Utah’s depth is supposed to a team strength. On the road against the Suns on the tail end of a back to back, that proved anything but the case.
While the Jazz starters looked lackluster for much of the game, very much like a squad having flown from LA in the early morning and depressed by missed shots by the bushelful, by nights end every starter had slogged his way to double digit scoring. Combined, Utah’s starters notched 79 points. That’s a full 20 point advantage on Phoenix’s starters.
But the bench bombed, mustering a futile nine points on 18 field goal attempts. The Suns bench countered with 38 points. That 29 point advantage ate up Utah’s starter’s hard – and undoubtedly tired – work, sending the Jazz home with back to back losses, both discouraging, and their first losing record since November 20th of 2016.
Utah has more back to back contests this season than any team in the NBA1. The bench had better have a better showing in the future or expect fatigued starters and a lot of losses in these matches.
Superstars: Rudy Gobert and Ricky Rubio
While each put up impressive numbers, Gobert (16 points, 14 rebounds, 1 assist, 5 blocks) and Rubio (15 points, 11 assists, 4 rebounds, 4 steals, 1 block) made a greater impact by being the only two Jazz players to exert any force during the long slog of the game’s first three quarters. Gobert fought to hold together an enervated defense by himself, frequently frustrated as teammates failed to rotate to or box out his man after he cut off penetration to the rim. Rubio tried to single handedly kindle the turnover fueled offense that served Utah so well in its wins early this season. Neither got much help at all until it was too late. If more teammates had followed and offered up the determination to match these leaders, this probably would be a win.
Secondary Star: Rodney Hood
Hood’s return from a mild calf strain didn’t disrupt his hot start to the season. He poored in 22 points on 16 shots, exactly the type of punch Utah should be able to use to ride to victory. 15 of those points came in a first half where Utah struggled mightily on offense, scoring only 41 points on 38 percent shooting from the field and a maddening eight – that’s right, eight percent! – from the three point line. Unfortunately, Hood failed to influence the game much beyond his scoring, notching only a single rebound and two assists in 35 minutes of play.
Secret Stars: None
Derrick Favors and Joe Ingles both contributed to a fourth quarter push that, much like the loss in LA the night before, put a little lipstick on this pig of a game. But their combined 16 points on nine shots in the final stanza doesn’t excuse the first three quarters where the duo combined for only nine points. No bench player approached anything nearing a net positive on the night. Even Ekpe Udoh, the Jazz’s plus-minus miracle worker, dinged the Jazz for a minus nine in under 12 minutes of play.
24 percent – Utah’s three point shooting on the night.
13 percent – Utah’s three point shooting through three quarters. For the second night in a row the team’s inability to hit from long range completely strangled both the offense and player energy and enthusiasm. Talking about dealing with a poor shooting roster – and Quin Snyder has done a lot of that already this year – is one thing. Watching it is something else. An ugly else.
9 – The offensive rebounding advantage for the Suns, which helped them to a 17 to eight advantage on second chance points. That’s the margin of victory.
14 – Utah’s disadvantage in the paint, which is simply unacceptable with Gobert and Favors both healthy.
0 – Times the Jazz held a lead in this game.
The Jazz need to regroup. Thankfully, they have two days off until their next contest, a home tilt against the Lakers, where they can hopefully right the season’s early ship.
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