Utah Jazz: Kirilenko experiment paying off
But the real million-dollar case for the Jazz on Sunday was the one adorned with No. 47, and it's all because of how turning a one-time All-Star into the team's chief sixth man could prove to be win-win for both Andrei Kirilenko and coach Jerry Sloan's club.
Hitting 7-of-10 from the field, Kirilenko again came off the bench and had a team-high 15 points the Jazz's 93-80 preseason win at Portland.
It's a look first displayed in Utah's exhibition victory over the Los Angeles Lakers last Tuesday in Anaheim, Calif., and one seemingly growing increasingly popular not only for Sloan and Kirilenko but also key Jazz teammates.
That includes two-time NBA All-Star Boozer, who had eight rebounds and 12 points with 4-of-8 field shooting while logging 15 minutes in his preseason debut.
"I was talking to him about it earlier," said Boozer, who missed Utah's first two exhibition games with soreness in his strained left hamstring. "He can come out, be aggressive. He can be a little bit of a point forward out there. ... He gets a chance to have a little bit more freedom offensively, which is great for him."
The still-under-consideration move, as Sloan revealed last week, was prompted partly by a potentially thin bench.
Usual backup small forward Matt Harpring remains out for at least another week while rehabbing his surgically repaired and subsequently infected right ankle, and his absence may be longer.
"Matt can come in, and he's always had the ability to be alive I mean, create something, get an offensive rebound, or a loose ball, maybe make a shot," Sloan said. "And Andrei has that kind of ability to be able to make a pass, or block a shot.
"We'll just have to see," the Jazz coach added. "It's a long, long season."
It is, yet it seems one increasingly more likely bound to at least begin with Kirilenko as a sub.
Usual reserve swingman C.J. Miles started Sunday at small forward for the third straight time in as many preseason games for the now 2-1 Jazz, and struggled with 0-for-3 shooting.
Yet even if Sloan is convinced starting Miles in Kirilenko's spot isn't the best bet, there are other options.
Sloan said Sunday he'd also consider beginning with usual backup shooting guard Kyle Korver and incumbent starting shooting guard Ronnie Brewer to fill the essentially interchangeable 2 and 3 spots.
No matter who starts, though, Kirilenko will get plenty of playing time.
Sloan made that much evident Sunday, when the the lanky Russian logged 25 minutes including a first-half stretch with 17 consecutive minutes.
"We're experimenting with some stuff, and we'll see how things go right now," Jazz general manager Kevin O'Connor said. "(But) I really think it's a matter of who finishes the game, not who starts it."
"He's going to play minutes," Sloan added. "There's no question about that. It's just where they come from, and how they're gonna look."
And from the look of things Sunday, the view may be one Sloan really does savor.
Kirilenko had a hand in five straight offensive plays after checking in with 4:34 to go in the opening quarter.
He hit a jumper over Luke Jackson, fed 10-point, 10-board double-man Kyrylo Fesenko twice inside, then finished twice with feeds from Fesenko.
The 2004 All-Star also was on the floor late in the third quarter, when the Jazz used a 10-0 run including five points from point guard Deron Williams to blow open a 59-57 game and go up by 12.
"I like the position of coming off the bench, because you kind of see the game how it goes," Kirilenko said. "You see hot players, cold players. ... You see how you can bring something to the game."
And the Jazz are looking for all they can get from Kirilenko, who'll make a team-high $15.096 million this season.
Should he indeed come off the bench, only one other NBA team the New York Knicks would have a higher-paid sub (Stephon Marbury).
"I think it's gonna fit him well," Boozer said. "I think he likes it, too, because he's a veteran coming off the bench for us that can help us a great deal especially with Matty (Harpring) being out right now."
"He can be more aggressive in the second group," added Williams, who dished seven assists in 24 minutes. "He'll be more of the focus. He'll handle the ball a lot more, and I think it's great. He might be able to play (power forward a little more). It might work out."
Kirilenko continues to embrace the possibility.
He was thrilled by some of the backdoor-cut passes he got Sunday from reserve point Brevin Knight, and suggested he's already engaged Korver with conversation about possibilities when the two play together.
"It's Coach's decision. He likes that," Kirilenko said. "I will try to help him, to bring it to life. If he wants to bring me off the bench, I don't have a problem with that. I will try to do my best."
E-mail: tbuckley@desnews.com
