EMPIRE OF THE SUNS

Suns go back-to-back against fellow West elite in Jazz, Clippers

Apr 6, 2021, 3:28 PM | Updated: 3:35 pm

Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns guards Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Utah Jazz during a game at V...

Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns guards Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Utah Jazz during a game at Vivint Smart Home Arena on December 12, 2020 in Salt Lake City, Utah. (Photo by Alex Goodlett/Getty Images)

(Photo by Alex Goodlett/Getty Images)

The first two weeks of the NBA season might as well be years ago at this point.

The Phoenix Suns played the Utah Jazz and Los Angeles Clippers then and there was little to no significance in those matchups.

That has changed a whole lot over the last three months.

The Jazz at 38-12 have the NBA’s best record, trailed by the 35-14 Suns as both teams have certified themselves as contenders in the Western Conference after there wouldn’t have been much confidence in that declaration when they initially faced off on Dec. 31.

They meet again on Wednesday in Phoenix as the top two dogs in the regular season, and once that game concludes, the Suns will travel to Los Angeles and face the third-seeded Clippers on Thursday.

The hype is real and should be. Sizing up some of the top competition before the postseason comes will be fresh in the mind.

“We want to win every game when we go out there,” Suns guard Devin Booker said Monday. “Obviously, those are two top teams in the West that I’m sure that we’ll see down the line at some point maybe so every game counts. I know we’re going to be locked in, we’re going to be ready, so it’s exciting.”

The Suns can also secure a tiebreaker in the standings over Utah with a victory, while a loss to Los Angeles after falling on Jan. 3 would give the Clippers that edge.

That makes both games meaningful in some way, but in terms of the grand scheme of things, Phoenix’s Chris Paul isn’t gonna draw a ton from it.

“I hate to say this but I don’t take too much into it win or lose,” he said Monday. “We play these games (and) we don’t know if a team is coming off four (games) in five (nights), we don’t know if a guy is sitting and resting and whatnot. I think everybody has the same mindset, though. It’s the next game on our schedule. We gonna go out and play our way to win the game. That’s all that matters.”

Like the Suns going 27-6 since hitting 8-8, the Jazz have exploded after reaching an early .500 threshold. They’ve won 34 of their last 42 games since beginning the year 4-4, and one of those four losses was to Phoenix.

That was a signature victory for the Suns because it showed the basic formula for major success through defense and their closers doing what they do.

Phoenix held the Jazz to 95 points, including 18 in the first quarter and only six assists for the first half, while doing enough offensively to mostly control the game throughout. A 16-point Suns lead with 4:22 left got hairy briefly before Booker scored seven points in two minutes to escape any danger.

As for the Clippers, that was a loss and wasn’t nearly as encouraging, either.

The Suns got smacked in the first half, down at one point by 31 points after turning the ball over 10 times in the opening 15 minutes while Los Angeles started 10-of-14 from three-point range and Phoenix began 3-of-17. The Suns clawed back to get it within a possession at 90 seconds left but came up short.

It was just one of those games where everything went wrong for the Suns and right for the opposition, so that makes Thursday even more enticing.

With this being quite the back-to-back, here are a couple stats to track from in each game that stand out from Cleaning the Glass, because, well, these are three great teams that do a lot of things right.

The Jazz, sporting the NBA’s second-best defense, are dead last in the amount of opponent’s possessions they force turnovers on. That’s turnover percentage, which the Suns rank fifth in offensively. Phoenix can’t give them the added benefit of turning the ball over.

In that defense, Utah allows 37.6% of its shots in the midrange, 29th leaguewide. That’s a great stat for the Jazz because denying shots at the rim and from deep is a key in today’s NBA, but Suns fans know of course that space between the two is where Booker and Paul own permanent residencies at.

In that Suns’ win against the Jazz earlier in the year, Phoenix shot 15-of-33 (45.4%) from the midrange, and on the year they are far and away tops in the NBA at 49.1% efficiency there.

On the other end of the coin, Phoenix opponents shoot 35.2% from three-point range, a top-3 mark. That’s where the Jazz excel, at a second-best 40.2%, and leading the league in 45.2% of their total attempts coming from three-point range has played a large part in their ability to blow teams out.

With the Clippers, keep an eye on how they get inside offensively. They rank 29th in the percentage of their attempts that come at the rim and 27th at points in the paint per game. Even with a top-5 defense, the Suns are middle of the pack in both opponents’ attempts at the basket and their efficiency there.

Los Angeles’ offensive firepower has a lot to do with the NBA’s best three-point percentage at 42.0%. That’s padded by generating the second-most corner 3s and shooting a terrific 47.3% on ’em. And guess what, the Suns are third in the league at the amount of attempts for opponents from the corner. In the Suns loss, the Clippers were 4-of-5 in the corners.

Comments

Comment guidelines: No name-calling, personal attacks, profanity, or insults. Please keep the conversation civil and help us moderate comments by reporting abuse.
comments powered by Disqus

Empire of the Suns

Rudy Gobert #27 of the Minnesota Timberwolves dunks the ball against Kevin Durant #35 of the Phoeni...

Kellan Olson

Who will win trade-off of Timberwolves’ size vs. Suns’ space?

The Minnesota Timberwolves' size and the Phoenix Suns' spacing will make for a fun stylistic clash in the NBA Playoffs.

13 hours ago

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 10: Jusuf Nurkic #20 of the Phoenix Suns talks with Bradley Beal #3...

Kellan Olson

Bradley Beal, Jusuf Nurkic must maintain footing for Suns playoffs series vs. T-Wolves

Bradley Beal and Jusuf Nurkic must step up to help the Phoenix Suns' first-round playoff series against the Timberwolves.

2 days ago

Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves handles the ball against Jusuf Nurkic #20 and Kevi...

Kellan Olson

How the Suns shut down Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards so far this season

Minnesota Timberwolves All-Star Anthony Edwards has struggled in all three meetings against the Suns. What could change in the first round?

3 days ago

Grayson Allen of the Phoenix Suns...

Kevin Zimmerman

Grayson Allen agrees to sign 4-year contract extension with Suns

Grayson Allen and the Suns agreed to a four-year, $70 million contract extension Monday after the guard's first regular season in Phoenix.

3 days ago

Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns shoots the ball against Naz Reid #11 of the Minnesota Timberwol...

Kellan Olson

Will Suns continue to be Timberwolves’ kryptonite in the playoffs?

The Phoenix Suns were a mismatch for the T-Wolves in the regular season. Will that remain the case in the first round of the NBA Playoffs?

4 days ago

Bradley Beal #3 of the Phoenix Suns celebrates his basket against the Minnesota Timberwolves in the...

Kellan Olson

It’s time: Suns locate spark, Bradley Beal lifts team to playoffs vs. Timberwolves

Whether it is due to a favorable matchup, a shock to the system via Bradley Beal, or a little bit of both, the Suns found what they needed.

5 days ago

Suns go back-to-back against fellow West elite in Jazz, Clippers