Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tough stretch could sink Hawks

- BY CHARLES ODUM

ATLANTA — The playoffs are no longer a certainty for the struggling Atlanta Hawks, whose immediate concern has shifted from postseason seeding to not being pushed out the door.

And after losing nine of their past 11 games, the challenge is about to become more difficult.

The Hawks, who have slipped to sixth in the eightteam Eastern Conference playoff standings, will play three games in four days against the conference’s top two teams. They host the Boston Celtics Thursday night before playing the Cavaliers twice in three days — Friday in Cleveland and Sunday in Atlanta.

It’s a critical stretch for the Hawks. Going into Tuesday night’s schedule, they were one game ahead of seventh-place Chicago and two games ahead of Miami and Indiana, who were tied for eighth.

“Maybe this will be the fight that we have to put up to really get us going,” guard Kent Bazemore said after Tuesday’s practice. “We’ve got some very tough teams left, some very good opponents.”

All-Star forward Paul Millsap missed seven straight games with left knee synovitis before playing a reserve role in a 91-82 road loss to the Brookln Nets on Sunday. Coach Mike Budenholze­r said Millsap “was OK, not great” against Brooklyn and had a good practice Tuesday. Millsap said he hopes to play his normal starting role against the Celtics.

Two recent losses to Brooklyn, which has the worst record in the NBA, are not the confidence-boosting games needed for a team now preparing to face the Eastern’s best teams.

“I think for our confidence and for our morale, we have to get these wins,” Millsap said. “We have to get out there and compete, because when we do get to the playoffs, we have to be playing pretty good basketball. This is a pretty good test for us. Hopefully we just rise to the occasion.”

The Hawks will close the regular season with games against Charlotte and Indiana next week.

Atlanta was without three starters — Millsap, Bazemore (right knee bruise) and Thabo Sefolosha (right groin strain) for a few games. Bazemore has returned, but Sefolosha may not play tonight.

Much is on the line for Budenholze­r, who as president of basketball operations made such offseason decisions as giving Bazemore a $70 million deal for four years and center Dwight Howard a three-year contract worth $70.5 million.

“This is the most enthused I’ve seen him in a long, long time,” Bazemore said of the coach. “He wants it just as much as we do. … When you see him get that rage in his eyes, it does something for you.”

Millsap smiled when told of the descriptio­n of Budenholze­r’s “rage” and said “I’ve seen love. It just all depends on how you look at it.”

Budenholze­r was amused by his players’ differing insights into his demeanor: “It’s way more love. It’s a passion of love.”

The coach said he has “a great group of guys” — even if the ill-timed slump has added unwelcome drama to the close of the regular season.

“I think we were making progress in this past week, and then I think Sunday was a little bit of a step back,” he said. “We want to always be making steps forward and making progress.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Atlanta Hawks forward Paul Millsap drives to the basket past Brooklyn Nets forward Trevor Booker during the second half of Sunday’s game in New York. The Nets won 91-82.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Atlanta Hawks forward Paul Millsap drives to the basket past Brooklyn Nets forward Trevor Booker during the second half of Sunday’s game in New York. The Nets won 91-82.

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