Now THAT’S how basketball is supposed to be played

January 28th, 2010 by Dwight Jaynes | Filed under NBA, Trail Blazers.

Man, the first quarter last night was a thing of beauty for the Utah Jazz — and basketball purists. The Jazz sliced and diced the Portland Trail Blazers, spread them out, isolated them and cut them up, laying them bare at both ends of the court in front of about 20,000 people.

Seriously, the new buzz words for the past several seasons in the NBA are cliches by now… all I’ve heard lately from teams is how they need to find players who can “create their own shot.” Yeah, well… I’m old-school. I admit that. But I remember when basketball was a beautiful team game –when it was systems that created shots. And that’s what I saw from the Jazz last night.

Jerry Sloan has never been coach of the year? What a joke. He’s one of the last holdouts who plays the game the right way, who has a system at both ends of the court and sticks to it — and makes sure his players do, too.

Did you see the Jazz just handing the ball to a player last night, asking him to go one-on-one to get a shot? And it’s not as if they couldn’t do that, either. Deron Williams could do it any time. But he works within a proven system that provides great shots for everyone — and Williams has no trouble getting his within that system.

Rick Adelman does this. So do Phil Jackson and Larry Brown. They understand that moving the ball, moving bodies and demanding that players be disciplined within a team framework is critical to winning basketball. For all you young people who think basketball is nothing but isolations and clear outs, who think you win by just handing the ball to your best guy and staying out of his way — well, get your hands on a video of last night’s game.

A lot of fans think that just because John Stockton and Karl Malone were in Utah so long running pick-and-rolls, that what Utah does is pretty predictable. But no way. Even in those days, the Jazz would come at that play in so many different ways, from so many different angles. You’d have to stop all sorts of back cuts, off-the-ball screens and player movement before they got to that play.

And you wonder why Malone and Stockton stuck around for almost two decades, playing in nearly every single game that whole time? Well, they were never asked to carry the same load that a Brandon Roy carries on a nightly basis — the task of taking the ball in the middle of the floor and constantly trying to beat multiple defenders on the way to the basket.

I get so frustrated with people who think that’s how you play winning basketball.

Look, last season the Houston Rockets ate the Blazers alive in the playoffs — and Portland came away saying it needed one more player, in addition to Brandon Roy, who could get his own shot. Meanwhile, the Blazers had been carved up by a team with NO players who could get their own shot but instead played a team game, stayed within a structured group of sets, ran plays, worked to get each other open.

Is nobody paying attention to this? Your system is supposed to get you shots, too — but it doesn’t happen here very much.

And at the other end of the court, well, it’s the same thing. For most of the first half, the Trail Blazers couldn’t get an open look. They had trouble getting to the basket and getting open threes. The Jazz got out to Portland’s guards while still being able to seal off the inside as well as anyone the Blazers have played.

Rudy Fernandez, Andre Miller, Martell Webster and Steve Blake combined to go 8 for 39 from the field. Jerryd Bayless was 5 for 12, but made that many only because he was relentless in his pursuit of cheap buckets late in the game when the issue was decided.

In the second half, things became a little more equal because Carlos Boozer left in the middle of the third quarter with a calf strain, right about the time Williams went to the bench with his fourth foul and Utah was pretty bad at the foul line. Besides, the trailing team, especially at home, always gets that run in the second half.

(By the way, it was a typical LaMarcus Aldridge game — great statistics at the end of the night but if you were watching the game, you wouldn’t like what you saw. For most of the night, Boozer just annihilated him. If he hadn’t gotten hurt, he’d have thrown Aldridge off the Broadway Bridge by the fourth quarter.)

But don’t let that obscure what happened in this game. The Jazz gave the Trail Blazers a very big lesson on how the game is supposed to be played. And it’s real important that everyone understand that.

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138 Responses to “Now THAT’S how basketball is supposed to be played”

  1. Paul Maul says:

    Thanks, Dwight. The team game is thing of beauty. I hope it is not going extinct.

  2. Panama says:

    Utah definently more fluid and they shot better. They were shooting alot of in the paint shots and making a high percentage (60%)

    We settled for jump shots (36%) If we wait till the second half to drive to the hole we will lose everytime.

    Yah Boozer did have a good game, but all the bigs had a good game against us. You can’t blame on LA when he is trying to help our bigs guard their men. Aldridge scored 11 on Boozer in one half and went off on Boozer in the 2nd half before Boozer yet again got injured.

    While were at it with agendas, while we started awful, the refs also started horribly. They missed several calls but seemed to whistle calls for the jazz just fine. Worst officiating start I have seen in a long time

  3. Jason says:

    Come on Dwight! Ya no doubt the Blazers played like crap. However do you really think it would have been such a clinic if Roy, Joel and Oden would have been healthy. HEll NO. That being said the Jazz played a great game.

  4. james 10 says:

    JamesPrice-
    Right on track! But moving Nate upstairs, I’m not so sure about. Unless you mean, having Nate take over, and manage the top floor refreshment stand. Maybe he could get LAM a job in the back somewhere, you know, someplace at least 15 feet from the front action, like hes use to!

    • JamesPrince says:

      James10…

      Maybe Paul Allen can get Nate a job managing at Microsoft…I still think he would make a good high school or college coach…do you know when Nate’s contract expires?

  5. the gardener says:

    Yes our system sucks….we need a new coach but allen is a sh**tlite and he love them fellow sh**tlites, so i wounder if ALllen will ever fired or let natroy go…

    btw he is part owner of the flounders….rave puke green.

    if we dont get a better system then roy has 3 years left with all the needless iso pounding he takes… he a stone in a river….water always wins.

  6. chris says:

    I think everyone is being a little harsh on the blazers here. I’ve not seen them leaning too heavily on B.Roy this season despite missing two starting line-ups worth of players to injury. The Blazers are just as good an example of the team game as the Jazz it’s just they weren’t hitting shots in the first quarter.

    Of the first 22 points scored by the Jazz all bar 2 were in transition. It was less the system and more the fact they played with more energy and pushed the ball at a high tempo. If there was anything to praise the Jazz for it was committed defence.

    As for the Blazers they have played as a team all season and it is reflected in there record so far. Everyone can bring their own talents to the table and use them to create advantages not just for themselves but also for each other.

    I’d love to see the stats but I’d wager the scoring load is shared more equally by the blazers than a lot of other teams.

    Give this team a chance… stick with them and I think you’ll be rewarded

  7. Natsthecat says:

    Dwight,
    late reply here…first of all ever since last season I have loved Batum’s play. He made a huge difference in the season. There are stats somewhere that give the win/loss when he was in the starting line-up. Then seeing him this year…wow. I don’t even care if the Blazers win or lose..I just want to see the way he plays. All I can say is that Nate had BETTER let Batum play to the level of his talent. Also..speaking of Rick Adelman…is there any chance the Blazers could snag him as a head coach? I know his family is in the Portland area. I like Nate but like Adelman’s style of play way better and feel there are about ….how many players on this team who would benefit from a more uptempo game?? Even Brandon…he’d benefit from off the ball movement…HELLO…HAMSTRING…much less wear and tear on his body…