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Anonymous Utah Jazz Exec Gets Honest on Offseason Decisions
Feb 13, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; LA Clippers guard Norman Powell (24) defends Utah Jazz forward/center John Collins (20) during the second half at the Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Creveling-Imagn Images Christopher Creveling-Imagn Images

With most of the dust settled from the 2025 NBA offseason, the Utah Jazz made sure to enact some key decisions to their roster in an effort to further progress their rebuild, maximizing their young talent and sending out multiple veterans.

Names like Ace Bailey and Walt Clayton Jr. came in, while Collin Sexton, John Collins, and Jordan Clarkson went out– making for some noticeable changes within this Jazz roster for the regular season ahead.

Certainly, a few tough calls to send out multiple franchise staples for the past couple of years, but in the mind of one Utah front office executive, they were all necessary moves to make to move the needle forward.

Spotrac's Keith Smith interviewed an anonymous Jazz executive during last week's NBA Summer League in Las Vegas to talk about Utah's offseason moves, where the exec broke down his and the team's rationale behind their decisions.

“We had a lot of work to do, for sure. When you have as many guys on expiring contracts as we did, plus as many young players, you have to be very proactive,” a Jazz front office executive said. “We didn’t want the older players here pushing for minutes to get their next deal, which is what they should be doing. We didn’t want the younger players getting resentful because guys who aren’t a part of our future were playing in front of them. That mindset drove some of our moves this summer.”

For fans, the decision to turn the clock forward to the next generation of young players have been expected moves for some time, but this was the offseason where the Jazz finally opted it was decision-making time.

With that, Sexton saw himself dealt to the Charlotte Hornets, Collins to the Los Angeles Clippers, and Clarkson landing with the New York Knicks via buyout–– all contributable players in their own right, but as the Jazz attempt to keep the positive strides going in their rebuild process, it required minutes and opportunity to be freed up for exisiting and incoming young talent, leading to the moves that inevitably transpired.

This season now sets the stage for a refreshed Jazz roster, led by Lauri Markkanen, Walker Kessler, and an assortment of one, two, and three-year players with an increased workload and responsibility across the 82-game stretch, a concept that's not as feasible with the three aforementioned veterans still in the mix.

The Jazz front office went into this offseason with clear goals for the future in mind, and heading into the 2025-26 campaign, Utah now has a budding, exciting young core set to take the floor for a season truly defined by youth movement without blatant tanking–– something this rebuild has yet to see since starting four summers ago.

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This article first appeared on Utah Jazz on SI and was syndicated with permission.

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