On Saturday, following a disappointing loss at the San Antonio Spurs, New Orleans Pelicans forward Zion Williamson told reporters he felt like his team was close to what it wanted to be. The Pelicans had just played two tough road games with losses to the Milwaukee Bucks and the Spurs, but he thought things could turn around soon.
"I feel like we're almost there," Williamson said. "I really feel like we're almost there. There's that final few things we need to figure out, but we're almost there."
Consider Monday night's effort a step in the right direction.
Behind Williamson's charge in the third quarter, the Pelicans toppled the team with the best record in the league, holding on late to defeat the visiting Utah Jazz 129-124.
The Pelicans lead by 17 early in the fourth quarter but watched the Jazz cut it all the way down to a single point in the final minute, before escaping with the victory after a pair of stops on Utah's final three possessions. Pelicans coach Stan Van Gundy joked that his team didn't hang on to the lead as much as it was able to build it up high enough to where Utah couldn't come back.
The Jazz (27-8) came into the game with a plus-161 point differential in the third quarter this season, which was 70 points better than any other team. But the Pelicans (15-19) outscored them in the third by 16 points -- the worst third-quarter differential of the season for Utah.
"Tonight, we wanted to come out strong in the third," Pelicans point guard Lonzo Ball said. "That was one of the focal points from the coaching staff. This game, Utah has been blowing people out in that third quarter, so that was one of the focuses. Z kind of led the charge in the third for us."
Williamson scored 15 of his 26 points in the third as the Pelicans built their lead.
"My mindset was whatever I can do to get my teammates energy, that's what I'll do," Williamson said. "In the third quarter, after the first two quarters of me reading their defense, I really got a feel for it and I was on the attack."
Attacking the basket was the Pelicans' focus throughout the night. They finished with 74 points in the paint, the most any team has scored in the paint in regulation against the Jazz in the past 25 seasons, according to ESPN Stats & Information research.
"It's crazy that we got to the basket so much with a defensive player like Rudy Gobert, where he's at the rim all night, every single night," Pelicans forward Brandon Ingram said of Utah's All-Star center. "But we made it happen."
Scoring so much in the paint meant the Pelicans didn't have to rely on 3-point attempts. New Orleans went 7-for-11 from 3-point range, and the 11 attempts were the fewest in a game by any winning team over the past four seasons, according to data from ESPN Stats & Info. Coupled with Utah's 43 attempts from deep, the game had the largest differential between two teams for 3-point attempts this season.
Zion fired up after and-1 bucket
Zion Williamson misses his initial shot but gets his own rebound and lets out a shout after the and-1 basket.
When Williamson was scoring in the third quarter, the Pelicans stayed with him, and he even went directly at Gobert on a few occasions.
"It means he's fearless," Ingram said of the 20-year-old Williamson. "Knowing that [Gobert is] a two-time Defensive Player of the Year or just a really, really, really good defensive player, he's just fearless. He knows the angles of the shot. He knows what to do when he goes into the game. He's not going to waver for anybody. He's going to keep going and keep going until he gets to where he wants to get to."
The Pelicans have wins over Utah, Milwaukee and the Phoenix Suns this season, along with a 24-point comeback to fell the Boston Celtics. But New Orleans also has suffered losses to the Detroit Pistons and Minnesota Timberwolves, teams at the bottom of the standings in their respective conferences.
For a team Williamson thinks is "almost there," Van Gundy said the Pelicans are talented enough to beat anybody in the league but that they make too many mistakes and haven't been consistent enough on defense to string together wins the way they want to.
Williamson agreed.
"For us to take it to the next level, we have to continue it for the next few games," he said. "We gotta be consistent with it."