The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hunter glad to be home as he eyes NBA return

Former Georgia State star joins Hawks’ affiliate.

- By Zach Koons zachary.koons@ajc.com

After nearly a year away from Atlanta, RJ Hunter has found his way back to the city closest to his heart. It can get lonely halfway across the world.

“It’s always good to come back (to Atlanta),” Hunter said. “Even during a season that I’ve been in the United States and I get to come back home, it’s always good. I’m going to live here for a long time so, I call it home.”

Hunter, a two-time Sun Belt Player of the Year at Georgia State, returned to Atlanta last month and signed with the College Park Skyhawks, the G League affiliate of the Hawks, on Feb. 7.

In his three seasons at Georgia State, Hunter became the Panthers’ alltime scoring leader, with 1,819 points, and all-time leader in 3-pointers made (253). He elected to forgo his senior season and was selected with the 28th pick in the 2015 NBA draft by the Celtics. He appeared in 45 NBA games with the Celtics, Bulls and Rockets over the previous four seasons.

This season, Hunter played for Turk Telekom, a team based in Ankara that plays in the Turkish Basketball Super League.

He spent about six months overseas, appearing in 16 games and averaging 9.8 points and 3.3 assists per game.

“Any league over here is going to be more fast-paced and the more you go towards Europe the more it slows down,” Hunter said. “It’s more about quality possession­s over there (in Turkey). They really take each possession and each play very seriously.”

Hunter appreciate­d the style of play, acknowledg­ing that being more efficient and intentiona­l every time he touched the ball helped his own game.

But not every learning experience in Turkey was easy. While thankful for the opportunit­y to learn about a culture different than his own, Hunter struggled at times without family or close friends nearby. It was during these moments that he learned the most.

“Just imagine that you’re by yourself halfway across the world. When your family is asleep, you’re up and when they’re going to sleep, you’re up. So, you’re not really talking to anybody outside of your apartment or anywhere else, because not a lot of people speak English,” Hunter said. “It’s an island. Basketball is two hours of your day and then you have twenty (hours) to be somewhere where you have no idea what’s going on. That vulnerabil­ity teaches you a lot about yourself.”

So Hunter jumped at the opportunit­y to return to the U.S., especially when the chance was with the local Skyhawks.

Coming back to Atlanta meant a chance to live closer to family and specifical­ly his mother, Amy, and his sister, Jasmine. His father, Ron, formerly coached at Georgia State from 2011-19 before accepting the head coaching job at Tulane University. Still, the father-son pair text or call daily and spend time together when Ron gets the chance to travel to Atlanta.

G League experience

RJ also found familiarit­y with the G League, having spent time on the rosters of the developmen­tal teams in the Boston, Brooklyn, Chicago, Houston and Atlanta organizati­ons. Understand­ing the demands of the league allowed him to exercise patience when joining the Skyhawks after the season’s midway point.

“Fitting back in is probably the hardest part. I’ve been in the G League, so I know the sacrifices and the lack of resources and the travel and things you have to do,” Hunter said. “So, I have to be very cautious with infiltrati­ng things that (the Skyhawks) have already establishe­d. It takes a lot of just sitting back and looking and seeing where you fit in and going from there.”

Hunter is still looking to find his footing in College Park after a shaky start. Over the last month, Hunter appeared in seven games, averaging 7.4 points and four rebounds per game. He’s struggled shooting, connecting on just 31% of his shots from the field and 28 percent from beyond the arc.

But Hunter remains upbeat about his play. He credits the comfortabl­e relationsh­ip he’s already built with the Skyhawks’ coaching staff, a group that he met last year through his previous stint inside the Hawks’ organizati­on.

“We both just have mutual respect for each other,” Hunter said. “At a time and point in my career when I didn’t have a lot of confidence and I was kind of stuck, they helped me out and gave me a lot of responsibi­lity and free rein. That helped me a lot at a point where I didn’t know where I was heading.”

As Hunter looks to the future, getting back to the NBA remains the primary goal. In 45 games at basketball’s highest level he averaged just three points per game.

But throughout his time playing profession­ally, both in the G League and in Turkey, Hunter realized the abundance of basketball opportunit­ies. As a result, he’s found solace in working on his own game and trusting wherever the sport takes him.

“The NBA is always the goal. At this point, I’m just trying to maximize my talent,” Hunter said. “There’s elite players worldwide that are living great lives, making great money and making a great name for themselves. As much as the NBA has grown, the global game is also crazy. There’s a lot of really, really good players overseas.

“Wherever (basketball) takes me it takes me. I’ve been in the playoffs in the NBA, I’ve started NBA games, I’ve had really good games in the NBA. I have an idea of what that is and if that doesn’t work out, it doesn’t work out. But there’s a lot of other opportunit­ies out there.”

‘Just imagine that you’re by yourself halfway across the world. When your family is asleep, you’re up and when they’re going to sleep, you’re up. So, you’re not really talking to anybody outside of your apartment or anywhere else, because not a lot of people speak English.’ RJ Hunter, on his time spent playing in Turkey

 ?? PHOTOS BY CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? RJ Hunter upbeat about his play and credits the comfortabl­e relationsh­ip he’s built with the College Park coaching staff.
PHOTOS BY CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM RJ Hunter upbeat about his play and credits the comfortabl­e relationsh­ip he’s built with the College Park coaching staff.
 ??  ?? For RJ Hunter, “the NBA is always the goal. At this point, I’m just trying to maximize my talent … I’ve started NBA games, I’ve had really good games in the NBA.”
For RJ Hunter, “the NBA is always the goal. At this point, I’m just trying to maximize my talent … I’ve started NBA games, I’ve had really good games in the NBA.”

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