The Jazz haven’t discovered the divine secret of basketball. They’re not smarter or brighter than any other organization. No sui generis life-form is sprouting up amid the desert salt grass of the Great Salt Lake’s alkali playas.

Nope, nothing to see here: “We haven’t figured anything out,” Utah’s first-year coach, Quin Snyder, told Grantland.

Except that the Jazz — a franchise assumed to be wallowing in the depths of a rebuild — have dominated the NBA since the All-Star break. Over that stretch, they’ve gone 11-3, suffocating opponents with the league’s top-ranked defense and racking up a higher margin of victory than the Warriors and the Cavs. A team that suffered an 0-9 stretch in late November has recently waxed heavy hitters like Portland, San Antonio, Memphis, and Houston. And if the Jazz played in the Eastern Conference, they’d now be tied for the eighth seed.

All very ho-hum for a team whose starting lineup is, on average, a year younger than that of nearby Brigham Young University, right?

A conspiratorial type might suspect that Utah has an organizational interest in staying beneath the radar. General manager Dennis Lindsey came aboard in 2012, following a lengthy tenure as an assistant GM in San Antonio, a place where a veil of blandness intentionally obscures the mechanics of the killing machine the Spurs have spent decades constructing. As branches of the Spurs tree extend throughout the league, one continually hears phrases like “The Program” and “The Process” from not only Snyder, but also Atlanta’s Mike Budenholzer and Philadelphia’s Brett Brown, both of whom were assistants to Gregg Popovich.

When asked about the team’s recent success, Snyder buzzes static like this: “The nature of the NBA is up and down, and we happen to be playing well. We’ve got a long, long road ahead of us.”

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Part of Snyder’s reticence to indulge in his team’s newfound success might be personal. After playing point guard for the Duke Blue Devils in the ’80s, a then-33-year-old Snyder, with his piercing eyes and glorious hair, took over at the University of Missouri in 1999 and promptly led the Tigers to four straight tournament berths. But by 2006, he had resigned in the wake of several disappointing seasons, rumors of impropriety, and three years of probation handed down by the NCAA. Over the last decade, Snyder resuscitated his reputation, coaching the D-League’s Austin Toros and serving as an assistant for the Sixers, Lakers, CSKA Moscow, and Hawks. His coiffure remains intact, but he’s keeping a lower profile.

“I didn’t know much about him,” said Gordon Hayward, Utah’s fifth-year swingman. “I’d seen him on a couple opposing benches and at Missouri.” Before the season, Hayward asked players on other teams what they thought about the new Jazz coach. “They were actually kind of pissed we stole him away,” he said. Now, Hayward describes Snyder as “intense,” “meticulous,” and “competitive,” saying, “He wants things to be perfect.”

While still not flawless, Utah wasn’t supposed to be this good, this fast. After allowing All-Star big men Al Jefferson and Paul Millsap to bounce in free agency during the 2013 offseason, the Jazz began an overhaul. Locking Hayward and forward Derrick Favors into long-term contracts, they bet on youth. Although those deals initially looked like more cases of a small-market team overpaying just to get someone, the impending torrent of TV money due to capsize the current salary cap makes Favors’s and Hayward’s contracts downright sensible. In addition to the marquee signings, Utah ate a few undesirable veteran contracts in exchange for draft picks, added an assortment of foreign talent along the way, and now has four rookies on the roster.

Already, the Jazz are blooming into a younger, westward version of the Pacers, a defensive juggernaut that blockades the paint, pummels shots, manhandles the boards, and scores enough to get the job done. A team can win a lot of games like that.

To some degree, Utah’s recent success involves addition by subtraction. At the trade deadline, the Jazz sent starting center (and impending restricted free agent) Enes Kanter and the little-used Steve Novak to Oklahoma City in a three-team deal that brought back Kendrick Perkins (who was soon waived), Grant Jerrett, the rights to FC Barcelona’s Tibor Pleiss, a protected 2017 first-round pick, and a 2017 second-rounder. More important, the move opened up minutes for Rudy Gobert, a 7-foot-2 Frenchman who patrols the paint with a nearly inconceivable 7-foot, 8.5-inch wingspan.

Melissa Majchrzak/NBAE

Wonderfully nicknamed “The Stifle Tower,” the second-year center has emerged as one of the league’s most intimidating leviathans. Despite his previous role as a reserve, Gobert’s numbers for the season are astounding: He leads the NBA in block percentage and rim protection (opposing field goal percentage at the hoop), and is fourth in rebound percentage, eighth in offensive rating, and third in defensive rating. Since the All-Star break, he’s averaged 10.3 points and 14.9 rebounds a game. “He’s a freak of a human being,” Hayward said. “He’s pretty coordinated, and he’s got great defensive instincts. He wants to be a better player, and you can’t teach that.”

With all the Gallic hype, Favors’s bruising interior play has largely been overlooked as a factor in the Jazz’s success. Already in his fifth season, he’s only 23, and his improvement is a reminder that even prospects from the apex of the lottery take time to flourish. The former Georgia Tech Yellow Jacket is averaging 16.3 points and 8.2 rebounds a game and borders on a top-10 standing in blocks. Among power forwards, only Anthony Davis and Blake Griffin have a higher PER, though you won’t spot Favors stunting in Foot Locker or Kia ads. “In Derrick’s case, there was a humility about him that’s unique,” Snyder said. “I don’t think he’s as concerned about being recognized in that way. He’s a great example of the whole team and for the whole organization.”

Despite the teamwide improvement, Utah’s offense is no delicate, freewheeling butterfly. The Jazz play ponderously slow, turn the ball over frequently due to a pair of youthfully indiscreet PGs in Dante Exum and Trey Burke, and predominantly focus on mashing the ball into the paint, where they gorge on offensive rebounds and second-chance points. They score capably in the trenches, but are pedestrian from 3-point range and scattershot from the void between. “We want to try to get good shots, that’s the best way of looking at it,” said Snyder, who maintains that Utah’s snail-like tempo wasn’t an intentional strategy going into the season. “Whether it’s fast or more deliberate, you try to adapt to your personnel. To me, we just want to be efficient.”

On offense, Hayward is Utah’s version of Paul George, an athletic and versatile wing with enough creativity to sort things out when other options run dry. Last season, Hayward struggled as the team’s marquee scoring threat, suffering slumps in both his field goal and 3-point percentage. He’s thriving now, dumping in 19.6 points per game with an outstanding true shooting percentage of 57. “Having a year under my belt as a go-to guy really helps,” he said. “They don’t leave you alone on the backside. I learned how to get my shots. I’m one of the veteran guys on this team — we’re a young team, and I need to lead these guys.”

Going forward, much of Utah’s ability to elevate its offense will depend on the development of young guards such as Exum, Burke, Rodney Hood, and Alec Burks (who had season-ending shoulder surgery in January). Exum, a 19-year-old point guard from Australia who was taken fifth overall in the 2014 draft, has made strides since being installed into the starting lineup. He’s averaging a modest 4.9 points and 2.3 assists in about 24 minutes a game in his new role, but he has used his 6-foot-6 length to inconvenience opponents at the point of attack.

“I think we really are buying into what Coach is telling us,” Exum said. “Even though he has opinions about the game, he’s an understanding coach, and that builds a respect. It’s open court for everyone to have their ideas. He’s said that to me multiple times — that [even though] I’m a rookie, I can voice my opinions.”

The Western Conference makes Battle Royale look like MILF Island, but Utah appears to be on a path to join the horde of regional powerhouses in the near future. And as the Jazz rise, Snyder’s resurrection will inevitably be part of the story, no matter how much he hopes to remain in the shadows. The sports world adores a narrative of brashness humbled and contrition redeemed — but does it apply here? “I don’t know,” Snyder said. “Everybody goes through things that can hopefully make you better. Better coach. Better person. Better friend. Better father. It’s the same growth process.”

Ben Detrick (@bdetrick) is a contributor to the New York Times and Grantland.