SALT LAKE CITY – Welcome to the Utah Jazz Mailbag! This week, we look at how the Jazz will handle the rest of the season after being fined $500,000 by the NBA.
Each week, we will send out a prompt on X and BlueSky asking for the questions you have about the Jazz.
Then, we’ll respond to as many as we can in that week’s Jazz mailbag in the Jazz Notes podcast.
Jazz Mailbag: What will the rest of the season look like?
Curious what your thoughts are on how the Jazz will handle the rest of the season.
Sounds like the Jazz are going to be under the microscope of the league. How will they go about keeping their pick / player development?— Tyler (@Tbunk0) February 17, 2026
Question: Curious what your thoughts are on how the Jazz will handle the rest of the season. Sounds like the Jazz are going to be under the microscope of the league. How will they go about keeping their pick/player development?
Answer: The NBA fined the Jazz $500,000 on Thursday for “conduct detrimental to the league,” citing the team’s decision to rest Lauri Markkanen and Jaren Jackson Jr. in the fourth quarter of games against the Orlando Magic and Miami Heat.
Before the fine became public, the Jazz announced that Jackson Jr. would be out indefinitely after a routine post‑trade MRI revealed a tumor on his left knee.
With Jackson Jr. potentially done for the season, the Jazz’s rotation should revert to its pre‑deadline self, with Vince Williams Jr. and John Konchar replacing Kyle Anderson and Walt Clayton Jr.
Related: Jazz Fined $500,000 For Resting Markkanen, Jackson Jr.
Where will the rotation change?
Coach Will Hardy still has room to adjust if the organization prioritizes developing young players while maintaining a path to keeping this year’s draft pick, with center being the primary area of note.
Jusuf Nurkic has exceeded expectations this season, earning minutes that otherwise might have gone to second-year big man Kyle Filipowski.
Nurkic has missed 15 games, all against teams projected to finish in the play‑in range or lower. Without him in the rotation, the Jazz are 4-11 against teams in the bottom half of the league, underscoring his importance.
Because he is not an All-Star, the NBA’s player participation policy does not require the Bosnian center to play, giving the Jazz full discretion to use or rest him.
As a result, don’t be surprised if Filipowski gets far more playing time to close the year, potentially moving into the starting lineup.
Will the NBA force Markkanen to play?
Markkanen is required to play under the player participation policy, which will likely force the Jazz to adjust his usage or risk further fines.
The simplest fix is to ensure Markkanen plays in fourth quarters, even if he remains on a minutes restriction after the illness that sidelined him earlier this season.
The Jazz have kept Markkanen under 27 minutes per game over his last five appearances and could continue doing so by playing him 6–7 minutes each quarter, with exceptions for blowouts.
Will Hardy on the league fining the Jazz $500K:
“I sat Lauri because he was on a minutes restriction. If our medical team puts a minutes restriction on Lauri I’ll try to keep Lauri healthy” pic.twitter.com/TgtSmuCOyl
— Oh No He Didn’t (@ohnohedidnt24) February 13, 2026
He is also likely to miss more games during the final six weeks due to rest or other nagging injuries, especially at home, where the league prefers stars miss time if their team deems it necessary.
Those changes alone could help the Jazz finish with the record needed to keep their draft pick while opening more developmental minutes for young players.
But the Jazz might not stop there.
Who else might see a change in usage?
After spraining both ankles in recent weeks, Keyonte George will likely be handled with extreme caution over the Jazz’s final 26 games.
The guard has led the team in minutes over the past two seasons, transforming into a borderline All-Star this year. Developing chemistry between him and Jackson Jr. would have been a late‑season priority in Utah, but injuries have derailed those plans.
Ankle sprains are easily re‑aggravated, and although George will certainly see the floor again this season, he may not carry the same workload he did over the first 50 games.
Keyonte George just returned from a left ankle injury, and now is limping off the floor with a right ankle injury.
Looks like a pretty good roll.
— Ben Anderson (@BensHoops) February 8, 2026
As a result, Jazz fans should expect heavier minutes for Isaiah Collier, Ace Bailey, Brice Sensabaugh, Cody Williams, and Filipowski, along with opportunities for two-way players Tshiebwe, Blake Hinson, and Elijah Harkless.
This approach could shift if the NBA increases fines leaguewide under the guise of lineup manipulation, though that would be unexpected.
Ultimately, teams should conduct business as usual to close the season, mixing ultra-conservative injury reports and limited win totals over the final quarter of the season in order to improve their draft stock, while developing their young rosters, and the Jazz should be no different.
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Ben Anderson is the author of the Jazz Mailbag, a Utah Jazz insider for KSL Sports, the author of the Jazz Mailbag, and the co-host of Jake and Ben from 10-12p with Jake Scott on 97.5 The KSL Sports Zone. Find Ben on Twitter at @BensHoops, on Instagram @BensHoops, or on BlueSky.
