The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Retooling franchise betting on bright future

Schlenk expecting youthful roster with emphasis on flexibilit­y.

- By Chris Vivlamore cvivlamore@ajc.com

Investing in the LAS VEGAS — future.

That is the term Hawks general manager Travis Schlenk prefers when speaking on the current state of the team. While some

will say “rebuild” and some will say “tank,” Schlenk doesn’t see it that way.

“Investing in the future,” Schlenk said of the Hawks’ plans. “We are going to be young. We are going to be fun. We are going to develop our talent. We are going to maintain our flexibilit­y.”

Schlenk spoke to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on as the Hawks’ first- and second-year players competed in the Las Vegas Summer League. Schlenk addressed the losses of Paul Millsap and Tim Hardaway Jr., what moves are next in free agency and how some of the young players have looked early.

Q: Let’s start with a couple of recent moves and have you explain your thinking behind each. First, what can you say about the decision not to re-sign Paul Millsap?

A: The first thing, I would like to thank Paul organizati­onally for everything he did for the Hawks

for the last four years. Obviously, he was a big part of the success of the organizati­on had. We were in contact with his representa­tion throughout the whole process. We knew he was going to get a very good deal. Where we are as a franchise and the path we are on, it just didn’t make sense for us at this time. Again, to reiterate, very grateful for everything that he has done for the organizati­on and the city the last four years.

Q: So even a short-term deal, two years with an option, was too much?

A: Like I’ve maintained from the beginning, our goal is to maintain our flexibilit­y. Get good guys on good contracts. Going into free agency, we weren’t going to be out of the gates early. We are going to take our time and let everything play out. That’s what we’ve done as we sit on the ( July) 10th, and we’ve signed one guy.

Q: How about Tim Hardaway Jr.? Was that contract just too rich?

A: We really wanted to work something out with him. Very happy for Timmy. Timmy did a great job here with our player-developmen­t staff getting better. He got rewarded for that.

Q: How about Jamal Crawford, and why did you buy him out?

A: That trade was to get the (draft) pick. It’s kind of the same reason as the decision with Paul. We are not really in a place. We want to be young. We want to be fun. That’s the direction we are going with younger guys.

Q: What advantage did you gain there?

A: The advantage, I don’t know there was an advantage, other than we have a lot of guards the way it is. We want to give (DeAndre) Bembry an opportunit­y. We’ve seen in Las Vegas that he is doing well. We have (Marco) Belinelli there also. (Kent Bazemore) also. We just drafted (Tyler) Dorsey. We just have a lot of wing guys. It didn’t make a lot of sense from a roster standpoint. Again, we did that trade to gain an asset.

Q: What about the state of the Hawks free agent-wise, as you need to fill out the roster? As you said, you’ve only signed one guy (Mike Muscala).

A: We are in negotiatio­ns with a few guys. We are going to sign deals we think are going to be value deals. Good players on good contracts. Listen, we are going to be young. We want to be fun. We want guys that play hard. That is where we are.

Q: You don’t like the word “rebuilding,” but are you in a different place now than you expected because you lost Paul and Tim?

A: Certainly you have to be flexible when that happens. We don’t want to concede to losing. I think a lot of times that what the term “rebuilding” means, you are conceding to losing. We don’t want to do that. We want to be competitiv­e every night. The term I like to use, we are investing in the future. We have young guys. We have probably five more firstround picks over the next two years to add to this group. We are investing in our future. The young guys we have, we want to keep developing them. We want to keep our flexibilit­y, collect assets, build the guys we have. Investing in the future. The end goal is to be able to compete for a championsh­ip. We didn’t feel like maintainin­g where we were, where you go 60, 48, 43 (wins). We have to start going up again.

Q: Coach Mike Budenholze­r likes to carry a third point guard. Do you expect to sign one?

A: We’ll sign a third point guard. We are deciding: Do we get a veteran guy or do we get a young guy that we think has upside? Do we bring in a couple guys and let them battle it out? We are going to sign a power forward for sure. We’ll sign a center for sure. Probably sign three more big guys so we end up with six.

Q: Do you expect Alpha Kaba and Isaia Cordinier to go back overseas?

A: I think Alpha will go back to Mega Leks or another team in Europe. Cordinier has expressed a desire to play in Erie (with the NBA G League team). We aren’t really sure if he’ll go back, but he’s expressed a desire to maybe to that. We’ll figure all that out in the next month.

Q: So it’s summer league, but John Collins has looked really good. Agree?

A: Very pleased with Collins. What we really like about him is that he is athletic. He’s got a great motor, not just in the games but in practices from Day 1. After the (introducto­ry) press conference, we had him in town and he just played hard every workout and goes hard every time. That’s what we really like about him.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? New general manager Travis Schlenk avoids calling the Hawks a rebuilding project.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM New general manager Travis Schlenk avoids calling the Hawks a rebuilding project.

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