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mellow

Well-Known Member
21
Rick Adelman (1975)
Truck Robinson (1978-1979)
Tony Brown (1991)
David Benoit (1992-2001)



20
Duck Williams (1980)
John Drew (1983)
Bob Hansen (1984-1990)
Me for Jr. Jazz (1988)
Walter Bond (1994-1995)
Quincy Lewis (2000-2002)
Gordon Hayward (2011-2012)




19
Raja Bell (2004-2005) (2010-2012)
 
David Benoit ranks 21 in all-time Jazz games played (415)

Bobby Hansen ranks 20 in all-time Jazz minutes played (9,484)

Rodger Braile is a tool.
 
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If you sum up those numbers and divide them to the sum of the digits, you will get 4. the first number minus the last equals two. multiply 4 with 2 you will get the number of times that the Utah Jazz won the Divison title.
 
Coming in at #21 in the all-time Jazz ranks:

Games played: David Benoit (noted by mellow, 415)
Points: Jeff Wilkins (3445)
Rebounds: Adam Keefe (1714)
Assists: Allen Bristow (724)
Blocks: Felton Spencer (153)
Steals: CJ Miles (274)
Minutes Played: Jeff Wilkins (9482)
 
The player with the 19th most minutes played in Jazz History is Jeff Malone (9,603)

Howard Eisley played in the 19th most all-time Jazz games (435)
 
In 1998 David Benoit was traded to Orlando with Yinka Dare and Kevin Edwards. Edwards wore 21 for most of his career. Going along with the other numbers of the thread, Edwards was the no. 20 pick in the 1988 Draft.
 
You're slipping mellow. Anyway, I'll get finding some stuff.

Sorry, we were hosting family all weekend, and with fantasy football starting.......

Anyway, I have really enjoyed reading your posts and most of the contributions everyone else.

I think these threads have been a nice diversion from the usual Demoncrats vs Republicons, or who should we trade Al for threads. I plan to keep going, although I might miss one day if I can sneak away for a fishing trip.
 
#20 All-time Jazz ranks:

Games: Jeff Wilkins (427)
Minutes: Bobby Hansen (9484)
Points: Bobby Hansen (3550)
Rebounds: Otto Moore (1757)
Assists: Paul Millsap (749)
Blocks: Joe Meriweather (159)
Steals: Ty Corbin (277)
 
Sorry, we were hosting family all weekend, and with fantasy football starting.......

Anyway, I have really enjoyed reading your posts and most of the contributions everyone else.

I think these threads have been a nice diversion from the usual Demoncrats vs Republicons, or who should we trade Al for threads. I plan to keep going, although I might miss one day if I can sneak away for a fishing trip.

You let me know if you'll miss a day and I'll try to post in your absence. I agree that these are a nice diversion from the political and trade threads.
 
In his 28 games with the Jazz, Rick Adelman averaged a combined (rounded) 20 of FGAs, FTAs, rebounds, assists, points, steals, and blocks per game.
 
we got quiincy lewis by trading the rights to nazr mohammed on draft night in 1998. of course, mohammed has since played 14 NBA seasons, been to the playoffs eight times, been a key rotation player for a title team (SAS), and last year made another trip to the finals. quincy lewis, in the meantime, was out of the league in four years. other players taken after nazr in 1998 were ruben patterson, rashard lewis and jazzfanz legend greg buckner. players taken after quincy lewis in 1999 include nobody fantastic, until you get clear down to pick #57 where the spurs selected #20 manu ginobili. the jazz picked 58th, right after manu was taken. eff.

carlos arroyo was #21 in his brief stint with toronto before coming to the jazz. mo almond was #21 in his brief stint with the wizards after he left the jazz.

interesting thing about the orl/njn benoit trade that nightmare mentioned... matt harpring was in that trade (sorta). the nets traded benoit, dare, edwards and a 1998 1st rounder in order to get brian evans and rony "you go live in utah" seikaly. that 1998 first rounder became matt harpring, who was traded two more times on his rookie contract: once to the cavs for andrew declerq, and then onto the sixers where he would wear #21.
 
we got the hayward draft pick from phoenix in the googs/handlotion/keon trade in 2004, but did you know how phoenix had it in the first place?

when phoenix traded penny hardaway, stephon marbury and cezary trybanski to the knicks in a midseason rebuilding trade, they received as compensation for their duo of aging stars: howard eisley, maciej lampe, antonio mcdyess, charlie ward, milos vujanic, a 2004 1st rounder (kirk snyder) and a 2009 1st rounder (gordon hayward). of course, they would convey the two draft picks (along with a 2005 2nd-rounder that the jazz later traded for ante tomic) to utah in exchange for the right to dump tom gugliotta's salary.

that was the year d'antoni took over, and after deciding to suck for the sake of clearing cap space (they finished 29-53 after gutting their team of long-term salary) they were able to add steve nash that offseason and get to the western conference finals just one season after failing to reach 30 wins. but it obviously cost them - they had to give up a 16th pick and a 9th pick.
 
In Karl Malones final season with the Jazz (2002-2003) he had 21 double-doubles.

In his last playoff victory with the Jazz Karl had 20 pts against Sacramento.

On Oct 30, 1985, in Karl's first start, he had 6 rebounds and 13 points (6+13)= 19
 
Stockton had 21 or more assists in a game 24 times. In 4 of those games he scored 19, 20, or 21 points.

He had 38 games with 20 or more assists and 67 games of 19 or more assists.
 
The Mailman had 21 or more points 1,210 times (regular season and playoffs). He had 19 or more rebounds in 25 of those games.

EDIT: This includes his season with the Lakers. That's a fail on my part.
 
Looking at some of Stockton & Malone's number makes me realize just how great they were. I think I had forgotten how they competed at such a high level for so many years. Awesome.
 
None of these daily count downs have yet earned as many posts in the day they are counting as the day they are counting. This one celebrated three days at the same time and still couldn't make it. Which number will be the first to succeed? Place your bets.
 
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