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Posted: Monday March 9, 2009 4:37PM; Updated: Monday March 9, 2009 6:54PM
Paul Forrester Paul Forrester >
INSIDE THE NBA

Jazz putting their pieces together

Story Highlights

After a so-so, injury-plagued start, the Jazz have won 11 consecutive games

Coach Jerry Sloan has liked the desire and grit he's seen from his team

More topics: Bobcats in playoff mix; notes from NBA analytics conference

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deron-williams.p1.jpg
Deron Williams has helped lift the Jazz into contention for a top seed in the West.
AP

For a guy who's won more than 1,000 games as an NBA coach, Jerry Sloan makes the process sound so easy.

"Anybody could coach these guys," Sloan said of his current Jazz team, which appears destined to become the 18th playoff club in his 21 years in Utah. "They're good people, they work hard in practice and they do the right thing. It boils down to people and how they work and how they respect their job. You always have a chance to win if you get good people who try to do their job. I don't think it's coaching."

It's hard to disagree with a man who ranks fourth on the all-time wins list, but the fact that the Jazz are within sight of the Western Conference's No. 2 seed is a reflection of what could be some of the best coaching of Sloan's career. Injuries, lineup changes, a typically tough conference schedule and sad off-the-court news for Sloan and the Jazz -- all those factors have made life complicated for a team that came within two victories of the conference finals last season.

"Our guys have played pretty hard trying to win some ball games," Sloan said. "We've lost some games we should have won and won some games we should have lost, but they've shown a lot of desire."

Utah is finally hitting its stride, but it took a while because of injuries to top players. Stars Carlos Boozer (45 games missed) and Deron Williams (14), starting center Mehmet Okur (nine), ace sixth man Andrei Kirilenko (11) and reserve forward Matt Harpring (15) all have been sidelined for long stretches. In fact, the Jazz didn't use their projected starting lineup until the 57th game of the season. They already have used 16 starting lineups, six more than last season.

With Paul Millsap's emergence and the continued development of Ronnie Brewer and C.J. Miles, the Jazz stayed afloat with a 26-22 record through January. Now healthy again (not withstanding Boozer's sore ankle), Utah has won 14 of 15 since Feb. 1, including a current 11-game winning streak fueled by the playmaking of Williams.

The Jazz have benefited from a home-heavy schedule; eight of the victories in the streak have come at EnergySolutions Arena (where they are 52-7 since Jan. 1, 2008), and Sunday's win at Toronto to open a five-game trip improved their road record to only 12-17. But Utah is also playing with more grit on defense, an acknowledged weakness that Sloan said is his responsibility.

"Taking bad shots has been one of the things that causes us to not play good defense a lot of the time," Sloan said. "And since pretty much all of our guys are offensive thinkers to start with, they sometimes have a tendency to take some bad shots and not cover the other end of the floor."

Though Sloan's just-do-your-job demeanor leaves the impression of inflexibility, he isn't as stuck in the old ways as presumed.

"The last couple of years he's changed a lot," said Kirilenko, who has famously battled Sloan in the past over his role. "He can be diplomatic on some days. He tries to involve the players a little bit more [in his decision-making] and explain things a little more. He's still a tough coach with his own philosophy, but he's shown he can adjust and joke a little bit."

That likely hasn't been easy to do over the past few weeks. Jazz owner Larry Miller died Feb. 20, and a week later Sloan's close friend and former Bulls teammate Norm Van Lier and his ex-coach Johnny "Red" Kerr passed away.

"It's not just about me," Sloan said in explaining how he has kept focused on the season. "My life was around those guys, but [my players] have their own lives in basketball. ... So it's about our players and our coaches.

"There's a lot to learn as you go forward. Each game is an experience sometimes. There's always something that players aren't familiar with or things you are trying to get across to them. That's part of the coaching process."

What's hot

Larry Brown's powers of persuasion. The peripatetic coaching legend seems to have regained his magic touch in resurrecting the fortunes of yet another also-ran. The Bobcats have won six in a row to move within a game of the East's final playoff seed.

Dwyane Wade's MVP push. Wade is averaging 35.3 points, 10.7 assists, 5.7 boards and 2.7 steals in his last 10 games.

Twitter. With Shaq delighting fans with his increasingly numerous tweets, the Internet's hottest social-networking site is gaining quite an NBA following. In a recent blog post on NBA.com, Tyson Chandler wrote that he was thinking about starting a "beef" with Shaq to pump up his Twitter feed.

What's not

Donald Sterling's patience. During a locker-room tirade after last week's 106-78 loss to San Antonio, the Clippers' owner reportedly berated the team and accused second-year forward Al Thornton of being the most selfish player he had ever seen. The Clips responded two nights later by losing 118-95 at home to the Grizzlies, who picked up their fourth road victory of the season. "I really can't say did [Sterling's tirade] help or did it motivate us," Thornton told the Los Angeles Times.

Hawks harmony. Josh Smith had seemed to find an uneasy truce with coach Mike Woodson this season ... until Friday's game at Charlotte. Smith reportedly got into a heated disagreement at halftime with Woodson, who benched his star forward for the second half of a 98-91 loss. "It didn't have nothing to do with his basketball-playing abilities," Hawks swingman Maurice Evans told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "It's the off-the-court, internal stuff that causes all the drama." There may be silver lining: Smith had 19 points, 12 boards and four blocks the next night in an 87-83 victory against Detroit.

New York's playoff dreams. It wasn't long ago that the Knicks were positioning themselves for a playoff run. But after seeing his team lose five of six heading into four consecutive road games this week, president Donnie Walsh can start prepping for the draft now.

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