Matchup Overview
The Jazz limp in with a skeleton crew, missing nearly every major frontcourt piece and their lone offensive engine, Lauri Markkanen. Recent losses pile up like laundry. The Pelicans, buoyed by a modest winning stretch, arrive battered but not broken—owning the psychological edge and, per BAC Model, a two-to-one win probability at 68%. For both teams, this is less about climbing the standings and more about proving someone—fans, future GMs, themselves—that there’s something worth building on. Motivation? It’s roster survival mode.
Stats Corner
- Utah’s defense is a sieve: 125.9 PA/G, DRtg 120.8, and a brutal eFG% allowed of 57.4.
- Pelicans have a stronger TQS (-4.82) than the Jazz (-7.34), reflecting broader competence on both ends.
- Recent H2H: Pelicans just beat this same Jazz team 129-118.
- Jazz missing over 65 points per game from unavailable starters (Markkanen, Nurkic, Jaren Jackson Jr.).
- Pelicans force far fewer turnovers, but own a lower TOV% (13.9) and a better net rating lately (-5.2 vs. Jazz’s -7.6).
- Utah’s top option out: Markkanen (26.7 PPG) done until mid-March.
The Edge & What Could Break It
BAC Model Pick: New Orleans Pelicans. The Pelicans just handled Utah, own the fresher legs, and boast a less decimated depth chart.
Supporting the Pick:
– The Pelicans’ offense is in rhythm, averaging 119.3 points over their last 3 wins.
– Utah faces a points deficit too large to bridge without Markkanen, Keyonte George, and its centers.
– New Orleans is on a mini-roll—three straight wins, league-average pace, and just enough shotmaking.
What Could Flip It:
– Dejounte Murray (15.0 PPG, 6.0 AST) is out—if the Pelicans’ replacement guards crater under minutes, Utah could sneak in.
– Yves Missi still questionable—if he and DeAndre Jordan both get into foul trouble, the Jazz might feast with a surprise inside game from Filipowski.
– Utah’s only win in five came via fluky outside shooting—possible, but improbable if their major creators are out.
Confidence Tag: Decisive. This is a two-thirds game—New Orleans has both the qualitative and statistical edge. The margin for Jazz magic is extremely thin.
The Bottom Line
The numbers—and the injury report—don’t lie: this is New Orleans’ game to lose. Utah is missing every engine, every spark, every paint presence. The Pelicans aren’t world-beaters, but against the league’s leakiest defense and without facing a go-to scorer, they shouldn’t flinch. Expect New Orleans to win on the road—and for Utah to keep their eyes firmly on the lottery, not the scoreboard.
