May 2002 Utah Jazz Wiretap

Sloan's analysis: too many turnovers

Apr 30, 2002 2:35 PM

Throughout the regular season, the Jazz were one of the worst turnover-committing teams in the NBA, committing an average of 16.5 per game.

In their final game of the postseason, Monday's first-round Game 4 playoff loss to the Sacramento Kings, miscues again doomed the Jazz.

Utah committed 21 turnovers in all, and the Kings converted them into 30 points in a 91-86 victory.

"Any time you play a team that is this talented (and commit that many turnovers) you don't have much of a chance to win," Jazz coach Jerry Sloan said.

Deseret News

Tags: Sacramento Kings, Utah Jazz, NBA

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Ostertag finally comes up big

Apr 30, 2002 2:35 PM

If Greg Ostertag played during the regular season anything even remotely close to the way he played in the Jazz's playoff-ending loss to Sacramento on Monday night, he'd be much more appreciated in Utah than he is.

The Jazz backup center seems to know it, too.

"I haven't played worth a damn this year," Ostertag said Monday night. "Y'all saw it."

Deseret News

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Stockton stays mum on future

Apr 30, 2002 2:34 PM

Monday's season-ending playoff loss to Sacramento in the Delta Center was the last NBA game ever for Utah guard John Stockton.

Or not.

You don't think he'd tell anyone in a somber Jazz post-loss locker room what his plans might be now that his most recent one-year contract has played itself out, do you?

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Kings glad they are moving on

Apr 30, 2002 2:33 PM

Having finally put away a Utah Jazz team that simply refused to expire on command, Sacramento Kings forward Chris Webber wasn't sure what to make of the experience.

"It was tough, but it wasn't that tough," Webber said after his team's series-clinching, 91-86 Game 4 victory Monday night at the Delta Center. "We made it tough on ourselves." A couple of minutes later, Webber said, "I look at this series as a blessing, playing Utah. They frustrate you, they make you be patient . . . you're either going to be patient or you're going to lose."

So it was a blessing, even though it wasn't that tough. And the only real obstacle was the Kings' own impatience, not the scrappy Jazz defense that all but brought the high-powered Sacramento offense to a halt.

Deseret News

Tags: Sacramento Kings, Utah Jazz, NBA

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Kings just skate by Jazz

Apr 30, 2002 2:32 PM

If you squinted just right ? or hoped enough ? while watching Monday night's NBA playoff game between the Utah Jazz and the Sacramento Kings, you could sense some similarities to the last time a bright spotlight shone on a Delta Center sporting event.

Think of the Kings as the heavily favored Russian figure skating pair of Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze from the 2002 Winter Olympics nine weeks ago. Envision the Jazz as Sale and Pelletier, the energetic and enthusiastic Canadian couple that wowed the Delta Center crowd.

And if you're cynical enough, consider the game's referees as figure skating judges whose scoring the gold for the Russians resulted in the "Skategate" controversy and eventually a second set of first-place medals for the Canadians.

Deseret News

Tags: Sacramento Kings, Utah Jazz, NBA

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Well done: Jazz give it their all but fall short

Apr 30, 2002 2:28 PM

After Game 1, Vlade Divac declared the Jazz "done."

Three more-than-they-bargained-for postseason games later, including Monday night's 91-86 series-ending victory by Divac's Sacramento Kings, Utah indeed is finished.

The question, however, is with what? Just another season, their 19th straight in the playoffs, or an entire era?

Deseret News

Tags: Sacramento Kings, Utah Jazz, NBA

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At least we had fun while it lasted

Apr 30, 2002 2:27 PM

Weird thing is, it was interesting.

Weird thing is that after all was said and done, it took a desperation three-point heave by Vlade Divac to drive a stake through the Jazz's heart. It took John Stockton's last-second shot in Game 1 to rim out, or maybe Scott Padgett's basket interference. It took Stockton fouling out in Game 3 and leaving Rusty LaRue to roll the dice.

It took shining moments by Padgett, Quincy Lewis, Donyell Marshall and even Greg Ostertag to make it turn out the way it did.

Deseret News

Tags: Sacramento Kings, Utah Jazz, NBA

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Making a List: Gimme five

Apr 30, 2002 10:01 AM

Here's a completely subjective look at five players who are, for various reasons, always worth watching:

Donyell Marshall, Jazz: Just because I remember his Warrior days, when they didn't know what to do with him and he didn't seem bothered by it. Deadly jump hook. Karl Malone still provides the team's best flexes and facial expressions, but Marshall is the guy the Kings can't stop. Wins points for having the most un-Jazz-like physical appearance in history.

ESPN

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Sacramento takes series 3-1, now awaits Dallas

Apr 30, 2002 9:58 AM

All along, Vlade Divac believed the Sacramento Kings would outlast the Utah Jazz. The 7-foot-1 center made sure it happened when he swished a dramatic 3-pointer from 28 feet.

Predrag Stojakovic broke out of a shooting slump with 30 points, and Chris Webber scored 23 as the Kings advanced to the Western Conference semifinals with a 91-86 victory Monday night.

Divac, who predicted the Jazz were "done" after Sacramento's victory in Game 1, backed up his claim with his 3-pointer with 1:29 to play, giving the Kings an 87-81 lead.

ESPN

Tags: Sacramento Kings, Utah Jazz, NBA

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Final verse for epic Jazz?

Apr 30, 2002 9:57 AM

Vroom, vroom. Out go the lights.

The Utah Jazz stuck to traditions Monday night, right down to Bear the mascot riding on to the court before the game on a motorcycle, cranking the handle several times to rev the engine enough to shake tiles from the roof, just like he used to do to drive poor Phil Jackson nuts when the Bulls would come through for the Finals. The crowd, doing its part, pushed the decibels as if these were still the glory days, fireworks went off as each home player was introduced during starting lineup, and AC/DC rocked over the loudspeaker.

For those into reality checks, they also played "I'm a Believer," the Monkees tune covered by Smash Mouth and the reminder of longshot chances facing the locals: Win now or summer vacation starts before the night is out, and with another first-round elimination at that. The other Utah Jazz tradition.

Sacramento Bee

Tags: Sacramento Kings, Utah Jazz, NBA

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Peja finds his stroke, and it's just in time

Sacramento Bee

"I'm not taking any negatives from this series"

Sacramento Bee

Desperate & decisive

Sacramento Bee

Escape from Utah

Sacramento Bee

Extra Point: Franchise reaches crossroad

Standard Examiner

Kirilenko selected for honor

Standard Examiner

Finished in four

Standard Examiner

All-Rookie Team Tabs Kirilenko

Salt Lake Tribune

Divac's Prediction, Though a Little Off, Was Right

Salt Lake Tribune

Jazz Made Kings Work For This One

Salt Lake Tribune

Kings oust scrappy Jazz from playoffs

Salt Lake Tribune

Added motivation to win in Utah: More rest

Sacramento Bee

Divac is a man of his words

Sacramento Bee

All about survival for Kings

Sacramento Bee

The benchmark: Are the Kings' reserves producing enough?

Sacramento Bee

Where's Peja?

Standard-Examiner

Marshalling a plan

Standard-Examiner

Stockton not thinking past tonight

Jazz Nearing End of an Era

Salt Lake Tribune

Jazz Fighting Valiantly In Battle They Can't Win

Salt Lake Tribune