If there is such a thing as a quality loss, the Utah Jazz leave San Antonio with exactly that after falling a hair short in a playoff-caliber contest to the Spurs 124 to 120 – though it’s little consolation for a team that, with the loss, now holds a tenuous single game advantage in trying to hold on to eighth spot in the West.
The signs that this game may be special came early in the form of LaMarcus Aldridge, whose career high 45-point night started quickly as he poured in 17 points in the first quarter. With Aldridge unable to miss and a scheme fine-tuned by Gregg Popovich to neutralize All-NBA center Rudy Gobert, who finished the night with 13 points and only eight rebounds, the Jazz looked unsettled early.
Yet after being down 29 to 21 after the first, Utah reined in any urge to panic and fought back despite the Spurs’s humming offense. Weathering Aldridge’s 28 points at half time, the Jazz narrowed the deficit to six. In a defensive-oriented third quarter, Utah scratched another point closer by period’s end despite shooting only 38 percent in the quarter. Entering the deciding quarter, the Spurs, shooting 49 percent from the field at that point, held a four point lead.
San Antonio stayed hot and widened the lead back to eight with six minutes to play. It looked like the Jazz, who played yesterday in a victory over the Mavericks, might run out of gas. The in a sign that foreshadowed the amazing and unpredictable end to this game, Derrick Favors hit a corner three, trimming the lead to five and giving the weary road challengers new life. What followed was approximately ten minutes of basketball as brilliantly crazy as any in recent memory.
Just consider the following sequence of noteworthy plays to close out the fourth quarter:
Utah’s young star was everywhere down the stretch of this game. The players capable of creating that type of clutch impact, on both sides of the ball, against a team as good and motivated as the Spurs, is very, very short. LeBron James. Russell Westbrook. Kevin Durant. Giannis Antetokounmpo. Anthony Davis. Maybe a few others like Joel Embiid, Paul George, or Jimmy Butler could approximate such a stretch.
And Mitchell.
With all the momentum in Utah’s favor, they had to like their chances to steal the game. Early in overtime it looked like they would. Gobert finished a three-point play at the hoop and Mitchell matched a Mills jumper with one of his own. Then the Spurs took hold of the game by playing both hard and wisely sticking to their game plan.
All night they had countered Gobert with a variety of strategies: getting up into his body, sometimes two and three people at once, so he couldn’t get off his feet for rebounds; making him cover huge amounts of ground to recover to contest shots at the rim; and as would prove key late, boxing out hard when he helped on defense near the rim, counting on offensive rebound opportunities.
On back-to-back plays in overtime, Aldridge drew Gobert to him and shot, opening up a putback by Rudy Gay, and then Gay did the same, missing a shot that Aldridge gathered in and put through the hoop. That final offensive rebound and field goal gave Aldridge his 45th point and the Spurs 122 points, a number the exhausted Jazz simply couldn’t match.
When the final horn sounded, Aldridge’s career high was just enough to give the Spurs their sixth straight home win, their longest win streak in over a year, and end Utah’s 12-game road winning streak.
Superstar: Donovan Mitchell (35 points, 3 assists, 2 rebounds, 4 steals, 4 threes)
There are valid criticisms about Mitchell. His three point accuracy has taken a notable downturn late in the season (he was four of 13 tonight), lowering his season average to 34 percent. His shooting volume sometimes swells as his efficiency lowers, often due to highly difficult shots he accepts too readily (as his 36 field goal attempts this game attest). He sometimes makes rookie errors, such as tonight’s costly turnover while being double teamed and inexplicably saving a ball from out of bounds and giving the Spurs an extra possession in crunch time. But these things are critiquing the imperfect cape of a superman. The combination of guts, confidence, and ability Mitchell displayed down the stretch as he willed his team into overtime against arguably the best-coached team in the league was astounding. Maybe 10 NBA stars are capable of doing what this 21-year-old rookie just did. Even fewer are willing to try. Mitchell ALWAYS tries, and succeeds with stunning frequency. If the Jazz make the playoffs, he’s Rookie of the Year. Period.
Secondary Stars: Derrick Favors (22 points, 8 rebounds, 1 assist, 2 blocks, 1 three) and Ricky Rubio (20 points, 8 assists, 2 rebounds, 2 steals, 1 block, 3 threes)
Favors was Utah’s best big tonight. He required only 10 shots to get his 22 points, hit the three that gave the team new life for a fourth quarter push, and played defense far better than Aldridge’s shooting made it look. The Spurs offensive leader took multiple fade-aways with Favors’s hand in perfect defensive position; Aldridge even fell the floor on several he thrust so hard fading back. Just about every one went in. It was a career night for a multiple time All-Star. Against anything less, Favors’s gave up shots that almost certainly win this game.
With Mitchell struggling mightily from three most of the night, Gobert effectively schemed out of the game by Popovich, and Ingles struggling to even get off shots, Rubio did a ton of heavy lifting offensively to keep his team within striking range. He didn’t miss a single three (three of three) or free throw (seven of seven) and so required only 10 shots to get his 20 points. He also led the team in assists. The Jazz won’t lose many games where Rubio produces 20 and eight.
Secret Star: Dante Exum (4 points, 4 assists, 2 rebounds, +4)
While Exum made no impact in the second half, unfortunate in an overtime game in the second night of a back-to-back, his first half impact was notable. He finished two nice layups, once over the Spurs defense and once by tricking it with a nifty shift of pace dribble. He also continued to distribute assists with encouraging rapidity, notching four in only 10 minutes of play. It’s just glimpses so far, which sums up the problem of Exum’s career to this point. He has nine games to turn those glimpses into full games.
65 percent – Field goal percentage in the fourth quarter and overtime by Aldridge, Mills, and Ginobili. Their 13 makes on 20 attempts is even crazier given the difficulty of many of these shots. Given how Utah defended, a typical NBA team would make maybe seven or eight of those field goals.
11 – Offensive rebounds by the Spurs, two of which just killed Utah’s in overtime.
Minus-10 – The plus-minus for each of Mitchell and Gobert, indicative of Popovich’s brilliant game plan keying on that pair.
23 – Point advantage by San Antonio’s bench, which scored 40 to Utah’s 17. 33 came from Ginobili and Rudy Gay.
78 – Combined points scored by both teams in the wild fourth quarter.
4 – Jazz players who played 40-plus minutes (or close enough): Mitchell’s 44 and Rubio’s, Gobert’s, and Ingles’s 40 each. These guys all played last night.
The Spurs entered this game off a dominant five-game home winning stand and were fighting for their playoff lives for the first time in decades. They had already lost to the Jazz three times this year. Meanwhile, Utah played on the road on the wrong side of a back-to-back. And it still took an Aldridge career high, a near season high from Mills, and a fourth quarter Ginobili from the way-back machine (12 points in the quarter!) for the Spurs to put the Jazz away.
This team in Salt Lake is really, really good. And they’re in eighth place only one game ahead of the ninth place Nuggets. Thus is the paradox of this season in the Western Conference.
Will it take a similar effort to have a chance to win Sunday in Golden State? The world champions have been decimated by injuries recently and look to be set in second position in the West, so the game appears unpredictable. But even if the Warriors were full strength, Utah needs that win more than the champs. Sunday will see if they can get it.
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