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Seven Things You Need To Know About The Spurs-Jazz Game

Season 49, Game 58
San Antonio 96, Utah 78
49-9, 2nd in the West

1. This Utah Jazz team is pretty, pretty good. And very, very young.

The Jazz started February by going on a seven game win streak. Depending on how Houston plays in March, they could very well make the playoffs, which is no mean feat in the Western Conference. Their starters against the Spurs were Gordon Hayward (25), Derrick Favors (24), Rodney Hood (23), Rudy Gobert (23), and Shelvin Mack (25). If Utah can keep Coach Quin Snyder (49) and these guys together, in a couple of years they could be a serious and consistent contender in the West.

2. The Spurs are much, much better.

The Spurs looked every bit like the best defensive team in the league, out rebounding the Jazz 43-31 and holding them to just 12 points in the second quarter – their worst quarter of the season. Combine superior defensive play with better offensive effort – San Antonio out shot Utah 48% to 43% – and you have the recipe for a decisive win.

3. Pop liked what he saw.

This is the best game since we came back from break. We had been really spotty and undisciplined, but what really helped us is that [the Jazz] are so good at execution. It actually helped us tonight because they used the whole clock and we had to play (defense) over and over.”

4. This is Kawhi’s team.

Of course the Spurs epitomize team basketball and this team won’t get far in the playoffs without great play by LaMarcus and Tony. But make no mistake: Kawhi is the key to the team’s success. He leads the team in scoring, three point shooting, free throws taken and made, steals, offensive win shares and defensive win shares.

Photo Credit: Russ Isabella-USA TODAY Sports

Photo Credit: Russ Isabella-USA TODAY Sports

Against the Jazz, Leonard scored 29 points (his second best of the season) to go along with 5 rebounds, 3 assists and 3 steals.

5. This might have been a playoff preview.

If the remainder of the season plays out as predicted, the Spurs will face the Jazz in the first round. That’s good news. San Antonio has won all three games against Utah this season, by an average margin of 27 points.

6. The playoffs will be extraordinarily difficult.

After Salt Lake City, it looks like the Spurs quest for a sixth Larry O’Brien Trophy would take them to Oklahoma City, Oakland and Cleveland. Put another way, after Utah, the Spurs would have to beat the 4th, 1st and 3rd best teams in the league. That’s not so great news.

7. We’re witnessing the end of an era.

Of course we’ve thought for several years now that this season would be Tim or Manu’s last. Given both men’s age, and recent health issues – Tim’s “good” knee doesn’t look so good any more and Manu had to have surgery after getting kneed in the groin by Ryan Anderson — it’s difficult to imagine them coming back next season, no matter how this one ends.

So let’s savor these next few weeks. We’re witnessing history, folks; the changing of the guard, the end of the Big Three, and the beginning of a new, different and exciting era in Spurs basketball.

Go Spurs Go.

Putting Sleep Train To Bed

Season 49, Game 57
San Antonio 108, Sacramento 92
48-9, 2nd in the West

The Kings play a game that is about 85% basketball, and 15% something else. I’m not quite sure what that something else is, but it’s hard to adjust to.

The pace is kind of frenetic, players are everywhere; about half the time a Kings player can’t be bothered to get back on defense, leading to easy cherry pick situations. For a large portion of the game, I was angry at the Spurs’ transition defense, until I realized it’s near impossible to play effective transition defense against a team who is barely playing traditional NBA defense themselves.

The Spurs put up 108 points despite a pretty poor offensive night. Kawhi and LaMarcus shot a combined 7-of-27. LaMarcus just hasn’t looked right since the All-Star Break, and Kawhi clearly had some rust after being off for so long. They both did other things quite well, particularly Aldridge in guarding Cousins on defense. I was really impressed with how willingly he accepted the challenge and got physical with him. Cousins got it going a bit in the 3rd quarter, but that was about all the Kings could muster.

While our stars struggled (including Duncan, but that’s a story for another day), our role players carried the day. Kyle Anderson, in particular, looked like a savvy vet out there, playing point forward for the second unit, and showing off his new and improving silky jumper. I thought he was the MVP of the game, and his confidence is finally catching up to his game.

Elsewhere, Mills, West, Green, and Diaw all contributed, each adding little spurts when the team needed it. Patty’s shooting helped push the lead to start the 4th, West banged on both ends, and Green’s 3s helped keep the offense running smoothly.

It’s hard to get a feel for this Spurs team. They keep winning games on the road, yet they’re not winning as impressively as they did to start the year. Does that matter? Are we really concerned about style points right now? Can we actually even extract any larger-scale interpretations from it?

We’re 5-1 on the Rodeo Road Trip and 49-7 overall. Is it just the large shadow of the Warriors looming over the entirety of the league this season that makes the Spurs’ season feel less special, even as it continues to be the best ever for this highly accomplished team?

Meh. I guess we’ll find out.

The Spurs have a quick (and tough) back to back, playing tonight in Utah. This has schedule loss written all over it. Let’s see how the team responds.

Go Spurs Go.

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