Regardless of who's on the court, the Utah Jazz are a team that will never quit. Already down two all-stars in Donovan Mitchell and Rudy Gobert, Utah found out postgame that head coach Quin Snyder and top reserve Danuel House Jr. would not play against Minnesota due to health and safety protocols.But the hits weren't done coming at that point.
"The sky isn't falling. … But that doesn't mean we accept what's going on."That was head coach Quin Snyder's message to his team and media members when speaking postgame.What had transpired before those words was an up-and-down game against the Phoenix Suns, the top team in the league. After trailing by 21 points at the end of the opening quarter, the Jazz battled back and
The odds were stacked against Utah on Monday night.Playing on the road for the second game of a back-to-back against a rested Phoenix Suns squad, that's enough to make it difficult. Add in that the Jazz were without its entire starting lineup and first man off the bench, that would seem like insurmountable odds to overcome.However, nobody told Trent Forrest and the Jazz
Basketball is a game of inches and the Utah Jazz found out the difficult way on Sunday night.Despite trailing by eight points at the end of the third quarter, the Jazz rallied back and had a chance to win the game in the closing seconds. Unfortunately, Bojan Bogdanovic's three-point attempt was just off the mark literally and Royce O'Neale's tip-in attempt hung on the
As one of the most veteran teams in the leagues, Utah understands how long an NBA season is. While the Jazz admit that every game is important and they want to win all 82 regular season games, they acknowledge that there will be struggles throughout the year. Following Wednesday's loss to Houston, it felt that Utah was currently in the middle of one of those struggles. But