The 14-5 Jazz have, by many objective measures, one of the worst benches in the NBA. Gordon Hayward isn’t ready, Kyrylo Fesenko floats in and out of the rotation, Francisco Elson is never going to be prolific and, worst of all, Mehmet Okur is hurt.
The rest of Utah’s bench consists of two career backup point guards (Ronnie Price and Earl Watson) and swingman C.J. Miles. The 6-foot-6 Miles is the only reliable wing in the bunch, a big change from a team that last season boasted a wing rotation of Ronnie Brewer, Kyle Korver, Wesley Matthews and Miles.
And yet, coach Jerry Sloan seems to have reached into this mess and found something new that works: pairing Deron Williams with another point guard, effectively shifting Williams to shooting guard or into some hybrid guard role. It’s unclear whether Sloan actually wants to do this or simply has to in order to keep the offense afloat when the second unit comes in, but regardless of his motive, the combination is working.
Considering only the lineups that have logged at least five minutes together, Williams has played alongside either Watson or Price for a little more than 68 minutes this season. These lineups include the seventh-, ninth- and 10th-most commonly used five-man groups that feature Williams. This is a major change from last season, when the Jazz rarely paired Williams with another point guard and almost never did so once the team dealt Eric Maynor to Oklahoma City. You’ve got to scroll all the way down to the 22nd-most commonly used lineup that featured Williams last season to find the first one in which Sloan paired Williams with another point guard (Maynor).
http://nba-point-forward.si.com/2010/11/30/jazz-sparked-by-two-guard-lineups/#comment
For all we know, these Williams/Price and Williams/Watson units will soon regress to the mean or even fall flat on their faces as the league figures them out. But they’re working for now, and they’re a small but important reason Utah is playing better than a lot of us expected.
I also found this as an interesting quote.