This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2017, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

Tribune Jazz beat reporter Tony Jones will answer readers' questions in a Twitter mailbag after each playoff game. You can submit questions using the hashtag #TonyTalks. Here are the questions after Game 3.

Tony's reply • You have to hope Chris Paul misses shots. It's not much more intricate than that.

Paul is one of the best point guards in NBA history, and there's very little an opposing coach can throw at him that he hasn't already seen. You have to switch up looks on him. Go over the screens for a little while. Then go under his screens. Blitz his screens. Then outright double him and force him to give up the ball.

He eventually will figure out things. He's a lot like LeBron James in this manner. There's no defense that will completely stop James. You just hope to slow him down enough to win the game.

What the Jazz can do is win the minutes Paul isn't on the floor. They haven't done a good enough job there.

Tony's reply • This is pretty unfair to Derrick Favors, who has been hurt and playing on one leg all season. When Favors is healthy, he's one of the better two-way power forwards in the league.

The better question would be is Favors going to get back to peak health again? That's a fair question.

Favors faces a pretty big summer. He has to come back next season with good health and show he can return to previous form. Failing that, the Jazz will have to make a decision on his future.

Tony's reply • No, they would've ruled the foul occurred on the ground.

The call on Boris Diaw was correct. The bad call was Chris Paul's four point play.

It wasn't a bad call because of continuation. It was a bad call because Hill never touched Paul.

But Diaw's shot never should've counted.