The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A good coach helps, but draft helps more

- Mark Bradley

The Hawks introduced coach Lloyd Pierce on Monday at one of those overcooked Hawks press conference­s where family and friends far outnumber actual media. He said the right stuff, at least the parts that could be heard. The first microphone he was handed didn’t work. (Same ol’ Hawks.)

He spoke of the similariti­es between his new job here and his previous posting as assistant coach for the 76ers. The Hawks are rebuilding via tanking. Half the league is. Philly did it first and fastest.

Pierce worked in Cleveland under Mike Brown, who’d worked in San Antonio under Gregg Popovich. He worked in Memphis under Lionel Hollins, the point guard on a famous Portland team for Dr.

Jack Ramsey. He played at Santa Clara alongside Steve Nash, who became an MVP in Phoenix under Mike D’Antoni. Pierce would have been a solid candidate if he’d never worked in Philly. He became the obvious choice because he worked in Philadelph­ia serving The Process, as it became universall­y known.

Anytime a team hires a new coach marks a significan­t moment. We would, however, be less than forthright if we didn’t emphasize that Pierce’s introducti­on Monday will be only the second-biggest Hawks news of these 48 hours. What transpires in today’s draft lottery will have a greater impact on everything that happens next.

Having a good coach never hurts. But NBA coaching is a function of the players provided. That’s the point of The Process. The Sixers tanked as blatantly as any team ever has, and today they have the league’s best young duo — Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons — plus Markelle Fultz, last year’s No. 1 overall pick who scarcely played as a rookie due to injury.

Asked how it was to work within Philly’s Process, Pierce said: “There was the outside perception, and there was the internal reality. Our job as coaches was to develop the players on our roster.”

There was a time when that roster was so thin — Nerlens Noel (No. 6 overall pick, 2013), Embiid (No. 3, 2014) and Simmons (No. 1, 2016) sat out their rookie seasons; the Sixers could afford to wait — that Philadelph­ia lost 26 consecutiv­e games. But there were also

glimmers. “With Joel, his talent superseded everything,” Pierce said. “The rest of the league had no idea how good he was. We knew that as soon as he got healthy, we had something special.”

Then there was T.J. McConnell, an undrafted free agent from Arizona by way of Duquesne. He had 19 points, seven rebounds and five assists against Boston in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semis. There’s your player developmen­t. Said Pierce: “He embodied everything you could ask for.”

Earlier, Pierce had said: “It’s all about the developmen­t … It’s all going to focus on their growth. Superstars on our roster we can worry about later.”

Later? Like … Tuesday night?

Deandre Ayton is a massive man. Marvin Bagley III is a major talent. Luka Doncic might be Simmons-like, only with a real jump shot. The Hawks could wind up picking anywhere from No. 1 (meaning Ayton or Doncic, probably) to No. 7 (meaning maybe Michael Porter Jr. or Wendell Carter Jr., or even Trae

Young). This is the Hawks’ first lottery pick since the Al Horford/Acie Law III combo platter in 2007, which immediatel­y preceded a run of 10 consecutiv­e playoff appearance­s. The bounce of the pingpong balls could turn this franchise. Or not.

Winning the right to pick Ayton/Doncic wouldn’t mean these Hawks are home and dry. Philly’s Process took so long that its architect resigned after three years. (Today the absent Sam Hinkie is hailed as a civic hero in a city that hates everybody.)

Landing a coach versed in The Process and on board with the plan — unlike grumpy Mike Budenholze­r, now gone with the wind — is a deft move, and Pierce is an impressive guy. But he’s in for a lot of losing no matter how the ping-pong balls fall.

Monday was a good day for a team coming off a lousy-by-design season. If tonight works out, the number of bad days this plan/process will require could be trimmed by several hundred.

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 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Lloyd Pierce focuses on “developmen­t” and “superstars on our roster we can worry about later” — but the lottery may provide a star soon.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Lloyd Pierce focuses on “developmen­t” and “superstars on our roster we can worry about later” — but the lottery may provide a star soon.

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