The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

SO FAR, TEAM NOT SHOWING SIGNS OF TANKING

Team not tanking, but could be worse off at end of season.

- Michael Cunningham

What Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban said on Julius Erving’s podcast Monday isn’t that controvers­ial. It’s just that he again said the unspeakabl­e, at least for people in his position.

“I’m probably not supposed to say this but ... you know, we weren’t competing for the playoffs (in 2017). I was like, ‘Look, losing is our best option,’ ” Cuban told Dr. J. “(NBA commission­er Adam Silver) would hate hearing that, but I at least sat down and I explained it to them. And I explained what our plans were going to be this summer, that we’re not going to tank again. This was, like, a year-and-a-half tanking, and that was too brutal for me. But being transparen­t, I think that’s the key to being kind of a players’ owner and having stability.”

Last year Cuban admitted that the Mavs “did everything possible to

lose games” after they were eliminated from the 2017 playoffs. Cuban

didn’t mean Mavericks players tried to lose, but rather that the team played its younger players to decrease chances of winning. It’s a subtle and important difference but the aim is the same: losing to increase lottery odds.

The Hawks (18-41) are in a similar position to the Mavs (18-40) but, so far, they don’t seem to be embracing Cuban’s approach. For the most part the Hawks have done everything they can to win by playing their veterans.

Rookie John Collins remains a reserve and is averaging about the same minutes per game in February (23.9) as he did in November (24.5) even while fouling at a lower rate now versus then. Rookie Tyler Dorsey is absorbing some of the minutes on the wing created by the departure of Marco Belinelli but so is Malcolm Delaney, and Kent Bazemore still is playing heavy minutes. Isaiah Taylor, who had four games of NBA experience before this season, has become the regular backup point guard but Dennis Schroder still is playing 30 minutes per game.

It could change for the Hawks now that the trade deadline has passed and they reset after the All-Star break. Maybe it started with their final game before the break, when Bazemore sat for rest and Schroder and Ersan Ilyasova were listed as out with injuries. Then again, Bazemore had played every game with the highest usage percentage since he became a rotation player and perhaps Ilyasova and Schroder needed the break, too.

But it will be tricky for the Hawks to strike a bal

ance of playing youngsters and keeping vets happy, for two reasons.

One is the Hawks don’t want losing to become a habit for younger players. There has to be accountabi­lity, with minutes earned and not given. That’s one reason why GM Travis Schlenk said before

the trade deadline that there is value in keeping Bazemore around during the rebuild.

“The tricky part of going through this is you still want to have a culture of winning,” Schlenk said.

“I give the coaches and players a lot of credit . ... We are not winning a lot of games but you can’t just show up and get a win (against the Hawks). Our guys compete every night.”

The other reason the Hawks may not want to go too far with tanking: No team wants to earn a reputation for luring veterans to play for them and then hurting the market value of those players by sitting them. I’ve also never met a player who is

fine with losing — financial incentives notwithsta­nding, these guys are competitiv­e.

Note that Ilyasova, when expressing his desire to remain with the Hawks, added the caveat

that he was happy to do so “as long as we are playing to win.” Cuban said he believes he earns credibilit­y with players for being honest about tanking, but I’m not so sure.

The Hawks added to the trickiness of the situation with some of their contracts. They signed Ilyasova to a one-year deal that preserved his “Bird rights” and, logically, Ilyasova was not willing to accept a trade and thus forfeit the chance for a bigger payday. The Hawks gave Dewayne Dedmon

and Mike Muscala player options for next season

that curtailed their trade value.

The Hawks signed those players so they would be competitiv­e. But the deals they gave them also made

them harder to trade. Now those three players can help the Hawks win games (and thus reduce their lottery odds), become free agents this summer and leave with the Hawks getting nothing in return.

Cuban’s approach to tanking has some potential drawbacks. But so too do the half-measures the Hawks have taken so far.

 ?? KEVIN C. COX / GETTY IMAGES ?? Kent Bazemore drives against Detroit’s Stanley Johnson in a recent game. Bazemore is still playing heavy minutes as the Hawks continue to struggle.
KEVIN C. COX / GETTY IMAGES Kent Bazemore drives against Detroit’s Stanley Johnson in a recent game. Bazemore is still playing heavy minutes as the Hawks continue to struggle.
 ??  ?? FRIDAY’S GAME Hawks at Pacers, 7, FSSE
FRIDAY’S GAME Hawks at Pacers, 7, FSSE
 ??  ??

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