![]() Kimball’s announcement that “all worthy male members of the Church” could now “be ordained to the priesthood without regard for race or color.”īeyond being one of the earliest published observations that Utah Jazz is a contradiction in terms (does anyone know of earlier expressions? Please share them in the comments!), the passage in Halberstam’s book points to the possibilities of studying sports in Utah as yet another angle through which to understand Mormonism’s complicated relationship with race. The NBA Board of Governors approved the relocation on June 8, 1979, exactly one year (to the day) after Spencer W. ![]() The timing of the Jazz’s relocation to Utah and the revocation of the priesthood ban is striking. References to a rich African-American musical tradition were out of place in Utah specifically because of “Mormon beliefs on race.”īy 1979, of course, those beliefs had begun to shift. It wasn’t just stereotypes about Mormon whiteness, either. While the racial and religious undertones had always been there in the joke about the incongruence of the Utah Jazz, I had never before seen them connected explicitly. Utah was new this year the previous year the same team had been the New Orleans Jazz, and having failed gloriously there, it had been moved, lock, stock and nickname, to Salt Lake City (the name a rare contradiction in terms, given the Mormon beliefs on race, though it suggested other possible misnomers in the league: the Los Angeles Nordiques, the Atlanta Yankees). If Portland was shaky on opening day, then Utah, the Utah Jazz was even shakier, a reminder of the lack of professionalism at the managerial level in the league. Narrating the opening night matchup between the Trail Blazers and the Jazz, Halberstam notes: The NBA Board of Governors had only approved the move of the struggling New Orleans franchise to Utah a few short months earlier. Portland opened the season in Salt Lake City, helping the newly-arrived Utah Jazz welcome the reintroduction of pro basketball to the state on October 12. Nor had I considered the timing of the New Orleans Jazz’s move to Utah before reading David Halberstam’s book on the 1979-80 Portland Trail Blazers, The Breaks of the Game. Until a couple of weeks ago, I had never really considered the history of the joke. The jokes occasionally give way to real-life proposals to rename Utah’s pro basketball franchise and give the Jazz nickname back to New Orleans’s latest NBA. Often left unaddressed are the racial undertones: Jazz was, of course, pioneered by black musicians and Mormons in the United States are overwhelmingly white (both literally and stereotypically). Get it? It’s funny because jazz, a rich musical tradition based on “collective improvisation,” could nowhere be more out of place than the straight-laced capital of Mormondom. The Jazz moved to Salt Lake City, where they don’t allow music. The Oilers moved to Tennessee, where there’s no oil. The Minneapolis Lakers moved to Los Angeles, where there are no lakes. Soon it was commonplace for entire teams to change in search of greater profits. ![]() ![]() It received a brief mention in the opening scene of Baseketball, a 1998 comedy starring Trey Parker and Matt Stone, the guys behind South Park and The Book of Mormon musical: Utah Jazz is a contradiction in terms because nothing could be so absurd as jazz music in Salt Lake City. It’s so obvious that it hardly needs to be told. There’s a joke common among sports fans concerning the Utah Jazz and the team’s nickname. Utah Jazz player Ron Boone meets with LDS Church President Spencer Kimball, 1980.
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