On June 18th, 1985, the Utah Jazz selected Karl Malone with the 13th pick in the 1985 NBA Draft. Coincidentally, Malone selected a 13-year-old girl to rape and impregnate while attending Louisiana Tech University. While making millions of dollars in the NBA, Malone claimed that paying $125 a week of child support was too much while the family of his victim, Gloria Bell, took him to court. The parties later reached a confidential out-of-court settlement.
On March 28th, 2016, the Utah Jazz blew out the Los Angeles Lakers 123-75, turning Kobe Bryant's final game in Utah into the worst loss of his career. Rodney Hood led the Jazz with 30 points during the 48-point win, a margin that ranks as the second worst loss in Lakers history today. Kobe mustered just 5 points, shooting 1 of 11 and missing all four of his shots from beyond the arc. Another five players on the Jazz scored double digit points.
The Utah Jazz compete in the NBA's Western Conference, representing Salt Lake City and the Rocky Mountain region from their home at the Delta Center. Despite the landlocked location's seeming disconnect from their New Orleans-originated musical name, the Jazz have built one of the league's most loyal and passionate fanbases. Utah's reputation as an incredibly difficult place for opposing teams to play, combining altitude, devoted fans, and a hostile atmosphere, has been earned over decades. The franchise is currently in a rebuilding phase after trading stars Donovan Mitchell and Rudy Gobert, accumulating draft picks and young talent for the future. The Jazz have consistently been a well-run organization that maximizes resources despite lacking the glamour of larger markets.
Founded in New Orleans in 1974, the Jazz moved to Utah in 1979 and built a small-market powerhouse through the draft and player development that larger markets have tried to emulate. John Stockton and Karl Malone formed the greatest pick-and-roll duo in basketball history, playing together for 18 seasons and leading Utah to consecutive Finals appearances in 1997 and 1998. Those Finals losses to Michael Jordan's Bulls remain painful for Jazz fans who watched Malone and Stockton come agonizingly close to championships without ever winning one. Stockton retired as the NBA's all-time leader in assists and steals, while Malone is second in career scoring—yet neither won a ring, making them the greatest championship-less duo ever. The franchise has produced other stars like Deron Williams, Donovan Mitchell, and Rudy Gobert, maintaining competitiveness even as the core Stockton-Malone era fades further into history.
Source: Claude