A Double OT Thriller has the Jazz Defeating the Bulls 150-147
It was a cold November night in Salt Lake City, but inside the Delta Center, the hardwood was on fire for both the Jazz and Bulls. This wasn’t just another game on the schedule; this was a bare-knuckle brawl, a double-overtime epic that pushed both the Utah Jazz and the Chicago Bulls to their absolute limits. When the final buzzer mercifully sounded, the scoreboard read like a typo: Jazz 150, Bulls 147.
This was the kind of game that leaves you breathless, the kind you’ll talk about for the rest of the season. It was a contest of wills, a story of heroes rising and falling, and a brutal reminder of how thin the line is between victory and heartbreak. For the Bulls, it was a fifth straight gut-punch loss. For the Jazz, it was a desperate, hard-earned gasp of air.
The Finnisher and The Kid Deliver for the Jazz
Lauri Markkanen played like a man possessed. Facing his former team, “The Finnisher” was nothing short of spectacular, pouring in a season-high 47 points. He was the rock, the unwavering force that kept the Jazz in the fight when it seemed like Chicago was ready to run away with it. Time and again, as the Bulls surged, it was Markkanen who answered, draining shots from all over the court and reminding everyone why he’s an All-Star.
But every hero needs a sidekick, and tonight, that role belonged to Keyonte George. The young guard played with a swagger that defied his years, finishing with 32 points. And when the moment of truth arrived, with the clock bleeding down in the second overtime and the game knotted at 147, George didn’t flinch. He rose and drilled a cold-blooded 3-pointer with just two seconds left, sending the 18,186 fans into a frenzy and sticking a dagger into the heart of the Bulls. It was a shot that screamed, “The future is now.”
Chicago’s Heartbreak in a High-Stakes Duel
You have to feel for the Chicago Bulls. They left everything on the court. Josh Giddey, in a masterful performance, notched a triple-double with 26 points, 12 rebounds, and 13 assists, orchestrating the offense with a veteran’s poise. Coby White was heroic, scoring 27 points and hitting clutch shot after clutch shot, including a tying layup with 0.2 seconds in the first overtime and two nerveless free throws to tie it again late in the second.
They fought, they clawed, and they refused to die. Matas Buzelis and Ayo Dosunmu each added 18 points, providing critical support. The Bulls led by nine at halftime and seemed to have an answer for every Jazz run. But in the end, it wasn’t enough. Nikola Vučević’s potential game-tying three at the buzzer clanked off the rim, a final, painful punctuation mark on a night of what-ifs for Chicago.
A Game of Runs in the Highest-Scoring NBA Game of the Season
This was a classic back-and-forth prize fight. The Bulls threw the first punch, building a solid lead. But the Jazz, led by Markkanen’s 13 points in the third quarter, stormed back. The fourth quarter was a chaotic masterpiece of traded blows. Utah trailed by seven before ripping off an 8-0 run to take a slim lead, and from there, it was a dogfight to the finish.
Both teams shot themselves into exhaustion, with a combined 219 field goal attempts and 99 three-pointers launched. The game was a blur of lead changes and ties, a relentless, high-octane battle that pushed every player to their physical and mental breaking point.
For the Jazz, it was a season-defining win, a show of resilience that proves they can hang with anyone on any given night. For the Bulls, it’s another step into a deepening hole, a frustrating loss that will sting for a long time. But for the fans? It was basketball at its most chaotic, dramatic, and utterly beautiful.

