Joe Ingles is slowly finding his place in Utah's awkward puzzle

By Jay Croucher / Expert

At their worst, the Jazz look small, slow and unathletic – at their best, we haven’t seen them yet.

The Jazz are still only an idea, a wonderful abstraction and outline that hasn’t been coloured in.

Their reality as a championship contender isn’t hard to imagine – a super-charged Rudy Gobert-anchored version of the feel-good 2015 Atlanta Hawks, where a lack of overall size is transcended through exquisite skill, coaching, shooting and selflessness.

To this point, though, the Jazz haven’t been very good. The defence has been fine, but not otherworldly or enough to carry them. The offence – which came with such high hopes – has been a disaster.

Jazz possessions look troublingly impotent and repetitive. Mike Conley, Bojan Bogdanovic or Donovan Mitchell run a pick and roll with Rudy Gobert, the defence sells out to protect against the lob, defenders stay at home on shooters, and Conley and Mitchell can’t quite power to the rim, settling for mid-range fade-aways or leaning floaters.

Conley and Mitchell take the most floaters in the league and that has become the sad identity of the Utah offence. The Jazz are grappling with reality of their two best perimeter players being 6″1′.

There’s no powerful wing-sized specimen like LeBron James or Luka Doncic who can work their way to the rim or the line at will. And there’s no shape-altering step-back shooting force like Damian Lillard or Stephen Curry to let the offence breathe.

Instead there’s Conley and Mitchell – leaning and hoping.

(AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

It shouldn’t be this difficult. Conley is lost and Mitchell is settling – taking more long twos than ever before. The floor is a paradox – spaced with excellent shooters but always congested, a kind of self-inflicted scoring flu.

As a result, Joe Ingles is sick. Ingles is a product of his environment – a knock-down shooter who hits shots when shots are open and an excellent passer who makes passes when they can be made.

Ingles has been miscast as a second unit leader. A roll partner like Gobert and dead-eye shooters accentuate his talents – Ed Davis, Emmanuel Mudiay and Jeff Green subdue them.

Sports opinion delivered daily 

   

The floor is more cramped and Ingles doesn’t have the space or the additive basketball IQ around him to enliven his skills.

Conley missing time with hamstring tightness, though, may have presented a possible solution. Over the past five games the Jazz offence has woken up with line-ups featuring all of Ingles, Gobert, Mitchell and Bogdanovic.

With these four sharing the floor suddenly the Jazz look as imagined. Ingles especially looks like himself – taking those cheeky, lazy curving routes around Gobert’s pick and then, as though the ball itself is grinning, slinging the bouncing pocket pass back to the rolling Frenchman for a clean, thunderous dunk.

(AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

Or, as a sweet optical illusion, Ingles takes that hard, abrupt step left to the hoop and for a fleeting second looks athletic.

Ingles and Mitchell anchoring the bench units isn’t working. Both, particularly Ingles, need class around them to thrive. The move, perhaps, is to give Conley the reigns with the second unit – putting the ball in his hands and letting him go to work with an inferior cast. If he closes his eyes, he’ll be able to see Memphis again.

The Jazz have not been right all season but find themselves at 14-11, having just begun a favourable stretch. They have all the time to find themselves, and all the talent to get there.

The Crowd Says:

2020-01-10T06:53:44+00:00

Pelican

Roar Rookie


My son plays basketball and got me into watching NBA 5 yrs ago. I picked the Bucks to follow because my son showed me a highlights package of their new player from Greece. It turned out he is pretty good. Thanks for your stats re def and off efficiency i did not know that. I really like the new coach too. He has noticeably changed them even to my inexperienced eyes.

2020-01-09T20:42:11+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Don't really back a team, used to be the thunder via extension of the Sonics but in reality I more just follow the game. I think the Clippers ceiling is higher than other teams right now but can see that the Vetran FA / trade deadline will play a bigger part this year as Lakers could get to that point also. If I had to put it in order though I'd give MIL the nod but just because they're more likely to emerge from their conference. But you can squint and even see a Denver or Dallas getting there, feels like a transition year as "power" teams gel and the Bucks ascend. As to Josso's Q the reason some are anointing the Bucks is because if they keep their current pace they'll be one of only 3 teams to be top 3 in Defensive and Offensive efficiency, the other two were the Back to Back warriors.

2020-01-09T08:05:30+00:00

Pelican

Roar Rookie


Hi Mushi. Yeah it's hard work posting sometimes to. I wrote a longer reply but its gone missing. The gist of it was who do you go for and who will win.

2020-01-09T04:15:45+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Yep the site structure has killed US sport dialogue. The basketball tab used to be my first port of call but its 6 clicks to get to here now. New owners though now, but they're focused on Aus sports so who knows.

2019-12-18T10:28:52+00:00

Pelican

Roar Rookie


Balanced side, MVP in top form, 18 wins on the trot, finals experience, great coach, good team spirit, no serious injuries so far. Not a sure thing but nothing is. No one seems to coment on here so i just threw a line in the water. Who do you think will be the champs Josso?

2019-12-16T08:02:02+00:00

Josso

Guest


Really? The rest being LAL, LAC, HOU, BOS, PHI, DEN, DAL.... Why specifically is it the Buck's year?

2019-12-15T05:19:36+00:00

Pelican

Roar Rookie


It's the year of the Bucks. Forget the rest. ????

Read more at The Roar