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Home » Sports

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Ailing Wizards fall apart vs. Jazz

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By

SALT LAKE CITY — In the final stop of their five-game road trip last night, the Washington Wizards appeared doomed from the start.

With Caron Butler and Antonio Daniels out after suffering injuries in Sunday's overtime loss to the Los Angeles Lakers, the Wizards' road swing ended on a dismal note with a 129-87 loss to the Utah Jazz at EnergySolutions Arena.

Butler's hamstring injury and Daniels' wrist injury put them on the bench with leading scorer Gilbert Arenas, who missed his 66th straight game while recovering from knee surgery. And although the Jazz played without guard Ronnie Brewer and forward Andrei Kirilenko, those absences seemed to have a rather minimal effect.

The Jazz carried on, handing the Wizards their worst defeat of the season. The 42-point margin of defeat tied for the sixth worst in franchise history. This season's previous worst mark was 39 points, suffered against Toronto on Jan. 30.

Carlos Boozer got the Jazz off to a strong start, scoring 14 of his 19 points in the first quarter, and Deron Williams paced his team with 16 assists to go with 12 points. Seven Jazz players scored in double figures, led by C.J. Miles with 29.

"It's not fun to lose, but yet it's a pleasure watching a Jerry Sloan team execute," Wizards coach Eddie Jordan said. "And I've always said after we play them that hopefully we can learn from what they do and how they play. So that was pointed out tonight. As far as the game, we just didn't have it. We tried to take away the paint. They made shots. They got the juice going. ... Not happy about some things tonight, but at the same time, that's a heck of a ballclub we played tonight."

The Wizards hung with the Jazz (49-26) for the first five minutes of the game, leading 6-5 at one point and trailing only 11-10 with 7:16 left in the quarter. But Utah quickly pulled away with a 14-5 run that included six points — all of them dunks — from Boozer.

Utah continued rolling along, outscoring the Wizards 25-4 in the opening six minutes of the second quarter and boasting a hefty 50-26 advantage midway through the quarter.

"I think they saw they were getting good looks off the pick and roll and kept with it, and we didn't have an answer for that," said Roger Mason Jr., who had 16 points and six assists while starting in place of Daniels. "Offensively we were a little stagnant, and they made shots. That lead just jumped out in the second quarter."

Utah then closed out the half by hitting 3-pointers on five of its six possessions. First came a 3-pointer from Miles, then a layup from Boozer, a 3-pointer from Williams, another from Miles and two more from Williams. The barrage capped a second quarter that saw the Jazz score more points in that period (42) than the Wizards did in the entire first half (41).

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