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Jazz teammates said Williams was disappointed at first upon hearing the news, especially with a pregnant wife and a home in Utah.
"Everything happens for a reason," Williams later told Jazz team broadcasters. "I had a great five-and-a-half years in Salt Lake. The fans have always been great for me. I'm going to miss them."
He also said he'd miss his teammates.
"I wish I could have (done) a little more, win a championship, brought that to Utah," Williams said. "I still hope they get a championship."
If the Jazz are to win one, they'll have to blend together even more new faces while mired in a horrid losing streak.
The Jazz have lost 14 of their last 18 and are 0-4 under new coach Ty Corbin following Wednesday night's loss in Dallas.
"We're going to keep the faith, stay positive and try to fight," said Jazz forward Paul Millsap, who has to take on more of a leadership role now with Williams gone.
Jazz brass hinted that they may not be done dealing before Thursday afternoon's trade deadline.
For now, Miller insisted he would not be driven by finances but rather a desire to remain competitive. That meant taking a hit on the luxury tax.
"We're in the fifth-smallest market with the sixth-highest payroll in the league, so we're pushing the envelope as hard as we can to be aggressive and attract talent to this team," Miller said.
No player is sacred if it means improving the team.
Asked how he would be able to market a team in Salt Lake City without a star, Miller said with "classic Jazz basketball."
"It's lunch pail, work boots," he said. "And who knows? We may have a star player before any of us realizes it."
Harris, a former All-Star point guard, and Favors, the No. 3 pick in the draft, were part of the package the Nets had been offering the Nuggets for Anthony.
Miller hoped Jazz players would continue to improve, and some of their first-round picks would blossom.
He said the identity would remain the same, even if the faces are rapidly changing.
"I hope our identity will continue to be toughness and being a scrappy ball team that never quits," Miller said. "Those have always been the hallmarks through 23 years that Jerry was here. It wasn't really glamorous. It was just get out there as hard as you can to make things happen."
The Nets have a part of that in Williams.
"Very rarely are you able to trade for someone who is arguably the best at his position," Nets coach Avery Johnson said. "We had to give up a lot, but when you get a chance to get him, you go for it. It wasn't a planned trade. This wasn't a plan B. He's a plan A guy."
[Associated Press;
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