The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

TO MATCH OR NOT

Despite showing occasional promise, Hardaway probably doesn’t belong in new GM’s rebuilding project.

- Mark Bradley My Opinion

The Hawks extended a qualifying offer to Tim Hardaway Jr. on Monday. This is a procedural move that will enable them to match any offer he might accept from another team and thereby retain him. (They did this with Jeff Teague, you’ll recall. As we can never forget, they did it with Jon Koncak.) Question is, should they match/keep Hardaway?

Most of this, I submit, rides on the answer to another question: How badly do they want to land in the

2018 lottery? Were I the Hawks, my answer would be, “Desperatel­y.” They haven’t revealed theirs, though a revelation will be forthcomin­g in the next 10 days. I cannot imagine them paying max money to re-up the 32-year-old Paul Millsap, but they might. As for Hardaway ...

He turned into a useful player last season. That’s not quite the same as being a consistent­ly good player. Kent Bazemore is a useful player whom the Hawks paid dearly to re-sign last summer, and I’m reasonably certain new management would dump that contract in a millisecon­d. My argument against Hardaway is the same as mine was against Bazemore: He’s just a guy. Every NBA team, even the lousy ones, has similar guys.

I say this having witnessed firsthand Hardaway turning, albeit briefly, into Kobe Bryant. His fourth quarter in Houston three nights before the Super Bowl was astonishin­g. I’d never seen anything like it from any Hawk, and I caught the Hall of Famer Dominique Wilkins at the peak of his powers. The Rockets, who would

finish with the NBA’s thirdbest record, couldn’t guard Hardaway. James Harden and Mike D’Antoni (newly minted coach of the year, FYI) kept casting the look toward one another that Butch gave to Sundance: Who IS this guy?

By season’s end, Hardaway became a starter. Come the playoffs, he became a non-factor. He made 32.9 percent of his shots and 26.2 percent of his 3-pointers in six games against Washington. That’s a small sample size, but it shows what can happen when a team game-plans for an opponent. On a Thursday night in February, the Rockets weren’t game-planning for the Hawks’ subs.

We saw in the brief postseason the flip side of pairing Hardaway with Dennis Schroder as the starting backcourt: Both are swinging gates on defense. Steals aren’t a full measure of defensive skill, but Hardaway had three in the series. He also had seven assists and 10 turnovers. If he’s not scoring — he averaged 12.8 points against the Wizards on 13.7 shots — he’s not an asset.

If the Hawks could persuade Hardaway to take a reasonable salary on a short-term basis, that would be one thing. With restricted free agents, you’re forced to accept/ decline a contract that another team has negotiated. When Teague signed his offer sheet with Milwaukee in 2013, it was for $32 million over four years. That wasn’t unreasonab­le, which is why Danny Ferry chose to match. Ferry would have preferred it be to for one less season, but that’s the way of offer sheets.

If we know anything about Travis Schlenk, it’s that he said he wants no oppressive contracts on his ledger. (Then again, he just up and traded for Miles Plumlee, scheduled to make $37.5 million over the next three seasons.) With Dwight Howard gone and Millsap surely going, the Hawks aren’t apt to be in playoff contention next season. If you’re not in playoff contention, do you need Hardaway at any price?

Which brings us to the truly fascinatin­g part of a fascinatin­g issue: Can the new general manager/ head of basketball operations say to Mike Budenholze­r, recently the head of basketball operations and still the coach, “Hey, Bud. We’re tanking”?

It was Budenholze­r who made the in-draft move in 2015 to trade for Hardaway, who was considered a Knicks draft whiff, but who torched the 60-win Hawks for 23 points on the penultimat­e night of the regular season. It was Budenholze­r who stuck with Hardaway even as he was shipped to the D-League early the next season. This coach turned a project into a useful player and eventually a starter. If Hardaway departs, here’s your Hawks roster for 2017-18: Schroder, Bazemore, Taurean Prince, DeAndre Bembry, Mike Dunleavy and some rookies. (Oh, and Miles Plumlee.)

Meaning: Hello, lottery. And maybe: Goodbye, Bud.

I’m sure the new GM wants to rebuild. (If he doesn’t, he shouldn’t have been hired.) I’m sure he values Budenholze­r as a coach, but we just saw the biggest acquisitio­n of Budenholze­r’s managerial tenure shipped to Charlotte for spare parts. Millsap is another test case, but I’m guessing even a coach who’s trying to win games can grasp that spending $205 million on a 32-year-old who isn’t LeBron would be the height of folly. (Then again, it’s believed the schism with the defrocked Wes Wilcox arose over Wilcox’s desire to trade Millsap last winter.)

The new GM has been handed a roster with a few useful pieces and no great answers. He also inherited a strong-willed coach who was, not so long ago, making the decisions that now fall to Schlenk. Being a coach, Budenholze­r wants good players. But good players come at a cost, and I’m not sure the Hawks need to be spending. For the 15th time: They really do need to get into the lottery. Which means they don’t need to be matching an offer for a guy who’s just a guy.

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hawks coach Mike Budenholze­r made the decision to trade for Tim Hardaway Jr. in 2015 and helped him become a useful player. But Hardaway’s long-term value is questionab­le.
DAVID GOLDMAN / ASSOCIATED PRESS Hawks coach Mike Budenholze­r made the decision to trade for Tim Hardaway Jr. in 2015 and helped him become a useful player. But Hardaway’s long-term value is questionab­le.
 ??  ??
 ?? HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY.TAYLOR@ AJC.COM ?? Tim Hardaway Jr. isn’t a special player — and if the Hawks are serious about rebuilding, that makes him expendable.
HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY.TAYLOR@ AJC.COM Tim Hardaway Jr. isn’t a special player — and if the Hawks are serious about rebuilding, that makes him expendable.

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