New York • Paul Millsap tried to play through it and made it almost an entire game. But by the time he woke up in midtown Manhattan on Saturday morning, the pain in his right knee was too much.
"It just don’t feel right," he said.
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The Jazz starting power forward sat out for the third time in six games when the Jazz played the Knicks at Madison Square Garden, this time due to inflammation in his knee. He said he injured it when he collided with a Cavaliers player while attempting a layup in the final two minutes of Wednesday’s 104-101 loss in Cleveland. He was limited to 21 minutes against the Bulls on Friday in Chicago.
Coach Tyrone Corbin said it was apparent during that 89-88 loss that Millsap wasn’t quite right but was attempting to play through it.
"Paul is one of the guys who doesn’t want to miss games," Corbin said, "and you know if he’s out he’s hurt."
Millsap’s knee will be re-evaluated upon the team’s return to Salt Lake City, and the veteran is considered day-to-day.
The Chicago game was the Jazz’s third loss in a row after they held leads in the final minutes of each.
Millsap’s injury is another twist in a long, adventurous week for the Jazz, in which they’ve missed both Millsap and Al Jefferson with injuries and on Wednesday finally got back Mo Williams, who had missed 32 games due to thumb surgery. Along the way, they’ve lost six of their last seven games and the last three by a combined five points.
"It’s too frustrating," Millsap said. "You want to be out there so bad, especially in the position we’re in right now. But you just got to know your body and now how you’re feeling, what you can and can not do and be smart about it."
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Marvin Williams, scout?
While Marvin Williams may be taking a reduced role with the Jazz after being moved to the bench last week, he took on extra duties in advance of Saturday’s game at Madison Square Garden.
The reason? The Jazz hoped the forward had some classified intelligence on Knicks coach Mike Woodson.
Williams spent five years in Woodson’s system in Atlanta and helped assistant coach Mike Sanders scout the Knicks.
Corbin said Williams was helpful in pointing out some of Woodson’s tendencies. It’s common, he said, for players to help the game plan when the opponent is their former team or features a former coach or teammate.
"I think the guys welcome that," Corbin said. "They want to be a part of it and they know you value what they think, and we can use that."
Williams, who was traded by the Hawks to Utah in the offseason, said he was happy to see Woodson have so much success with the Knicks after Atlanta did not renew his contract after the 2010 season.
"He’s a good coach, man," Williams said. "You look at what he did, they took a bunch of 17-, 18-year-olds and turned them into professionals in this league and took them to the playoffs."
The forward had a chance to have a conversation with his former coach prior to Saturday’s game.
"We learned a lot through coach Woodson," Williams said. "To see him with the veteran group and to see him succeed, it’s no surprise to see him succeed at all."
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