Utah Jazz: Hard-working Paul Millsap willing to do whatever it takes to help his team win
"It's motivation for me," he said. "I don't get down on myself because I'm on the trading block or get down on myself for kinda being too small, and I use that to motivate me and to help me to continue to do what I do."
What he does, quite simply, is bust his tail to help his team win. And over the course of the season, he does it time and again for the Jazz.
He scored the last six points of the game in an overtime victory against Golden State and had a couple of huge fourth-quarter baskets in a victory over Oklahoma City. Then there was the time he scored six straight points in the final minute of Utah's only victory of the season over San Antonio — thus far, that is.
And how about his monstrous follow-up dunk which tied the Dallas game with two seconds left in regulation of an eventual triple-overtime victory over the Mavericks? Or how he hit four free throws in overtime of a key late-season win over Orlando? Or his huge three-point play in the fourth quarter of last week's win over Phoenix, a victory that clinched Utah's playoff spot?
And who could ever forget that night in November 2010, when Millsap hit three 3-point bombs and amazingly scored 11 points in the final 28 seconds of regulation on his way to career-high 46 in a rousing come-from-behind road victory in overtime against the Miami Heat?
Indeed, Millsap is one of those blue-collar guys who shows up every day ready to go to work. In his career, he has missed just 14 games over his first six seasons, playing all 82 games in the 2006-07, 2007-08 and 2009-10 seasons. He played in 64 of Utah's 66 regular-season games this year.
And he'll play hurt — a rare, vanishing breed in today's NBA, and a great example to his teammates.
"You've got to watch him in some cases when he's beat up, because he won't say much about it," Corbin said. "He doesn't look for excuses — he's a no-excuse guy. He wants to come in and give you a day's work every day that he's supposed to be at work.
"And that's a great commodity for us and a great lesson for our young guys to learn that, in this business, you're going to be banged up some and if you're looking for an excuse, it's easy to find a lot of excuses not to work. But if you want to work, you can get people to fight through those and that's what winning teams and winning people do."
Late in the season, Corbin starting going to a bigger lineup at times, a lineup which moved Millsap from his customary four (power forward) position to the three (small forward) spot, with Jefferson moving from center to power forward so Derrick Favors could come in and play center.
It was highly effective, as Millsap's size — while at times being supposedly somewhat smallish for the four spot — puts him at a definite advantage over the small forwards in the league.
Millsap wasn't wild about the switch in positions, but was willing to do it in order to help the team.
"I'll go to the three when I'm called, when I'm told to go to the three," he said. "Whenever he puts me there, I'm always going to be ready to go step in and play that position. But I'm a four right now, and if I can continue to do my job as a four then I'd rather be there.
"It doesn't matter, though, as long as I'm playing. If they say Paul, we want you to play the three for the whole year, I'll do that. If they want me to play the four for the whole year, I'll do that, too. It's not going to matter to me because I'm always going to try to adjust and, if I'm able to, I can make it. As long as it helps the team, and I see that it helps the team, I'm willing to do it."
Perhaps Jefferson put it best: "Paul just wants to play, man," Big Al said with a broad smile. "He'd play point guard if they asked him to."
Well, Millsap might not be quite ready to run the point position just yet.
But give him some time. If it'll help the Jazz beat the Spurs and advance in the playoffs, "Mailman Light" would do it in a heartbeat.
Email: rhollis@desnews.com
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Nice article. Someday the rest of the league just might recognize Millsap for what he is to the team and the league. I hear an occasional positive comment from the analysts on TV and the play-by-play announcers almost always give muted praise to More..
I think that he, along with Stockton, are the best draft picks the Jazz ever made. Millsap does disappear sometimes against taller bigs, but his overall effort on offense and defense puts him often ahead of Karl Malone in my mind. He can go above the More..
You forget that Malone had is moments of vanishing. I think Millsap is a Charles Barkley clone. He should be the heart of this team for years to come. Most of the time when he doesn't get involved its because the Jazz are running everything More..