Of course that is how you see things. You are you.
No one is forcing you to watch em. I love watching the jazz. I really like wins. Had a great time watching the jazz tonight. Wins matter to me. The jazz have more of them than almost all teams in the nba in their history. That counts to me.
And no one is forcing you to share my opinion or reply to it. I said what I said.
If wins matter to you, you'd probably be a bit more annoyed at the fact they're 19th in overall playoff win percentage - despite being a team that consistently has made the playoffs over the 43 years they've played in Utah.
Utah is a great regular season team and an awful playoff team, especially the last 20 years.
Championships aside, the Jazz can't even get out of the second round anymore.
They've figured out new ways on how to lose a playoff series: including blowing a fifteen-point lead up 3-2 in a closeout game five and then of course blowing a 2-0 lead last year, as well as a 20+ point lead in a must-win game six.
None of that is winning.
But I get it. You're the reason the Jazz hang Midwest/Northwest Division banners in the arena because it's just good enough and the fans are content with constant playoff flameouts because they can point to the fact the team has made the playoffs consistently since relocating to Utah.
Meanwhile, a team like Milwaukee last year won the NBA title despite making the playoffs eight fewer times than the Jazz over the last 30 seasons - or a team like Phoenix, who might actually go out and win it all this year, despite having making one playoff appearance in the last decade-plus, which happened to result in a trip to the NBA Finals.
Then there's the Jazz and their 13 trips to the playoffs this century and every one of 'em, outside a fluke in 2007, have ended in either the first-round or semifinals.
I'd wager the Jazz likely have one of the worst playoff win percentages the last 20 years of any team who's played at least 10 playoff games.
That record? 42-61 (..407), which is far worse than their overall playoff win percentage - a total that is entirely propped up by the Stockton-Malone era that ... ended in no hardwood.