Jazz Fans Just Got A Rare LeBron-Related Reason To Feel Proud

LeBron James' potential move sparks intrigue and optimism for the Utah Jazz's future.

LeBron James may have given the Utah Jazz a small but meaningful nod, even if it wasn’t meant that way.

Brian Windhorst said on a recent episode of “The Hoop Collective” that if James ever had the chance to pick from all 30 NBA teams, Boston would sit dead last on his list.

“I think Boston would rank 30th on his list; I really honestly do. He hates Boston.”

That matters for Utah in a roundabout way. James’ move away from the Los Angeles Lakers already made it easier for the Jazz to deal Walker Kessler there, and if LeBron ends up back in the East, Utah also avoids the headache of seeing him land with another West playoff threat.

The bigger takeaway for the Jazz is simple: they apparently wouldn’t be at the bottom of his list. For a franchise that hasn’t exactly been a magnet for marquee free agents, that’s a decent little win, even if it comes with no actual move to Utah attached.

And no, that doesn’t mean LeBron is headed to Salt Lake City. The Jazz know that, and so do their fans. All signs point to James not being Utah’s problem this season, which is just fine with them.

If you wanted to dream a little, though, LeBron would fit just about anywhere. Even at 41, he still brings enough to tilt a team’s ceiling. He can still produce at an All-Star or All-NBA level, just not every night the way he used to.

For Utah, the fit would be obvious. He could slide into the starting five, help steer the offense, and give the team another strong presence on the glass. The Jazz are already projected to be a playoff team even without Kessler this season, and adding LeBron would push them up another tier.

Of course, that’s fantasy, not reality. Utah does have a couple of James’ former teammates connected to the organization now in Dwyane Wade and Carlos Boozer, but that isn’t enough to change the picture.

And if anything, the Jazz have had more reason to matter to James than the other way around. Utah took Boozer from Cleveland in 2004, and over the years they’ve also brought in several of his former teammates, including Jae Crowder, Kyle Korver and Jordan Clarkson.

For all the enemies James has collected over two decades at the top of the league, Utah hasn’t been one of them.

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