Cameron Boozer Is Already At The Center Of A Heated NBA Rivalry

Young stars Darryn Peterson and Cameron Boozer could become the NBA's next great rivalry, as their draft positions and competitive spirit set the stage for high-stakes showdowns in the Western Conference.

The first chapter of what could become a long NBA matchup between Darryn Peterson and Cameron Boozer came with a little edge Monday night in Salt Lake City.

Peterson’s Utah Jazz beat Boozer’s Memphis Grizzlies 109-100 in Summer League action, and both rookies left their mark. Peterson finished with 25 points and 12 assists in 28 minutes, while Boozer posted 18 points and 7 rebounds in 27 minutes, hitting 6 of 9 shots from the field.

The bigger storyline, though, may be the one that followed the final buzzer. Peterson didn’t waste much time turning a Summer League game into something more pointed, especially with Boozer going one pick after him in the draft. The Jazz guard made it clear he had the matchup on his mind.

"I try to find something against everyone I play against," Peterson said."He (Boozer) was the pick after me, so I know that he probably had an agenda today as well, so I couldn't let that ride."

That’s the kind of quote that sticks, especially when the two players are already tied together by draft position. Peterson went No. 2 to Utah, while Boozer went No. 3 to Memphis, and that alone gives both sides plenty to chew on.

For Boozer, there’s the motivation of being passed over by the team that took Peterson. For Peterson, there’s the added edge of knowing some believed Boozer should have been the Jazz pick.

On the court, Utah leaned heavily on Peterson, running much of the offense through the rookie guard. Memphis is still sorting out how to use Boozer, which is exactly the kind of thing Summer League is built for - a place to test, adjust and figure things out.

The result mattered less than the hint of what might be coming later. The Western Conference already looks set to be shaped by the San Antonio Spurs and the Oklahoma City Thunder, with Victor Wembanyama and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander positioned to battle for conference control for the next few years. But Monday night offered a glimpse of another pairing that could eventually take over the conversation.

Boozer has won everywhere he’s played, and the expectation is that Memphis will eventually build around him and push toward the league’s top tier. Peterson, meanwhile, has already started to quiet the pre-draft doubts and looks like a future star.

If this was the opening snapshot, the regular-season meetings between these two are going to be must-see. Three or four times a year, maybe more if the playoffs ever get involved, Peterson and Boozer are going to keep crossing paths. And if Monday was any sign, the rivalry may already be here.

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