JAZZ SLAPPED WITH LABEL AFTER LEBRON JAMES'S RETURN

Following a loss to LeBron James' Lakers, a Jazz beat writer questioned if Utah is "really trying to win," citing questionable roster construction and rotation choices that prioritise development over victories.

Jazz Slapped With Label After LeBron James's Return
LeBron's Return Confirms Jazz "Not Trying To Win

For Utah, LeBron James' eagerly anticipated return to the Los Angeles Lakers was accompanied by a vicious side plot.

Beat writer Andy Larsen of the Salt Lake Tribune stated that the Utah Jazz are "not really trying to win" at the moment after the Lakers defeated them 140-126 in James' record-breaking 23rd NBA season opener. Larsen pointed directly to the way the Jazz are assembling and utilising their lineup.

Luka Doncic finished with 37 points and 10 assists, while James finished with 11 points and 12 assists in 30 minutes as the Lakers won for the third time in a row, improving their record to 11-4.

Utah has lost five of its previous seven games and is currently 5-9 and bottom of the Northwest Division after giving up a 21-5 surge in the third quarter.

Andy Larsen wonders if the Jazz are actually attempting to win on X. Larsen described Utah's scenario as "strange" and contended that the Jazz would "attempt to get real NBA-calibre centres" and regularly play their best players if they were genuinely aiming for wins. Rather, he presented it as a team that was more concerned with giving players the impression that they were striving to win than with really increasing victories.

The Jazz are in such an odd predicament. They would aim to get true NBA-calibre centres and rotate their best players if they truly wanted to win.

However, they are only attempting to give their players the impression that they are trying to win, not actually trying to win.

In a follow-up post, Larsen listed several decisions that, in his opinion, do not align with pure win-now basketball: Svi Mykhailiuk starting while young forwards Taylor Hendricks and guard Walter Clayton Jr. were DNP-CDs, rookie wing Cody Williams getting 18 minutes, and Jusuf Nurkić's defensive errors and turnovers feeding a significant Lakers run.

Thus, you get things like Nurkic's lack of defence and TOs driving the Lakers to a 20-point run, Cody Williams' 18 minutes, Svi Mykhailiuk's start, and Hendricks and Clayton's DNP-CDs. Everything that would make sense separately but not together, because of the ridiculous incentives.

On their own, those choices can be justified as experimentation or development. Larsen described them collectively as the result of "goofy incentives" for a rebuilding squad attempting to balance long-term upside with competition.

The situation at Utah's centre is already challenging. The Jazz changed course by starting Nurkic, who is anticipated to have a long-term starting position, as Walker Kessler is out for the season due to shoulder surgery. 

Nurkic's errors against the Lakers were brought to attention by LeBron's first game back, a night that became a national talking point and made every Jazz action appear more deliberate. The idea that Utah is more concerned with evaluation than the standings is strengthened when that is combined with a rookie like Williams playing a lot of minutes and lottery talent Hendricks getting no floor time.

The Jazz are still heavily dependent on their players, though. Keyonte George scored 33 points in the defeat, matching his season high, and Lauri Markkanen scored 31 points, demonstrating that Utah is not completely discarding its best prospects despite criticism from the media and supporters. 

The Implications for Utah. This is what a "competitive rebuild" looks like in real time, and Larsen's posts following LeBron's Return Game essentially state the silent part out loud. The rotation and roster balance indicate that the front staff is still putting development, flexibility, and future draft position ahead of securing every regular-season victory, even though the Jazz are capable of hanging 71 points on the Lakers in the first half.

On a night when LeBron makes history and the Lakers' new super-duo of James and Doncic appears set, that is a difficult sell for fans, and Utah leaves with more doubts about its long-term strategy. Before facing the Lakers once more in Salt Lake City, the Jazz will host the Oklahoma City Thunder. This will provide everyone with a brief follow-up to see whether the rotation changes or if Larsen's "not really trying to win" read turns into the season's pivotal narrative. 

NFL EXECUTIVE NAMES COLE PAYTON HIS "NO. 2 QUARTERBACK" IN THE 2026 CLASS

From 94.6 PFF grades to 4.56 speed, Cole Payton is the Eagles' latest QB project. Analysing his path to the NFL depth chart.

top-news
Cole Payton officially signs a rookie deal - Courtesy Picture

Cole Payton, who played quarterback at North Dakota State, might end up making a bigger splash as a fifth-round pick than people expect.

He’s not just another late-round flyer, either. An NFL executive recently told insider J.L. Canfora that Payton has real upside. The Eagles have done something similar before, so this isn't coming out of nowhere.

Remember Carson Wentz? Philly grabbed him with the second overall pick back in 2016, but Jalen Hurts ended up taking over. Now, some people around the league think history might repeat itself with Payton possibly replacing Hurts down the road.

The executive went all in on Payton: “You know, I believe in that kid. That was my No. 2 quarterback in the draft. And Howie [Roseman] takes him? Come on. He sees it too. Cole Payton, if you bring him along the right way, can start in this league.”

Roseman, the guy in Philly’s front office, was a big part of the Wentz pick. He’s seen his fair share of quarterback changes over the years, and honestly, that might matter this time, too.

The executive didn’t hold back: “All the stuff you hear about Hurts, all the drama and where he is in his contract." You can call me crazy, but I think this kid could take over from him in a few years. They did this with [Kevin] Kolb, even when [Donovan] McNabb was still there. I know how Howie thinks. This kid has a chance.”

Payton had to wait for his turn at NDSU.

Payton rolled into North Dakota State in 2021, known as a strong recruit for an FCS quarterback, straight out of Omaha.

He was supposed to be the next big thing, just like the string of successful Bison quarterbacks before him. But things didn’t break that way at first. Cam Miller, the QB ahead of him, kept stacking up wins and making a name for himself in Fargo.

Miller even beat out Quincy Patterson II, a gifted dual-threat quarterback who transferred in from Virginia Tech. After Patterson got banged up in 2021, Miller took over, steered the team to a national championship, and then hung on to the starting job through 2024.

Patterson left for Temple, so Payton slid into the Bison’s running packages in a spot that Patterson had filled before. And Payton did more than just fill that role. In 2022, he ran for 284 yards and two touchdowns on 38 carries. By the next year, he really took off: 615 yards and 13 touchdowns on 84 carries.

Setback, then a breakout

Payton started 2024 looking like the same kind of threat on the ground, but a shoulder injury cut his season short. He only managed 164 rushing yards and a score on 21 carries before he went down.

Finally, in 2025, his shot as the full-time starter arrived after Miller left for the NFL draft, drafted by the Raiders in the sixth round. Payton made the most of it. He led NDSU to an unbeaten 12-0 regular season, completing 70% of his passes for 2,719 yards, with 16 touchdowns and just four picks. And he still ran wild, with 777 rushing yards and 13 touchdowns on 136 carries.

Now, he’s got a fresh chance in Philadelphia. If you ask people around the league, he’s not just there to hold a clipboard. They're watching to see what happens next.

DAVE ROBERTS COMPARES LEFTY JUSTIN WROBLESKI TO CLAYTON KERSHAW AFTER METS GEM

Discover how Justin Wrobleski transitioned from the bullpen to becoming the Dodgers' statistical leader in a historic 2026 run.

top-news
Rookie Justin Wrobleski now leads the National League with a historic 1.25 ERA - Photo Credit: PA

Dave Roberts gets it; he isn’t surprised Logan Webb might’ve hit Daulton Rushing with a pitch.

But there's something else on his mind: Justin Wrobleski. The Dodgers have a fresh-faced lefty in the rotation, and Wrobleski isn’t just holding his own; he’s shining. Roberts can’t help but see shades of Clayton Kershaw in him, and he’s letting people know it.

Wrobleski’s just 25, fresh out of Oklahoma State, but don’t let the age fool you. He’s pitched 36 innings as a starter with a 1.25 ERA, the best mark in the National League. People are starting to talk. Roberts definitely is. The Kershaw comparisons are already swirling, and they don’t sound that far-fetched if you watch Wrobleski work.

On Monday, he diced up the Mets by going right after hitters, pitch after pitch. Roberts has been around long enough to recognise the approach. “He’s got a great mentor in Clayton,” Roberts said, “and sometimes, it really feels like he channels Kershaw’s mentality. Attack guys, force them to put the ball in play.”

Just look at what he did to the Cardinals on Sunday. Six scoreless innings, only one walk, six hits – nothing fancy, just solid pitching. That’s two starts in a row; he’s thrown up six scoreless frames. Last year, Wrobleski mostly worked out of the bullpen. But with Blake Snell hurt and Emmet Sheehan shaky, Roberts gave him a shot, and Wrobleski ran with it. In 2025, he struck out 76 over 66 innings but had a 4.32 ERA. He got swings and misses back then, but in 2026, the punchouts dropped. Just 15 in 36 innings. Still, his control and poise jumped another level.

Roberts sees it up close. Sometimes he even jokes about the similarities. “He wears Skechers like Clayton does,” Roberts grinned. “He does his side work in his full jersey, just like Kershaw.”

Reporters asked Wrobleski about admiring a legend like Kershaw now that he’s part of the Dodgers mix. His answer’s honest: “Just watching him every day was something special for me,” Wrobleski said. “Not everyone gets to be around guys who are legends of the game.”

So yeah, it’s early. Comparisons can sound wild. But as long as Wrobleski keeps pitching this way, the talk isn’t stopping anytime soon.

Read More News