Utah Jazz: It's time to summon vintage Boozer

Published: Friday, May 2, 2008 12:10 a.m. MDT
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Nothing really seems to faze Carlos Boozer, which is both a curse and a blessing. On one hand, the Jazz All-Star probably should be troubled by his surprising ineffectiveness in this year's playoffs. Yet in interviews he can appear indifferent.

On the other hand, this is a man who — during a run of injuries shortly after coming to the Jazz — was accused of faking, of not wanting to play in Utah, of not being competitive, and what does he do? He makes himself into a two-time All-Star.

Same guy who has been labeled a liar, cheat and a double-talker by Cleveland fans who felt he hoodwinked the Cavs into letting him become a free agent.

The criticism barely drew a rise out of Boozer.

Thus, when discussing his letdown in the playoffs this year, he doesn't appear concerned. Most of his responses have been vague, even glib. Asked Thursday if he feels due for a breakout game, Boozer replied, "Yeah, I think I'm due for one. I think I'm taking good shots. Things obviously weren't going good last game, a blowout game, but nothing you can do about that ... "

One thing seems certain: The Jazz need Boozer to be bodacious. Now. Before this thing really gets out of control.

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The Jazz-Rockets series continues tonight with Game 6. If the Jazz win, they move on to play the Lakers in the next round. If they lose, it's back to Houston for a Game 7 on Sunday, and you know how dangerous that would be.

Paging Carlos Boozer. Mr. Carlos Boozer. You have a call on line one.

"Hang in there with us," said Boozer. "Don't be frustrated. We're not frustrated. We're going to come out ready to play."

While his words are reassuring to Jazz fans, his game has been less convincing — at least by his usual standards. Last year, he thrived against the massive Yao Ming on the inside, spinning for score after score. This time, Houston is using a surprisingly problematic Dikembe Mutombo at center. Energetic forward Luis Scola has dutifully hounded Boozer from tipoff to locker room, as has Carl Landry and others.

Consequently, Boozer has no more than 20 points in any game and is averaging just 16, eight below last year's playoffs. His field goal percentage is nine down from last year.

Boozer, though, isn't one to agonize over failings in public. Not that he doesn't care. That much was obvious last week when he went 3-8 on free throws in Game 3, so he shot an extra 100 free throws at practice the next day. Voila! He was 8-8 from the line the next game.

It's just that he's not going to air his concerns on "Oprah" or "Dr. Phil."

Actually, the Jazz have done fairly well without a turbo-charged Boozer. They have traditionally counted on other players to augment his brilliant offensive play. But lately it seems the reverse.

Recent comments

This article whole assumes there is a vintage boozer.

That...

bigjazzfan | May 2, 2008 at 5:42 p.m.

Where did it go? I saw a glimpse of it when Deron threw it down...

Killer instinct... | May 2, 2008 at 11:19 a.m.

The reason boozer can't beat mutombo off the dribble is those...

JAFO | May 2, 2008 at 10:35 a.m.