Utah Jazz: Korolev still has NBA dreams
Former Clippers lottery pick in Jazz's Revue camp
But Yaroslav Korolev's career with the Los Angeles Clippers didn't exactly pan out as planned.
He appeared in 24 games as a rookie in 2005-06, which was fully expected to be a developmental season. But the lanky 6-foot-9 small forward never did turn into the rotation regular the Clippers had envisioned, and instead he played just 10 games in his second NBA season.
Career average to date: precisely 1.1 points per game.
Yet Korolev was in the Clippers' initial plans for last season.
And then after point guard Shaun Livingston's devastating knee injury prompted the signing of veteran Brevin Knight, and power forward Elton Brand's ruptured Achilles tendon led to the signings of Ruben Patterson and Josh Powell he found himself out of a roster spot-sapped picture.
So Korolev returned in December to his native Russia and played instead for his hometown Moscow Dynamo, thinking the whole time about an eventual return to the NBA. And now he is a free agent in the Jazz's Rocky Mountain Revue camp, now just 21 and hoping to salvage what once was at his fingertips.
"Especially at my age," he added, "I still have a lot of years in front of me, so I'm gonna do my best to get back here as early as I can."
The Jazz are willing to give him the chance, and it's no charity gesture.
"He's got a lot of basketball skills," Jazz coach Jerry Sloan said.
"I think he's a kid that can really shoot the basketball," general manager Kevin O'Connor added. "We want to see if he's expanded his game a little bit."
The Jazz aren't sure what went wrong in L.A., where perhaps his game simply wasn't NBA-ready, and maybe expectations were warped by the pressures of being drafted so high.
They really don't care, either.
"He's got a blank page with us," O'Connor said. "He's a 21-year-old ... that's coming in to look for a spot. That's how we look at it. I want to see who he is now."
"A lot of guys you make mistakes on, but that doesn't mean they can't play if you work at it hard enough and understand what's going on," Sloan added. "We'll just take a look at it and see what's here."
Sloan said Korolev must learn "how we're gonna play, not to bury your head, and go one-on-one."
Korolev sounds willing to try whatever it takes.
Recent comments
I hope Korolev can make the team. As for CJ, hit the road you ingrate...
Team Player | July 16, 2008 at 3:13 p.m.
Why would a free agent who has had minimal exposure for limited minutes...
Free Agent Madness | July 16, 2008 at 10:50 a.m.
Korolev has a real chance at making the roster. I'm sure he...
Hollywood | July 16, 2008 at 9:15 a.m.



