This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2011, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

Some notes and quotes from the Jazz's 112-107 overtime win over Philadelphia on Monday night at EnergySolutions Arena:—-Tyrone Corbin did not commit to keeping C.J. Miles in the starting lineup and bringing Raja Bell off the bench. "We'll see," he said. "It worked tonight. It got us off to a good start. C.J. did a great job. I think he got a little tired because of the extended minutes. ... But we'll see how it goes."Miles scored nine of his 19 points in the first quarter, helping the Jazz take a 28-23 lead. Bell, who played despite a sprained toe, played 36 minutes off the bench. He finished with five points and four rebounds.—-The 76ers started 3-13. Even after losing to Utah, they are 34-33 this season and will almost certainly qualify for the Eastern Conference playoffs. "They've learned that they have to count on each other," Corbin said. "... They learned they have to trust each other on both ends of the floor [and] that one or two guys can't be the only ones who come to play. They have to bring all 12 guys and, when they come into the game, everybody has to be ready to do the right thing."While discussing the 76ers, it sounded like Corbin was delivering a message to his team, too.—-Philadelphia played poorly in the first half, when the Jazz raced to a 60-42 lead."We were terrible," said coach Doug Collins. "... They went anywhere they wanted with the ball and just picked us apart. I just told our guys, 'If you don't play hard, I'm going to find someone who will because I'm not going to watch.'"The 76ers, who still trailed by 18 late in the third quarter, played much better down the stretch. In fact, they used an 11-0 run to take a 102-99 lead in the final seconds of regulation."All we did in the second half was compete," Collins said. "... I was very frustrated. I told our guys early in the game, 'I don't know why we even have a [morning] walk-through if you are going to come out and let a team throw 30 points on you in the first quarter. We played with no toughness. And we can't play that way. We have an undersized front line. We cannot play that way."—-Paul Millsap missed his fourth game with a sore knee and, for the first time, Corbin started Derrick Favors instead of Jeremy Evans in his place.Favors finished with 11 points and six rebounds. Evans came off the bench and contributed eight points and six rebounds.Corbin insisted his decision to start Favors was not a "demotion" for Evans, who struggled in two of his three starts."Bless is heart," Corbin said. "I think he wants to do it. He wants to do well so bad I think he pressed a little bit too much — put too much pressure on himself to do well. He got in foul trouble the first game and just couldn't get himself going after that. "It's a learning process for him and he's got to learn to relax a little more. I know his desire is there because he continues to work ... He will get [better] results in a game once he gets more comfortable."As far as dropping Evans from the starting lineup, Corbin said, "It's not a demotion for Jeremy. I don't want to make it seem like I'm taking him out because he didn't perform well. I thought he tried. ... He was trying to do the right thing."—-Briefly:Jazz point guard Devin Harris finished with 19 points and four assists. But strained his hamstring late in the fourth quarter, return for one possession and then went back to the bench. He did not play in overtime and status is day-to-day, according to the Jazz. After the game, Harris said, "It's not too bad. Not as bad as I thought." ...The Jazz improved to 4-10 since Corbin replaced Jerry Sloan as coach on Feb. 10. ... Utah is 5-0 in overtime this season. They are 18-11 against Eastern Conference opponents. ... Al Jefferson had 30 points and 17 rebounds. It was his 28th double-double of the season.— Steve Luhm