看板 UTAH-JAZZ 關於我們 聯絡資訊
Jazz finds its rhythm once again Utah's most recent division title didn't come without obstacles. By Scott Howard-Cooper - Bee Staff Writer Last Updated 12:18 am PDT Friday, April 6, 2007 Story appeared in SPORTS section, Page C1 So this is Plan B. The fallback. The team with which it got stuck. Poor Utah Jazz. Things went so wrong. The badly smudged blueprint and the questioned draft pick, the crucial decision that could be controlled, has led to such a setback that the Jazz will only cruise to the Northwest Division title and win 50 games for the first time since the 2000-01 season. That much, at least, was planned, the part about returning to the Western Conference elite following the retirement of John Stockton and the free-agent departure of Karl Malone in the summer of 2003. The rare opportunity to be far below the salary cap would be used to aggressively pursue emerging talent while the lottery picks, likewise unusual sightings in Salt Lake City, would add a star of the future. It just took the long way to get there. The Jazz signed Corey Maggette and Jason Terry as free agents ... and got rebuffed. The Jazz responded by signing Carlos Boozer and Mehmet Okur, without their original teams having the right to match the offer, and ended up getting centerpieces of what would become a very good frontline. The Jazz drafted Deron Williams ... and got ripped the ensuing season for passing on Chris Paul, the eventual Rookie of the Year. Williams responded by showing star potential at point guard in his second season and flipping the conversation to where some now say they prefer Williams. Entering tonight's game at Arco Arena, Utah has a 48-26 record, a division crown in hand and a roster filled with 20-somethings that should keep improving. That, and it has vindication. "We're very, very lucky to have had some of these things happen," coach Jerry Sloan said. "That's part of it in this business. You can plan and plan. But sometimes, you just need to be lucky." Utah's luck was mostly centralized in that fateful summer of 2003, after the breakup of the historic Stockton-to-Malone tandem. On July 14, the Jazz signed one restricted free agent, Maggette, to an offer sheet reportedly worth $42 million over six seasons, only to have the Clippers match the deal July 29 and keep the athletic small forward. Utah signed another restricted free agent, Terry, on Sept. 11 for a reported three years and $22.5 million, but the Hawks matched Sept. 25 to retain the fleet guard. Without the desired roster renovation, the Jazz missed the playoffs in 2003-04, the first time that had happened since 1982-83, albeit with a still-respectable 42-40 mark. The front office moved again. This time, signing unrestricted free agents removed the right of first refusal from Cleveland (Boozer) and Detroit (Okur). Neither player was a star, but the promise was obvious, especially with Boozer. He averaged 15.5 points and 11.4 rebounds in his second season and turned that into a six-year commitment from Utah. The signing came three days after Okur, a spot starter with the Pistons, got six seasons as well. Maggette became a 20-point scorer with the Clippers, before feuding with coach Mike Dunleavy and getting a reserve role. Terry spent one more season in Atlanta before becoming an important part of Dallas' success, but power forward Boozer and center Okur have remained at the forefront of the Jazz building. They team with Andrei Kirilenko for a dangerous, versatile frontline, with Boozer going from two injury-riddled seasons and criticism after his arrival to averaging 21.1 points and 11.9 rebounds and shooting 56.1 percent in 2006-07. "You never know," Sloan said of their unexpected path to Salt Lake City. "But that's what basketball is about. Some people, you have a few things go against you, and the world's coming to an end. But when you have a chance to have things work out, you have to make the best of it." Speaking of the 2005 draft, the Jazz had the third pick, after Milwaukee took Andrew Bogut and Atlanta selected Marvin Williams. The Jazz had a choice of point guards in the continuing quest to replace Stockton: Deron Williams from Illinois or Paul from Wake Forest. It picked Williams -- and then got reminded every five minutes or so as Paul averaged 16.1 points and 7.8 assists for the Hornets. Williams made the All-Rookie team, but at 10.8 points and 4.5 assists. Williams tired of the comparisons, and the Jazz continued to praise his progress. By this season's training camp, team officials and coaches, thrilled by Williams' offseason work, projected a breakout season. Making them look good, not to mention saving himself from having to buy earplugs, Williams has surged to second in the NBA in assists at 9.5 per game while also contributing 16.8 points. Suddenly, with Paul still drawing high marks while fighting a season of injury, it's a great debate again for best young point guard. "If I had to take one of them, I would probably take Deron," retired point guard Mark Jackson said. "His scoring ability separates him, and his size (6-foot-3, 210 pounds). But both of those guys are going to have spectacular careers." Williams appears destined for grand success, and Boozer and Okur are major parts of the resurgence in Salt Lake City, where the Jazz has a division title and can begin working on real possibilities in the years ahead. That's Plan A. http://www.sacbee.com/100/story/150562.html -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc) ◆ From: 59.41.169.199
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