Saturday, November 19, 2011

My Top 5 Utah Jazz memories

5. Deron Williams' debut game - There was general shock around the fanbase when Jerry Sloan decided Keith McLeod would be his starting point guard, and the #3 pick in the draft was going to come off the bench. Williams came into the game with a chip on his shoulder, and the highlight was in the final second of the third quarter, he put up a 3-pointer from 60 feet away and nailed it. It was a sign of perennial playoff-appearances to come.

4. The first game after Stockton retired and Malone left, the Jazz were predicted to be the worst team in the NBA. Jerry Sloan had a patchwork team of Andrei Kirilenko, Matt Harpring, Carlos Arroyo, DeShawn Stevenson, Jarron Collins, and a bunch of other leftovers and scraps. They opened against the Blazers, and this rag-tag group played as a team and won, and went on to an imporbable 42-40 season. It's the closest Sloan's come to winning Coach of the Year.

3. The Jazz are down by two in the final seconds to the best team in the NBA, the Cleveland Cavaliers. LeBron James and company are providing lockdown defense and the only guy who can get a little space is D-League signee Sundiata Gaines. At the buzzer, over LeBron's outstretched fingers, Sunny-D nails the 3. Most players can go their whole careers without feeling that burst of joy Gaines felt.

2. The Jazz's two point guards are both in foul trouble in the third quarter in the playoffs against the Warriors. We keep hearing that Derek Fisher is on a plane heading back to Salt Lake, and Jerry Sloan left an active roster spot for him in case he made it back to the game in time. CJ Miles and Andrei Kirilenko are valiantly assuming point-guard duties, but it isn't really their position. I was at that game, and I'll never forget the ovation we gave Fisher when he showed up at courtside and entered the game. Combine that with him drawing the crucial offensive-foul on Baron Davis at the end of the game, and it was magic.

1. The Shot. That's what we call it in these here parts. Stockton-and-Malone have been a power duo for over a decade, but the Utah Jazz had never made the NBA Finals. I can still hear Greg Gumbel's call when John Stockton hits the game-winning three over Charles Barkley to finally get them there. The usually stoic Stockton jumped in the air for joy.

No comments: