Utah Jazz notebook: Young bigs stuck on bench

Published: Monday, Nov. 16 2009 12:00 a.m. MST

Even with the Jazz down to a scant nine available healthy players for their last two games, young bigs Kosta Koufos and Kyrylo Fesenko played sparingly in Friday night's win at Philadelphia and Saturday night's loss at Cleveland.

Both appeared for fewer than two minutes of garbage-time against the 76ers, while Fesenko logged just four minutes against the Cavaliers and Koufos, despite having more than a dozen friends and family members in the stands from his nearby hometown of Canton, did not play at all.

Finding time for one, let alone both, has proven problematic so far this season, Jazz coach Jerry Sloan readily admits.

Regarding 22-year-old Fesenko, Sloan said, "I'd like to get him in the game a little bit more, but our chore is try to win the game. Just to put a guy out there to give him minutes sometimes when he's not quite ready to play that kind of difficult."

The case is similar for Koufos.

"The minutes are always tough, but that's what the D-League's about," Sloan said.

"I think sometimes they think that's a demotion," he added. "What it is is a way to try to learn how to become a better player."

Fesenko, being a third-year NBA player, no longer is eligible for assignment to the NBA Development League.

But Koufos, who played 10 games as a rookie last season for the Orem-based Utah Flash, is.

With the Jazz lineup depleted as it is, Koufos won't be headed to Utah County any anytime soon. But it could happen sometime this season, Sloan suggested before Saturday's win in Cleveland.

"He's big and long, and probably now he needs a chance to play a little bit more," the Jazz coach said. "But, like I said, we're trying to win games every time we step out there, and it's not an exhibition season now. Everything's on the line."

Sloan had effusive praise for Koufos' work ethic, but he hastened to add that after just one season spent at Ohio State — that playing mostly zone defense — the 20-year-old still has a lot to learn.

"He's improved a great deal," Sloan said of Koufos, who got a surprise start when the Jazz visited Cleveland last season.

"It's just that being so young, trying to understand the mechanics of the game has probably slowed him down a little bit," the Jazz coach added. "But his work habit has not slowed him down."

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