"We fell apart," said Kings head coach Keith Smart.
How did the Kings fall apart?
"We started doing one-on-one, we turned the ball over, unfinished plays," Smart said. "Everything we had done to get us in that position on the road in this building, against this team where you don't win often, and we just (let) the game get away."
"Mental mistakes," Smart said. "Mistakes down the stretch. Fouling, fouling, fouling put us in a tough situation."
Tyreke Evans might have been the Kings' best player but was on the bench for most of the Jazz comeback. Evans finished with a team-high 19 points but played just the last 3:06 of the final quarter and was scoreless.
"We were up and the team had a good flow," said Smart when asked if Evans could have come back into the game sooner. "All you had to do was do the right thing and close the game out the right way. We tried to go one-on-one, and we lost the ball, we had bad shots."
Evans said he didn't consider asking Smart to go back in during Utah's comeback.
"Nah, I'm not that type of player," Evans said. "I don't want to seem like I'm trying to get points or something like that. But I do want to win. He's the coach at the end of the day. If he feels like putting me in, he puts me in, and that's all I can do."