Twice in two years the Utah Jazz have faced the number one overall seed in the NBA Playoffs in the Conference Semi-Finals. Today’s 112 – 102 loss to the Houston Rockets means they have twice bowed out against that challenge. But nothing about tonight’s game was old or tired. Instead, this game was about two superstar guards, one legendary veteran and one rookie perhaps a legend in the making, both providing the NBA with something gloriously new.
The Jazz entered this deciding Game 5 hobbled. Ricky Rubio missed the entire series with a left hamstring injury, and last game Dante Exum joined him on the bench with the same ailment. Derrick Favors has played the last few games on a tender ankle. When a fifth seed is that banged up, already down three games to one, and on the road, it makes sense that the league’s best regular-season team might expect them to lay down and quit.
Not the Utah Jazz.
Through the first 22 minutes of the game, the team with less talent and worse health hung with the Rockets, keeping the game tied at 43. A veteran superstar for Houston then decided to take the game in hand, and it wasn’t presumptive MVP James Harden. Chris Paul, Houston’s daring new addition in the off-season, drilled two of the Rockets’s three three-point shots in the final two minutes of the first half, catalyzing an 11 to three run that gave the home team an eight-point halftime lead.
But Utah was within striking distance. They just needed an offensive lift.
Enter Donovan Mitchell. The 21-year-old had never looked like a rookie until the series against the Rockets, where the combination of skill and intensity, at times, finally appeared too much for the poised young man to handle. But the Jazz coaching staff has been lauding Mitchell’s incredible ability to learn all season. He learned through the first four games of the series. Now, with the season on the line, he had enough of being the student.
So he started teaching the Rockets. The lesson? A career-high tying 22 points in the third quarter… of an elimination game on the road. All but the first two of these points came in that pivotal third quarter:
Superstars are made in the playoffs, and Mitchell took this game in hand and yanked it away from Paul and Harden, giving his team a three point lead entering the fourth quarter.
In a chance knock of knees that was awful for all basketball fans, those in Utah in particular, Mitchell soon after left the game not to return after a collision with Harden. Meanwhile, it just so happens that the young maestro’s mentor was wearing Rockets’s red, and after 85 playoff games and never reaching a Conference Final, Chris Paul was done waiting.
Paul clawed back nearly every point Mitchell had created, scoring a magnificent 20 points in the closing quarter. At 33-years-old, no player on the court had as much motivation to win this game as Paul, and he did exactly that, putting up the greatest playoff effort of his Hall of Fame career: a playoff career high 41 points, 10 assists, and seven rebounds on only 22 shots, including an unbelievable eight of 10 from three.
Utah bled every drop of talent from their depleted roster, to the point of marshaling 39 combined points from Alec Burks and Royce O’Neale. But Paul wasn’t losing this game. And so the Rockets move on, as expected, though not without a hobbled Mitchell and his team of upstarts offering up everything they had.
Superstar: Donovan Mitchell (24 points, 9 assists, 4 rebounds, 1 steal, 2 threes, 4 free throws)
Mitchell limps away from his first playoff experience having played 11 games and averaged 24 points, six rebounds, four assists, and a steal and a half. How many other players in NBA history can claim that statistical profile over that many games as a rookie in the playoffs? None. It’s never been done before. In those 11 playoff games, Mitchell met or exceed his career high from the regular season in rebounds three times and in assists twice. In Round 1, he scored 38 points to close out Russell Westbrook. In deciding games, he TWICE scored 22 in a single quarter. There is no debating whether the Utah Jazz have a superstar. None.
Secondary Stars: Alec Burks (22 points, 5 assists, 3 rebounds, 1 steal, 3 threes, 5 free throws) and Royce O’Neale (17 points, 3 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal, 1 three, 4 free throws)
There isn’t a better story from the series loss to Houston than Burks. In the absence of Ricky Rubio, he not only re-entered the lineup but likely revitalized his career. He scored in double figures in five playoff games, including games of 22 points and five assists as well as 17 points and six assists. He ended up being Utah’s fourth leading scorer against the Rockets.
While Mitchell’s name has been written across the sky in fire this season, O’Neale has at the very least been etched in stone as a significant NBA contributor for the rest of his career. After being one of the best bench defenders in the league during the regular season, he took Rubio’s starting role against an elite NBA squad in playoff mode and more than held his own. At the season’s start, it would have been long odds whether O’Neale would score 17 points in two games all year. He did in two of the last three games against Houston. The Jazz turned Joe Ingles from a fringe NBA talent into a quality starter. O’Neale looks like he may be on the same trajectory – and, like Mitchell, it’s worth remembering he’s ending his rookie season.
Secret Star: Rudy Gobert (12 points, 9 rebounds, 1 steal, 5 blocks, +2)
This series was difficult across the board for the Jazz but perhaps hardest of all for Gobert. Entering Game 5, Gobert was in the unfamiliar position of having the worst plus-minus on the Jazz in the series. While he didn’t dominate today, he did for the first time match Clint Capela’s impact in the game, including out-rebounding him nine to five. He was the only Jazz player with a positive plus-minus tonight. Gobert is immensely proud and, like Mitchell, is certain to focus on ways to improve upon his performance in the playoffs. Look for him to obsess about Houston switching Harden and Paul onto him repeatedly without fear throughout this series. It will be interesting to see what he’s added to his game next season because of that thorn in his psyche.
76 percent – Three point shooting by Paul (eight of 10) and PJ Tucker (five of seven), who was magnificent in this series. Those two players made three more threes than the entire Jazz squad.
34 – Points in the paint allowed by Utah, few enough to win this game without Paul’s and Tucker’s long range heroics.
24 – Jazz assists, second most of the series and playoffs by Utah.
94.6 – Houston’s defensive rating with Trevor Ariza on the floor. His impact far exceeds his raw statistics in this series.
16 – Missed field goals in the paint by the Jazz. Perhaps more than anything else, it was the team’s inability to finish these shots that determined the outcome of the last three games.
Looking at the season’s end from its beginning, would a 4 to 1 loss in the Conference Semi-Finals to the league’s best regular season team be considered a best-case scenario? Very possibly. Some might argue that would require tearing another game from Houston, but recall that in a similar situation last season versus the Warriors the Jazz were swept. Very possibly, Utah exits the 2017-18 season on a higher note than they ever believed they could reach this year. Just consider all the reasons the Jazz and their fans have to celebrate:
The Rockets are, right now, a better team than the Jazz, as shown by their decisive four to one win this series. They’re also far older, the second oldest team in the league. The Warriors are facing a potential financial cataclysm in the next few years. The Spurs are both old and, amazingly, in the purgatory of potentially alienating Kawhi Leonard to the point where he may move on from San Antonio.
The future of the West is far from certain. After this most amazing stepping-stone season, make no mistake: the Jazz are placing no ceilings on how high they might leap in the future.
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