When this game tipped off, the Utah Jazz knew they would play the Oklahoma City Thunder in the first round of the playoffs. What wasn’t known is where game one would be played, as a Jazz victory over the Portland Trail Blazers would have won the third seed in the West and home court advantage over the Thunder.
Despite both their opponent – the New Orleans Pelicans – and home court decided in advance, the Trail Blazers thoroughly outplayed Utah, reminding one of the league’s hottest teams that victories against quality western opponents playing their best ball come hard.
Where Utah’s defense is typically the story of Jazz games, tonight it was Portland’s forceful, paint-swarming D that commanded the game. Not only did Terry Stotts not rest his key players as many thought prudent (Damian Lillard played 37 minutes, CJ McCollum 35), he devised a fantastic defensive scheme that put Utah’s offense out of sorts all night.
Through three quarters Portland totally dictated to Utah’s offense, which shot a tepid 33 percent from the floor and a horrid 25 percent from three. Meanwhile, the Blazers’s elite scoring back court lit up the Jazz for 45 points with 12 minute yet to play.
The Jazz showed some mental toughness, down big on the rough side of a back-to-back, yet made several runs to make a contest out of what had to that point been total domination by the Blazers. Donovan Mitchell, who had a tragic six of 23 night from the field, showed once more that no matter how out of sorts he is through most of a game, down the stretch he can flip a switch and put on an offensive blitz to change a game. He scored eight points in the fourth quarter on three of six shooting, including making his only three in the game despite eight attempts.
Yet the Blazers have the player Mitchell is modeled after (though Dwayne Wade is often mentioned as well), and the rookie’s mentor demonstrated what true closing power looks like. When the Jazz cut what was once a 24-point deficit to 14 with eight minutes to play, Stotts re-inserted Lillard into the game. He then closed out the game with nine points on six shots, ending the night with a stellar 36-point, 10-assist cap to his greatest NBA season.
And leaving the Jazz, the sixth seed in the West, with a road date with the Thunder and the only player in league history to average a triple double in multiple seasons, Russell Westbrook.
Superstar: None
The only candidate in this game for this status is Lillard. He utterly dominated the action and no combination of Jazz players or Quin Snyder’s defensive schemes could resist him. He was brilliant.
Secondary Star: Derrick Favors (10 points, 6 rebounds, 4 blocks)
There’s a good argument to be made that no Jazz player deserved even this billing. That’s how thoroughly outplayed they were tonight. But Favors at least played physically and energetically, and for much of the night was the only Jazz player of whom that could be said. If there was a highlight on the receiving end of such a thumping, it was his block of a Jusuf Nurkic dunk.
Secret Star: Jonus Jerebko (5 points, 2 rebounds, 1 block)
Though Jerebko played only 10 minutes, most of them when the game was out of reach, his energy fueled one of Utah’s late come back attempts, enabling a 10 to one Jazz run to reach single digits. He made his only three attempt on the night and two of three shots in total, making him one of only three Jazz players to shoot 50 percent or better from the field1
92.5 – Utah’s offensive rating, 12th lowest this season. Not surprisingly, they lost all but one of those games.
20 – Jazz second chance points to Portland’s seven, which kept the final tally from being even worse.
18 – Assists by Utah, their fewest since the home debacle against Atlanta.
41.6 – Utah’s effective field goal percentage, seventh lowest this season.
Without question this is not how the Jazz thought their regular season would end. They have quietly been targeting the number three seed for longer than most would have considered within reason. But neither should this loss shake their confidence, nor is it likely to. Occasionally this team simply can’t hit better than one in four of their three point shots, which is what happened throughout most of this game. When that happens, they usually lose.
But that’s the exception, not the rule. This is still a team that ended the regular season winning 28 of 34 games, including 15 of 17 on the road. The Thunder may have won three of four meetings this year, but all those games were played before the end of the December, a stretch where Utah was at absolute rock bottom and with Gobert typically out of the lineup. The Thunder haven’t faced this Jazz team, and the Jazz haven’t faced a Thunder team without Defensive Player of the Year candidate Andre Roberson.
Utah will take the sixth seed, and the Thunder, and Russell Westbrook the triple double machine. They’ll take the challenge of stealing away home court. It isn’t what they hoped and planned for, but they’ll take it.
And if I had to put down money right now, I’d wager it on the Jazz winning the series. The playoffs start Saturday!
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