<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">Andrei Kirilenko was worried when his back pain didn't go away after a couple of days. And he wasn't the only one. "Everybody so panicked," Kirilenko said with a laugh. Well, quiet the sirens and put away the survival kits. It was a false alarm. MRIs on his back showed "everything normal, typical NBA player, nothing to worry about," Kirilenko said Sunday, and he proved it by participating with his teammates in their Christmas night practice. "I feel great today." That's great news for the Jazz, who went 0-3 without Kirilenko last week and are 13-38 when he doesn't suit up over the past two seasons. Even better: Carlos Boozer believes he will make his 2005-06 debut "soon." So maybe the Jazz's season, and the careers of their two highest-paid players, isn't on the brink of ruin after all. The worst-case scenario had occurred to their coach. </div> <div align="center">Source</div>