The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

'Drastic changes' not part of plan

Final 23 games likely to maintain same player rotation, coach says.

- By Michael Cunningham michael.cunningham@ajc.com

For the first practice after the All-Star break, Hawks coach Mike Budenholze­r said he added a “wrinkle here or a new play there” but doesn’t anticipate making any “drastic changes” to the way his team plays over its final 23 games. That includes how he distribute­s playing time among his veteran and young players.

Some other teams near the bottom of the standings have publicly proclaimed they will favor youth over experience for the final four-plus weeks of the season, but Budenholze­r said he will stay the course.

“I think we’ve been a mix of young and veteran guys all year,” he said Wednesday. “I think the way we’ve played, and the way we continue to play, won’t be that much different.”

If that approach holds, it means the Hawks (18-41) will continue to use essentiall­y the same playing rotation as they did while posting an 11-16 record in the seven weeks prior to the All-Star break. They are tied with the Phoenix Suns for the worst record in the NBA but have shown that improved health for veteran players makes them more competitiv­e.

The Hawks have especially made strides defensivel­y, improving their efficiency ranking from 29th in the league on Dec. 23 to 24th now. Their offensive efficiency slipped during that time, in large part because they didn’t

shoot the ball nearly as well as they did for the first 32 games.

If the Hawks keep winning at a higher rate, it could imperil their odds of winning the lottery for the top NBA draft pick. Eight NBA teams have 20 or fewer victories so there’s a lot of competitio­n for finishing last in the standings.

At least three teams near the bottom of the standings haven’t been shy about expressing a change in priorities after the All-Star break. The league fined Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban $600,000 after he said in an interview that “losing is our best option” because it improves the odds of Dallas (18-40) getting a high pick.

The Chicago Bulls (20-37) announced that Robin Lopez, Justin Holiday and Jerian Grant will no longer start or get regular minutes as unproven players take on bigger roles. The Sacramento Kings (18-39) already proclaimed they were favoring young players over veterans before they traded away George Hill before the deadline.

The Hawks didn’t trade any veteran rotation players and they bought out the contract of just one, Marco Belinelli. Ersan Ilyasova remains the Hawks’ starting power forward after he invoked his right to reject trade offers that were presented to him and indicated he doesn’t want a buyout.

Dewayne Dedmon still is starting at center ahead of John Collins, one of the top rookies in the NBA. Rookie wing Tyler Dorsey has earned a spot in the rotation but starter Kent Bazemore is playing a career-high minutes per game. A similar dynamic applies with starting point guard Dennis Schroder and backup Isaiah Taylor, who has played 48 career games.

 ?? REINHOLD MATAY / AP ?? Dewayne Dedmon remains the Hawks’ starting center, ahead of John Collins.
REINHOLD MATAY / AP Dewayne Dedmon remains the Hawks’ starting center, ahead of John Collins.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States