New opportunity Utah Jazz try to even the series, something they missed against Spurs
Or at least some semblance of one.
It's familiar territory for the Jazz.
It was just last year, in fact in the Western Conference finals against the eventual NBA-champion San Antonio Spurs that Utah was in the very position it is now in the 2008 Western semifinals against the Los Angeles Lakers.
And we all know how that Game 4 went.
Fourth-quarter follies. Twenty-five free throws for the Spurs in that final period, four technical fouls on the Jazz courtesy of Steve Javie and crew. Utah falls by 12, then travels to San Antonio for an embarrassing Game 5 loss.
Series over.
For today's ABC-televised Game 4 against the Lakers, truth be told, the feeling is not all that dissimilar.
After winning 104-99 on Friday night at EnergySolutions Arena, the Jazz again are down 2-1 in a best-of-seven series against one of the NBA's elite.
Yet they're holding onto hope.
"We felt we could win Game 4 last year," Jazz point guard Deron Williams said Saturday. "It just didn't happen the way we wanted it to."
"I don't think we're in awe of anybody," Williams said. "Maybe when Kobe throws it off the backboard to himself."
That incredible Game 3 play by Bryant aside the NBA MVP passed out of a trap to himself off the backboard, then dunked the ball home for a fourth-quarter bucket it was the Jazz whose play on Friday dazzled most.
They played inside-out. They had just seven steals, but a boatload of deflections. They fought for loose balls, they weren't afraid to take the ball to the hole and they managed to do it all without falling into the trap of foul trouble.
Jazz All-Star Carlos Boozer, in fact, feels Utah finally dialed in Friday on the formula to success.
"If we're active defensively, and we're rebounding the ball, getting in the passing lanes, causing some deflections, making them a little bit more uncomfortable," Boozer said the morning after a 27-point, 20-rebound night, "then we have a good shot.
"And offensively," he added, "if we just keep being aggressive, and keep attacking and taking what's there, but taking it with aggression that's our formula."
But it all starts on the defensive end.
"I think if we play that kind of defense, we could play against anybody," Boozer said. "Regardless of the offensive side of the ball, if we play active defense, and we're aggressive and getting steals, that creates some offense for us and fastbreak points."
Recent comments
I swore off pro basketball, football, and baseball TV about a decade...
Who cares? | May 11, 2008 at 3:46 p.m.
Gametime
jazzfan | May 11, 2008 at 1:52 p.m.
Kobe has more talent than probably anyone who ever played.However...
traveler | May 11, 2008 at 1:19 p.m.



