Resonance
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redsox907
Topic author - Posts: 4189
- Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40
Resonance
I think its a long term not a short term move. They did make the finals last year
I didn't even know the game could do this lmao
I even have the screens I took before and after. Jokic has the deal in place with Detroit after Day 1, then next recap of day 2 had him gone, but Ausar signed, then day 3 Jokic was on the Nuggs
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redsox907
Topic author - Posts: 4189
- Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40
Resonance

Jazz Add Edge and Experience: Brooks, Green, and Smart Join Mazzulla's Roster Revolution

Salt Lake City, UT. - On first glance, pairing Dillon Brooks and Draymond Green on the same roster seems like a powder keg waiting to explode.
The two have a well-documented rivalry, to put it mildly—years of on-court confrontations, trash talk, and playoff intensity that made them bitter adversaries. But tempers have cooled in recent years, with Green even going so far as to praise Brooks publicly during a 2025 conversation with Phoenix Suns owner Mat Ishbia about Brooks' addition that summer.
"You added Dillon Brooks," Green said at the time. "I've had my differences with Dillon Brooks, but one thing is certain: Dillon Brooks is going to make a team better. No questions asked. Regardless of how you feel about him, he's going to make a team better. He's going to raise the level of that team on a nightly basis to compete at a high level."
Now, the former rivals will call themselves teammates after both officially agreed to new deals with the Utah Jazz—Brooks on a one-year, $4.42 million contract and Green on a veteran minimum.
When asked what the veteran additions bring to Utah's roster, head coach Joe Mazzulla didn't mince words.
"They're gritty, tough, don't take any shit," Mazzulla said bluntly. "Any team could use that. I don't see how that isn't clear."
It's quintessential Mazzulla—direct, unapologetic, and focused on the intangibles that separate playoff teams from pretenders. Both Brooks and Green bring exactly what Utah's young core has lacked: championship experience, defensive intensity, and an edge that can't be taught.
Green, a four-time NBA champion and former Defensive Player of the Year, provides veteran leadership and defensive IQ despite his age (37) and diminished role. Brooks, meanwhile, brings relentless perimeter defense and the kind of competitive fire that can energize—or antagonize—an entire arena.
Together, they represent calculated gambles on veteran minimums that could pay enormous dividends if their presence elevates Utah's mentality without disrupting chemistry.
The Jazz also brought back Keyonte George, though not on the terms the sixth man originally envisioned. After no team offered a deal approaching his desired $30 million annual salary, George signed the one-year, $9.2 million qualifying offer, betting on himself to prove his worth over the coming season.
The Jazz didn't stop there. Utah also brought in former Boston Celtics guard Marcus Smart, reuniting the 2022 Defensive Player of the Year with Mazzulla, who coached him during their time together in Boston.
"Love Marcus—the intensity, the passion," Mazzulla said of the reunion. "It's going to be needed with so many young guys facing expectations to compete for the first time. He knows what it takes."
Smart, 34, is no longer the elite defender he was during his DPOY campaign, but he brings invaluable playoff experience and the kind of vocal leadership a young locker room desperately needs.
With Ace Bailey entering Year 4, Cameron Boozer in Year 2, and newly acquired Bam Adebayo adjusting to a new system, having veterans who can guide them through the grind of an 82-game season—and the intensity of playoff basketball—could prove critical.
The Jazz also signed former Los Angeles Clippers guard Kobe Sanders to a two-year, $6 million deal, a low-risk flier on a gifted scorer who has struggled to carve out a consistent NBA role.
Sanders, 25, averaged just 6.2 points in limited minutes last season but possesses legitimate scoring ability when given opportunities. At $3 million per year, he represents the type of developmental project teams can afford to take chances on without significant downside.
If Sanders clicks in Mazzulla's system, he could provide valuable bench scoring. If not, the financial commitment is minimal enough that Utah can move on without consequence.
The final signings wrapped up one of the most impactful offseasons in recent Utah Jazz history. In the span of three months, the organization traded for an All-Star in Bam Adebayo, added playoff-tested veteran in PJ Washington, secured their defensive anchor in Anthony Black, and surrounded their young core with championship experience in Green, Brooks, and Smart.
The message from the front office is unmistakable: The rebuild is over. It's time to win.
When asked if the Jazz are ready for the expectations that come with such an aggressive offseason, Mazzulla didn't hesitate.
"We'll be ready," he said.
The Western Conference has been warned.
Notable NBA Free Agent Acquisitions
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Last edited by redsox907 on 27 Feb 2026, 20:12, edited 1 time in total.
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The JZA
- Posts: 9155
- Joined: 07 Dec 2018, 13:10
Resonance
Giannis in Brookyln 
Toronto getting Dick for the next 5 years
Seems like almost everyone stayed home while the big houses outside of Brooklyn and Utah did absolutely nothing.
What's the state laws on assault? Gotta update Draymond, this ain't the Cisco anymore

Toronto getting Dick for the next 5 years

Seems like almost everyone stayed home while the big houses outside of Brooklyn and Utah did absolutely nothing.
What's the state laws on assault? Gotta update Draymond, this ain't the Cisco anymore
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redsox907
Topic author - Posts: 4189
- Joined: 01 Jun 2025, 12:40
Resonance
I didn't even notice them making moves until I looked at the recap. They lost almost the entire previous roster tho (Steph obv, Butler, Podzi) so it'll be interesting if Miller and Scoot can channel their inner Splash Bros and make the Bay relevant again

I felt like this would be a realistic goal for a team like the Jazz that have stripped their core and have literally zero key players with playoff experience before the offseason. I think RW3 and Black were the only ones on the roster who had even been in the playoffs. Now we've got guys who have been to the Finals, won the Finals, competed at high levels and expect that intensity from everyone. Culture change in Salt Lake

no lie - I almost gave Dick the bag just to recreate this nightly
BLACK TO DICK...BANG BANG BANG!

