The Utah Jazz pushed their season series with Dallas to a 2-0 advantage on Thursday night with a 116-114 final score. That result nudged the Jazz and Mavs one notch closer to one another in the Western Conference standings, adding Utah’s 13th win of the year and first in their last six contests. Like it or not, this team is too feisty, too energetic to sit around and lose every night.

This game began with the visiting Dallas Mavericks just a game and a half ahead of the actively losing (while graciously hosting) Utah Jazz. The Western Conference is, once again, remarkably deep this season, but to see a team like Dallas go from holding sincere NBA Finals aspirations to struggling to remain in the Play-In conversation is baffling, no matter how you view it.

This team traded for Anthony Davis in an effort to win, and win immediately (if you don’t subscribe to the Adam Silver Draft Lottery string-pulling conspiracy theories), and still managed to acquire one of the most NBA-ready 18-year-olds the sport has ever seen in Flagg with the number one pick.

Flagg has delivered exactly as advertised: a do-it-all, no apparent weaknesses type of player who dishes out like catnip for winning basketball. Scoring? Check. Playmaking? Check. Defending? Check. Hustle? Check, check, and check. He’s the reason Utah nose-dived to the bottom of the NBA standings in 2024-25. Players like Flagg are the reason that tanking is practiced at all. Despite all this, I will never pass up a chance to poke fun at his ridiculous Van Dyke goatee.

Even with Kyrie Irving sidelined with injuries, players like Ryan Nembhart, Max Christie, Klay Thompson, and Daniel Gafford seem like the pieces of a highly competent basketball team, no?

I must be delusional or horribly misinformed about the Dallas Mavericks, because the product doesn’t match my mental narrative in the slightest.

Then, on the other side of this matchup, we have the Utah Jazz. Just a season ago, when observing the Utah Jazz in a vacuum, the early returns of the team’s rebuilding era weren’t very promising. Taylor Hendricks, when healthy, has been a mouse. Slipping through each game silently, unnoticed. Cody Williams has been much the same. Sensabaugh, Collier, and Filipowski, while offering servicable production, don’t typically move the needle towards winning basketball games.

Even this year, Ace Bailey and Walter Clayton Jr. have been hot-and-cold, glass-half-full types of evaluations more often than not. Their production is promising because we believe it can be, so Jazz fans have taken every ounce of positive output they can get.

So it’s odd to me, the dichotomy between these two basketball teams. They clashed tonight in the Delta Center as peers, when the finer details suggest to me this should have been Dallas’ runway to their 20th win or so at this point in the year — at least. But basketball doesn’t care about what’s reasonable, nor rational. Basketball exists in its own sphere, and tonight, the Jazz won their second game of the year against Dallas.

But this season, the emergence of Keyonte George as an honest-to-goodness star point guard has breathed life into a franchise stuck treading water. Suddenly, George and the already-established Markkanen are one of the NBA’s most potent scoring combinations. Tonight, they dropped 19 and 20, respectively.

Sensabaugh came up huge in the final stretch of this game. With the lead changing hands over and over again down the stretch, a top-of-the-key three-ball pushed the Jazz ahead. Dallas’ next possession was cut short when Ice Brice stole an inbound from Cooper Flagg and slipped a layup through the rookie’s swinging wings.

I don’t do this often, but I’d like to show some appreciation to Cody Williams for his efficient, productive night. With a final stat sheet reading eight points (4-for-5 from the floor), four assists, three rebounds, and two steals from the starting lineup. It’s typically much more fun to talk about his shortcomings during his first two years of NBA play, but I have to hand it to him; he’s been steady in his recent appearances. Two blocks and a steal against OKC? 18 points in 26 minutes against the Clippers? Give it up for Cody.

The Jazz advance to 13-23 and line up their next game against Kon Knueppel and Charlotte on Saturday.

Calvin Barrett is a writer, editor, and prolific Mario Kart racer located in Tokyo, Japan. He has covered the NBA and College Sports since 2024.