Latest Jazz Stories
Posted: Jun 30th 2009 7:15PM ET by Tom Ziller (RSS feed)
Filed under: Jazz, NBA Rumors, NBA Transactions

Could it be any other way with
Carlos Boozer and the Jazz? Everything is so complicated, from late owner Larry Miller's combative stance on Boozer's injuries to Boozer's renewed sense of self-worth to the constant conflict between stardom and also-ran status. Boozer surprisingly
picked up his 2009-10 team option Tuesday, putting Utah on the hook for $12.3 million.
Boozer is well worth the cash, so this development should be a clear win for Utah, right? Well, it's complicated. Boozer's commitment puts the status of back-up power forward
Paul Millsap and starting center
Mehmet Okur into question. By casting his lot with Utah for one more year, Boozer may very well have cast his buddies out.
Posted: Jun 29th 2009 10:30PM ET by Tim Povtak (RSS feed)
Filed under: 76ers, Bulls, Cavaliers, Hawks, Heat, Jazz, Knicks, Lakers, Magic, Mavericks, Nuggets, Pacers, Pistons, Raptors, Rockets, Suns, NBA Rumors

Not everyone is waiting for 2010 – the mother of all free agent summers – to try to improve their team by throwing big money at the seasoned veterans.
Even in hard economic times, the top players like
Carlos Boozer,
Hedo Turkoglu and
Jason Kidd will leave teams and get their financial reward in other places. The squeeze will be on the lower-level free agents who must settle for minimum or various exceptions.
What hurts this class is that only seven teams really have major room under the salary cap to make something happen, and they usually aren't the NBA's biggest spenders. Unless the free agents stay with their current teams, only Memphis, Oklahoma City, Sacramento, Atlanta, Portland, Toronto and Detroit have major room.
Although there has been plenty of dancing and unofficial talks the last few days, the real dealings can't start until 12:01 a.m. Wednesday.
Here is a breakdown by position of the five most intriguing – and unrestricted – free agents.
Posted: Jun 29th 2009 8:55AM ET by Tom Ziller (RSS feed)
Filed under: Jazz, NBA Rumors, Thunder

The market for restricted free agent
Paul Millsap was expected to be robust in theory, if not in actuality. This is to say Millsap is a highly desired fellow, given his proclivity to rebound like a champ, score efficiently, and defend his tail off at the power forward position. However, as always, a limited pool of clubs will head into July with cap space for next season.
The Thunder is one team with space to sign a free agent like Millsap. The team currently falls about $15 million under the cap, and Millsap has been pegged to pull a starting salary around $7-8 million. Oklahoma City can certainly afford to get into that ballpark, should
Sam Presti desire to. Ross Siler of the
Salt Lake Tribune seems to believe OKC, in fact,
desires Millsap.
Posted: Jun 26th 2009 3:04PM ET by Matt Steinmetz (RSS feed)
Filed under: Jazz, NBA Rumors, NBA Transactions

The Jazz announced Friday that they have tendered a qualifying offer to power forward
Paul Millsap.
While the move is more a formality than anything else, it does signal the possible nudging of
Carlos Boozer out of Salt Lake City.
Millsap, who had a breakout year in 2008-09, appears to be the power forward of the future for the Jazz.
Posted: Jun 26th 2009 3:45AM ET by Matt Steinmetz (RSS feed)
Filed under: Clippers, Grizzlies, Hornets, Jazz, Kings, Lakers, Mavericks, Nuggets, Rockets, Spurs, Suns, Timberwolves, Trail Blazers, Warriors, NBA Draft, Thunder

The NBA Draft started with a no-brainer --
Blake Griffin going No. 1 overall to the Los Angeles Clippers. Then, the fun happened, with Memphis taking Hasheem Thabeet and the Timberwolves' vexing decision to horde as many point guards as they could. A few other teams lucked out when players dropped down the board and into their laps. Check out the grades for the Western Conference after the jump.
Posted: Jun 22nd 2009 7:10PM ET by Gary Washburn (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bucks, Hawks, Hornets, Jazz, NBA Draft
FanHouse fixes a decade of draft-day blunders in Revisiting the NBA Draft.The 2005
NBA Draft would change the course of the future of two teams -- the
Atlanta Hawks and
Milwaukee Bucks. There was no clear-cut No. 1 pick, but Utah's
Andrew Bogut was big, skilled and NBA ready. He wasn't the most convincing or dominant No. 1 pick, especially with
Dwight Howard averaging a double-double in his rookie season, but he appeared to be the best choice for the Bucks.
Meanwhile, the Hawks decided on a player who was a sixth man of his college team.
Marvin Williams had all the physical tools to be a star but played just one season at North Carolina. He fed off the Tar Heels' national title run and opted for the draft. It sounded like a good idea, although he was only 19. It's not that these were poor choices. Neither Bogut nor Williams are busts. They are productive NBA players, but when compared with the next two drafted, they are disappointments.
Posted: Jun 22nd 2009 9:00AM ET by Matt Steinmetz (RSS feed)
Filed under: Jazz, Nuggets, Timberwolves, Trail Blazers, NBA Draft, Thunder

The
Minnesota Timberwolves might not have had the best regular season in 2008-09, but they're sure going to be a factor come the
NBA Draft on Thursday.
New president of basketball operations
David Kahn has five picks to use, including three in the first round. Minnesota has the Nos. 6, 18, and 28 picks in Round 1, and two more in the second round.
Will Kahn use all of those picks to drastically remake the T-Wolves' roster, or might he package a couple of picks or three in order to land a veteran difference-maker? More on the Northwest Division after the jump.
Posted: Apr 28th 2009 3:13PM ET by Brett Pollakoff (RSS feed)
Filed under: Hornets, Jazz, Lakers, Nuggets, Playoffs

After the Nuggets crushed the Hornets
by 58 points on Monday, and after the Lakers eliminated the Jazz -- but allowed their reserves to trim a 21-point fourth quarter lead down to six before doing so -- the
internets are
alive with people warning (wishing?) of a possible Denver upset of L.A. in the Conference Finals.
I have two words for you: Stop it.
Posted: Apr 25th 2009 9:27PM ET by Matt Moore (RSS feed)
Filed under: Jazz, Lakers, NBA Live Blogging, Playoffs
Well, well, well. Utah has decided it won't go down without a fight. Behind a raucous (as usual) home crowd, the Jazz clawed their way back in Game 3 to put a win up on the board. Now with Game 4 tonight, the Jazz have an opportunity to prove our own
Brett Pollakoff wrong and make this a series for real. The Jazz get
Mehmet Okur back tonight (most likely) which is a big plus for them. For the Lakers, the question is not talent, nor execution, nor offense, nor defense. It's simply effort. If they don't want this game more than Utah does and play like it, no amount of talent and size is going to save them amongst the rabid Utah fans.
Say, since this is such a big game, why don't we get a liveblog going? Indeed, let us. Join us at 9PM EST for Lakers at Jazz, Game 4.