Jazz Fans Are Asking Why Utah Got Blocked Again

Why the NBA's inconsistent Summer League coaching rules have left Jazz fans puzzled and questioning policy fairness.

The latest Keyonte George-Summer League wrinkle has left Jazz fans with one big question: why was Utah told no while Boston seemed to get away with the same basic idea?

George and the Jazz tried to have him on the team’s Summer League coaching staff, only for the league to shut it down. That alone was enough to frustrate Utah’s fanbase, but the irritation spiked when Derrick White appeared to be doing exactly that for the Boston Celtics during the Las Vegas Summer League last week.

White was shown coaching up Hugo Gonzalez during a timeout break, and Boston’s own X posts appeared to back up the idea that White was on the sideline with the rest of the assistant coaches. Those posts were later deleted, but not before Jazz accounts saved them and used them to question why White was allowed to do what George could not.

That led to plenty of speculation about favoritism, but the likeliest explanation is a lot less dramatic: Boston probably just didn’t realize there was a problem until the league stepped in.

It’s possible the Celtics assumed having White on the sideline wouldn’t be a big deal, especially if they weren’t aware of the George situation at the time. The fact that the posts were quickly removed suggests the league likely contacted Boston and made it clear White could not serve as an assistant coach.

Utah, at least, checked with the league before moving forward. The result was still the same, and George was denied the chance to join the staff.

The whole thing is made a little stranger by the fact that NBA players have appeared in Summer League as players without issue, even while still in the middle of their primes. That’s part of why the line between player and coach here feels so arbitrary.

In the end, this does not look like a major league scandal. If anything, it sounds like Boston may have gotten a warning and moved on, which makes the whole episode more annoying than consequential. The NBA has its rules, and teams are expected to follow them, even the small ones.

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