This game did not look like a formula for a close contest. The Utah Jazz, hottest team in the NBA and winners of their last ten games. The Phoenix Suns, losers of six straight and 11 of their last 12. In Vivint Smart Home Arena. In the last game before the All-Star break, when every player is exhausted and the Suns, with only 18 wins this season, had very little to play for.
Facing that extremely steep hill, the Suns, second youngest team in the NBA, made a valiant climb and nearly crested the top triumphantly before Utah’s defense, and some timely buckets by Jae Crowder and Donovan Mitchell, tumbled them into a seventh straight loss. Meanwhile, Utah won its 11th straight game, 107 to 97.
The Suns young talent on the perimeter was on full display tonight and kept the game competitive. Devin Booker, arguably the best young scorer in the NBA, scored 28. The fourth pick in the draft, Josh Jackson, used his superb athleticism to get to the rim repeatedly and neared his career high by scoring 22. And Elfrid Payton, who the Suns grabbed in a steal of a trade in return for only a second round draft pick, notched an impressive 13-point, 12-assist, 11-rebound triple double.
With what was for much of the night a horrid performance for Utah’s bench, who managed a combined eight points entering the fourth quarter, Phoenix’s young gunners kept the game surprisingly close, including taking the lead numerous times in the third and fourth quarters. But even on a night with the Suns’s future humming and only six Jazz players showed up to play1, Utah was too much for the young visitors.
All five Jazz starters scored 13 or more points while Jae Crowder piled up 11 points in the fourth quarter alone to end the night with 15. Down the stretch the Jazz kept the Suns’s offense in the half court where their elite defense overwhelmed the young upstarts. Offensively, Crowder’s offensive explosion in the quarter capped a strong game by the starters and propelled Utah to another double digit win.
Utah enters the All-Star break 30 and 28, only two games back in the loss column of playoff seeds five through eight in the West. They’ve won 11 straight games, their longest streak since 2009. It’s going to be a wild and wonderful stretch run to the playoffs.
Superstar: Royce O’Neale (19 points, 5 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals, 1 block, 3 threes)
In a game where the Jazz got excellent games from six players2, O’Neale capped off his first stretch as a starter by ascending to, at least for tonight, the team’s best all around player: efficient offensively (he only took 12 shots and made all three of his three pointers on his way to career-high 19), an impact defender, and contributions all across the court. O’Neale’s confidence is sky-high now, as seen by his running trash talk back and forth with the Suns’s Booker. Once undrafted, O’Neale is jawing with stars and backing it up.
Secondary Star: Donovan Mitchell (24 points, 7 assists, 4 rebounds, 4 threes), Rudy Gobert (14 points, 17 rebounds, 1 assist), Derrick Favors (18 points, 12 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 block)
What more can be said about Mitchell this season? Critics can certainly latch onto the drop in his offensive efficiency of late, which continued tonight as he took 24 shots to get his 24 points. But he’s the leading scorer on the hottest team in the NBA and a new favorite to make the playoffs. His ability to distribute the ball continues to blossom, and he reinforced his well-earned reputation as an ice-cold finisher with one of the toughest threes of the year to close out this game.
Not many people are wringing their hands about Gobert and Favors playing in tandem now. They are simply dominating defensively night after night, and when their offensive game is humming like tonight they give the Jazz an advantage over every team in the NBA. Tonight they combined for 32 points on only 17 shots and gobbled 29 rebounds, including a big eight on the offensive glass3. This duo is wrecking the league right now.
Secret Star: Jae Crowder (15 points, 7 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 steal)
In truth, there should be nothing secret about Crowder’s place on this team either this game or going forward. But he deserves the love on Valentine’s Day. In only three games he has cemented himself as the rock-solid veteran presence Dennis Lindsey has coveted for at least a year. Worth particular note tonight is that Crowder still managed respectable offensive efficiency (15 points on 12 shots) despite missing all four of his three pointers. He made up for those misses by attacking the rim ferociously through brute strength, finishing several layups through heavy contact, and brilliant off-ball cuts. In a surprisingly close game he had 11 points in the fourth quarter, cementing his already clear value to this team.
14 – Jazz offensive rebounds, nine more than the Suns.
29 percent – Three point shooting by Utah, which kept Phoenix in this game.
9 percent – Field goal percentage of Utah’s bench outside of Crowder’s five of 12 night.
10 – Threes taken by Utah’s bench, all misses.
8 of 10 – Free throws made and taken by the tandem of Favors (four of six) and Gobert (four of four).
Jazz players can now rest on their laurels over All-Star weekend, except, of course, for Mitchell and O’Neale, Utah’s awesome rookies who will take part in the festivities. For all intents and purposes, the Jazz are now neck and neck with six teams for the last four playoff spots in the West, with a seed as high as third not out of the question. While everyone on the team is likely looking forward to a rest, there must also be anticipation about getting back on the court to continue their push to the playoffs.
Take note: this team isn’t merely looking to squeak into the post-season as an eighth seed. The way they are playing now, with the prospect of getting back Rubio and perhaps even Dante Exum for the stretch run, means no one should write off the Jazz’s chance of scoring home court in the first round of the playoffs.
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