So, here's how I see Sacramento vs. Utah:
The Starters:Boozer vs. Yao: First, there's absolutely no way that Yao is completely healthy and the same player he used to be. He's 30 years old, coming off of multiple surgeries on his foot. As recently as this off-season, Yao was contemplating retirement, and the word on the street was that he might never be able to play again. I mean, guys don't just miss full seasons in the NBA and come back 100%.
So, Yao will be hobbled. That's a fact. However, even when fully healthy, Carlos Boozer played him tough. (And yes, Carlos Boozer plays center -- almost as much as he plays power forward, but nobody watches the Jazz, so they don't know that). In their respective careers, Boozer has played Yao evenly offensively (15.2 vs. 16.1 points per game). However, Boozer *dominates* Yao on the boards, 9.7 vs. 7.3. Every rebound means another possession for the Kings. (I'd also point out that Boozer averages more personal fouls and more turnovers than Boozer does H2H.)
Randolph vs. Gasol: Everyone's gut instinct is to say that Gasol wins this one, right? Wrong. See the stats above: Randolph has consistently outscored and outrebounded Gasol in their H2H matchups. These stats haven't come at the expense of winning, either, as Randolph has won 50% of the games he's played against Gasol.
Lewis vs. Gallinari: I think Lewis takes this one, and Gallinari is certainly more of a question mark. However, let's call this one about a push.
Lee vs. Casspi: This one is pretty much a wash, too. I'd lean toward Lee, as he's a better defender and because Casspi is *not* a shooting guard. They don't have much of a head-to-head history, but in the one game they did play that Lee was healthy for, Casspi shot 1-for-8.
Rose vs. Calderon: By far, the biggest mismatch in the series. You have one of the best scoring PGs in the league going up against perhaps the worst defensive PG in the league. (Yes, worse than Mike Bibby). Calderon allows opposing points guards to score 26.2% more than they normally do when he guards them, and was relegated to backup status (behind the immortal Jarrett Jack) in Toronto. Calderon is a guy best suited to 25 minutes per game, which isn't going to cut it against Derrick Rose.
The Bench:The two benches are similar in some ways. They both have a defensive big man (Dampier vs. Lopez). They both have a defensive stopper who can play multiple positions (Jeffries vs. Mbah a Moute).
However, Sacramento has a couple of things that Utah doesn't. First: the Kings have a backup PG. Believe it or not, the Jazz don't. Seriously. They've got one of the worst starting PGs in the league, and he's backed up by... Willie Green. The same Willie Green who has never been a PG, and never will be a PG. Sure, Jeff Teague is inexperienced, but he'll be playing 8 minutes a night. Green is going to have to play, at minimum, 18, and probably closer to 23. That's a HUGE advantage for the Kings.
Next, the Kings have dynamic scorers off the bench, that the Jazz can't compete with. Francisco Garcia is a 6'7" shooting guard who causes matchup problems and who shoots 39.0% from three. Richard Jefferson is a guy who is a season removed from averaging nearly 20 ppg in Milwaukee. There's just no counterpart on the Jazz who can keep up with those guys.
Lastly, rebounding remains a recurring theme, as nobody on the Jazz bench can rebound with Drew Gooden and Eric Dampier up front.
Why the Kings win:"Offense sells tickets, Defense wins games, Rebounding wins championships." - Pat Summit
The Kings are the best rebounding team in the CB-NBA, and they're going to consistently beat the Jazz on the boards. On top of that, the Kings have an extremely efficient offense -- led by three legitimate stars -- that can score both in the post and from outside. The Kings hold two huge matchup advantages here: the bench and the point guard position. Everywhere else is arguably fairly even, but when 20% of your starting lineup is getting dominated every night, it makes it hard to win games. It makes it even harder when your bench is losing its nightly battles, as well.