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[TheSaltLakeTribune] Utah Jazz: Jazz trying not to be overconfident

Discussion in 'NBA Dish' started by jsmee2000, Apr 18, 2008.

  1. jsmee2000

    jsmee2000 Member

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    article link

    Utah Jazz: Jazz trying not to be overconfident
    By Ross Siler
    The Salt Lake Tribune
    Article Last Updated: 04/18/2008 02:57:23 AM MDT

    What does it say when the Houston Rockets win 22 consecutive games in the regular season - the second-longest winning streak in NBA history - and the Jazz's biggest concern might be overconfidence as they prepare to play the Rockets in a first-round playoff rematch?
    It's largely the product of the Jazz's recent history against the Rockets, starting with their 103-99 Game 7 victory in Houston last playoffs, leaving Tracy McGrady 0-for-6 at leading a team out of the first round in his career.
    The Jazz returned to Houston on Jan. 27 for the first time since that game and handed the Rockets their last loss before the historic streak. Only four days ago, the Jazz built a 21-point lead early in the second half in cruising past Houston at EnergySolutions Arena.
    With that in mind, it's easy to see why the Jazz are consensus favorites against the Rockets, especially with Yao Ming lost for the season to a stress fracture in his left foot. Of course, it also was the last thing the Jazz wanted to hear Thursday.
    "You start talking like that, that's when you get beat," Kyle Korver said. "I feel like we definitely have confidence against them because we have beaten them a couple of times, but it's not an overconfidence by any means.
    "They're a very good team, they play really well together, and if Tracy gets hot, watch out. We've just got to go out there and do what we've been doing, try to establish an inside game and we'll see what happens."
    Asked about the pitfalls of overconfidence, Jazz coach Jerry Sloan instead branded his players as underdogs. He's right in one respect: Without home-court advantage, the Jazz will have to win at least one game in Houston to advance.
    "I don't know how when you're the underdog and going into somebody's building, thinking you're going to be overconfident," Sloan said. "I hope they're confident we can win but not overconfident to think we don't have to play.
    "We have to play our hearts out to beat these guys in their building in some way or another."
    After holding a short team meeting Thursday, the Jazz brought up some of their points of emphasis for the series with reporters. First of all, they will look to take advantage of Yao's absence in looking inside to Carlos Boozer and Mehmet Okur.
    The Rockets start 41-year-old Dikembe Mutombo and rookie Luis Scola before turning to Carl Landry and Chuck Hayes off the bench. At the same time, Sloan made clear the Rockets are a deeper and tougher team than they were last playoffs.
    "They added four or five bulldogs, you might say, tough guys that are going to get after you," Sloan said.
    The Jazz (54-28) also are keen on reclaiming home-court advantage as quickly as possible, unlike last playoffs when they dropped their first three games in Houston before finally breaking through in the fourth quarter of Game 7.
    "It's going to be a tough series," Matt Harpring said. "It's not going to be a walk in the park for us, and I think we know that. The biggest thing is to try to get one of these two wins on the road and if we do that, I think we're back in the driver's seat."
    The Rockets' 22-game winning streak earned the Jazz's admiration, with Boozer acknowledging he tuned in nightly to see against which team it would finally end. Only the 1971-72 L.A. Lakers, led by Gail Goodrich, Jerry West and Wilt Chamberlain, ever had a longer streak, winning a record 33 consecutive games.
    Although Houston won 10 straight games without Yao, the streak was snapped by Boston on March 18. The Rockets still won nine of their last 16 games after the streak.
    "You don't see teams that lose a piece like a Yao Ming do that kind of thing," Boozer said. "For them, I assume that they have a great chemistry, a great camaraderie, they love playing with each other. To put something together like that, you have to have that kind of cohesiveness."
    Even with Rick Adelman replacing Jeff Van Gundy as coach, the Rockets remain a sturdy defensive team, ranking among the NBA leaders in allowing just 92.0 points on 43.3 percent shooting. They also are a potent three-point shooting team.
    Since this is a playoff rematch, the Rockets could have revenge on their minds. They are a different team with the additions of Scola, Landry, Bobby Jackson and Aaron Brooks, and Sloan guessed Adelman's emphasis would be on the present instead of the past.
    "They have something to prove," Sloan said. "I don't know if it's revenge as much as they have a better record [55-27] than we do and they want to prove that."
    rsiler@sltrib.com
     
  2. xiki

    xiki Member

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    Sounds like something the writer was trying to foment. The Jazzies were doing their PC best to not agree.
     
  3. A_3PO

    A_3PO Member

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    The Jazz have every right to be confident. But the games have to be played and they must win at least once in Houston while holding serve at home.
     
  4. SuperBeeKay

    SuperBeeKay Member

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    I smell bullpoop when I read it
     
  5. RocksMillenium

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    Why would you say that?
     
  6. Bigmarky

    Bigmarky Member

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    the jazz have owned the rockets pretty much due to the 8 vs 5 theory

    5 jazz players on the court plus 3 officials vs 5 houston players


    that is my theory.


    oh ya, when the rockets lost to J.Stocks 3, we had missed 2 wide open 3s before that (mario ellie and one other)
     
  7. tigermission1

    tigermission1 Member

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    Well, last year that wasn't the case, really. It was mostly Yao and McGrady choking hard in the final minutes of the game. Our two stars didn't 'deliver' in a career-defining moment, which unfortunately has been a running theme in their respective careers so far.

    We gave away that series to the Jazz last year, nothing will ever convince me otherwise...I saw it with my own eyes, and had that sickening feeling in my stomach when I realized what was happening.

    This year it's not a 'fair fight', so I won't hold a grudge if we lose, and will be overly excited (and amazed) if we win. Either way, I am looking for a good showing/never say die type of effort from our guys. If they go down, at least do so in Spartan-like fashion.
     

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