
The 2025-26 season is almost here, and Utah has just opened its year against the Los Angeles Clippers on October 22.
The rebuild is still in motion, but the front office and coaching staff continue to focus on one question. How quickly can Isaiah Collier help this roster look like a playoff group again?
Lauri Markkanen
John Collins
Walker Kessler
Collin Sexton
Isaiah Collier#StartingLineup presented by @zionsbank pic.twitter.com/uF3QQeuaEI
— Utah Jazz (@utahjazz) February 4, 2025
Collier’s appeal is simple to see in practice. He plays at a controlled tempo, keeps his dribble alive, and reads the weak side before the defense rotates. He is not a volume-first guard. He profiles as a connector, the guard who takes a decent trip down the floor and turns it into a quality look with the extra pass.
That plays to Utah’s strengths. Lauri Markkanen eats on early touches and quick decisions, and Walker Kessler needs live-dribble feeds tossed above the rim or slipped into tight pockets so he can finish without a gather.
With the 29th pick of the 2024 NBA Draft, the Jazz select Isaiah Collier
pic.twitter.com/7Nw9XG9GA1
— Utah Jazz (@utahjazz) June 27, 2024
Size matters in the paint, and he still keeps his vision clear. That matters for a team that struggled when the ball stalled late in the clock. A guard who can get downhill, draw help, and deliver on time gives Will Hardy more ways to organize the half-court. It also lets Utah toggle between spread pick-and-roll and the elbow actions the staff leaned on last season when the offense bogged down.
The Jazz do not need Collier to be a star in week one. They need him to be sturdy. That means second-unit minutes that steady the game, plus short with starters where his pace and vision lift lineups built around Markkanen.
Expect simple reads early, and drag screens in transition. Spain pick-and-roll action gives him two clean options, and empty-corner pick-and-roll to reduce help. Utah can protect him by pairing him with a spacer at the four and a vertical threat at the five, which spreads responsibility and keeps his decisions clean.
On defense, the objective is simple but crucial. Fight over screens. Keep the ball moving and stay in front. Finish possessions with a body on a shooter. If he can avoid foul trouble and protect the nail area, the staff will accept rookie mistakes elsewhere.
Two items sit at the top of the development plan. The first is perimeter shooting. He does not need to be a high-volume specialist, but he must punish defenders who slip under ball screens. Even a respectable catch-and-shoot number changes how teams guard Utah’s guards and unclogs driving lanes for everyone else.
The second area is late-game decision-making. NBA defenses disguise help and bait young guards into floaters or cross-court passes that look open for half a beat. The counter is patience and footwork. Get two dribbles deeper, keep the pivot, and force the low man to commit. That is learned through minutes, not film alone.
Utah is trying to balance size, shooting, and rim pressure across all five positions. Markkanen supplies efficient scoring and gravity. Kessler brings rim protection and vertical spacing. Wings fill in the gaps with length and spot shooting.
A guard who can organize, deliver shooters into rhythm and still create his own paint touches fits that template. Collier also gives the Jazz a different texture than a pure scoring lead. That variety matters across an 82-game schedule, where matchups swing on small edges like second units and two-minute bridging stretches.
The Clippers will test his screen navigation and his patience. They switch more than most and load up early against drivers. Two simple checkpoints will say a lot. Does Collier get the ball across half-court quickly and flow into early offense, or does the possession slow down before it starts?
When the switch comes, does he accept the isolation or use a re-screen, a slip, or a quick hit-ahead to move the defense?
If he maintains tempo and limits live-ball turnovers, Utah will generate enough clean looks to keep the game among the top tier of shot quality.
Wheels up to Utah
pic.twitter.com/LNYYVysumD
— LA Clippers (@LAClippers) October 21, 2025
Utah does not need a perfect rookie season from Collier. It needs proof of concept. If by midseason the rotation stabilizes and he is turning second units into positive minutes and holding his own next to Markkanen, the playoff conversation becomes real instead of aspirational.
If the shot ticks up the reads sharpen, the Jazz have a long-term starter at the most important position on the floor. That is how a rebuild accelerates.
Opening night will not determine anything, but it will offer a first look at the plan. Utah wants to grow its kids without punting competitive nights. Collier is central to that tightrope. Stay in front of the ball moving, keep the defense organized, and keep learning. Do those three things, and the rest tends to follow.
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