Filling Fisher's voids, Jazz to face Lakers

Published: Tuesday, Oct. 23 2007 12:21 a.m. MDT

ANAHEIM, Calif. — They were beneficiaries for one year of his on-court calm, and his perimeter defense, and all the savoir-faire that comes with having won three NBA championship rings.

The Jazz, however, are taking a practical approach to life without veteran guard Derek Fisher and the sage direction he delivered before asking out of his contract in Utah and rejoin the Los Angeles Lakers last offseason.

"We'll definitely miss Fish," point guard Deron Williams said Monday, when the Jazz prepared for preseason games against Fisher and the Lakers both tonight here in Anaheim and Thursday night in San Diego.

"But, at the same time," Williams added, "we know we've got guys that are capable of leading this team."

One who warmly embraces the task is power forward Carlos Boozer, the Jazz's leading scorer and rebounder during the 2006-07 NBA season.

"Absolutely, I'm comfortable," Boozer said when asked Monday about accepting a leadership role.

"This is my team. It's me and D-Will's (Williams') team," added Boozer, who joined Williams in publicly criticizing unnamed teammates after Utah was eliminated by San Antonio from last season's Western Conference finals. "Obviously, Coach (Jerry Sloan) has given us the reins to take over, and we have, and we'll continue to lead our team by example."

Boozer deems himself — and Williams, too — ready, willing and most definitely able.

"Some of that comes with being here longer than a year or two, being comfortable with the system, being comfortable with the organization and your teammates," he said. "Some of that just comes with maturity, and I think we've both matured a lot, especially over last season."

Williams readily acknowledges that he and Boozer both intend to tackle the role, but takes a somewhat more diplomatic approach to defining the terms under which they'll do the leading.

"It's everybody's team," Williams said. "It's Booz's team, it's Memo's (Mehmet Okur's) team, it's A.K.'s (Andrei Kirilenko's) team, it's Coach's team. I'm just a part of that team and want to try to be a leader for it."

The one whose team it is not any longer, in any event, is Fisher, the longtime Laker who started at shooting guard and backed up Williams at the point as Utah ended a three-year playoff drought and advanced to last season's conference finals series against the Spurs.

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