Darryn Peterson didn’t make the pre-draft trip to Utah, but the Jazz have not had any trouble selling him on what comes next.
Since going No. 2 overall to Utah last month, the former Kansas guard has sounded locked in on the opportunity in front of him. The Jazz have spent years tearing things down, but with Jaren Jackson Jr. already added at last season’s trade deadline and Peterson now in the fold, the franchise is looking ahead to 2026/27 with real momentum.
“What excites me the most is being able to be a part of the young core,” Peterson told ESPN. “It’s just a great basketball organization.
I think everyone would agree with me, and we’ve kind of talked about it: It’s time to win. So, to be a part of that is like a dream come true for me.”
Utah’s long-term plan appears to center on Peterson and Keyonte George as a two-man engine in the backcourt. The Jazz think the fourth-year guard and the rookie can grow into one of the league’s best pairings, and Will Hardy isn’t boxing either player into a strict role. Instead, the head coach wants both of them sharing the ball-handling and playmaking duties.
“I think it’s really exciting,” Hardy said. “It gives us some flexibility.
It’s going to take a little bit of time for us to get the rhythm of it perfect. But they have a tremendous amount of potential together, both sides of the ball.
We need to let them live in the environment together a little bit and try to see what they do. I’m going to try my best not to over-coach them early because there’s a lot that I can learn from watching them play off of each other.”
George has already been around the Summer League group plenty, even if the NBA backed away from its initial approval of a plan for him to serve as an assistant coach for Thursday’s game in Las Vegas. After reviewing the situation and “relying on precedent,” the league changed course, according to Sarah Todd of The Deseret News.
Even so, George has been a steady presence with the team. MacMahon described him as a “constant” around the Summer League squad, noting that he has attended every practice and taken on a mentorship role with Peterson. The two already knew each other through their shared skills trainer, Phil Beckner, and Peterson has leaned into George’s advice.
“Every day, he’s been pushing me and telling me what he sees and telling me what I need to be better at in practice and games,” Peterson said. “He’s going into year four now.
So, I don’t know if that’s a vet or not, but to me, that’s a vet. He’s been here in the league four years, so he’s somebody I would definitely lean on throughout the season.”
The Jazz will get another chance to showcase Peterson on Thursday night in Las Vegas against AJ Dybantsa and the Wizards, a matchup Jason Batacao of The Salt Lake Tribune flagged as a possible early chapter in a new rivalry between the top two picks in this year’s draft.
Peterson already made a splash in Salt Lake City before Las Vegas even got underway. In two games at the SLC Summer League, he put up 53 points and 14 assists in a little more than 55 total minutes, a performance that stood out enough to headline Sam Foster’s takeaways from the event.
There’s also a roster wrinkle tied to Walker Kessler’s sign-and-trade. Hoops Rumors learned that Kessler’s new four-year, $129.5MM deal with the Lakers carries a starting salary of $30,108,821, which means Utah’s trade exception from the deal is worth $15,054,411. That figure is half of Kessler’s salary, and the reason comes down to base year compensation.
In Other News...
NBA Double Standard Just Made The Jazz Look Even More Targeted
The NBAs latest probe into the Clippers has reopened an old complaint around how the league handles discipline, especially when the issue involves stars and powerful owners. Los Angeles is being investigated for alleged salary-cap circumvention tied to Kawhi Leonards contract, and the trade sending Leonard back to Toronto is sitting in limbo until the league sorts it out. For Jazz fans, it lands as another reminder that the league can move quickly when it wants to, but not always in the same way for every team.
Utah already knows what it feels like to be on the receiving end of the NBAs enforcement arm, after the league fined the Jazz for tanking-related conduct. The contrast is hard to miss: Minnesotas Joe Smith case from 2000 is still the cleanest example of how fast the league can act when it chooses, yet this situation has stretched on without a ruling. Whether the delay is about the complexity of the case or the profile of the people involved, it has left the Jazz looking like a team that got punished while others are still waiting for the league to make up its mind. [Read more 🡒]
Former Jazz Guard Just Earned Another NBA Opportunity
Elijah Harkless is getting another NBA look, and it comes after a stint that should still be familiar to Jazz fans. The former Utah two-way guard has landed a new two-way contract, a reminder that his path through the league has been built on staying ready and making the most of limited chances.
Harkless spent a season and a half with Utah and got into 36 NBA games along the way, giving the Jazz a steady backcourt option when they needed one. For Detroit, he fills the last open two-way spot and joins Isaac Jones and Ugonna Onyenso on that list, a small but meaningful sign that his next opportunity is already in place. [Read more 🡒]
John Stockton And Karl Malone Reunite In A Powerful Jazz Reminder
John Stockton and Karl Malone turned up together during 4th of July celebrations tied to Americas 250th anniversary, giving Jazz fans a familiar sight from one of the franchises defining eras. The former Utah stars were together in a private family setting, a reminder of how deeply their names remain woven into the teams history long after their playing days ended.
The reunion was not connected to any official NBA or Hall of Fame event, which only made the moment feel more personal. Photos and videos of Stockton and Malone together spread quickly online, and for Utah supporters, seeing the two legends share time with family carried its own kind of weight, even without any ceremony attached. [Read more 🡒]
