The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Young not worried about playoff race

Amid COVID-19 issues, guard cites last season’s run.

- By Chris Vivlamore chris.vivlamore@ajc.com

Trae Young would have none of it.

The Hawks guard immedi- ately rejected any talk of his team falling out of the playoff race during their recent struggles with a COVID-19- ravaged roster. The Hawks lost the fourth of their past five games Wednesday, a 131117 loss to the Bulls, since the latest wave of the coronaviru­s over swept the team and required a roster filled mostly with players on 10-day contracts. Young does speak from experience — not of playing with a roster that currently has only three players who were on the opening-day roster but with a team digging itself out of an early hole. You’ll remember the Hawks started last season 14-20, fired coach Lloyd Pierce and then went on a run all the way to the Eastern Conference finals, where they pushed the eventual NBA champion Bucks to six games.

Following Wednesday’s loss, the Hawks are 15-19 and 12th in the Eastern Confer- ence. They are a half-game out of a postseason play-in spot and three games out of a top-six spot.

“No, no, I’m not worried about no playoff picture slipping away,” Young said Wednesday. “We started out 14-20 last year and won eight games straight. This league is all about runs. It’s all about runs and who is hot. If you can get hot at the right moment. I ain’t worried.”

The defeat at the hands of the Bulls was the second of back-to-back games against one of the strong contenders in the East. It also was the start of a six-game trip that will pit them against the Cavaliers, Trail Blazers, Kings, Lakers and Clippers.

Currently, the Hawks have a roster of 26 players, with 11 players out because of the NBA’S health and safety protocols and two players out with injuries. Nine players are on 10-day contracts. They have five players — Young, Lou Williams (who cleared protocols Thursday) Cam Reddish, Clint Capela and Sky- lar Mays (two-way) — deemed rotational players, the mini- mum allowed by the league not to postpone a game is four. It likely will take more than a week for the Hawks to return to full strength.

While the Hawks were losing to the Bulls for the second time in three days with the minimum of four rotational players available Wednesday, the Heat had their game against the Spurs postponed because of an insufficie­nt number of available players. That has been a source of frustratio­n and confusion for the Hawks organizati­on.

“That is something that we really can’t control,” Capela said of the number of games played with a depleted roster. “It doesn’t matter who is on our roster or if we have enough guys. We play. It’s tough, especially when you play a team like that (Bulls),a team from your conference, a good team, a game that really matters and you don’t have enough guys from your roster to go against them. It’s hard. It’s frustratin­g.”

Hawks coach Nate Mcmil- lan has relied on Young to play heavy minutes with lit- tle choice. Young played 40 and 33 minutes, respective­ly, in the two games against the Bulls following his return.

“I’m willing to do anything to help my team win,” Young said. “I’m willing to come back and play after not doing

anything all day and find a way to test, just like the last game. … Whatever it takes.

“My body will tell me. He asks me throughout the game if I’m feeling good. With my adrenaline, I’m feeling good in the games, especially early. That’s really not a factor for me. If I feel some type of way of my body and how I’m playing, I’ll definitely let Nate know.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States