Some thoughts on the Utah Jazz schedule:
- Of the 66 games, they play 11 on national TV. Not bad for a small-market lottery team whose biggest draws are Al Jefferson and its rookies and sophomores.
- Their opening game is against the Lakers, but for the Lakers, it's their third game in three nights.
- Deron Williams will come home on January 14. By the way, when you look at the flurry around Chris Paul and Dwight Howard, it's clear that the Jazz did the right thing in trading D-Will. At least they got Devin Harris, Derrick Favors, Enes Kanter and the Warriors' 2012 first-round pick for him. And the Nets will sweat all year that they've done enough to have Deron re-sign.
- Jimmer's coming to town twice. I expect it will be the loudest ovation since Derek Fisher showed in the third quarter to help advance the Jazz to the Western Conference Finals.
- The Jazz have plenty of home games to start off. For such a young team, it'll be good for them to get that experience in front of friendly crowds.
Current Roster:
PG - Devin Harris
SG - Gordon Hayward, Raja Bell, Alec Burks
SF - CJ Miles
PF - Paul Millsap, Derrick Favors, Jeremy Evans
C - Al Jefferson, Mehmet Okur, Enes Kanter
Likely re-sign: Earl Watson
That's 12 right there. I'm intrigued if they can work out a mutually beneficial deal to bring Andrei Kirilenko back. My guess is not. So they'll see who gets amnestied, which free agents will get ridiculously overpaid on the first day of free agency, and if they get a trade offer worth making.
Tyrone Corbin wants to win, but the future of this teams is the Fresh Four (Hayward, Favors, Kanter, Burks). If they're somehow good enough that this team can get to the playoffs, I'm shocked and impressed, but for this 66-game season, it may be more beneficial in the long run to develop the youngsters, and take advantage of two lottery first-round picks in the deep 2012 draft (the Warriors pick is Top 7 protected, but I see them being about 11th in the West.)
I'm intrigued, intrigued, intrigued.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Saturday, December 3, 2011
NBA Christmas
No one can put it quite like Bill Simmons.
I'm thrilled the NBA is back, and with Chris Paul already demanding trades, doesn't look like much has changed after all. Ah well; don't care. This is going to be one of the fastest, most furious NBA Decembers ever.
I'm thrilled the NBA is back, and with Chris Paul already demanding trades, doesn't look like much has changed after all. Ah well; don't care. This is going to be one of the fastest, most furious NBA Decembers ever.
Saturday, November 19, 2011
My Top 5 Utah Jazz memories

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.

Friday, November 18, 2011
NBA Owners Deserve Most of the Blame
I acknowledge that the players may have become too powerful. You look at how LeBron James left Cleveland in tatters, and how Toronto received nothing for Chris Bosh's departure. Carmelo Anthony held Denver hostage while pushing for a trade to New York, and Utah traded away Deron Williams for fear he'd bolt in 2012. Better get something for him now. And the fanbases of New Orleans and Orlando have to be depressed about the odds of keeping Chris Paul and Dwight Howard, respectively.
But the primary reason there are no NBA games on tonight are the owners. This is a lockout. They are the ones forbidding their players from competing.
Here's a few columns I've found I agree with:
Money quote from the Boston Globe:
Money quote from Sports Illustrated:
There's still time to get a shortened season, while the majority of the remaining fans don't hold the players to equal or greater blame (which was not true in the shortened 1999 season). But the owners are willing to lose a full season, and many of them are, then they need to be prepared for the NBA to fall behind the NHL and MLS in attendance averages. Do they really want that?
But the primary reason there are no NBA games on tonight are the owners. This is a lockout. They are the ones forbidding their players from competing.
Here's a few columns I've found I agree with:
Money quote from the Boston Globe:
"In his memo to NBA players imploring them to make a deal, commissioner David Stern asked players to focus on the compromises owners have made. Then he mentioned backing down on a hard salary cap, roll-backs of existing contracts -- you know, the ones owners negotiated -- and the abolition of guaranteed contracts.
"How can you concede something you never had? It’s logic more twisted than a bread tie.
"NBA stars such as LeBron, Kobe, D-Wade, Kevin Durant and Derrick Rose aren’t just employees. They’re the product, and that’s the irony here. The NBA is trying to slay a monster it created."
Money quote from Sports Illustrated:
"If Jerry Buss, Jim Dolan and other big-market owners had been willing to share their revenues earlier and more comprehensively for the greater health of the league, could the division among owners have been headed off?
"Or look at it from the other side of the owners' room. If so many of these small-market owners had operated their teams more wisely and efficiently, might the bigger-market teams have been more willing to share money with them on good faith that they were investing in the health of the league?
"And then could the owners together have not inched forward on a few points of contention here and there in order to ensure agreement with the players?"
There's still time to get a shortened season, while the majority of the remaining fans don't hold the players to equal or greater blame (which was not true in the shortened 1999 season). But the owners are willing to lose a full season, and many of them are, then they need to be prepared for the NBA to fall behind the NHL and MLS in attendance averages. Do they really want that?
Friday, November 11, 2011
NFL Power Rankings 11/11/11
Going into the weekend.
NFC
1. PACKERS (8-0) - They look like they have a great shot at finally killing dethroning the 1972 Miami Dolphins. Aaron Rogers is the best quarterback on Earth.
2. 49ERS (7-1) - Alex Smith had been declared a bust by many, but with a better coach and an upgraded offenive line, hey, he's finally putting up the number that behoove a #1 pick. Frank Gore is able to do more damage when the passing game works, and they have the #1 defense in the NFL.
3. GIANTS (6-2) - Eli Manning's been up and down, but Brandon Jacobs is playing like his 2008 self with Ahmad Bradshaw out. Victor Cruz has been a great find.
4. LIONS (6-2) - They need Calvin Johnson and Matthew Stafford to stay healthy, and if they do, I foresee a Conference Finals in their future. Not the Super Bowl; sorry you're in the Packers' conference.
5. SAINTS (6-3) - They can put up the points, but Drew Brees needs to get his interception count down. Not to mention the Saints' D has allowed more points than the Dolphins.
15. RAMS (1-7) - They have the worst offense and defense in the NFC. Nuff said.
AFC
1. RAVENS (6-2) - Yeah, I'd have to say they're the favorite in the volatile AFC right now. They step up to the plate in the big games.
2. BENGALS (6-2) - They've been playing great, but can their star rookie quarterback/receiver combo keep it up down the stretch?
3. TEXANS (6-3) - The one-two rushing combo of Arian Foster and Ben Tate has covered for the absense of #1 receiver Andre Johnson.
4. JETS (5-3) - The ship appears to have been righted, but the real test is if they can knock down the wobbling Patriots. But the Jets tend to be the one team that can knock off the Pats when they're good, let alone when they're on a losing streak.
5. PATRIOTS (5-3) - I do think the Jets are going to beat the Patriots, but when you look at their schedule, I see them ending the season at worst 10-6, but after the Jets they could just as easily finish on a 7-0 run.
15. COLTS (0-9) - Peyton Manning hides a lot of flaws, but this goes beyond that. Their defense is porous, their running game is ineffective, and Reggie Wayne and Austin Collie can't do much if they don't have a quarterback that can get them a ball. Miami is praying they somehow find a place to win.
NFC
1. PACKERS (8-0) - They look like they have a great shot at finally killing dethroning the 1972 Miami Dolphins. Aaron Rogers is the best quarterback on Earth.
2. 49ERS (7-1) - Alex Smith had been declared a bust by many, but with a better coach and an upgraded offenive line, hey, he's finally putting up the number that behoove a #1 pick. Frank Gore is able to do more damage when the passing game works, and they have the #1 defense in the NFL.
3. GIANTS (6-2) - Eli Manning's been up and down, but Brandon Jacobs is playing like his 2008 self with Ahmad Bradshaw out. Victor Cruz has been a great find.
4. LIONS (6-2) - They need Calvin Johnson and Matthew Stafford to stay healthy, and if they do, I foresee a Conference Finals in their future. Not the Super Bowl; sorry you're in the Packers' conference.
5. SAINTS (6-3) - They can put up the points, but Drew Brees needs to get his interception count down. Not to mention the Saints' D has allowed more points than the Dolphins.
15. RAMS (1-7) - They have the worst offense and defense in the NFC. Nuff said.
AFC
1. RAVENS (6-2) - Yeah, I'd have to say they're the favorite in the volatile AFC right now. They step up to the plate in the big games.
2. BENGALS (6-2) - They've been playing great, but can their star rookie quarterback/receiver combo keep it up down the stretch?
3. TEXANS (6-3) - The one-two rushing combo of Arian Foster and Ben Tate has covered for the absense of #1 receiver Andre Johnson.
4. JETS (5-3) - The ship appears to have been righted, but the real test is if they can knock down the wobbling Patriots. But the Jets tend to be the one team that can knock off the Pats when they're good, let alone when they're on a losing streak.
5. PATRIOTS (5-3) - I do think the Jets are going to beat the Patriots, but when you look at their schedule, I see them ending the season at worst 10-6, but after the Jets they could just as easily finish on a 7-0 run.
15. COLTS (0-9) - Peyton Manning hides a lot of flaws, but this goes beyond that. Their defense is porous, their running game is ineffective, and Reggie Wayne and Austin Collie can't do much if they don't have a quarterback that can get them a ball. Miami is praying they somehow find a place to win.
Monday, October 31, 2011
NBA Players must give in
I recognize that between the owners and players, the owners are on the more side of wrong than the players. But that doesn't matter. The powerful billionaires will win out against the less-powerful millionaires every time. Even if the owners are going to contradict themselves in the very-near future with free-agent signing frenzies, they can afford to lose a season. The players can't. Oh, LeBron James might be able to. But how many mid-level guys spend like Antoine Walker?
So the players should take the deal. It's only going to get worse. They're still going to get guaranteed contracts. They just won't be as long for as much.
Friday, October 7, 2011
End the NBA Lockout Now
They'll lose billions if they grouse over how to split hundreds of millions.
Sunday, August 21, 2011
Kiley & Booms
From 2000-2002, Fox Sports Radio had the Kiley & Booms show, a sports-talk radio show that was part Mike & Mike, part Hannity & Colmes, part Abbott & Costello. Kevin Kiley & Chuck Booms had chemistry like no sports duo I've heard before or since. I just read that they're reuniting to host a morning sports-talk show in Cleveland. So in these post-LeBron days, at least Cleveland gets Kyrie Irving, and Kiley & Booms.
Thursday, August 4, 2011
NBA - Millionaires v. Billionaires
Here's an article that swung my sympathies much closer to the players.
"Purchased by Peter Holt in 1996 for $76 million, the Spurs are now (according to Forbes) worth $404 million. The Spurs lost $4.7 million in 2010 (again, according to Forbes), which was an aberration -- it was the first time in eight years that the team lost money. But Mr. Holt must have found solace in the fact that if he had sold his team at market value, he would have cleared around $300 million. On a 14-year investment. Or a little over $21 million per year. Even if his team had lost $4.7 million every year, Mr. Holt would not soon have been caught toting his bindle down the highways of America.
"NBA owners are like investors who want their stocks to provide them with dividends and gain value over the long run, but who won't admit to such lofty desires. Instead, they focus public attention on the fact that this year's dividend hasn’t been up to snuff. (Which, as I established at the outset, may or may not even be true.)"
"Purchased by Peter Holt in 1996 for $76 million, the Spurs are now (according to Forbes) worth $404 million. The Spurs lost $4.7 million in 2010 (again, according to Forbes), which was an aberration -- it was the first time in eight years that the team lost money. But Mr. Holt must have found solace in the fact that if he had sold his team at market value, he would have cleared around $300 million. On a 14-year investment. Or a little over $21 million per year. Even if his team had lost $4.7 million every year, Mr. Holt would not soon have been caught toting his bindle down the highways of America.
"NBA owners are like investors who want their stocks to provide them with dividends and gain value over the long run, but who won't admit to such lofty desires. Instead, they focus public attention on the fact that this year's dividend hasn’t been up to snuff. (Which, as I established at the outset, may or may not even be true.)"
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)