In February 2015, Utah Jazz made a trade that seemed odd at the time. In trading away starting centre and offensive fulcrum Enes Kanter for a first round draft pick, it looked like the Jazz were aborting their rebuild, only to enter another one
The Jazz snapped up back up bigs Ed Davis & Jeff Green, who are both very solid defensively & capable on offence. Green in particular is an intriguing signing. The former fifth pick from 2007 has flattered to deceive over his career, offering tantalising flashes of brilliance scattered across a journeyman's resume.
He will have his standard six to eight games that make you say 'Whoa! I forgot how good Jeff Green is!', before again becoming a wallflower for a fortnight. Utah are hoping for one or two of those explosions come play-off time.
The Jazz also signed another former high draft pick in Emmanuel Mudiay (seventh overall in 2015). A wrecking ball of an athlete, Mudiay has never really shown that he has the basketball IQ to harness his physical gifts.
However, Coach Snyder and his assistants have demonstrated a remarkable ability to develop guards and wings over the past few years. A backup guard/wing rotation of Mudiay, the much improved Royce O'Neal & dry pasta for ligaments Aussie Dante Exum gives this Utah squad enviable depth.
The $64k question is this: has this off season made the Utah Jazz a genuine contender?
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In the immediate aftermath of the Conley trade, the response from NBA media types was 'Yes!', but there was an almost instant backlash to that. Conley is good but not an All-NBA type.
The West is loaded. The Lakers will stock up on talent (nobody foresaw the Clippers off season acquisitions at that stage). The Rockets will improve. Curry is out for revenge.
All of these things are true, but there are caveats. Conley is playing in a historic period for Point Guards. In most eras, he'd be a multiple time all star....if he'd played his career in the Eastern Conference he'd be a multiple time All-Star! The West is loaded, but the Lakers have their own issues; the Cippers will treat Kawhi Leonard & Paul George with kid gloves; the Rockets & Warriors have to integrate some major new pieces.
Alongside the Nuggets, Utah has perhaps the most continuity in respect to their main players. Home court in the Western Conference is vital. The Jazz will fancy themselves to finish top three.
Some food for thought. There is a common trope in the NBA that to be truly elite, a team needs to have close to a top five offence and defence. Last season, The Jazz's defence ranked first in points conceded per 100 possessions, against 16th for points scored. Should this offence/defence trade off give the Jazz just two more points per game whilst conceding two more – just one measly layup - where would the Jazz finish?
Defensively the Jazz would finish fifth, maintaining that excellent defensive record. Offensively? They would jump to seventh. Those numbers in and of themselves, validate the Jazz's changes.
It's time to #takenote, NBA. For the first time since Stockton to Malone pick and rolls, the Utah Jazz are in prime position to launch their bid for an inaugural NBA title.
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