The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hawks show fight in loss to Raptors

- By Sarah K. Spencer sarah.spencer@ajc.com

It came down to the final seconds, but the Hawks (4-12) fell to the Raptors 119-116 Saturday at State Farm Arena. Some takeaways:

■ With 30 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists, Trae Young led the way, recording the second triple-double of his NBA career. His first came in his rookie season when he put up 23 points, 10 rebounds and 11 assists in a March 9 loss to the Nets. With his fourth 3-pointer of the game, Young reached the 200 mark — he’s the fastest in Hawks history to reach that mark (doing so in game 96 of his career) and is also the youngest Hawk to reach 200. “Just knowing the history of Hawks bas- ketball, it’s very humbling to have those type of accolades,” Young said. Young also guarded Fred VanVleet for most of the game, holding him to 7 for 21 from the field (VanVleet finished with 25 points after making 9 of 9 free throws).

■ After struggling with slow starts, the Hawks actually had the lead coming out of the first quarter, 27-26, and worked their way to a 61-52 lead at halftime. Friday’s loss in Detroit featured a scoring drought of more than six min- utes in the first quarter, so that was a step forward, on the sec- ond night of a back-to-back. “I was pleased with our guys from start to finish . ... There’s always ups and downs, but

I didn’t think it was a lack of effort at all tonight at any point, really,” Hawks coach Lloyd Pierce said.

■ Back-to-back 3-pointers by Pascal Siakam (who led the Raptors with 34 points) to open up the second half forced Pierce to call a timeout 46 seconds into the third quar- ter, but the Hawks responded, a steal and finish by Young giving them a 72-62 lead with 7:52 to go in the third. When the Raptors took the lead more than five minutes later, eight straight points from rookie De’Andre Hunter (who added 26 points) helped the Hawks get it back and take a 90-87 advantage into the fourth. Even when the Hawks were down by eight with about six minutes to go, they didn’t go quietly, a 3-pointer by Hunter cutting it to 116-113 with 25.8 seconds left in the fourth. They weren’t truly out of it until Young missed a 3-pointer from the logo at the final buzzer. “It sucksthat obviously we lost,” Young said. “But if we play like that, it’s going to be tough to beat us. Obviously we’re down a couple guys, but the way we played tonight, if we can play (like) that, we can turn things around, and that’s just what we’ve got to do every night.”

■ After that bad loss in Detroit on Friday, the Hawks held a team meeting. Pierce’s mainmessag­e was about how the Hawks have to compete more in games — and Saturday’s game had a completely different feel from start to finish. Given the loss (they’ve lost six in a row), it wasn’t a perfect response from the team, but the level of competitio­n ticked up. “There was a lull where we couldn’t score in the fourth quarter, but it definitely wasn’t lack of effort, and that was the message last night,” Piercesaid. “How do we compete on a consistent and nightly basis? How do we compete every single possession? If we do that, everything else will kind of take care of itself, and that’s what we didn’t do last night, that’s what we struggled to do in the last five games. We did that in its entirety tonight.”

■ The Hawks got a combined seven rebounds from their three centers, with Damian Jones adding one, Alex Len adding two and Bruno Fernando adding four. Young led the team with his

10. The Raptors grabbed 42 rebounds (12 offensive) compared with the Hawks’ 38 rebounds (eight offensive). Not having John Collins hurts the Hawks’ cause on the boards, but they now rank 27th in the league in defensive rebounding (32.2 per game) and 19th in offensive rebounding (10.1 per game).

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