Following the Jazz‘s loss to San Antonio on Thursday in Utah, head coach Will Hardy had some pointed words for his club, according to Andy Larsen of The Salt Lake Tribune. The Jazz committed a ghastly 26 turnovers, with the Spurs stealing the ball nine times in the third period — the most thefts in a single quarter since 1996.
“This is not guaranteed. Being in the NBA is not guaranteed,” Hardy said. “There’s a lot of players who have established themselves, but they’ve had to fight to do so. You have to scratch and claw and battle to be an NBA player for a long time. I think the average NBA career is like under four years or something, and that’s because the league will just churn players in and out.
“And right now, I just don’t feel that desperation. I don’t feel that hunger on every play.”
Larsen points to a couple of bad plays by second-year guard Keyonte George as being emblematic of the team’s poor effort, and writes that none of Utah’s young players — aside from maybe Walker Kessler — should feel secure about their place in the NBA. The Jazz are the only team in the league that has yet to win a game (0-5).
Here’s more from the Northwest:
- Chet Holmgren and the Thunder bested Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs on Wednesday in a marquee matchup between two of the league’s top young big men, per Michael C. Wright of ESPN. Holmgren finished with 19 points, five rebounds, two steals and two blocks in 28 minutes, while Wembanyama recorded just six points, eight rebounds and three blocks in 27 minutes. Both players downplayed any talk of a budding rivalry, with Holmgren saying Oklahoma City’s defense was key to the 105-93 victory. “We won tonight on the defensive end,” Holmgren said. “It wasn’t perfect on offense. I feel like we were very solid almost throughout the whole game on the defensive end.”
- Thunder guard Ajay Mitchell has been receiving rotation minutes to open his rookie season, writes Rylan Stiles of Sports Illustrated. The 22-year-old, who was selected No. 38 overall in June’s draft, turned in his best performance on Wednesday vs. San Antonio, finishing with 12 points (on 5-of-6 shooting), four rebounds and two steals in 22 minutes. “We play a lot of 5-on-5 at training camp, so there is a lot underneath the surface that you guys might not see, but we do,” Head coach Mark Daigneault said of Mitchell. “We take those minutes really seriously…he showed a capacity early, on both ends of the floor. As good as he was offensively tonight, he was really good defensively. He continues to make strides and get better defensively.”
- It appears as though rookie Trey Alexander, who is on a two-way deal, is ahead of Jalen Pickett in the Nuggets‘ backcourt rotation, tweets Harrison Wind of DNVR Sports. Pickett, a 2023 second-round pick who is on a standard contract, was recently assigned to the Grand Rapids Gold, Denver’s G League affiliate, while Alexander remains with the Nuggets.
It’s so annoying the NBA is trying to make Chet/Wemby a thing when OKC are far and away the best team in the West and the Spurs are likely bottom 4. Let them have a huge game first before forcing this crud, like, yeah, duh Wemby is going to get destroyed by the Thunder this season, that’s obvious.
Agree with you. OKC is a NBA finals contender while Spurs are a bottom seed team. It shouldn’t be a rivalry just yet but NBA is trying to market Wemby against any big, which is smart but us fans see right thru it.
Agreed raz. Now once *Clingan* starts playing starter minutes after Ayton gets traded, then that would be a good opportunity. Clingan, Scoot, and Shaedon Sharpe vs. Wemby, Castle, and Vassell would be a pretty good rivalry.
Davey J I agree with you about wemby. This dominant big man did nothing to make his teammates better. This next big thing, looked awkward,weak and hardly a unicorn. His numbers didn’t jump off the page. Chet is smooth for a big man, nice passer,tough inside and does make his teammates better. In my opinion.