LunaticWolf
Well-Known Member
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We were one win from being a two seed last year. The 2008 team almost... The 2007 team would have...
-2006-07 - Western Conference Finals (as in: 1 step away from the Finals) - and if Robert Horry doesn't body check Steve Nash into the scorer's table - it's likely Utah faces a Phoenix squad they beat 3/4 times instead of San Antonio in the WCF and then go on to beat that dreadful Cleveland team.
-2007-08 - Conference semifinals, Game 5 at Staples Center - the game everyone forgets, but the Jazz were one increbile Steve Javie/Bob Delaney-screw job away from taking a 3-2 lead over THEE LOS ANGELES LAKERS, with Game 6 back in SLC. Most analysts agreed that series was the real conference finals.
-2008-09 - Season got derailed twice, first when Deron sprained his ankle in preseason and didn't regain form until January, then when Boozer injured his knee and missed 45 games. Then they had to face the Lakers - w/out Mehmet Okur for essentially the entire series.
-2009-10 - Got hot in midseason and were on an incredible 17-2 stretch, when they traded away Ronnie Brewer - which didn't affect the team until AK injured his calf with 16 games remaining in the season - and was lost for virtually the rest of the season/playoffs. Then Okur blows his achilles in Game 1, beat Denver but not enough weapons left to finish games against LA even though they had great chances (Game 1: 4-point lead with 2 minutes left at Staples, Game 3: 2-point lead w/30 seconds left).
So you see 2 years where the Jazz were 1 step away from making The Finals, and 2 years where injuries and lack of roster improvement prevented them from taking that next step. (If healthy it's likely they don't make it regardless, but injuries really robbed them of the opportunity to take that next step).
Due to injuries/age of Boozer, I agree with the decision to let him walk for 6 yrs $75 million. However, the fact is those were still some darn good Jazz teams that were pretty close to the ultimate goal.
Jazz fans will be lucky to experience that type of success from this new rebuilding effort. For every OKC, there are a dozen rebuilding failures. There are just too many unknowns to think the Jazz are in a better position now than they were 3 years ago.
It's like spending $500 on lottery tickets instead of spending $500 on savings bonds. You now have a chance at striking it rich, but that doesn't mean you're more financially successful.
Wait, what? You're idea of "backing yourself up" is by bringing up how the Jazz consistently failed to accomplish or advance? Is that really what you're trying to do here, Babyfeld?
Yup, two missed three's from sending game six to overtime, and one bs call in game five where we could have had a chance to tie it. Of course, I do remember most people on this board bitching about how Kobe averaged 11 free throws per game. Funny how at the time they blamed the refs, but just now admit the team wasn't good enough. Gotta love people who change their opinions depending on what they are arguing.
And I'd still really love to know why nobody else had a genius idea of blowing up the team in previous seasons since, according to many of you, we weren't a contender. Any takers on that one?
-2006-07 - Western Conference Finals (as in: 1 step away from the Finals) - and if Robert Horry doesn't body check Steve Nash into the scorer's table - it's likely Utah faces a Phoenix squad they beat 3/4 times instead of San Antonio in the WCF and then go on to beat that dreadful Cleveland team.
-2007-08 - Conference semifinals, Game 5 at Staples Center - the game everyone forgets, but the Jazz were one increbile Steve Javie/Bob Delaney-screw job away from taking a 3-2 lead over THEE LOS ANGELES LAKERS, with Game 6 back in SLC. Most analysts agreed that series was the real conference finals.
-2008-09 - Season got derailed twice, first when Deron sprained his ankle in preseason and didn't regain form until January, then when Boozer injured his knee and missed 45 games. Then they had to face the Lakers - w/out Mehmet Okur for essentially the entire series.
-2009-10 - Got hot in midseason and were on an incredible 17-2 stretch, when they traded away Ronnie Brewer - which didn't affect the team until AK injured his calf with 16 games remaining in the season - and was lost for virtually the rest of the season/playoffs. Then Okur blows his achilles in Game 1, beat Denver but not enough weapons left to finish games against LA even though they had great chances (Game 1: 4-point lead with 2 minutes left at Staples, Game 3: 2-point lead w/30 seconds left).
So you see 2 years where the Jazz were 1 step away from making The Finals, and 2 years where injuries and lack of roster improvement prevented them from taking that next step. (If healthy it's likely they don't make it regardless, but injuries really robbed them of the opportunity to take that next step).
Due to injuries/age of Boozer, I agree with the decision to let him walk for 6 yrs $75 million. However, the fact is those were still some darn good Jazz teams that were pretty close to the ultimate goal.
Jazz fans will be lucky to experience that type of success from this new rebuilding effort. For every OKC, there are a dozen rebuilding failures. There are just too many unknowns to think the Jazz are in a better position now than they were 3 years ago.
It's like spending $500 on lottery tickets instead of spending $500 on savings bonds. You now have a chance at striking it rich, but that doesn't mean you're more financially successful.
That people try to justify the blowing up of this franchise by saying that the Deron/Boozer era was going nowhere. Um, excuse me, but THIS ERA is going nowhere. We were a contender and that's hard to build. I suspect a very long rebuilding process to become a contender again.
Enjoy your false hope and lottery picks, Sloanfidels.
Dude, I've had your back around here, when it comes to Boozer.
The truth is, Deron wasn't going to stay here, unless this team was a contender. As much as I think Boozer is/was a stud, our FO saw the writing on the wall. Boozer wasn't going to get us there, and the injury concern was legitimate. They took a big risk by letting him go(I have no doubt they tried to trade him), but they came up huge with Jefferson. NOT as big of a gimme as some people think. Utah ended up about 5th highest in the league, salary wise, when they traded that exception for big Al. The gamble didn't pay off like they hoped. Then again, I give credit for being pro-active. Deron was on the way out, and Utah made the best of it. Yes, it will probably be a long road back, but it's better than riding Deron into the grave, and then climbing our way out for 20 years.
3 things. 1st in 07-08 we did almost win, I still had hope then. But we lost to that Laker team without Bynum. Not a good sign for the future.
2nd is 08-09 Forgive me if I'm miss remembering. But your supposed 2nd time the season got derailed. We won more without Boozer than with, it was his return that derailed that season not his injury.
Last year. They won the same % of games without Brewer as with. The injury to Memo was critical but why would we believe that the same team from the year before had a chance against a still great Laker team when they put up barely a fight the year before? And they may have been close in 2 games. BUT THEY GOT SWEPT. No series is close if you get swept. And I don't believe for a second that Memo makes enough of a difference to change the ultimate outcome. Maybe they win 2 games if he is there. Or maybe the defensive ineptitude of Boozer/Memo together makes that series completely embarrassing.
Those teams never once beat a real contender in a series. Every time they faced a real contender they were beaten soundly. With the exception of the year that the Lakers had one of their big guys injured.
I agree, we know the real mistakes were made with not trading AK and extending Memo, but all I'm trying to say here is that those teams WERE contender.