Utah's Carlos Boozer celebrates after a slam dunk as the Utah Jazz host the Portland Trailblazers at Energy Solutions Arena in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Nov., 28, 2009. Mike Terry, Deseret News
Mike Terry, Deseret News
Soaring toward the end of November as they have been, the Jazz seem to have come to the realization they perhaps can be really good this season.
Too bad for them they may not have anyone left for December.
Utah thumped the Portland Trail Blazers 108-92 Saturday night at EnergySolutions Arena, getting a 26-point, 12-rebound double-double from power forward Carlos Boozer and a 24-point, 15-assist double from point guard Deron Williams.
The 9-7 Jazz's second straight win and fifth in their last six outings came, however, with a cost.
Their bench took a beating.
Backup small forward Andrei Kirilenko and backup power forward Paul Millsap, both rotation regulars and key contributors, exited with injuries in the first half.
Neither Kirilenko, who strained his back, nor Millsap, who bumped his left knee, is expected to be out more than a few days.
But with their already injury-decimated lineup down to nine players for much of the month and at 10 Saturday night, it's a good thing for the Jazz they already were well on their way to a blowout win when both left with just less than four minutes to go in the second quarter.
Jumping quick on a 12-7 Blazers team that lost Friday at home to Memphis, the Jazz led by as many as 15 during an opening quarter in which they shot 76.5 percent from the field (13-for-17) and dished 11 of their season-high 36 assists.
"We were active at the beginning," center Mehmet Okur, "because we knew they played (Friday) night, and we just wanted to run the floor, be active, and it worked out for us.
"We executed," Okur added. "We played our type of basketball: Whoever was open, we just swinged the ball and found the wide-open man."
They did, with tremendous frequency.
"We really passed the basketball," coach Jerry Sloan said after his Jazz matched their highest assists total from last season.
"When you pass the basketball and share with each other," he added, "it makes the game a lot easier to play."
So much so it looked like cake on Saturday.
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