I was very tempted to tally every Jazzman tonight to a D or lower, but I had to remind myself who we’re dealing with. No one who is sane thought there was possibly a conceivable chance that the Jazz could have the hope of maybe winning this game by a long shot. The Jazz defense crumbled under OKC’s 24 triples on 53.3% efficiency. They withstood a crushing 146-111 defeat in the Thunder’s territory.
It was a one-sided battle that the Jazz knew they needed to give up. No more funny business. It was time
for the most brutal psychological battle with the Sacramento Kings. The constant looming threat of falling out of the top-3 puts both teams at a deadlock, to lose out on the rest of the season or pray for what comes after. Or at least, that’s what it is in theory, because no one on this planet has any idea what the Kings are doing.
Despite the lack of excitement for what was displayed on the court Sunday night, I shall do my due diligence to rate these players fairly, who are mentally strong enough to consider playing, despite knowing that all their hopes of victory were pointless.
Brice Sensabaugh – A
I will never stop believing in Brice Sensabaugh, and 34-point nights while attempting to maintain a respectful score against an OKC juggernaut is going to help the case. He locked onto catch-and-shoot threes, attacking the basket when it was open. We shall forgive your defensive sins on Resurrection Sunday.
Kyle Filipowski – B+
There’s no doubt that Flip’s been on a heater, scoring 22.6 points per game and 9.2 rebounds per game before tonight. This is no longer the same player who looked invisible out there on the floor. You could say he…flipped expectations. No? I’ll see myself out.
After a slow start, Filipowski stringed together his third double-double in four games. He battled against the 7-foot towers — Chet and Hartenstein — that await him inside the paint. It was some ugly efficiency, netting 8 of 20 shots and shooting 0 of 5 from beyond the arc, but I’m leaving this disaster with something.
Ace Bailey – B+
A quiet night for Ace Bailey, sporting 14 points, 2 assists and 3 stocks in 33 minutes. I am, however, going to bump him up an entire grade for this beautiful chase-down block.
Cody Williams – D
I am now under the expectation that Cody Williams is a 20-point player, and I will not be convinced otherwise. When he doesn’t hit that benchmark, I won’t be so lenient. Only 8 points, 4 rebounds, 5 assists on 3-11 shooting for the family member of Jalen Williams today.
When is the next time you’re going to see Cody first-option hoops? These are limited opportunities he has to take advantage of.
Oscar Tshiebwe – C+
There’s tanking. Then there’s the anomaly known as Oscar Tshiebwe. He put up a triple-single 4-4-2 in 20 minutes as a starter. I don’t blame him for what he could produce when matched up against the basketball equivalent of the Galactic Empire, but his time on the Jazz is dwindling.
SVIATOSLAV MYKHAILIUK – B+
Float like a butterfly, sting like a Svi. It was an explosive 11-point first half for him, but the basketball gods were not in Svi’s favor in the latter, shooting 2-7 from the field in the second half. Whether we see him in Utah’s final three games of the season is up in the air. But if this was it, it was an honor, Mr Mykhailuk.
Kennedy Chandler – C-
Chandler got the short end of the stick after his first single-digit performance back on Friday. His second 10-day contract tenure could not be going worse. 5 points and 5 assists in 20 minutes.
John Konchar – A
Konchar plays a simple, straightforward brand of basketball. Thus, I shall grade him based on his elite simplicity: 9 points, 9 rebounds, 3 assists and 5 steals. He stuck to his strengths and is proving his worth for a roster spot next season.
Sacramento Kings – A+
None of what you just witnessed tonight would have been possible without the help from Sacramento, who are now tied for the fourth-best odds. Truly, thank you, Kings, for playing a 36-year-old DeMar DeRozan in an April game against the Pelicans.









