From Deseret News archives:

Utah Jazz: Alston wasn't always deadly

Published: Thursday, May 1, 2008 12:29 a.m. MDT
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"He's a much better 3-point shooter now than he was when he played with us," Cleveland said. "He's made himself into a very good shooter, but back then he was inconsistent from the perimeter. He could always pass it and run the team, but shooting from the outside wasn't exactly his strength."

Joy for the Jazz to know now.

Said Cleveland, "The thing I will always remember about Rafer is that he had an intense competitiveness about him and it didn't matter what we were doing — it could be a free-throw shooting contest or anything — he was so competitive and had great pride in playing with as much intelligence as possible."

No wonder Alston has returned to the lineup with a vengeance in this series.

"Any time you have a point guard who has the ability to shoot the 3 and stretch things, it puts pressure on other people," Cleveland said. "In talking to Rafer this season, when Yao Ming was playing, they could stretch people, and with Tracy McGrady, they can really stretch people. You can see how they went on that great (22-game) run, got it going, even without Yao on the floor, they continued to stretch people."

That ability to stretch is killing the Jazz.

Like it usually has.

Alston grew up playing street ball in Jamaica, across the bridge from New York City. His skills were evident from the start, a flag that got Tarkanian involved.

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"He is fiercely competitive but also very cerebral. He knew the game at an early age when others around him were still trying to figure things out. He just understood," Cleveland said.

Now, the former BYU coach has no dog in this race, and he'd likely want to see Utah succeed as much as the Rockets. But when you have former players on a roster, your interest changes.

Cleveland just finished his third season at Fresno State, a school which almost received the death penalty by the NCAA for violations which occurred before he got there. He's had to work though some tough hurdles, restrictions and scholarship limitations.

"I knew what I was getting into for the most part," Cleveland said. "Most of it, I knew, some of it, I didn't. But we've got our work cut out for us for a few more years. We could be down two or three scholarship restrictions this coming year. But we'll turn this around."

Some of it's already started. Fresno State basketball will graduate six players this year, two more than that school's had in the past 15 years.

Back to Alston, the man.

Rafer Alston, his history, the genesis of his shot, and this Houston-Utah series?

Right now, Alston is the reason this series grinds on.


E-mail: dharmon@desnews.com

Recent comments

Alston is obviously essential to the Rockets in the playoffs. Look,...

Ella | May 1, 2008 at 9:59 p.m.

I just hated the way the Jazz give up during game six. They had...

jim b. cedar city | May 1, 2008 at 5:40 p.m.

... we can figure out how to ATTACK THE BASKET!!! Everybody needs to...

Jazz in 6 if . . . | May 1, 2008 at 4:33 p.m.

Image
Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News

Houston Rocket guard Rafer Alston celebrates a point in the closing minutes of the game against on April 24.

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