Comments about ‘Utah Jazz notebook: Sloan remembers Abe Pollin’
What You May Have Missed
Most Popular
Across Site
In Sports
- Top-10 All-Sports schools in each of the five...
- ESPN: Mormon athlete Jabari Parker's family...
- Vai's View: Vai's View: Ross Farnsworth and...
- Popularity of club soccer among girls still...
- Gail Miller gets engaged to Salt Lake attorney
- BYU sports: Two years later, WCC happy with...
- Utah Utes football: 5 questions with Utah...
- Utah State football: Fox anxious to join...
Most Commented
Across Site
In Sports
- Doug Robinson: BCS has finally admitted...
30 - BYU football: Phil Ford has change of...
26 - Cottonwood High School football coach...
25 - High school baseball: All-star rosters...
19 - Utah Jazz: No luck for Jazz as Warriors...
19 - Brad Rock: UVU gets a lesson in...
15 - Jazz, Warriors have much at stake in...
14 - Utah Utes football: 5 questions with...
12






I'm glad Sloan remembers Abe Pollin.
Too bad he doesn't remember how to coach defense.
I am not sure that Coach Sloan is the one that should be held accountable. He works with the talent he is given and for 20 + years has done very well. The problem seems to be with the talent evaluators and with the level that the Jazz pick every year in the Draft. It is very seldom that the Jazz choose above the 14th pick. Very seldom do picks between 15 and 30 turn out to be of any worth and I know there are exceptions. Those that do have slipped through and it takes talent to find a good one.
Since KOC what talented players have the Jazz chosen. Miles, Kuofos, Fesinko, and others are not very talented. Williams is about the only one.
The answer is the Jazz need better talent and better shooters and they will not receive this as long as they keep going the way they are.
Um... Millsap?
Sloan Haters are Well Deserved!
Yet another SLoanaholic (thankfully minority)
Gee, the Jazz cannot move up in the draft
really???????
Whose Fault is that
O Connor (worst GM in sports)
sureeeeee
DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments