Archives For Jackson Rudd

You want swagger?  We’ve got swagger.  Mo Williams had his introductory press conference today and he was as confident as a man could be.  He’s great with the press, he is excited to be here, and he discussed everyone from Jerry Sloan to LeBron (except for Marvin Williams… Marvin is out of bounds until the deal goes official).

We know that the biggest question everyone had was, “What number is Mo Williams going to wear since Al Jefferson is wearing 25?”  Well, the answer is (currently) 16, as chosen by his kids.  We’ll put up the audio from the full press conference when it comes.  In the meantime, if you’ve got twenty minutes to spend, you should head over to 1280′s website to listen to David Locke’s great interview with Williams from this morning.

Check out ESPN’s rundown here:

Sources:  Marvin Williams off to Utah

This is apparently what it feels like to wonder aloud why your team’s General Manager did nothing through the NBA Draft only to look up a week later and see that 2/5s of the starting lineup has changed.

There is a lot to say about this, but for now, let’s take care of one misconception that has floated around a little bit:  Devin Harris is on the books for one more year at over 8 million dollars, and so is Marvin Williams.  The difference is that Williams has one more year on his contract as a player option at 7.5 million dollars.  It is hard to say whether he will exercise his option or not as it likely depends on how the next season goes.  However, either way, this doesn’t hurt Utah’s cap situation very significantly.  The cap situation after next season was getting so amazingly good that it was almost a bad thing- remember, the new Collective Bargaining Agreement instated a salary floor, meaning that if Utah couldn’t get enough solid free agents next summer (or agree on extensions with current players), they’d have to hand out some bad contracts just to reach the minimum threshold.  So the dream for James Harden lives on!

We’ll have more thoughts soon to come about the trade as well as our untimely farewell to Devin Harris. Until then, we can watch Williams’ highlights in Utah’s quadruple-overtime loss to Atlanta earlier this year with terribly mixed emotions:

 

 

Video highlights, as usual, credited to @ProdigyJF

In an attempt to memorialize Utah’s biggest lottery defeat since falling to number 6 in 2005, here is my stream of consciousness during the proceedings last night:

 

All you need to know for this live-blog to make sense is that I care way too much about the NBA Draft and wildly overrate the value of draft picks.  I rearranged my work schedule to be able to watch the draft lottery and I’ve spent all day trying to not get my hopes up about the Jazz getting Golden State’s draft pick.  I failed, and I really hope that Utah pulls it out.  Sure, the Jazz would get the Warriors’ pick next year as a consolation prize, but today Chad Ford called next year’s draft terrible and I hate delaying gratification.

5:08:  They finally turn it over to the Mock Draft crew and I’m instantly placated by the meaninglessness of everything that Jay Bilas is saying.  Thank goodness for Jay Bilas.  Mark Jones asks Bilas a question about Anthony Davis and Bilas, for the 5,868th time in his career, says that the ‘sky is the limit’ for Davis.

5:11  Jeff Van Gundy calls Magic Johnson “Earvin” and Mark Jones looked confused.

5:12:  Andre Drummond is asked about raising the age limit.  As a resident expert, he says something like, “Umm… once in my sophomore year of high school I took Home Ec… so I think I’m good.  Go UConn!!!”

5:14:  Little known fact:  the Magic 8-Ball gimmick was a late night hit for the Game Show Network back in 1992.  They used the same set.

5:20:  In order to prevent myself from thinking of things more likely than 28%, I’ve spent the last few minutes trying to figure out the age border where analysts start calling Magic Johnson “Earvin.”  So far, Jeff Van Gundy and Mike Wilbon are the only ones on the show to make the leap, so I’m thinking the age requirement is like 45.  How old is Wilbon, anyway?  I really hope we get this pick.

5:26-  Heather Cox interviews David Stern.  It’s heavily edited, but thankfully left in Stern’s dissertation on how everyone is tweeting everything all the time (at the expense of his explanation of why he thinks the age limit should be raised).

5:29-  Do the Jazz have a 28% chance or a 26% chance?  Everyone keeps saying different things.  I suppose that if Charlotte gets the first pick, all of their ping pong balls are gone, raising lower teams’ odds at jumping into the top 3.  Though, on the other hand, that also increases Golden State’s odds at getting into the lottery as well, so the proportions stay the same.  I’m not sure, but I think that the final answer is that there is a 27.3% chance that the Jazz get the pick.  Approximately.

5:33- Magic Johnson decides that Miami’s championship merit depends on their ability to beat a hobbled and old Celtics team (playing its 17th playoff game) in Boston on Friday.  Somewhere, Gregg Popovich laughs heartily and changes the channel.

5:37- Uh-oh.  We’re getting closer.  The’re back to the draft crew and this time they have the official draft ticker at the bottom.  Jay Bilas says everything about Perry Jones that everyone has been saying for two years.  He then pretends that Tyler Zeller isn’t the same person as Patrick O’Bryant and everyone else.

5:46- Mike Wilbon says that 14 teams are hoping the balls bounce their way.  Fifteen teams care this year, Wilbon.  Fifteen.

5:55-  I have no idea why Andre Drummond or Thomas Robinson are here.  What does the lottery tell them?  Drummond could fall down to number six and Robinson could go that low too.  Where is Anthony Davis?  Why am I not seeing him all the time?

5:58- They show the draft order again.  Golden State’s logo is almost illegible.  It looks more like a crystal ball.  Does that mean something?  Or is just my feed?

6:01-  Jay Bilas defends his love for Jeremy Lamb to Chad Ford (under the guise of people who don’t have Lamb in their top ten), stopping just short of saying, “Lamb played in a major conference!  A MAJOR CONFERENCE, CHAD!!!”

6:07-  The analysts pick who they think will win the lottery.  This is awesome because it actually is nothing but a guessing game, which is what they normally do, which is probably why they sound so confident when they pick teams like New Orleans.

6:08-  Everyone keeps talking about the 14 teams whose fates will be decided by the lottery!  THERE ARE FIFTEEN TEAMS CONNECTED.  The Jazz matter! Really!

6:10-  I think I’m going to be sick.  I’m going to be so sad when we don’t get this pick.  I can’t believe how likely I think 27.3% chances are.

6:12- Wes Matthews is representing Portland.  For some reason, I take this to be a bad omen.  Bob Myers and Peter Guber are here for Golden State.  One of the owners is here?  He must know something we don’t.  This is bad.  This is really bad.

6:13-  The Nets girl relays information about drug trade in Russian to Mikhail Prokhorov via ESPN.  The Cavs are staying with the hot hand.

6:15-  Rich Cho looks more scared than everyone else.  He looks like he’s the general manager of the worst professional basketball team of all time.  One final look at the odds. 27.3% chance.  I can’t breathe.

6:16- Houston, Phoenix, Milwaukee.  Chalk so far.  This is bad.

6:16:- Portland.  Wes Matthews doesn’t care.  New Orleans.  We’re doomed.

6:16- Detroit.  THIS IS OUR LAST CHANCE.

6:17-  We lost.

6:18- Anthony Davis, looking terrified at the realization that he is either going to Washington, New Orleans, or Charlotte.  This is a bad day for him.

6:20-  The commercials are still running.  I’m so sad about this.  Even a shot of LeBron  reading through Catching Fire doesn’t make me feel any better.

6:22-  Anthony Davis is going to New Orleans.  Everyone is going to say the fix is in, and maybe they’re right.  I don’t care.  Stupid Warriors.  There should be a rule voiding all losses instituted when starting five rookies.  What’s amazing is that no one is even going to care very much.  Golden State’s Oakland fans are all deeply hurt because the team is leaving and the San Francisco’s “fans” don’t care because they are rightfully embarrassed to be taking on a franchise so pathetic and useless.  Nobody cares, except for Perry Jones, who will spend the next three years underperforming in Oakland before he gets dealt along with a top-7 protected draft pick for John Lucas III, who will be putting up 13 and 7 during a contract year.  Stupid Warriors.  Stupid lottery.

If you want to read more about the Lottery Disaster, head over to SI.com and check out Zach Lowe’s article about how the lottery actually works.

 

Editor’s Note: The following is the press release announcing changes in the local sports radio landscape. The flagship radio station for the Jazz is now 1280 AM. The Jazz ownership group also jumps onto the FM dial with FOX Sports Radio 97.5. Utah Jazz games will air on both stations.

SALT LAKE CITY (May 22, 2012) – Larry H. Miller (LHM) Communications Corporation today announced its acquisition and re-launch of superstation 1280 The Zone (KZNS-AM) and Fox Sports Radio 97.5 (KZNS-FM).  The all-new, 50,000-watt 1280 The Zone will feature an All-Star mix of Utah’s best sports radio talent and live game broadcasts, including serving as the new home of the Utah Jazz.  FOX Sports Radio 97.5 will provide the national perspective offered by the FOX Sports Radio network in addition to simulcasting the Jazz games and carrying the Salt Lake Bees and other local and national game broadcasts.  The new programming schedules for both 1280 The Zone and Fox Sports Radio 97.5 begin on Wednesday, May 23.

LHM Communications has finalized an agreement to purchase the signals, towers and licenses of the two Salt Lake City-area radio stations, 1280 (KZNS-AM) of Salt Lake City and 97.5 (KZNS-FM) of Coalville, Utah, from SLC Divestiture Trust I on May 21, pending Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approval.  In addition, LHM Communications has also reached an agreement with Simmons Media Group to operate 960 (KOVO-AM), which serves Utah County and will also simulcast Jazz broadcasts.  LHM Communications will cease operating 1320 (KFNZ-AM) effective May 31.

“The purpose of this venture is to formulate the premier radio group in Utah for local and national sports talk shows, as well as live game broadcasts, while also drastically improving our signal strength and clarity,” said Chris Baum, senior vice president of broadcasting for Larry H. Miller Sports & Entertainment.  “This purchase will allow us to protect our base by controlling the distribution of the broadcasts for Utah Jazz, Salt Lake Bees and other sports properties.”

LHM Communications also announced today the hiring of Randy Rodgers to serve as general manager of the company’s radio stations.  A native of Salt Lake City, Rodgers brings with him nearly 40 years’ experience working in the Salt Lake radio market, having most recently served as executive vice president for the Simmons Media Group.

“We are very pleased to welcome Randy to the Larry H. Miller family,” said Baum.  “His long track record of leadership and tremendous amount of experience in this market make him a natural fit to oversee our new radio stations.”

The dynamic duo of David James and Patrick Kinahan, better known as “DJ & PK,” will take the highest-rated sports radio show in the market to the 1280 The Zone airwaves each weekday morning from 6-10 a.m., as the pair closes in on a decade working together on radio in Salt Lake City.  The nationally syndicated “The Jim Rome Show” will then follow “DJ & PK” from 10 a.m. – 1 p.m. before Scott Garrard and Jake Scott take over the microphone from 1-3 p.m. daily.  The star-studded lineup rounds out with the return of “The Big Show” featuring Spence Checketts and Gordon Monson as they team up for the ride home from 3-6 p.m. each afternoon, followed by “Inside the Outdoors” with Steve Brown from 6-7 p.m.

“Between our unmatched Jazz coverage and new All-Star lineup – ‘DJ & PK’ continuing to anchor the mornings, Jim Rome offering his unique national takes, Scotty G. and Jake Scott in mid-afternoon, and the strong opinions of Spence Checketts and Gordon Monson during afternoon drive – 1280 The Zone is clearly the new ‘The Sports Leader’ in the market,” said Baum.  “And with the increased range provided by a 50,000-watt AM signal, the additions of an FM signal and the station in Utah County, we will be better able to reach and serve sports fans, and Jazz fans in particular, all along the Wasatch Front.”

The new lineup on FOX Sports Radio 97.5 will include a local show hosted by Jake Scott and Tony Parks, a re-broadcast of “The Jim Rome Show,” as well as national shows “FOX Sports Daybreak” and “Petros & Money.”  Both 1280 The Zone and FOX Sports Radio 97.5 will feature national overnight shows “FOX Sports Tonight” and “JT The Brick,” and the FOX Sports Radio weekend lineup.

1280 The Zone Lineup (Monday-Friday)

6 – 10 a.m.                  “DJ & PK” (David James and Patrick Kinahan)

10 a.m. – 1 p.m.          “The Jim Rome Show”

1 – 3 p.m.                    Scott Garrard and Jake Scott

3 – 6 p.m.                    “The Big Show” (Spencer Checketts and Gordon Monson)

6 – 7 p.m.                    “Inside the Outdoors” (w/ Steve Brown)

 

FOX Sports Radio 97.5 (Monday-Friday)

6 – 10 a.m.                  “FOX Sports Daybreak”

10 a.m. – 1 p.m.          Jake Scott and Tony Parks (local)

1 – 4 p.m.                    “The Jim Rome Show” (re-air)

4 – 5 p.m.                    “Loose Cannons”

5 – 8 p.m.                    “Petros & Money”

Most Valuable Player:

Evan Hall:  Gordon Hayward. During the push for the playoffs, Hayward was the best player on the team. In April, Hayward averaged 16 ppg, 4 rebounds, and 3.5 assists on 51/49/88 shooting splits. Read those splits again! 51% from the field, 49% from three, and 88% from the line! Those numbers are so Steve Nash-ian that I can’t stop using exclamation points!

Nick Smith:  Paul Millsap. While Jefferson may have carried the scoring load throughout the season, Millsap’s all around game makes this a no brainer. Millsap was also our best guy late in huge games.

Jackson Rudd:  This is tricky- Millsap had a lackluster second half of the season, Hayward and Harris had rough starts, and Big Al was never really the difference maker.  It has to be one of those four guys, though, so I’m going with Hayward.  The Jazz were 8-2 this season when he scored 20 points or more, but more importantly, his playmaking skills always fired up the offense and helped everyone get going.

Austin Horton:  Paul Millsap (player), Kevin O’Connor (personnel).  Call me crazy, but it would have to be Paul Millsap, with a honorable mention going to Kevin O’Connor. Obviously, the “P” in MVP would have to stand for Personnel, not Player, but you’ve got to make exceptions for O’Connor. The moves he made in such a short offseason when the lockout was officially ended, and the pick ups/signings he made DURING the season were as important as any on-court contribution from the players this season. But, for MV Player, it has to be Millsap no question.

Sam Strong: This will be the trendy pick but how can you can go with anyone but Milsap here? Anytime this team needed a big shot, after the ball was passed around way too many times, it ended up in Milsap’s hands and he delivered more times than anyone expected him to. He’s a hustle guy who was asked to be a superstar and he did an adequate job. Begrudgingly, runner up goes to Big Al. Hard to believe they make the playoffs without him.

 

Most Improved Player:

Hall:   Derrick Favors. Over the course of the season, Favors became a prolific rebounder, a decent scorer, and one of the 15 best low-post defenders in the NBA. Five years from now, the D-Will trade will look like a steal for the Jazz, and it will be all Derrick Favors’ fault.

Smith:  Has to be Gordon Hayward. Gordon Hayward is emerging as a mini LeBron James. I’m not putting him in that category, but Hayward can guard 4 positions, has great size, is great in both offensive AND defensive transition, and is great making plays for his teammates. Not many players in the league are that versatile.

Rudd:   Favors wins this by a mile.  Hayward only got the votes in the NBA’s Most Improved Player tally because the national media didn’t notice that he was already lighting everyone up the last month or two of his rookie year.  Favors didn’t put up dramatically better stats, but he became a dramatically stronger presence on the defensive end.  He started to gain a sense of how to take over games defensively that I have never seen from a Jazz player (possibly because there aren’t enough Mark Eaton highlights on YouTube).

Horton:  Gordon Hayward. While his offensive stats were actually slightly below last season’s final numbers (keep in mind it was a shorter season, and he almost DOUBLED his minutes played), his DEFENSIVE stats were light years improved from last season. Last year in 72 games played, Hayward logged 19 blocks, 30 steals, and 98 DRB’s. This season> 41 blocks, 53 steals, and 171 DRB’s. And in 6 LESS games than the previous year. (Addendum: I’d be surprised if he’s not NEXT year’s MIP as well)

Strong:  Hayward all day. I’ve never seen someone’s play drop off as severely as his did from the end of the regular season to the playoffs but that shouldn’t overshadow the strides he made this season. He looked like a lost 10 year-old kid at times last season. Now, he still looks like a 10 year-old but he’s found his groove. If he keeps playing the way he closed the year, he could be something very special.

 

Rookie of the Year:

Hall:  Alec Burks. I love Kanter, but Burks was the only player on the entire roster who could penetrate at will and consistently get to the foul line. He’s just a rookie, and he was already filling a necessary role for the team.

Smith:  Enes Kanter. While Burks’ play was solid and at times seem to be more convincing than Kanter’s, who honestly expected Kanter to play as well as he did after not having played basketball in 2 years. Sure he’s got a lot to work on, but a big men have the toughest transition into the NBA even if they are coming from the best college program in the country, let alone from a two year hiatus from competition. Kanter’s ability to contribute was a huge surprise.

Rudd:   I’m going with Kanter here based on his elite rebounding alone.  He is only 19 years old and he finished in the Top 10 rebounds-per-48-minutes in the entire league- and that’s not even taking into account the fact that he was competing for boards alongside Favors, who is ranked 15th on the same list.  I love Alec Burks, but Enes Kanter’s rebounding sets him apart for me.

Horton:  Alec Burks. Is anyone going with Kanter? Not that Enes had a bad season, but he definitely faded away as the year went on, while Alec Burks seemed to get stronger, more confident, and smarter as time went on. Burks can definitely bring the energy and ability needed to score a lot of points, and at times he almost single handedly conducted runs that aided the Jazz in comebacks, even if the team ultimately ended up losing the game. While he does have the curse of “when he misses, he misses and misses and misses,” Burks got love and respect from opponents around the league this season, and definitely didn’t look like a rookie for most of the season.

Strong:  The Big Enes’ mic drop almost sealed the deal but you have to go Burks here. Not only did he play more minutes and score more than Kanter, he didn’t look like a rookie when he was in there. Granted, I’m a bit biased, but at this point, Burks looks like more of a potential starter than Kanter.

 

Best Moment of the Year:

Hall:  Gordon Hayward’s double-block against the Celtics. Of all the highlights from this season, this will be the one I return to YouTube time and time again to watch.

Smith:   Derrick Favors taking over the playoff play-in game vs. Phoenix by completely shutting down anything and everything Phoenix brought down the lane, especially Gortat. Have the Jazz ever had a player that has changed the entire game by his defense? How many guys in the entire NBA can do that? Favors seems to be destined to be a top 5 PF.

Rudd:   March 2, Miami Heat, Devin Harris, and-1 for the win at the end of regulation.  That game made me believe that this team could actually beat anyone on a good night and served as the beginning of Devin Harris’ redemption.

Horton:  3OT Win over Dallas down the home stretch. Riding a 2 game losing streak (@ New Orleans, @Memphis) and looking like they were fading from the playoffs picture more every day, the Jazz were able to dig deep and knock off the depending NBA champions in 3 overtimes, withstanding furious efforts from Dirk, Jason Terry, and Jason Kidd. With that win I physically saw in some of the players’ eyes and faces that they finally BELIEVED they could and should make the playoffs. That game had everything in it. Joy, pain, success, failure, smart decision, ridiculous decisions, and yet the team was able to pool their efforts and come out with a giant win.

Strong:  This is a weird one and anyone who’s been near my Twitter profile knows I’m the last Big Al apologist on earth but his Ally-oop/Tip-in/Was-that-a-shot?-Who-Cares! game winner in Sacramento sticks out to me. That was the first time I remember believing that this could be a playoff team.

 

“If this team had a captain, it should have been…”

Hall:   I thought Corbin’s refusal to choose a captain was so awesome that I wrote an entire post about it, but with the advantage of hindsight, Devin Harris should have been the captain of this team. The idea of a Team Captain is all motivational symbolism anyway, so the captain should carry himself like the best player on the team, at times play like it, and be self-aware enough to defer when he’s off.

Smith:   Paul Millsap and Al Jefferson. Say what you want about their games, but leadership is about showing up and playing hard. Both of those guys did that all year long.
Pretty solid role models for our young guns. Now if Kanter can just keep learning Big Al’s footwork along the way…

Rudd:  Paul Millsap and Earl Watson should have been co-captains.  Both of them understood the team’s ceiling this season before anyone else did, they were the first players to show a lot of heart early on when things weren’t looking great, and they were both humble enough to do whatever the team needed them to do in order to win.

Horton:  Earl Watson.  If you say anyone else, you’re absurd. Watson was the ultimate leader, even when he was sidelined, from day 1. Even during the lockout when
he wasn’t under contract, the dude was still calling players together and contaminating them with his confidence and belief. There’s that word again, belief. Watson knew from the get go that this team was ready to bloom and achieve more than any outsiders expected. And not only did he say it, he believed it. He backed it up. And he was right. The young guys and the old vets all stood behind him, even if they themselves didn’t realize it. He was the leader in the community, around the media, in the box scores, and on the bench. El Capitan? No, more like Earl Capitan.

Strong:  Devin Harris. He’s not the most popular among fans but he commands a lot of respect in the locker room. He can be an effective leader next season if his quality of play picks up where it left off.

 

For more analysis on which Jazz players  are most deserving of awards, check out Salt City Hoops’ podcast featuring Spencer Ryan Hall and Jackson Rudd.

 

 

Utah Jazz 83 Final
Recap | Box Score
114 San Antonio Spurs
Josh Howard, SF 24 MIN | 3-9 FG | 4-5 FT | 5 REB | 1 AST | 10 PTS | -33

Josh Howard actually improved a lot from Game 1, and it wasn’t his fault that he was in the game for too many minutes. His defense wasn’t good, but whose was?

Paul Millsap, PF 29 MIN | 4-11 FG | 1-2 FT | 5 REB | 0 AST | 9 PTS | -35

Paul had a relatively passable offensive night, though his defense was subpar as well. The bigger problem is that this team desperately needed someone, anyone, to pull them together and Paul wasn’t that leader tonight.

Al Jefferson, C 30 MIN | 5-15 FG | 0-0 FT | 4 REB | 2 AST | 10 PTS | -38

No interior defense. No rebounding. No hustle. And all of his shots looked shaky. This is one that Al will want to forget. Soon.

Devin Harris, PG 23 MIN | 2-7 FG | 1-1 FT | 0 REB | 1 AST | 5 PTS | -36

Tony Parker 2, Devin Harris 0. He wasn’t playing with the swagger that keyed the Jazz’s late season run.

Gordon Hayward, SG 28 MIN | 3-10 FG | 2-2 FT | 2 REB | 4 AST | 8 PTS | -32

Gordon Hayward was the only one trying to get his team involved. The results obviously weren’t that moving, but at least he tried. His shot wasn’t falling, just like everyone else.

Jamaal Tinsley, PG 19 MIN | 1-6 FG | 2-2 FT | 0 REB | 3 AST | 4 PTS | +3

There wasn’t a lot of flair to his game. By the time he came in during the third quarter, the game was already out of hand and he played like he knew it.

Blake Ahearn, PG 6 MIN | 2-3 FG | 0-0 FT | 0 REB | 2 AST | 5 PTS | +2

Responsible for the only three-point field goal all game. He was getting killed on defense by Gary Neal though.

DeMarre Carroll, F 18 MIN | 2-3 FG | 0-0 FT | 1 REB | 0 AST | 4 PTS | +4

Carroll doesn’t know what his role is right now, which is fair, because neither do the rest of us. He didn’t give the energy burst that he’s known for, but he wasn’t notably worse than anyone else, either.

Jeremy Evans, SF 6 MIN | 0-1 FG | 2-2 FT | 3 REB | 1 AST | 2 PTS | +2

He showed some hustle and hit the boards hard in meaningless minutes.

Derrick Favors, FC 21 MIN | 3-9 FG | 3-3 FT | 9 REB | 0 AST | 9 PTS | +6

His +/- was +6 in a game the Jazz. Plus/minus differentials aren’t too incriminating, but in this case, that means that something went terribly wrong in the rotations.

Alec Burks, G 20 MIN | 2-8 FG | 5-5 FT | 4 REB | 1 AST | 9 PTS | +1

Burks is cocky, and he was the one playing with the most pride late in the game- he was trying to catch the Spurs playing sloppy and was still running the floor even in the last couple of minutes. He’s the only reason the deficit was less than 40.

Enes Kanter, F 16 MIN | 4-8 FG | 0-1 FT | 10 REB | 1 AST | 8 PTS | +1

Did anyone predict that ESPN’s box score would list Enes Kanter as Utah’s top performer in the second game of the playoffs? I don’t believe that anyone did. The most backhanded compliment I can offer to the Jazz as a whole is this: Kanter earned it.

Three Things We Saw

  1. I think everyone would have a better understanding of what happened tonight if the score read: Gregg Popovich 114, Ty Corbin 83. The shots weren’t going down, but if 20-0 runs are happening with no lineup changes, there is definitely a coaching mismatch. This playoff experience is more needed for Corbin than any of the young players.
  2. Interesting stat: the Jazz are known for fouling a lot, but they have gotten more free throws than the Spurs in both games so far. Apparently, fouling wasn’t the problem with Utah’s defense.
  3. Game 3 is Saturday and stands as Utah’s last chance to retain some dignity from this series. If they lose Saturday, even a Game 4 win wouldn’t convince anyone that this series was remotely competitive.

Tom Smart / Deseret News

Over the past two weeks, the Western playoff hunt has gone from a five-team chase for the last three spots to a two-team chase for the eighth spot. Thankfully (eat your heart out, tankers), the Jazz are one of them, with only the Phoenix Suns standing in the way of postseason bliss (and by “bliss” I mean a very entertaining five-game series with a few fleeting moments of memorable fight). Of all the teams to be pitted against in a battle of wills, Phoenix seems like the natural choice. After all, they are the anti-Jazz in every conceivable way. For the Suns, this is one final blaze of glory to commemorate their dynasty of style on the eve of its downfall. For the Jazz, this is a golden opportunity to show the world that a future contender is already on the horizon.

For Jazz fans with decent memories–or possibly a poor capacity for coping–the poetic irony in all of this is not hard to see. It wasn’t so long ago that Steve Nash’s young and promising Dallas Mavericks dismissed the Jazz from the playoffs in 2001 after resiliently overcoming a 2-0 series deficit for Utah’s first first-round exit since 1995. For me, that might have been the most devastating defeat of my entire fandom. After the 1998 Finals I was crushed, but confident my guys would win the following year. In 2001, it was inescapably clear to everyone watching that the window of opportunity had closed for the Stockton-Malone era and sure enough, they never won another playoff series together. As painful as it was, even then I recognized that Dallas had a certain hopeful fire and relentlessness that the Jazz simply couldn’t match. That Mavs team is much less repugnant in hindsight, knowing the price they would pay to finally get their title. I’m sure that Suns fans (or Rockets fans; especially Rockets fans) find the Jazz to be similarly detestable right now. After all, this collection of players dominantly in their 20s, without any individual claims to significant NBA success, shows an astounding amount of entitlement in their expectation to reach the postseason. This, too, will likely be more forgivable a few years down the road.

The problem for the 2001 Jazz and, by association, the 2012 Suns, is that Dallas should have won that first-round series. History suggests that energetic, hopeful up-and-comers generally deserve the win over the past-their-prime giants. It’s a sad reality, but only in the short-term view of things. Of course I hate the way Apollo Creed’s storyline ended in Rocky IV as much as everyone else, and generally I want my heroes to have their dramatic ride into the sunset, but the Local Natives are right when they sing (in a music video that should really have more than 34K views) that “the bad feels so bad to make the good so good.”

That’s why the Jazz are going to make the playoffs. Time always pushes the envelope, and it’s flying toward the era when Phoenix pays its cyclical dues before becoming relevant again. It’s also pushing toward that future moment when Utah is recognized for what it fundamentally is- a fresh, synergized, and legitimate challenger to the NBA throne.

Utah Jazz 98 Final
Recap | Box Score
103 Memphis Grizzlies
Paul Millsap, PF 38 MIN | 8-15 FG | 0-2 FT | 7 REB | 1 AST | 17 PTS | 0

Is there any trait of this Jazz team more perplexing than Millsap’s buzzer-beating three-point stroke? It just doesn’t make any sense. He’s a 21.4% shooter from beyond the arc this year, and yet everyone still expects him to make threes at the buzzer… and he does. It blows my mind.

DeMarre Carroll, F 22 MIN | 3-6 FG | 0-0 FT | 2 REB | 0 AST | 6 PTS | -1

Carroll seems to experience bouts of unadulterated energy followed by stretches in which it would be difficult to remember that he is still on the floor if not for his unmistakable dreads. Tonight provided more of the first, and his defense early on was notably effective.

Al Jefferson, C 37 MIN | 10-17 FG | 0-0 FT | 8 REB | 4 AST | 20 PTS | 0

Al was on fire for awhile and was largely responsible for the big third quarter. His defense was characteristically suspect, but he was distributing the ball on offense and his jumper was falling.

Devin Harris, PG 36 MIN | 7-16 FG | 4-6 FT | 1 REB | 6 AST | 20 PTS | +2

When the game was tied at 82 with almost 8 minutes remaining, Harris went on a three-possession stretch of taking really questionable shots that he couldn’t get to drop- one was even on a fast break. While he played his heart out for the rest of the game, that stretch really killed Utah’s chance to pull away late.

Gordon Hayward, SG 37 MIN | 4-10 FG | 7-7 FT | 4 REB | 5 AST | 17 PTS | -5

I feel like people should be talking more about how bizarre it is that in both of his first two seasons, Hayward started without any consistent ability to shoot from range and finished both seasons as a hesitance-free . Is this normal? Has anyone seen this before? What are we supposed to expect at the beginning of next season?

Jamaal Tinsley, PG 12 MIN | 1-3 FG | 0-0 FT | 1 REB | 3 AST | 2 PTS | -7

Tinsley is fun to watch, but once the shine wears off, it is clear that he gambles on defense all the time. That is probably because it seems like it is really hard for him to stick his man on defense for longer stretches of playing time. His fourth quarter stretch was so short in part because his defensive lapses were causing mismatches that were getting Memphis some easy buckets.

Blake Ahearn, PG 5 MIN | 0-1 FG | 0-0 FT | 2 REB | 1 AST | 0 PTS | 0

Ahearn’s first minutes back in the NBA showed him playing with a surprising level of comfort. His fast-break assist to Burks had a high level of difficulty and he made it look effortless. That said, if I had told you this morning that Blake Ahearn would take the final shot tonight, you probably would have thought, “That can’t be good.” You would have been correct.

Derrick Favors, FC 28 MIN | 4-10 FG | 2-2 FT | 14 REB | 0 AST | 10 PTS | -5

Derrick Favors put up a mean line tonight, but it didn’t do justice to what a force he was on defense. It is hard to complain when Jefferson and Millsap are your starters, but Derrick Favors is indisputably a starting-caliber player at this point.

Alec Burks, G 13 MIN | 2-4 FG | 0-0 FT | 2 REB | 0 AST | 4 PTS | -4

I’m not sure what Burks is doing to inspire the coaching staff to only keep him in for 13 minutes, but I wish he would get through it. He has a tool set that no one else on the Jazz can replicate, so it hurts the team when he can’t stay on the floor. The Harris-Tinsley backcourt is interesting, but it isn’t actually effective.

Enes Kanter, F 11 MIN | 1-1 FG | 0-0 FT | 0 REB | 0 AST | 2 PTS | -5

For someone who makes rebounding his claim to fame as a rookie, you hope for him to, you know, actually get rebounds. Still, his jump-hook to start the fourth quarter was beautiful and he guarded Gasol as tightly as anyone could expect.

Two Things We Saw

  1. The officiating was every bit as poor as Bolerjack and Harpring were making it sound. The Grizz were only called for 13 fouls when they were not shying away from contact at all. The non-calls made Utah’s late rally much more difficult, but it wasn’t responsible for the Jazz getting in the hole in the first place. This was still an incredible winnable game.
  2. Different city, same scene: O.J. Mayo single-handedly put the Jazz away with 17 fourth quarter points the night after Eric Gordon did the same thing. The interesting thing about this is that shooting guards haven’t been anywhere close to the biggest defensive issue for the Jazz for most of the season.
Utah Jazz 96 Final
Recap | Box Score
105 Los Angeles Clippers
Paul Millsap, PF 30 MIN | 6-14 FG | 6-6 FT | 9 REB | 5 AST | 18 PTS | -1

For Paul Millsap’s sake, let’s disregard his defensive performance for the moment and just agree that an 18-9-5 game is very respectable and that this game would have been a lot uglier if he didn’t keep the offense churning.

C.J. Miles, SF 26 MIN | 4-6 FG | 2-2 FT | 0 REB | 1 AST | 13 PTS | -7

He gets bonus points just because his back-to-back threes with two minutes left in the game made the score look much better. Besides, when is the last time you saw a Jazz player make back-to-back threes?

Al Jefferson, C 37 MIN | 13-22 FG | 0-0 FT | 4 REB | 2 AST | 26 PTS | -2

Black Hole Warning: 26 points on 21 shots without a single free throw. He only got 3 rebounds against DeAndre Jordan’s 10, but in his defense, there weren’t a ton of rebounds to go around since L.A. was shooting 56% from the field. Oh wait, that’s not in his defense at all.

Devin Harris, PG 30 MIN | 2-4 FG | 1-1 FT | 2 REB | 6 AST | 5 PTS | -7

Okay, Chris Paul is good, but Chris Paul isn’t THAT good. Getting outscored by 20 by your counterpart is never a good sign.

Gordon Hayward, SG 37 MIN | 4-12 FG | 6-9 FT | 7 REB | 2 AST | 14 PTS | -4

Pretty run-of-the-mill post-All-Star game from Gordy. Little did we know that his slick steal and fast-break and-one at the beginning of the first quarter would be the high water mark for the Jazz.

Earl Watson, PG 18 MIN | 1-3 FG | 1-2 FT | 2 REB | 1 AST | 4 PTS | -2

‘That awkward moment when you realize that Jamaal Tinsley is better equipped to lead the bench than the fan-favorite backup point guard.’

DeMarre Carroll, F 11 MIN | 0-3 FG | 1-2 FT | 3 REB | 1 AST | 1 PTS | -5

Remember when the Jazz signed Carroll and his field goal percentage was something outrageous, like 70% or so? I suppose it was doomed to not last. He’s still a braided ball of energy all the same and even though he might be making some mistakes, he certainly isn’t being outworked on the floor.

Derrick Favors, FC 18 MIN | 1-3 FG | 3-4 FT | 6 REB | 1 AST | 5 PTS | -8

What do you do the night after you set the franchise record for most field goal attempts without a make (at 13)? You only take three shots, that’s what. Favors did look a little bit more timid tonight but he was still crashing the boards hard.

Alec Burks, G 22 MIN | 1-7 FG | 1-3 FT | 1 REB | 2 AST | 3 PTS | -2

After the hot streak he has been on the past few games, a rough shooting night was inevitable. At least he got his money’s worth from his one field goal with a crazy-fast slash to the hoop in transition.

Enes Kanter, F 11 MIN | 3-3 FG | 1-2 FT | 4 REB | 0 AST | 7 PTS | -7

Kanter continues to climb over his rookie wall with his second 3-3 game in the last three outings. Do you realize what that means? That means that no one blocked his shot in the entire 11 minutes he was on the floor! For Enes, that in and of itself is worthy of an A-.

Three Things We Saw

  1. The Clippers may very well be the most talented non-Contender I have ever witnessed. I know that Vinny Del Negro is catching a lot of flak these days for the Clippers ups and downs, but I can’t imagine he’s the one responsible for teaching half of their players to fall over themselves in epileptic seizures anytime a player comes within 3 feet of them in the hopes of drawing a foul. The Spurs have had a well-established rep for flopping, especially if you go back a few years, but at least they always had the toughness to back it up (and the Europeans to allow the rest of us to rationalize it). The Clippers give me the impression that they are doing everything they can to avoid having to play tough defense or make hustle plays by trying to get a whistle whenever things get hard.
  2. This really deserves to be an entire post all its own, but can you imagine a more ill-fitting parallel than that between second-year Blake Griffin and second-year Karl Malone? It appears that sometimes the numbers do, in fact, lie.
  3. My favorite broadcasting moment of the night (well, besides Harpring’s thinly veiled disdain for everything the Clippers stood for, even drawing parallels between Griffin’s flopping ballet and fake soccer injuries in the World Cup) came when Matt Harpring glowingly talked up a 20-foot jumper that Hayward missed in the first quarter. Hayward had just curled off of a screen and missed the open catch-and-shoot opportunity, and Harpring spent the next couple of possessions talking about what a great shot it was and how much Hayward will grow to love those shots, as if the entire audience didn’t remember that those catch-and-shoot jumpers off of screens single-handedly extended Harpring’s career by three years.
Utah Jazz 111 Final

Recap | Box Score

120 Phoenix Suns
Josh Howard, SF 26 MIN | 3-12 FG | 0-0 FT | 6 REB | 0 AST | 6 PTS | -18He was simply terrible tonight. In a game that was strictly defense-free, he went an apalling 3-12 from the field, played with no energy, and gave up points to whoever was willing to challenge him. I hate to pin the loss on one guy, but if you’re looking at the box score, how can’t you?
Paul Millsap, PF 34 MIN | 8-16 FG | 2-3 FT | 10 REB | 3 AST | 18 PTS | -24One of the greatest nostalgic elements of this year’s Jazz team are those nights when Paul Millsap is really hitting the boards hard and reminds us all of when he was a rookie and that was pretty much all he could do.
Al Jefferson, C 29 MIN | 8-18 FG | 2-2 FT | 7 REB | 1 AST | 18 PTS | -14You know, a 8-18 game is redeemable in most games, but tonight I really expected more. He could have dominated Robin Lopez whenever he wished to do so and used the match-up advantages he was getting all night to open up his teammates, but he was in black-hole mode and didn’t help his team at all beyond scoring. Oh, and his defense was terrible.
Raja Bell, SG 21 MIN | 3-4 FG | 0-0 FT | 1 REB | 1 AST | 7 PTS | -14This was the definition of a prototypical “Raja Bell pretty good game.” He didn’t have a lot of presence on the floor, though he made open jumpers and didn’t appear to derail the team by openly feuding with Ty Corbin… Which is a good night for him.
Devin Harris, PG 17 MIN | 2-4 FG | 1-2 FT | 0 REB | 2 AST | 7 PTS | -10Devin Harris was playing well enough, but getting into foul trouble was not okay in a game when Earl Watson went down early. The Jazz needed a big game from Harris and he had to spend most of it riding the pine because of pointless reach-in fouls.
Jamaal Tinsley, PG 23 MIN | 5-8 FG | 0-0 FT | 3 REB | 8 AST | 11 PTS | -9What fascinates me about Jamaal is that 4 times out of 5, he’ll run the offense beautifully, and then the fifth time, he plays like he’s trying to pump his stats on NBA 2K12. Great game from him tonight though. He worked Sebastian Telfair over until the mid-4th quarter when it looked like he started to get a little worn out.
Earl Watson, PG 8 MIN | 0-1 FG | 0-0 FT | 3 REB | 5 AST | 0 PTS | +10I’ve got nothing against Tinsley tonight, he was great, but Earl was ruling over the court for his 8 minutes. Grabbing 3 boards and 5 assists in 8 minutes compensated enough to make it endearing when he cranked that strikingly awkward, insecure-looking mid-range jumper.
C.J. Miles, SF 22 MIN | 3-6 FG | 3-4 FT | 3 REB | 0 AST | 9 PTS | +9C.J. Miles got 22 minutes tonight and Alec Burks got 0, which is really difficult to fathom. You know things are going rough for you when Matt Harpring gives you props for throwing the ball out of bounds instead of taking a bad shot. At least he only took 6 tonight.
Gordon Hayward, SG 28 MIN | 5-8 FG | 2-2 FT | 1 REB | 1 AST | 13 PTS | +5He looked really confident on offense tonight- he was pushing the ball, filling the lanes and doing everything you could ask him to do. I know I’m not alone when I wish he would kick into take-over mode in games like this, but I can’t complain about his line tonight.
Derrick Favors, FC 21 MIN | 6-8 FG | 2-4 FT | 3 REB | 1 AST | 14 PTS | +12It seems that Favors woke up at the beginning of this month, rolled out of bed, and said, “You know what? I would be better at basketball if I just stopped missing shots.” And that’s pretty much what he’s done. Against Phoenix’s second unit, he looked like a man among boys. He could do whatever he wanted in the post.
Enes Kanter, F 11 MIN | 4-5 FG | 0-0 FT | 5 REB | 0 AST | 8 PTS | +8One of the more interesting subplots of the season is that Kanter is developing a mid-range game before a legitimate post-up game. I’m choosing to ignore the fact that this is the result of him being the most frequently blocked post player I’ve ever seen and think it’s because the Jazz want more of an inside-out game with him and Favors. Regardless, he was showing some new stuff tonight and creating his own shot and it was very exciting.

Four Things We Saw

  1. Defense after the first quarter: F. Wow. The Jazz were playing a strict “open threes for everybody!” policy, and even better, anyone who wanted to penetrate were granted free passes through the key.
  2. 4 technicals getting handed out: D. Ty Corbin and Devin Harris got dinged for the Jazz, while Alvin Gentry and Shannon Brown got T’d up for the Suns. None of them seemed particularly worthy of technicals by themselves, so when you take the four of them put together? Very questionable.
  3. Jazz 3-point shooting: B. It is definitely on the rise. Utah shot 5 for 13 tonight, good for 38%. That puts them at 12 for 24 across the past two games, which is much better than anyone expects of them at this point.
  4. Larry H. Miller’s Honorary Coach Contest: A. I love everything about these commercials. I love that Ty Corbin has a stoic expression in the picture of him that they keep showing, I love that Ty is also trying to break the record for most unenthusiastic script-reading of all time, and most of all, I love that everyone knows that this is only happening now because fans were too afraid of Jerry Sloan to want to sit next to him.