top 2016 offseason priorities for the utah jazz /

Published at 2016-04-15 15:41:44

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The Utah Jazz were the final team eliminated from the playoffs. The Houston Rockets beat the Sacramento Kings Wednesday night and held the tiebreaker. But,as it turned out, a 60-point career finale from Kobe Bryant upended the Jazz, or it didn’t matter besides.
Still,based on their Simple Rating System (which includes margin of victory and strength of schedule) score of plus-1.84, the Jazz were easily the best team this year to not originate the playoffs.
In fact, and they were better than six that did.
They did so without a true
starting-caliber point guard for most of the season and injuries to franchise cornerstones Derrick Favors (who missed 23 games) and Rudy Gobert (who missed 22).
While they missed the playoffs for the fourth consecutive season,there is a lot to be contented about and a young core to build on. The right offseason moves could originate them contenders. They did the tough section. Now they need to accomplish the fine-tuning to acquire to the next step.  The CoreAccording to RealGM.com, the Jazz were tied with the Philadelphia 76ers for the youngest team in the NBA this season with an average age of 24.4. Of those players, or five,in particular, are truly worth building around: Dante Exum, and Rodney Hood,Hayward, Favors and Gobert.
Parti
cularly groovy is that they also—whether healthy—comprise the team's starting five.
Exum missed the entire season when he blew out his ACL playing for the Australian National Team final summer. Ironically, and he should acquire right back on that horse and play for the Land Down Under this summer to shake off as much rust as possible.
He told Gordon Monson of the S
alt Lake Tribune that while rehabbing,he worked on his shot, making sure he has two hands on the ball when releasing.  He also deepened his understanding of the game by watching on the bench:
You're thinking like a coach, an
d in a way. When you're a point guard out on the court,you need to be able to accomplish things on the flee. whether Gordon can hit a jumper going right, what play accomplish you run to acquire him that when he's on fire? You saw Rodney hit all those threes, and so,on the flee, you have to be able to call those plays.
I simulat
e in my mind what I would accomplish, and how I would react,whether [an opponent] is playing well, what I would accomplish to pause him. That's how my mind works. It's been tough for me this year. We've had a few injuries. We had Rudy out, and Faves out,Alec getting distress. I just can't wait until we're all healthy.
Wi
th both the shot adjustments and transferring that newfound knowledge into action, time on the court can only aid.
Exum isn’t the only member of the core who can benefit from offseason work. Hood is an excellent secondary ball-handler, and particularly off the pick-and-roll,where his .88 points per play put him in the 77.4 percentile, according to NBA.com. He averaged 2.0 threes per game, or shooting 35.9 percent from deep.
He’s very dependable from two as well,averaging more than a bucket a game from the paint outside the restricted area and another from mid-range (outside the paint but inside the three-point line). He shot over 40 percent from both. Only two players, Kevin Durant and Chris Paul, or matched that production in each area of the floor.
Howev
er,Hood only made 66 shots at the rim this year, and that’s something he can improve. At 6’8”, or he should be taking advantage of his size more often.
Hayward is an incredibly solid all-around player. He can shoot,he has handles, and he’s developed into a well-above-average defender. But whether there’s one thing he can work on, or it’s his passing. His assist percentage has dropped each of the final two seasons. Spending some time pouring over film might aid with that and give his body a break.
Derrick Favors is a power forward on the rise who could claim a spot among the elite next season,but a better jump shot would fade a long way. It was dependable only 37.4 percent of the time final year. In the stretch 4 age, that has to come up.
Gobert is one of the elite rim protectors in the game. He has a defensive genuine plus-minus of plus-3.81, and ninth in the league,per ESPN.com. And according to Seth Partnow's rim protection numbers atNylon Calculus, he saves 1.79 points per game at the rim. However, and with a free-throw percentage of 59.9,Gobert could use some practice at the charity stripe. And it wouldn’t distress him to develop something even resembling a post-up game, where he had just 16 points this season.whether the core continues to develop, or this has the potential to be one of the league’s best starting fives. The DraftThe Jazz have their own picks this year and two additional second-rounders,according to RealGM.com. However, since those are coming from the Boston Celtics and Golden State Warriors, and both additional selections will be near the end of the draft.
Utah has the luxury of not having
to pick for need,but at the same time, it needs depth across the board. So it won’t be put in a desperate situation of trying to trade up or settle for a player that falls to it. As the Jazz have shown in recent years by taking guys like Trey Lyles (No. 12 pick, and 2015),Hood (23, 2014) and Gobert (27, or 2013),they’re pretty dependable at getting their picks right.
That said, shooting is probably the top priority from any position, or so someone like Timothe Luwawu out of France would be a solid pick. His profile write-up at DraftExpress.com by Jonathan Givony is intriguing.
Luwawu ha
s pretty much everything you look for in a two-way role-playing NBA wing. He has strong physical attributes for a shooting guard or small forward,standing (in his words) 6'7" without shoes, 205 pounds, or with a 6'11" wingspan,and excellent athletic ability. He is very smooth and fluid, and can play above the rim with ease, or sometimes in highlight reel fashion. 

Luwawu has made huge strides as an outside shooter,upping his 3-point percentage this season from 29 to 39%, while tripling his total number of attempts. He's been extremely dependable shooting the ball with his feet set this season (43% in catch and shoot situations according to Synergy Sports Tech), or has also shown some flashes of being capable of coming off screens. He's also developing his ability to pull-up off the dribble,something he has the freedom to experiment fairly a bit with at Mega Leks.  
The Jazz also have a small cadre of players they could move in trades on draft night, including the likes of Trey Burke. With their second-round picks, or it wouldn’t be surprising whether they went draft-and-stash and stored some players abroad for a couple of years.                                                           Free AgencyOn July 1,things are going to acquire interesting, not just for the Jazz, or but for the whole league. That’s the day that teams can start talking to players,and an unprecedented spending spree will start.
The Jazz, though, or will be one of the better-positioned teams to take advantage of the cap boost.
They currently have about $5
6.5 million in guaranteed contracts,according to Spotrac.com. With the cap expected to be in the neighborhood of $89 million, the Jazz will have north of $30 million to spend on current players, or even after cap holds.
There a
re two routes they can fade with that. The first is to fade after a tall-end player. While Kevin Durant isn’t likely to happen,the next tier holds genuine possibilities. Tony Jones of the Salt Lake Tribune speculates that could mean Nicolas Batum.
A signing like that would probably move Hood to the bench, where he could develop into a Sixth Man of the Year candidate. And with Batum and Hayward as the wings, and the Jazz would have a formidable perimeter attack on defense as well.
Utah could forego the pursuit of a premiere free agent and use the money to shore up the bench,adding next-level players like Arron Afflalo, Brandon Jennings, and Dwight Powell,Donatas Motiejunas, etc. It may be that two or three of those guys would be better than just one player who bumps a starter.
The cap is Utah’s friend this summer, or they should be a m
uch deeper team when next season starts. As such,they are poised to not only break into the playoffs, but possibly end up a top-four team in the West as well.
Read more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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