With both their point guards in a heap of hurt, the Memphis Grizzlies were an accident waiting to happen Thursday night.
     
The Jazz ran over them anyway, putting Tuesday's wreck in Sacramento in the rearview mirror. Then they backed up, revved and threw it into drive one more time, finishing a 114-70 win like a team with something else on its collective mind.

"They pretty much manhandled us all three games," said Jazz forward Donyell Marshall, referring not to the Grizzlies but rather Sacramento's NBA-leading Kings, whose average margin of victory over Utah this season is 27.7 points. "But I think we've done a good job since the All-Star Game."
     
Utah is 7-1 in that span, including the final seven games in a Winter Olympics-induced stretch of nine straight on the road and Thursday's game ? its first back in the Delta Center since Feb. 2.
     
Perhaps even more importantly for the 32-25 Jazz, they seem to be back in the good graces of coach Jerry Sloan, who just two nights earlier was appropriately disgusted by a 107-81 loss in Sacramento.
     
"I was pleased (with) the way everyone played the game, all the way to the finish," Sloan said after Utah posted its third-highest margin of victory in franchise history. "The guys that came off the bench ? I thought that they were involved in the game, they were thinking about what their assignments were and they stuck to what we were trying to do on the offensive end."
     
Marshall finished with 20 points, playing a reserve role in just his second game back after missing 19 of the previous 20 with a hip-groin-pelvic injury. That game-high 20 included two alley-oop dunks ? one delivered by John Starks and the other from fellow sub DeShawn Stevenson.