Even with a 2-0 lead, Utah knows it still has plenty to prove

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The Jazz have been in this moment before. Now the hard work officially begins….

It is easy to forget — and perhaps healthier — that two teams blew 3-games-to-1 series leads against the Denver Nuggets in last season’s Western Conference playoffs.

But fate has matched those teams — the Utah Jazz and LA Clippers — against each other in the second round of this year’s playoffs, a sort of group session on how to bounce back from a postseason meltdown. And there are plenty of notes to compare.

All season, both teams have had to make their peace with the outside world’s difficulty in believing in them, no matter how well they play or what they accomplish.

Take the Jazz, who have just held serve at home with two impressive wins over the Clippers, behind two incandescent performances from star Donovan Mitchell — who finished with 37 points in Thursday night’s 117-111 win in front of 18,306 fans at Vivint Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah.

They also had the best record in the NBA this year, the Defensive Player of the Year in Rudy Gobert and the Sixth Man of the Year in Jordan Clarkson.

But even the Jazz players will tell you they haven’t proven or done anything yet.

“We’ve been through a lot of adversity over the last few years, on and off the court,” Gobert said. “We’re at a point where we all understand that we have a great opportunity to accomplish something special this year. We don’t want to miss out on the opportunity.”

When you blow a 3-1 series lead (which has happened only 13 times in NBA playoff history), respect is hard to come by. Both the Clippers and Jazz have had to accept that this season. But both have also used that as motivation, and as a learning experience. Each showed how much they’ve grown in Thursday’s game.

“I think we understand how to handle these things, and that was what you saw tonight,” Mitchell said. “The experience level in the bubble helped … just continuing to do what we do and understanding they’re going to punch back and we’ve got to continue to fight.”

The Jazz looked to be cruising to an easy win for most of the first half. But much as it had in a taut, seven-game series against the Dallas Mavericks in the first round, Tyronn Lue’s club stayed poised and made key adjustments.

Utah was excelling at scoring off the dribble, hitting 17 of 25 shots, so the Clippers switched to a zone defense to try to clamp down on Mitchell’s drives (he was 8-for-11 on drives in the first half).

It worked. LA went on a 46-23 run and even took the lead, 101-99, on a 3-pointer by Reggie Jackson with 6:37 to go in the fourth quarter.

According to Second Spectrum data, the Jazz shot just 29% on the 18 possessions in which they faced a zone Thursday night.

“When they played zone, I thought our spacing broke down,” Jazz coach Quin Snyder said. “Anytime you’re not spaced, it’s tough to move the ball. … I thought that affected us mentally.”

But the Jazz didn’t panic. Joe Ingles hit a layup by banking in a scoop shot high off the backboard like he was playing in a backyard game of HORSE. Then Bojan Bogdanovic hit a 3-pointer to put the Jazz back up 104-101.

“There’s going to be adversity,” Mitchell said. “We’re not going to always blow them out, blow teams out. It’s the playoffs. It was great being up 21, but at the end of the day, they executed like they should. They have been here before. They have guys that have been to the Finals, been in the playoffs, have rings, have championships, so this is nothing they haven’t seen before.”

The Clippers came back again, though, getting two free throws from Paul George to cut the lead to 104-103, and a steal from Kawhi Leonard set up Marcus Morris Sr. for a 3-pointer that could’ve given LA the lead.

Instead, Morris missed, then Patrick Beverley missed, and 57 seconds later, the Jazz were up by seven points again after a three-point play by Rudy Gobert and a 3-pointer by Royce O’Neale.

Ingles assisted on both of those plays, then hit a 3-pointer of his own with 3:07 to go to put the game out of reach, 113-103.

“I’ve been answering a lot of questions about [Ingles] and [Clarkson], and I think their play kind of reinforced who they are,” Snyder said. “Not that anybody needed to know that. They didn’t have to prove anything. But it wasn’t just what showed up on the box score. I thought that Joe played with tremendous poise and confidence, and JC, when he’s come in the game, he’s able to make plays and hit shots that are usually really momentum shots.”

For the Clippers, it was a second straight missed opportunity to steal a game on the road against the top-seeded team in the West. But there was plenty for LA to feel good about, too.

Jackson continues to play like a guy the Clippers can count on in a role (starting point guard) they’ve been searching for an answer on for the better part of two seasons.

His 29 points on Thursday led all Clippers scorers, and 24 of them came in the second half when the Clippers stormed back from a 21-point deficit.

“He was great tonight,” Leonard said of Jackson. “They let him play on the island. He stayed aggressive. He got to the paint. He made some big shots. He’s been doing that for us all year.”

George also got it going in the second half, finishing with 27 points, 10 rebounds, six assists and some clutch shot-making in the final minutes to help give LA a chance to steal the win.

Then there were the contributions from Beverley, whose defensive pressure forced two key turnovers while the Clippers were staging their rally, and DeMarcus Cousins, who continues to be effective in short spurts against Gobert.

But mostly it is the feeling that they had a chance to win both games in Utah, despite coming off a quick turnaround from the Dallas series.

“We’ve got to give them credit,” George said. “This is a tough opponent. They weren’t No. 1 in the West for no reason. This is a tough team. But, you know, we are approaching this the same way Dallas was; we still feel we have a lot of possessions that we can clean up and a lot of possessions that are hurting us that’s our fault.

“So as good as they are playing, as good as this matchup is, as tough as this matchup is, we still feel like there’s moments throughout this game, this series, that, you know, we are making plays that are self-inflicted. It’s a lot of uphill, but we’re optimistic that we can get this under control and go back home and one game at a time and try to tie this series up.”

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