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Could a new era of home court dominance be on the horizon?

7StraightIsGreat

Well-Known Member
Ok, it's the offseason and I'm officially bored. The Jazz posted a very respectable record of 29-12 at home last year and while I doubt we'll ever see the home dominance that we saw during the height of the Stockton/Malone era, there's a couple of things that have happened this offseason that make me think Utah can once again enter the realm where we see seasons within 34-35 home victories.

First of all, I think the new timeout rules help teams like Utah and Denver dramatically. Over the years NBA coaches have adapted pretty well when coming to Utah and playing at elevation. A huge factor in that has been strategic use of seemingly endless timeouts. With less timeouts to work with, Utah can now force road weary teams into playing longer stretches in the 4th quarter without stopping the game. I'm interested to see how it plays out because it's just a hunch more than anything. However, I think that it could have a major effect.

Reason #2: I think this roster is starting to fill up with players who wear their emotions on their sleeve a bit more than normal. Guys like Gobert, Ingles, and it looks like Donovan Mitchell are the type of guys that feed off of getting the fans riled up. Momentum in Energy Solutions can quickly snowball for an opposing team when you factor in fatigue and the players and fans feeding off of each other, creating a frenzied atmosphere.

I think it also helps that the Jazz and their fans seem to have a new chip on their shoulder after the Hayward indecision. Maybe it's just me, but it's starting to feel like an "us against the world" type of thing. I actually think the Jazz will win more than 29 games at home next year even though they just lost their best offensive player and play in an already tough western conference that somehow found a way to get even more grueling. Then again, maybe I'm just crazy....
 
I think the players we added will be fan favorites. They will play off the energy of the place. Someone like Jerebko who doesn't back down from anyone.
Adding Sefolosha, and Udoh will only make our home court advantage that much stronger. Our place gets lit when Rudy or someone blocks a shot. I'm hoping
we can turn our home court into a nightmare for other teams. If we can get a little more offense from Ingles, Hood takes a step, and JJ plays the same we'll have
a chance to win a lot more games than we should. Hood, DM, JJ, and Ingles might be a lot tougher than some teams are expecting.

Seeing Gobert, DM, and Rubio on the court together will be exciting to watch. Lots of hustle, defense, and highlights.

Our new blue seats, uniforms, and stadium renovations are going to add to the energy of the building. This team is going to be tight as hell, and come after people.
I think we'll have even more success at home in the next two years.
 
This guy gets it.

To take matters further, look at it this theory: Win 30 games at home next year and go 20-and-10 against an Eastern Conference that's weaker than it's ever been. Boom, 50 wins and a top 5 seed again. Suck it, Gordon.

Edit: And by "this guy", I mean Revolution.
 
I think the West is too strong to have serious home-court dominance. And while you are right the TO rule might help, the season starting earlier and giving teams more rest might also hurt. Probably means less teams coming into SLC on b2b's.
 
Reason #2: I think this roster is starting to fill up with players who wear their emotions on their sleeve a bit more than normal. Guys like Gobert, Ingles, and it looks like Donovan Mitchell are the type of guys that feed off of getting the fans riled up. Momentum in Energy Solutions can quickly snowball for an opposing team when you factor in fatigue and the players and fans feeding off of each other, creating a frenzied atmosphere.

You mean the Delta Center? Great post.
 
Ok, it's the offseason and I'm officially bored. The Jazz posted a very respectable record of 29-12 at home last year and while I doubt we'll ever see the home dominance that we saw during the height of the Stockton/Malone era, there's a couple of things that have happened this offseason that make me think Utah can once again enter the realm where we see seasons within 34-35 home victories.

First of all, I think the new timeout rules help teams like Utah and Denver dramatically. Over the years NBA coaches have adapted pretty well when coming to Utah and playing at elevation. A huge factor in that has been strategic use of seemingly endless timeouts. With less timeouts to work with, Utah can now force road weary teams into playing longer stretches in the 4th quarter without stopping the game. I'm interested to see how it plays out because it's just a hunch more than anything. However, I think that it could have a major effect.

Reason #2: I think this roster is starting to fill up with players who wear their emotions on their sleeve a bit more than normal. Guys like Gobert, Ingles, and it looks like Donovan Mitchell are the type of guys that feed off of getting the fans riled up. Momentum in Energy Solutions can quickly snowball for an opposing team when you factor in fatigue and the players and fans feeding off of each other, creating a frenzied atmosphere.

I think it also helps that the Jazz and their fans seem to have a new chip on their shoulder after the Hayward indecision. Maybe it's just me, but it's starting to feel like an "us against the world" type of thing. I actually think the Jazz will win more than 29 games at home next year even though they just lost their best offensive player and play in an already tough western conference that somehow found a way to get even more grueling. Then again, maybe I'm just crazy....

Wow, I like the way you think. I personally believe that it could take a little while to really get our team chemistry up and going since we changed the recipe (new player mix). But I can certainly envision us becoming a real force at home particularly and hopefully on the road as well.

But I think a lot hinges on just how effective Rubio is with the ball in his hands. Can't have defenders double teaming other players and daring him to shoot. We don't have anybody that's ready to take the reins if he fails. But if he comes in with a chip on his shoulder and succeeds we're going to be tough for anybody to beat IMO.
 
Ok, it's the offseason and I'm officially bored. The Jazz posted a very respectable record of 29-12 at home last year and while I doubt we'll ever see the home dominance that we saw during the height of the Stockton/Malone era, there's a couple of things that have happened this offseason that make me think Utah can once again enter the realm where we see seasons within 34-35 home victories.

First of all, I think the new timeout rules help teams like Utah and Denver dramatically. Over the years NBA coaches have adapted pretty well when coming to Utah and playing at elevation. A huge factor in that has been strategic use of seemingly endless timeouts. With less timeouts to work with, Utah can now force road weary teams into playing longer stretches in the 4th quarter without stopping the game. I'm interested to see how it plays out because it's just a hunch more than anything. However, I think that it could have a major effect.

Reason #2: I think this roster is starting to fill up with players who wear their emotions on their sleeve a bit more than normal. Guys like Gobert, Ingles, and it looks like Donovan Mitchell are the type of guys that feed off of getting the fans riled up. Momentum in Energy Solutions can quickly snowball for an opposing team when you factor in fatigue and the players and fans feeding off of each other, creating a frenzied atmosphere.

I think it also helps that the Jazz and their fans seem to have a new chip on their shoulder after the Hayward indecision. Maybe it's just me, but it's starting to feel like an "us against the world" type of thing. I actually think the Jazz will win more than 29 games at home next year even though they just lost their best offensive player and play in an already tough western conference that somehow found a way to get even more grueling. Then again, maybe I'm just crazy....

It's a valid point you make in re having guys who sho lots of passion on the floor. I would love to see Draymond on this team even though I hate his *** on the warriors, mostly cause they are so dominate. I'd enjoy a Gobert, Mitchell, Ingles, Draymond team amid the chaos of a riled/ screaming their lungs out vivant smart home arena.
 
It's a valid point you make in re having guys who sho lots of passion on the floor. I would love to see Draymond on this team even though I hate his *** on the warriors, mostly cause they are so dominate. I'd enjoy a Gobert, Mitchell, Ingles, Draymond team amid the chaos of a riled/ screaming their lungs out vivant smart home arena.

Not to mention Exum and Rubio.
 
So If I came to Salt Lake City for a home game, whats the best way to get 3 tickets, where should I put my family up, when are the skiing season, any cool places? Might spend a mini vacation in SLC just for a Jazz home game but would like a cool little outdoor cabins-like place to stay and enjoy nature instead of the city methinks
 
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