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ATLANTA HAWKS: Toast of the NBA two seasons ago, Atlanta is mired in a terrible slump.

- By Paul Newberry Associated Press Sports Writer

ATLANTA — The Atlanta Hawks are struggling to figure out what happened to the team that won 60 games just two seasons ago.

A ballyhooed makeover has quickly bogged down. The offense looks stagnant and confused. The defense is struggling to stop anyone.

The Hawks have faded back into NBA purgatory.

Since a 9-2 start raised hopes of another strong run in the Eastern Conference, Atlanta has lost seven straight games — its longest skid since February 2014 — and 10 of the last 11. More troubling, the Hawks haven’t been competitiv­e in many of those games.

The plummet includes six double-digit defeats, including a 36-point rout at home by Detroit and a 44-point embarrassm­ent at Toronto in backto-back games.

No wonder the Hawks took a bit of hope from their latest setback, a more respectabl­e 102-99 loss to Oklahoma City.

“A step in the right direction,” coach Mike Budenholze­r said Tuesday, even while acknowledg­ing “this is a little bit of uncharted waters.”

Budenholze­r has already juggled the lineup, making Thabo Sefolosha a starter and benching Kyle Korver. But there are plenty of troubling issues beyond an aging 3-point specialist — from new center Dwight Howard acclimatin­g to an offense built on motion and making the extra pass, to Kent Bazemore struggling to live up to the huge contract he received this past summer, to Dennis Schroder’s upand-down play in his first season as the starting point guard.

“We started out the season with the right attitude, the right mindset,” said Paul Millsap, who is battling a sore hip. “Somewhere down the line, we lost track of who we are.”

Budenholze­r was the toast of the league in 2014-15, molding the Hawks into a cohesive unit that was greater than its individual parts. Atlanta ripped off a 19game winning streak and all five starters shared player of the month, an unpreceden­ted honor.

The Hawks claimed the top seed in the East and got past the second round of the playoffs for the first time since moving from St. Louis in 1968. Even though they were swept by LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers in the conference finals, this looked like a franchise on the rise. Not anymore. The Hawks had 12 fewer wins last season than they did the year before, and went out meekly in the second round with another sweep by the Cavaliers. That prompted Budenholze­r, who inherited total control over personnel matters after the ouster of general manager Danny Ferry for racially charged comments, to decide on a major shake-up.

Atlanta doled out $70.5 million to Howard, even though his star had faded in recent seasons, allowing longtime Hawks center Al Horford to bolt for Boston. Budenholze­r also traded point guard Jeff Teague to Indiana, handing Schroder the keys to the offense.

Those moves raised plenty of eyebrows, as did the $70 million contract for former D-Leaguer Bazemore, but the strong start — which included an impressive road win at Cleveland — seemed to justify Budenholze­r’s direction.

Then, suddenly, the Hawks fell apart.

The schedule surely had something to do with it. Atlanta’s slide began when the team headed out on the road for seven of eight games, including a West Coast swing.

With all that traveling, there was little time to practice between games.

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