Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Daddy, Who Did You Say Won 22 Games in a Row in 2008?



Utah Jazz fans are loving life right now! We had another good game in Houston yesterday. That was a really quick first-round matchup. What? It's not over yet? Well, at this point I will bet all the money I will ever make that Utah doesn't let this lead slip out of their hands (judging by my recent college test scores, I may not make much. But I will bet it all). The Jazz will take care of business.

Tracy McGrady and Rick Adelman both complained about a questionable call late in the game last night. Andrei Kirilenko was trying to chase down McGrady in the corner when he was held up by Luis Scola. AK totally completely threw himself into the stands, and the ref called a foul on Scola. It was a huge call because the Jazz were up by three, and the Rockets hit a three-pointer right as the foul was called. The trey was wiped away, the Jazz got possession, and never relinquished the lead from there. I thought it was pretty childish to complain about that call for a few reasons: first, it was a foul! Sure, AK made it look much more violent than it actually was (Kirilenko's comment on whether it was a foul or if he flopped: "Let's say it is 50-50"), but it was a foul regardless. And if you're going to bring up bad calls, you ought to discuss the time Deron Williams was slammed to the floor and no foul was called. If you lose in the playoffs on your home court, don't make excuses. This is professional basketball!

I think Houston is done mentally. T-Mac says he's tired, he has no legs, and he just can't shoulder the load right now. I also think he's smoking something. After the game, when asked how he's going to approach game three, he said his back has never really been up against the wall like this. What? Tracy, do you remember how you've been in six other first-round matchups and you've lost all of them? Wow.

Now the party really gets started. Look for EnergySolutions Arena to be rocking. It's going to be a madhouse! Keep it up, Utah!!

Sunday, April 20, 2008

To: Houston. From: Russia, With Love.

There were no tears for Andrei Kirilenko last night in the Toyota Center in Houston, unless they were tears of joy. AK played a great game, leading the Jazz to a huge Game 1 win over the Rockets. This is good news for Jazz fans: when Utah wins Game 1 of a playoff series on the road, they win the series. Granted, it's only happened three other times in franchise history, but you have to admit that things are looking good right now.

Utah came out with energy last night, which was good to see after the nightmare in San Antonio. You could tell that Jerry Sloan had gotten his troops ready for this playoff match-up. Considering that Sloan was coaching in the playoffs when most current Jazz players were still in diapers, he's a good man to have on the bench. Kirilenko was diving for loose balls, Ronnie Brewer was sticking to Tracy McGrady, and Mehmet Okur was muttering Turkish obscenities to the crowd. Everybody was doing their part. Carlos Boozer had a monster game, pulling down 16 boards to go with his 20 points.

Evidence #856 that the Korver/Giricek trade was the best trade since the Clinton/Bush transition: when things were getting dicey in the third quarter with Utah holding on to a two-point lead, Kyle Korver nailed two straight treys and blocked a shot by McGrady. The Jazz were up by eight and never looked back from that point. Korver will prove to be a huge factor in our playoff run this year.

You just get the feeling that Houston (including coaches, players, and fans) is just mentally done right now. The Jazz worked them over last night, and half the crowd was gone by the time the final whistle blew. This is a playoff game! We'll see if the Rockets can rebound Monday night, but the writing is on the wall -- Houston has a problem...

Thursday, April 17, 2008

When You Fall Off Your Horse, You Get Up, Shoot the Horse, And Anybody That Was Watching

This was not the ending to the regular season that I had hoped for. The Jazz were completely out-played last night in San Antonio. It looked like Varsity playing JV for the whole first half. The Spurs completely shut down Utah's offense, and we seemed content to settle for jump shots (when you're shooting 35% from the field, that is not going to win games.) To make matters worse, San Antonio was shooting close to 80% in the first quarter and got whatever they wanted on offense. This was no contest.

So we're matched up against the Rockets in the first round of the playoffs. If there is a positive coming out of last night's game, that is it. We've played well against Houston, with the exception of the season's home-opener (one of the four total home losses for Utah this year.) If we can forget about what happened against the Spurs and have the Big Three at the top of their game, I really like our chances. We need Deron Williams to rest his buttock before Saturday (I don't know what you do to rest your buttock, but it needs to be done.)

Regardless of the debacle in San Antonio, this is the best time of year for Jazz fans. EnergySolutions Arena will be rockin' and Jerry Sloan will be a loaded cannon. If Deron Williams steps up in a big way this postseason, I see good things for this team. I only wish we still had Bryon Russell and Greg Ostertag filling out our starting five. Wait, What??

It's game time. Release the hounds!!!!!!!!!!!

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

I'm At the Top of the World Tonight, and I Ain't Comin' Down

It's a very exciting week in the NBA world. Scratch that, it's a very exciting week in the Western Conference of the NBA world. With the Eastern Conference playoff picture decided, all eyes are focused on the Wild Wild West. The seventh and eighth place seeds go to Dallas and Denver, respectively, but the rest is up for grabs. With Utah's big win against the Rockets on Monday night, The Jazz still are in the hunt for home-court advantage, at least in the first round of the playoffs.

Utah looked good last night, from what I saw (confession: I chose a rockin' Jimmy Eat World concert over basketball. Can you blame me? Yes. Should you? No.) Carlos Boozer had a good game, finishing with another double-double. We need him to be at the top of his game on Wednesday in the showdown with the Spurs in San Antonio. If you pay attention to history, you will need to pop some Zoloft pills before the game -- the Jazz haven't won in San Antonio since Tim Duncan was in diapers. If there is a year Utah can win, however, it's now.

Everybody settle in for the wildest season-ending scramble in NBA history. Put the children to bed, lock the women in the cellar, and get ready to rock!

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Creaming the Nuggets

The Jazz picked up a huge win Saturday night in EnergySolutions Arena. They came out ready to rock, scoring 40 points in the first quarter and ended up beating the Nuggets by 27. Deron Williams was the alpha male on the court last night. He got slammed to the floor by Carmelo Anthony, landing right on the small of his back. After squirming on the floor for 20 seconds, D-Will got up and finished the game. I think opponents are soon going to realize that it's not in their best interest to get Williams upset; get him ticked off, and you're just scheduling your own funeral.

This is a monumental week for the Utah Jazz. Home-court advantage is on the line. We've gotta win against Houston on Monday then hope for a miracle on Wednesday (either a victory on the road against the Spurs, or the Clippers beating the Rockets. Either would be a miracle).

Side note: I've got to give props to Rod Zundel and KSL for the best Karl Malone interview that I've ever seen. Zundel sat in the bed of a truck with the Mailman and discussed everything from Karl's new car dealership, to Malone's attitude towards Jazz fans today, to the possibilities of a 2-on-2 between Stockton/Malone & Williams/Boozer (Karl: "Not gonna happen"). Karl is building a museum in the upper floor of his new dealership. It will be full of Mailman memorabilia, including old Dream Team jerseys (Malone says there are still original Gatorade stains on Larry Bird's jersey. He didn't wash them. I don't know how Karl ended up with everyone's jerseys....). The Mailman also predicted a Jazz championship within 3-5 years. Quotes from Karl: "I come in peace; I prepare for war."; on why he won't challenge Boozer and Williams to a showdown: "We're just old dogs on the porch. We like where we're at." When asked by Zundel if there were any good rumors to start: "Let's start the rumor that I am buying 20% of the Utah Jazz. Me and Larry (Miller). Start that rumor." Great interview.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Lonestar Letdown

What a heartbreaking game last night! The Jazz struggled for much of the game to get anything going, but they seemed to be putting it together just in time to pull out a tough game on the road against Dallas. Deron Williams was leaving everything on the floor, and it appeared that he had singlehandedly willed the Jazz into overtime with his ridiculously tough bank shot from 25 feet out with five seconds left in the game. But, alas, someone (Carlos Boozer) forgot there were still five seconds left and Dirk Nowitzki had a wide open three-pointer that absolutely made Jazz fans everywhere curse uncontrollably (or at least scream out a controversial "Are you flippin' kidding me?!").

Not all is lost, however; for last night could prove to be a valuable lesson come playoff time. It felt like it was the Western Conference finals for the last two minutes of last night's game. Deron had a fire in his eyes, the crowd was on the edge of their seats, and Jerry Sloan was shooting violent gesticulations towards the officials. If nothing else, it had to get Jazz fans excited for a little post-season drama, because it's just about time! We definitely need a more complete team effort, though, if Utah is gonna go anywhere this May.

Don't let this loss get you down, Jazz fans. Dallas is hot, and they will be a tough draw for anybody in the West. What Utah has to do now is get everybody on the same page for the final three games and get ready to turn on the heat! With how tight the West is, the conference title is there for the taking by any of the top eight teams.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Will the Defense Please Rise

Where has this beautiful defense been all season? The past two games, the Jazz have held two elite teams (San Antonio and New Orleans) to 64 points and 66 points, respectively. That's the best scoring defense Utah has ever had for two consecutive games! It was fun to watch New Orleans struggle to get open shots and to see Chris Paul completely frustrated on the offensive end last night.

The Jazz are a very deep team. On a night where Deron Williams has only four points and Carlos Boozer only has 10, Mehmet Okur stepped up with 22 points and 17 rebounds. He seems to be at the top of his game right now, which is good timing for the Jazz. Memo was hot from beyond the arc, he was driving to the hoop with authority, and he was playing some defense!! Besides these three stars, Utah has a solid supporting cast with Andrei Kirilenko, Ronnie Brewer, Matt Harpring, Paul Millsap, and Kyle Korver. They may be the most talented team in the NBA!

If we keep this stifling defense for the final four games, I think we will have home-court advantage, at least in the first round of the playoffs. We have been scary good the past few games, and now everybody should be healthy and ready to make the final push heading into the post-season. Git 'er done!

Monday, April 7, 2008

Week to Remember

The Jazz scored 117 points against Minnesota and held San Antonio to 64 points (9 points in the 4th quarter!!) this last week; two great games, two victories, and a nice little break before a grueling 5-game stretch to close out the regular season.

A few things to note: The Utah Jazz have officially clinched another playoff berth. I am completely blown away at how quickly the Jazz retooled their whole team from the Stockton/Malone/Jerry era to the Deron/Boozer/Jerry era. Chicago is still rebuilding from the loss of MJ. The Celtics took a good fifteen years to get back on top. The Jazz had one losing season -- one! -- between dynasties. Maybe I can't call our team a dynasty yet (and maybe Stockton/Malone weren't ever, either, without championship rings), but it sure is fun to watch them dominate at home this year.

Another note: Adrian Dantley has finally been accepted into the Basketball Hall of Fame. This has been a long time coming, and it is definitely deserved. He was perhaps the only thing keeping the Jazz' heartbeat going in the pre-Stockton/Malone period. He averaged 30-plus points per game several seasons in a row and was named an All-Star 6 different times. Hats off to AD.

We've got three of the final five on the road against playoff teams from the West. I hate to chalk up three losses already -- prove me wrong!!

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Put Out the Fire!

Wow, what a game last night! The Jazz beat the Wizards by 42 points! I think each member of the Wizards organization should take a moment to evaluate their lives and see if it's really worth it. They just got humiliated in a way that shouldn't happen in the National Basketball Association. Utah dominated in virtually every aspect of the game; it was never even close

First red flag for the Wizards: C.J. Miles had 29 points. He was getting shots all over the floor, and by the time Washington realized that he was a professional basketball player, he was so completely in the zone that it didn't matter who was guarding him -- he hit everything! 29 points is a new career high for Miles; big props to C.J. last night.

Another red flag: Utah broke a franchise record for three-pointers made in a game. Morris Almond (that should be it's own red flag) hit a trey late in the fourth quarter, bringing the total to 15 for the night; that's one more than the previous best which was also set earlier this season. The Wizards simply weren't putting the pressure on from behind the line, and they paid dearly. Part of the reason may be that they were finishing a five-game road trip, but I think the real reason is that Utah has some great shooters this season. I mean, look at these guys: Kyle Korver, Mehmet Okur, Deron Williams, now C,J. Miles; each can absolutely stroke it from distance!

Final red flag for the Wizards: EnergySolutions Arena. Enough said.

The best thing about last night's game is that Carlos Boozer, Williams, and Okur got to sit the fourth quarter and should be very rested for the brutal stretch ahead. Keep it up Jazz!