have a hard time understanding why Jazz fans seem almost endlessly obsessed with finding shooting guards or wing defenders.
For years the biggest deficiency the Jazz have had has been size and defense at the power forward and center positions. With Okur and Boozer we were slightly small and defensively weak in the paint, however, we were a decent rebounding team and they complemented each other well offensively. So how did we do? Not great, we got lucky with Golden St upsetting the number 1 seed (Dallas) one season and got to the conference finals once.
This last season we had Al playing the center spot and Millsap at the four. This means we were painfully small in the front court and while they both were decent rebounders and brought some quality scoring on the offense, the shear lack of size really killed us against bigger teams. In the playoffs we would have no shot with that front court. Supporters of the Big Al/Millsap front court will counter that the Jazz were 5th in the league in blocked shots this season...and they are right about that. However, blocked shots alone don't tell the whole story. One of the reasons the Jazz blocked as many shots as they did was because Al and Millsap were so small that teams continually pounded the ball into the paint and took a ton of shots near the basket. Al and Millsap played courageous defense and ended up blocking a lot of those shots, however, we still got killed by opposing bigs and Millsap wore down halfway through the season.
The NBA of today appears to be a guard-dominated league...and in some respects this is true. There are few all-star quality centers and a plethora of really good point guards (probably the deepest the league has ever been at that position).
But the bottom line is that the biggest teams and the teams with the best front courts (especially defensively) are still winning the titles:
The Lakers in 2009 and 2010 had Bynum, Gasol and Odom,
The Celtics in 2008 had Garnett, Perkins and Big Baby,
The Spurs in 2007, 2005, and 2003 had Duncan and others,
The Heat in 2006 had Shaq's last dominant season,
The Pistons in 2004 had Ben (Def Player of the Year) and Rasheed Wallace, and
The Lakers in 2000-2002 had Shaq in his prime.
Playoff basketball is still about half-court basketball and getting defensive stops by controlling the paint and getting defensive rebounds is still what wins championships. Just ask the Phoenix Suns from 2004-2010.
The Jazz have a wonderful front court piece in Derek Favors. He is a big, athletic power forward who can play defense and rebound and he has the potential to be an all-star calliber player. Big Al or Millsap could be valuable pieces off the bench. However, if the Jazz are going to become legitimate title contenders they will need to find someway to get a quality true center who is big and can defend and rebound.
Of course the other pieces do matter: a good point guard, quality wings, perimeter shooting, etc. But no matter how good our point guard of the future is or how well Gordan Hayward becomes, if we don't have an excellent true center next to Favors, I don't think the Jazz will be ever be real title contenders.
For years the biggest deficiency the Jazz have had has been size and defense at the power forward and center positions. With Okur and Boozer we were slightly small and defensively weak in the paint, however, we were a decent rebounding team and they complemented each other well offensively. So how did we do? Not great, we got lucky with Golden St upsetting the number 1 seed (Dallas) one season and got to the conference finals once.
This last season we had Al playing the center spot and Millsap at the four. This means we were painfully small in the front court and while they both were decent rebounders and brought some quality scoring on the offense, the shear lack of size really killed us against bigger teams. In the playoffs we would have no shot with that front court. Supporters of the Big Al/Millsap front court will counter that the Jazz were 5th in the league in blocked shots this season...and they are right about that. However, blocked shots alone don't tell the whole story. One of the reasons the Jazz blocked as many shots as they did was because Al and Millsap were so small that teams continually pounded the ball into the paint and took a ton of shots near the basket. Al and Millsap played courageous defense and ended up blocking a lot of those shots, however, we still got killed by opposing bigs and Millsap wore down halfway through the season.
The NBA of today appears to be a guard-dominated league...and in some respects this is true. There are few all-star quality centers and a plethora of really good point guards (probably the deepest the league has ever been at that position).
But the bottom line is that the biggest teams and the teams with the best front courts (especially defensively) are still winning the titles:
The Lakers in 2009 and 2010 had Bynum, Gasol and Odom,
The Celtics in 2008 had Garnett, Perkins and Big Baby,
The Spurs in 2007, 2005, and 2003 had Duncan and others,
The Heat in 2006 had Shaq's last dominant season,
The Pistons in 2004 had Ben (Def Player of the Year) and Rasheed Wallace, and
The Lakers in 2000-2002 had Shaq in his prime.
Playoff basketball is still about half-court basketball and getting defensive stops by controlling the paint and getting defensive rebounds is still what wins championships. Just ask the Phoenix Suns from 2004-2010.
The Jazz have a wonderful front court piece in Derek Favors. He is a big, athletic power forward who can play defense and rebound and he has the potential to be an all-star calliber player. Big Al or Millsap could be valuable pieces off the bench. However, if the Jazz are going to become legitimate title contenders they will need to find someway to get a quality true center who is big and can defend and rebound.
Of course the other pieces do matter: a good point guard, quality wings, perimeter shooting, etc. But no matter how good our point guard of the future is or how well Gordan Hayward becomes, if we don't have an excellent true center next to Favors, I don't think the Jazz will be ever be real title contenders.