Utah Jazz: Players have missed 66 man-games

Published: Friday, Dec. 5, 2008 12:41 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Barely more than a month into the 2008-09 NBA season, the Jazz already have lost 66 man-games to injury and personal leave.

That's more than double what future Hall of Famers John Stockton and Karl Malone missed in their 37 combined seasons playing for the Jazz.

It's also 21 more than Jazz players missed all of last season, and — though perhaps unlikely to actually soar this high — it's on pace for more than 270 total games lost by the time this season is done.

Yet there is some solace within the massive cloud that continues to hover, even now that starting point guard Deron Williams is back from a preseason ankle injury and two other key cogs — sixth man Andrei Kirilenko and All-Star power forward Carlos Boozer — may be on the verge of returning.

Before getting to them, though, the latest update from the Jazz infirmary is as follows:

• Kirilenko (irritated right ankle), reserve forward Matt Harpring (strained lower back) and reserve big man Kyrylo Fesenko (same) all are listed as game-time decisions for tonight's late-starting ESPN-televised meeting at home with the Toronto Raptors, and Kirilenko is hopeful he can go.

Story continues below
• Boozer is listed as "doubtful," but he suggested earlier this week that he probably won't play against until sometime next week at the earliest due to a strained left quadriceps tendon that already has caused him to miss eight straight games.

• Power forward Paul Millsap — who has been starting in Boozer's place, and who had a double-double in Wednesday's home loss to Miami — is being called "probable" because of a left big toe he sprained against the Heat.

• And reserve big man Jarron Collins (inflamed right elbow) remains out long-term.

And now, the silver linings ...

One is that reserve shooting guard Morris Almond, the only 2007 NBA first-round draft choice whose third-season contract option was not picked up, is logging lots of minutes and actually impressing the Jazz brass.

When earlier this season the team decided against exercising its option, there was talk that the Jazz were trying to trade Almond.

They didn't.

And while it still remains likelier than not that Almond will be playing elsewhere next season, such chatter — at least for the time being, especially after double-digit scoring nights and decent defensive efforts in Utah's last two outings — has been squelched.

Recent comments

Is that the reporters are back to....comparing this years or last...

Bob W. | Dec. 5, 2008 at 9:13 p.m.

Memo would play some D! (It could get ugly against the Toronto...

I wish | Dec. 5, 2008 at 5:05 p.m.

This kid is one of the worst rebounders (for his position) in the...

CJ??? | Dec. 5, 2008 at 4:37 p.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

lets crucify someone who was angry his mother got spit on the death penalty...

I will vote for him.

Impeach the judges that set these low bonds.Make them accountable,provided...

As a employee of Natures Way I can say that most of us will miss working for...

Why is Y. ignoring spew of hatred?

Max called a spade a spade here. He shouldn't have done it in the way he...

BYU is going to crucify someone who was angry his family was attacked by...

He apologized, he apologized, he apologized. Way to cast the first stone.

any journalist who uses inflamatory phrases such as "hole war" has no right...

Morgan is amazing and would be one of the greatest Congresspersons. He...

Only two citations? What did they have for security at the game, a meter maid?

Advertisements