The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Surging Hawks embark on tough trip

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

As of Friday afternoon, the Hawks owned the longest active win streak in the NBA.

The Hawks have won seven in a row, climbing to No. 5 in the Eastern Conference standings, and interim coach Nate Mcmillan is 9- 1 overall this season, 7- 0 since taking over when Lloyd Pierce was fifired March 1.

To put it succinctly, they’re surging.

They’ve also played their last home game until April 4 and embark on a brutal eight- game trip, beginning with today’ s game at the Lakers.

“We’ve got along road trip coming up that in a lot of ways is going to make or break our season, so that’s kind of how we’ re going into it,” wing Kevin Huerter said. “Extremely important time of year, and we want to keep this going.”

The Hawks play at the Clippers on Monday, then will visit the Kings on Wednesday, the Warriors on March 26, the Nuggets on March 28, the Suns on March 30, the Spurs on April 1 and the Pelican son April 2. They flflew to Los Angeles on Friday, will flfly back from New Orleans on a red eye and won’t get back home until April 3, so that’s roughly a 16- day trip, playing every other day except for that fifinal back- to- back.

It will be grueling and is significan­t because the Hawks, now playing better under Mcmillan, with the potential return of De’andre Hunter and Kris Dunn’s debut looming, will get to see how they stack up against stiffer competitio­n. Over their seven- game win streak, they have played one team with a winning record( Miami at 22-19, which is No. 4 in the East). All but two teams they’ ll face on this trip have winning records ( Sacramento at 16- 24 and New Orleans at 17- 24).

Also, as a team that’s looking to make the playofffff­fffffffs for the fifirst time since the 2016 season, they’re fifinally in a good spot in the Eastern Conference standings ( No. 5), the middle of which are jampacked, with a few teams lagging at the bottom and three ( Philadelph­ia at 28- 13, Brooklyn at 28- 13, Milwaukee at 26- 14 ) way ahead. The Hawks recently inched above .500 at 21- 20, and a dreadful performanc­e on the trip would mean they would drop signifific­antly in the standings.

A solid showing, though, competing well against playoff teams and scraping together as many wins as possible, would be a great sign for this team’s progress. After they return, their schedule lightens, playing 16 of their final 23 games at home.

“We go out there and blow all our opportunit­ies to win games that we should win, or compete in games that we should, it defifinite­ly could be a deal- breaker,” power forward John Collins said. “Going on a road trip, it’s not easy, playing consistent away games over and over again, the travel, the ( COVID- 19) testing; there’s a lot more that goes into it than your average season, as well as our standing in the East right now. So every game counts, but we’ve got to approach every game the same way and just attack it from there.”

For guard Trae Young, one of the more important parts of the trip is getting adequate rest and staying fresh throughout a tough stretch.

“It’ s important for us, especially being gone 16 days, playing eight games. You do the math, and we’re playing basically every other day and not getting too many practices in, really just traveling and playing, so for us, it’s a mental thing,” Young said.

“In our fifilm session, being really locked in and just taking care of our bodies while on the road, it’s going to be very important to do that. It’s going to be an important stretch for us, so we’ve just got to be ready, and I believe we will be.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ CURTIS. COMPTON@ AJC. COM ?? Hawks coach Nate Mcmillan bumps players Thursday before their seventh win in a row, a 116- 93 victory over Oklahoma City. fifist
CURTIS COMPTON/ CURTIS. COMPTON@ AJC. COM Hawks coach Nate Mcmillan bumps players Thursday before their seventh win in a row, a 116- 93 victory over Oklahoma City. fifist

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