The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Schroder questions being benched

Argument with Howard, defensive lapse lead to early exit.

- By Chris Vivlamore cvivlamore@ajc.com

An exchange of angry words on-court between Dennis Schroder and Dwight Howard on Monday night led to a defensive breakdown in the Hawks’ loss to the Warriors.

It also led to something much bigger.

In addition to the heated exchange between players, Schroder also had words with coach Mike Budenholze­r following the play. Budenholze­r then benched Schroder, who played just 3:19 of the second half in the 119-111 loss.

The Hawks have lost three straight entering tonight’s game with the visiting Nets.

Budenholze­r later termed the benching a coach’s decision. Schroder said he didn’t understand Budenholze­r’s decision and wanted a meeting to discuss it. Howard said such a conversati­on would not be a bad thing. Several other Hawks players wanted to put the incident behind them and move forward.

The timing is unfortunat­e. The slumping Hawks need no such distractio­ns as they enter the

stretch run of the regular season still trying to get on the same page.

Budenholze­r yanked Schroder despite the point guard’s 23 first-half points, including 19 in the first quarter, when the Hawks were up by as many as 15 points.

“Just us staying together is the bigger point,” Budenholze­r said of his decision. “We’ve got to stay together and find a way to move on to the next play. Those things are important.”

The Hawks were leading 70-69 early in the third quarter when Howard was credited with a turnover when his outlet pass to Thabo Sefolosha flew out of bounds. As Schroder and Howard argued over the play, the Warriors inbounded the ball and Stephen Curry quickly hit a 3-pointer. Budenholze­r was heard to yell at Schroder, “That’s what I’m talking about.”

Less than a minute later, Schroder was replaced and spent the remainder of the game on the bench.

“I don’t really know,” Schroder said when asked why he was pulled. “I know the 3 from Steph Curry when me and Dwight was arguing was part of it. That can’t happen. I don’t understand coach’s decision. I want to be on the court. Maybe I’m too competitiv­e. I’m just trying to be competitiv­e and win games.”

He added he would like to discuss the disciplina­ry action with Budenholze­r.

The team did not practice Tuesday.

“We have to figure it out, me and coach,” Schroder said. “I want to talk about it. Dwight’s got to be in there too. Get on the same page.”

The Curry 3-pointer was part of a 26-10 Warriors run that nearly put the game out of reach. The Hawks have dropped six of their past eight games and are 11-14 since a seven-game win streak ended in early January. They are 25-27 since starting the season 9-2.

Howard was asked afterward whether he would welcome the meeting Schroder suggested.

“Listen, we are a team, right?” Howard said. “It’s OK if we have conversati­ons. It’s not always conflict when you have a conversati­on with your coach or a team meeting. That’s what you are supposed to do. By him wanting to have a meeting, it’s great. It’s great for our team. It’s great for each other. We’re all open to it. It’s not always bad when you have a conversati­on.

“We just have to move forward when we have plays like that. I know it’s highlighte­d but it’s OK. We made mistakes. We are human. Wish it didn’t happen but it did. Hopefully, everyone will just let it go and move on.”

Paul Millsap insisted the Hawks have a “tight locker room.” Sefolosha sought to downplay the exchange.

“When you play basketball, especially in a game like this, emotions are high,” Sefolosha said. “We are a team. We have to play as a team. I’m sure things are going to be talked about between the two of them and we are going to be fine.”

That Budenholze­r would sit Schroder despite his offensive output was part of a bigger picture. Schroder was suspended for one game last week for not returning from the All-Star break on time. He did not start the following game after he was late for a team bus.

Players were frustrated with Schroder that he would argue with Budenholze­r during a close game with one of the best teams in the NBA.

“We need to learn to play together and stay together for 48 minutes,” Budenholze­r said. “That is something that is important to us.”

The Hawks had a chance in the fourth quarter when they closed to within a point, 94-93. Budenholze­r played Malcolm Delaney and Tim Hardaway Jr. for extra minutes and Kent Bazemore played some at the point.

“I’m not the coach,” Howard said. “My job is to play, rebound, block shots and run the floor. That’s what I’m going to do. I’m going to let Coach coach the team. If he decides to sit any of us, that’s on Coach. That’s why we have a team.

“It’s not one player on a team. It’s 15 of us. We have to trust each other. If one man goes down, someone has to step up. It’s just like if one man gets in foul trouble. If I get in foul trouble, I’ve got to trust the next guy to come in. If Dennis gets in foul trouble, it’s the same thing. That’s how it has to be.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ CCOMPTON@AJC. COM ?? Coach Mike Budenholze­r speaks with guard Dennis Schroder before benching him in the third quarter for the rest of the game Monday.
CURTIS COMPTON/ CCOMPTON@AJC. COM Coach Mike Budenholze­r speaks with guard Dennis Schroder before benching him in the third quarter for the rest of the game Monday.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Coach Mike Budenholze­r says “us staying together” is more important than his benching of Dennis Schroder in Monday night’s game.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Coach Mike Budenholze­r says “us staying together” is more important than his benching of Dennis Schroder in Monday night’s game.

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