Jonathan Anh Juzang (/ˈdʒuːzæŋ/; born March 17, 2001) is an American professional basketball player for the Utah Jazz of the National Basketball Association (NBA), on a two-way contract for the Salt Lake City Stars of the NBA G League. He began his college basketball career playing one season with the Kentucky Wildcats before transferring to the UCLA Bruins. A two-time all-conference selection in the Pac-12, Juzang earned third-team All-American honors as a junior in 2022. As a sophomore in 2021, the Bruins advanced to the Final Four of the 2021 NCAA tournament, and he was named to the All-Tournament Team.
![]() Juzang with UCLA in 2021 | |
No. 33 – Utah Jazz | |
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Position | Shooting guard |
League | NBA |
Personal information | |
Born | (2001-03-17) March 17, 2001 (age 21) Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Listed height | 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) |
Listed weight | 209 lb (95 kg) |
Career information | |
High school | Harvard-Westlake School (Los Angeles, California) |
College |
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NBA draft | 2022 / Undrafted |
Playing career | 2022–present |
Career history | |
2022–present | Utah Jazz |
2022–present | →Salt Lake City Stars |
Career highlights and awards | |
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Stats ![]() | |
Stats ![]() | |
Juzang played high school basketball for Harvard-Westlake School in Los Angeles. In his freshman season, he averaged 16.2 points, 7.5 rebounds, and two assists per game and was teammates with Cassius Stanley. Harvard-Westlake won the CIF Southern Section (CIF-SS) Division 1A championship after Juzang recorded 21 points, 11 rebounds and four assists in the final.[1] As a sophomore, he averaged 22.8 points, 9.5 rebounds and 2.8 assists per game, leading his team to a 22–6 record.[2] In his junior season, Juzang averaged 23 points, 8.5 rebounds and 3.4 assists per game and was named the most valuable player of the Mission League.[3] He helped lead Harvard-Westlake to their first league title since 2011 after scoring 25 points in the championship game against rival Loyola.[4]
After the season, Juzang reclassified from the 2020 class to the 2019 class, allowing him to play collegiately in the following season.[5] He was a four-star recruit and one of the top small forwards in his class.[6][7] On May 10, 2019, he committed to play college basketball for Kentucky over Virginia. He had also been interested in UCLA, but their coach, Steve Alford, was fired, and he did not have time to develop a relationship with their new coach, Mick Cronin, before choosing the Wildcats.[8][9]
Name | Hometown | High school / college | Height | Weight | Commit date | |
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Johnny Juzang SF |
Los Angeles, CA | Harvard-Westlake School (CA) | 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) | 205 lb (93 kg) | May 10, 2019 | |
Recruiting star ratings: Scout: N/A Rivals:![]() ![]() ![]() | ||||||
Overall recruiting rankings: Rivals: 34 247Sports: 30 ESPN: 29 | ||||||
Sources:
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As a freshman at the University of Kentucky, Juzang played behind Tyrese Maxey and Immanuel Quickley and was mostly restricted to catch-and-shoot opportunities in limited playing time.[10][11] His defense was considered a weakness, and he did not shoot well enough to compel Wildcats coach John Calipari to play him more.[12] On February 8, 2020, Juzang scored a season-high 13 points with three three-pointers in a 77–64 win over Tennessee.[13] He averaged 2.9 points, shooting 37.7 percent from the field, in 12.4 minutes per game for the Wildcats. After the season, he announced that he was transferring from Kentucky.[14] He had been lonely without his family, and the COVID-19 pandemic drove his desire to return home.[9] Juzang decided to transfer to UCLA and play under Cronin,[9] and he was granted a waiver to play immediately instead of the usual requirement to sit out a season.[15][16]
Juzang missed the first four games of the 2020–21 season with a stress reaction in his right foot.[17][18] In his first game, he scored 10 points off the bench in a win over San Diego.[19] He moved into the starting lineup in the following game against Marquette.[20] On January 14, 2021, Juzang scored a then-career-high 17 points, leading the Bruins in scoring in a 91–61 blowout win over Washington State.[21] On January 24, against Stanford, he scored 27 in a 73–72 loss in overtime,[22] the Bruins' first conference defeat of the season. The game included a stretch where Juzang scored 21 straight points for the team, making eight consecutive shots to end the first half and begin the second.[23] Against Washington, he scored a career-high 32 points in a 64–61 win.[24] He was the first Bruin to score at least half of his team's points in a game since Reggie Miller 35 years earlier.[25] The team's leading scorer, Juzang was a second-team All-Pac-12 selection.[26]
In the 2021 NCAA tournament, Juzang joined Miller and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, known in college as Lew Alcindor, to become the third player in UCLA history to score at least 20 points in their first two NCAA Tournament games.[27] He scored 28 points in a 51–49 win over No. 1 seed Michigan, as UCLA advanced to their first Final Four since 2008. Eighteen of his points came in the first half, which included a run where he scored 12 consecutive for the Bruins.[28] He became the first player to score at least half of his team's points in a regional finals win since Oscar Robertson in 1960.[29] He was named the most outstanding player of the tournament's East Region.[30] Juzang scored 29 points in the national semifinal against 1-seed Gonzaga, including a basket to tie the game with 3.3 seconds remaining in overtime, but the Bulldogs' Jalen Suggs made a 40-foot (12 m) buzzer beater to win 93–90 over the Bruins.[31] Juzang averaged 22.8 points in six games in the tournament,[32] and was named to the 2021 All-Tournament Team.[33] He scored 137 total points, the second most by a UCLA player in NCAA Tournament history behind Gail Goodrich's 140 points in 1965.[34] He scored 23 or more points four times in the tournament for a total of eight games with at least 20 during the season.[32][35]
During the offseason, Juzang declared for the NBA draft while maintaining his college eligibility.[36] After making it into the first round of some mock drafts but also struggling in a few draft combine games, he decided to return to UCLA and contend for a national championship in 2021–22.[37] Hoping to boost his draft stock, Juzang instead fought injuries,[38] missing one game due to a sore hip from a scooter accident and two others with a sprained right ankle.[39][40] He was also sidelined for two games after testing positive for COVID-19,[41] and failed to significantly improve on defense during the season.[38] Though he was the focus of opponents' defensive game plans, Juzang largely duplicated his statistics from a year before and remained as UCLA's leading scorer,[32] helping lead the team to a No. 4 seed in the 2022 NCAA tournament.[42] He was named a third-team All-American by the National Association of Basketball Coaches,[43] and was voted to the All-Pac-12 first team.[44] He was also listed on the final national ballot for the John R. Wooden Award,[45] and was a finalist for the Jerry West Award, given to the top shooting guard in the nation.[46] After failing to reach double figures in scoring in four out of six games,[47] Juzang had his best game since his ankle injury with 14 points on 6-of-11 shooting along with eight rebounds in a 72–56 win over Saint Mary's in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.[48] He scored 14 again in the Bruins' season-ending 73–66 loss to North Carolina in the Sweet Sixteen, but needed 13 shots and was only 2-of-8 shooting in the second half.[49] After the season, he left UCLA to enter the NBA draft.[50]
Juzang went undrafted in the 2022 NBA draft.[51] He played for the Utah Jazz in the 2022 NBA Summer League, although his debut was delayed after he suffered a concussion in a car crash days after he arrived in Utah.[52] After the summer league, he signed a two-way contract with the Jazz.[53]
GP | Games played | GS | Games started | MPG | Minutes per game |
FG% | Field goal percentage | 3P% | 3-point field goal percentage | FT% | Free throw percentage |
RPG | Rebounds per game | APG | Assists per game | SPG | Steals per game |
BPG | Blocks per game | PPG | Points per game | Bold | Career high |
Year | Team | GP | GS | MPG | FG% | 3P% | FT% | RPG | APG | SPG | BPG | PPG |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019–20 | Kentucky | 28 | 2 | 12.3 | .377 | .326 | .833 | 1.9 | .3 | .2 | .1 | 2.9 |
2020–21 | UCLA | 27 | 26 | 32.3 | .441 | .353 | .877 | 4.1 | 1.6 | .8 | .3 | 16.0 |
2021–22 | UCLA | 30 | 29 | 31.8 | .432 | .360 | .835 | 4.7 | 1.8 | .7 | .1 | 15.6 |
Career | 85 | 57 | 25.5 | .431 | .352 | .853 | 3.6 | 1.2 | .6 | .2 | 11.6 |
Source:[54]
Juzang's older brother, Christian, played college basketball as a point guard for Harvard,[55] and played in the Vietnam Basketball Association with the Saigon Heat.[56] His father, Maxie, is Creole, and his mother, Hanh, is Vietnamese. He has a younger sister, Lauren.[8]
Kentucky started three guards this season — Ashton Hagans, Tyrese Maxey and Immanuel Quickley, all of whom were five-star recruits — which meant playing time was scarce and Juzang’s role was mostly restricted to catch-and-shoot opportunities in sporadic minutes.
Utah Jazz roster | |
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Salt Lake City Stars current roster | |
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