Jazz Win (as usual) with Enes Kanter

August 25th, 2011 by Nick Smith

Amidst the current labor stoppage, I have been doing my fair share of thinking/appreciating how nice it’s been to be a Jazz fan. Sure, we’ve never won an NBA championship, but ask yourself this; how many NBA franchises would have been better to cheer for over the last 20 years than the Jazz? Chicago, LA Lakers, San Antonio and probably Dallas for sure. Then you have other teams that have won a championship or two but endured miserable years before or since those championships, such as Boston, Houston, Miami, and Detroit. Value those as you may, but as a fan, a few great seasons every 20 years surrounded by disaster would not keep me as interested as a team that is in playoff contention every single year. Having said that, this last season shows exactly why the Jazz have been competitive for all these years. They are a forward thinking organization with a commitment to their community to stay competitive.

As time goes on, I find it exciting to start adding names to the Deron Williams trade. As it stands, the Jazz traded Williams for Devin Harris, Derrick Favors, and Enes Kanter, with another young stud hopefully just around the corner. Outside of Devin Harris, there remains to be a lot of question marks around the other three pieces. The future draft pick is still a total unknown, your guess on Derrick Favors’ success in the NBA is as good as mine (although for the record, I’m a huge fan), and Enes Kanter hasn’t even played competitively in years, until recently. With the Eurobasket just around the corner, Turkey has played four exhibition games, giving Kanter some burn in each of those four games.

As to be expected, Enes looked very rusty, and in some ways, like a fish out of water on the court. His reaction times were slow and he seemed to be thinking his way through the game rather than just playing. He didn’t have much of a clue how to rotate defensively, he seemed to panic a bit when he had the ball, and appeared to be a step slow at times. But in his most recent game against Germany, Kanter finally showed us what he looks like when he’s comfortable out there and just plays. He was extremely aggressive, a fantastic rebounder, and runs the floor beautifully. You can forget all Mehmet Okur comparisons you may have ever heard and should maybe start thinking more along the lines of a 6’11, more likable version of…Carlos Boozer. The most impressive thing I saw about Kanter, something that I think draws the Boozer comparison, is his ability/desire/motivation (whatever it is) that makes him leave his area to grab rebounds. Jefferson, Okur, and Millsap are all decent rebounders, but none of them would leave their area to go chasing after a rebound like Enes seems to do. So why is this such great news? Well, unless your name is Reggie Evans or Dennis Rodman, a 10 rebound a night guy usually means at least 10 points a night as well, and with the skill set Kanter seems to have, there’s no reason to think he couldn’t make that 15-20 points a night.

You don’t need to remind me that it was just one game, but just for fun, here are some stats from that Turkey vs. Germany matchup to show Enes’ performance relative to a few other guys you may have heard of before.

These stats are adjusted per 40 minutes.

Points/40 mins Rebs/40 mins
Dirk Nowitzki

27.9

9.9

Omer Asik

15.8

11.9

Ersan Ilyasova

14.2

12.4

Hedo Turkoglu

10.7

3

Enes Kanter

36.3

12.1

 

Trading a player as good as Deron Williams hurts but is at the same time the kind of move that exactly illustrates why I could count on one hand how many teams’ fans cheer for a more successful organization than I do. Who knows how good Enes Kanter will ever be, but a strong, physical, excellent rebounding 6’11 center that can shoot the ball out to 20 feet sounds ok to me. Now if only we had a young, freakishly athletic, 6’10 PF to complement the bullying Kanter, I’d be welcome to the idea of the next 20 years being similar to the last 20…

Retro Jazz: Utah vs LA on April 6, 1999

August 5th, 2011 by Salt City Hoops

(Hat tip to @monilogue for the video)

In an effort to help you get through the lockout, here is one of my favorite Jazz games of all time. Appropriately enough, it happened in 1999 during the lockout-shortened season. The video is tagged 3/7/99 but this is a game from April 6, 1999. The Jazz won three out of four games against the Lakers that year, after knocking the Lakers out of the playoffs the previous two years. The Jazz would win again a week later, winning eight times in their previous 10 meetings with the Lakers, including a sweep in the playoffs a season before.

The Laker roster in 1999 featured a young Kobe Bryant, Shaq in his prime, Dennis Rodman at his craziest, Glen Rice, Rick Fox, Derek Harper, and Robert Horry. Phil Jackson would arrive as coach the next season, but in the meantime Kurt Rambis was in charge (and over his head).

The Jazz roster includes some of the most-loved names in team history. John Stockton, Karl Malone, Jeff Hornacek, Bryon Russell, Shandon Anderson, Howard Eisley, Adam Keefe, Jacque Vaughn, Thurl Bailey (in a return appearance), and even Greg Foster (famous for making the throat-slashing gesture against the Lakers in 1998. If anyone can find footage of that game from March 28, 1998, send it on). Greg Ostertag was also on the team.

Watch this video a million times. It’s absolutely brilliant. John Stockton puts on a virtuoso performance, making me realize we haven’t seen his equal before or since. Karl Malone is ridiculously tenacious, going 12/12 despite Dennis Rodman committing physical crimes that are probably illegal in several states. The rest of the players make cuts and finish at the rim in ways that haven’t been seen since.

The game also featured Jerry Sloan getting ejected, just to give Jazz fans an extra dose of nostalgia.

Enjoy.