Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Jazz All-Star Weekend, Then a Kings Loss

Gordon Hayward and Derrick Favors did very well in the Rising Stars Challenge game, and they were key pieces to TeamChuck getting the win. They each scored 14 points, and they actually played some defense. Hayward had two blocks. If Hayward played with as much confidence in himself that Charles Barkley and Kenny Smith showed in him, he'll be in the Sunday All-Star game in two years.

Overall, yeah, the Slam-Dunk Contest wasn't that great, but Jeremy Evans's double-dunk would be a contender in any year of the contest.

Didn't watch the actual All-Star game. No Jazz players in it, so didn't care as much. Watched the Oscars instead.

So with most of the Jazz players getting a week's rest, would it make a difference?

The Jazz lost 103-96 to the Kings. Not a good way to start the second half.

- Al Jefferson and Paul Millsap did not attempt a single free-throw.

- The Jazz shot 11-22 free throws. Missed 11, lost by 7.

- Gordon Hayward missed all three of his 3-point attempts.

- Devin Harris played better than Earl Watson.

- There's been rumblings that Ty is thinking of removing Hayward from the starting line-up when Raja Bell gets back. I think it's be a mistake. If he wants to bench Hayward, then he should start Alec Burks. A starting line-up of Devin Harris, Raja Bell, Josh Howard, Paul Millsap and Al Jefferson tells me you're going for a deep playoff run. In 2009.

- The best they can hope for at this point is the 8th seed, and if they do that they lose this summer's first-round draft pick to the T-Wolves. They'd be better off to miss the playoffs, keep the pick, then use it to package with the Warriors pick they're going to get (top-7 protected, but the Warriors are playing just good enough, the Jazz should get it), and move up in the draft to get a true star player. Or use a pick and some players to go get a point-guard upgrade or a reliable outside shooter.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

The worst Jazz first half yet

The Utah Jazz were going against the thinnest roster in the NBA. The New Orleans Hornets were without four of their five best players and only had nine players total. Of those nine, three were rookies I'd never heard of. Maybe the Jazz figured they could roll out of bed and beat the depleted Hornets by 20.

Look at the plus/minus of the Jazz players:

Paul Millsap -16
Devin Harris -14
Josh Howard -14
CJ Miles -14
Al Jefferson -9
Raja Bell -3
Enes Kanter +3
Earl Watson +8
Gordon Hayward +8
Derrick Favors +10
Alec Burks +11

No negative connotation can accurately capture how bad the starting lineup was. And then Miles & Howard came off the bench and weren't any better. The best line-up wound up being Earl Watson and the four lottery-pick youngsters. At one point the Jazz were down 20 and they fought all the way back to 83-80, but couldn't quite pull off the win.

- Millsap and Jefferson combined for 18 points and 17 rebounds.

- Favors and Kanter combined for 20 points and 17 rebounds.

- Chris Kaman looked like his old All-Star self.

- Devin Harris hasn't looked like his old All-Star self all year. He was outplayed by Greveis Vasquez. Vasquez, Al-Farouq Aminu and Xavier Henry are three sophomores drafted by other teams who've wound up here. This hodge-podge team was 4-23, and now they're 5-23.

- The rumor is that DeMarre Carroll was signed by the Jazz to give them flexibility for trade possibilities. I think Devin Harris is the one they want to move, and they're willing to throw in Miles and/or Bell to make something work.

- Raja Bell was 3-4 from 3-point land.  He's their most reliable 3-point shooter.  granted, they're the one of the worst perimeter shooting teams int he NBA.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Jazz muzzle the Grizzlies 98-88



- Gordon Hayward was great.  He defended Rudy Gay about as well as anyone could, but Gay still ended with 22 points.  Well, Hayward had 23.

- It was nice to see the whole team have early aggression.  That had been their problem against the Thunder; they didn't attack the basket enough.  The Jazz knocked the Grizzlies on their heels early, scoring the first 7 points of the game.

- The Jazz bench's struggles continued in the first half but they were more productive in the second half.  It'd be nice if they could blow out a team to get more minutes, let the starters get more rest.  And yet, Ty Corbin did a good job once again with the minutes.  Hayward had the most with 35:22.

- The Grizzlies had 17 assists and 18 turnovers.  The Jazz had 26 assists and 13 turnovers.

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Jazz win, Lakers lose

My thoughts on the Jazz beating the Lakers 96-87.

- HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

- Ty Corbin did a good job managing minutes tonight. No one cracked 31 minutes on the Jazz.

- Derrick Favors and Enes Kanter not only took advantage on the Lakers' thin bench, but they had pretty good D on Andrew Bynum.


- Bryant, Bynum and Gasol had 71 of the Lakers' 87 points.

- Devin Harris wasn't bad on defense, but his offense was awful tonight. 0-6 shooting, 1-2 free throws, 3 assists in 21 minutes. He was benched in the third. Earl "The Bulldog" Watson was a stud. He got everything rolling and finished with 11 assists.

- Gordon Hayward fared best defensively on Kobe Bryant, and therefore didn't seem to look much for his own shot.

- Al Jefferson had 18 and 13, and Paul Millsap had 16 and 13. They also each had 2 blocks.

- The turning point in the game was early in the fourth when LA coach Mike Brown screamed at the ref for not calling a foul when Watson stole the ball from Gasol. Brown wound up bumping the ref and got thrown out. The crowd roared to their feet and after the free throws, and it was the spark the Jazz needed.

- The Lakers had 30 free-throw attempts to the Jazz's 20.

- Alec Burks was a DNP-CD.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Jazz lose heartbreakers to Clippers 107-105

Thoughts on tonight's game:

- Chris Paul and Blake Griffin make for a scary duo.

- Al Jefferson was a beast inside with his own 27-point, 12-rebound game.

- The injury to Earl Watson hurts.  He tends to rise to the occasion in games like these while Devin Harris wilts.  Watson was +8 in his 20 minutes before he went out with the ankle sprain.  Harris finished with -7.  Jamaal Tinsley, their third point guard, was -8 in his 7 minutes.

- Last time Paul Millsap outplayed Blake Griffin, but last time Blake didn't have CP3 passing him the ball.


- When Blake Griffin got his fifth foul, I was excited.  I figured the Jazz could pound inside and Blake would be afraid to pick up the sixth foul.  But when Millsap had the ball in the post, Blake started to fall before Millsap even bumped him to put up the shot.  The ref called an offensive foul.  Now Millsap made the shot, and it would have tied the game.  But the refs are not about to call Blake for his sixth foul, and I don't know why they didn't do a no-call for a flop that would make Vlade Divac blush.  The Jazz never recovered.

- Beyond that game-changer, the Jazz lost in other ways.  They were outrebounded 50-35.  They missed 10 free throws.

- Derrick Favors played inspired.  He had 14 points, 3 rebounds and 2 blocks in 18 minutes. And he made all his free throws.  He probably should have had some more of Sap's minutes tonight.

- Mo Williams had the least efficient 19 points ever.

- Josh Howard wound up dribbling down the court three possessions in a row.  If he'd been a faster guard, he could have thrown some passes for easy assists, but since he's Howard, the Clippers guards caught up to him and stopped any quick scoring from happening.  On the third time, the ball was stolen, Josh was benched, and he didn't come back until the second half.

- Millsap and Miles each hit a 3 in the final few seconds trying to keep the Jazz alive.  It all came down to the Jazz not being able to grab the offensive board on a deliberately missed CJ free throw.