The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fourth-quarter woes reversed

Hawks have stretched their winning streak to fifive with late- game dominance.

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

Collapsing in the fourth quarter had become the dominant narrative surroundin­g this Hawks team. That’s starting to shift, thanks to fifive straight wins — outscoring opponents 159- 103 in the fourth over that span — under interim coach Nate Mcmillan.

For the fifirst time since winning seven straight games from Dec. 28, 2016 to Jan. 10, 2017 — the last season the Hawks made the playoffs — they find themselves on a streak that has them 19- 20 after the recent success.

“It’s obviously a new feeling, something I want to continue to keep having,” said power forward John Collins, the longest- tenured Hawk.

They’ve mostly achieved it by dominating the fourth quarter and playing a full 48 minutes, banishing the sluggish finishes that had often doomed them in the fifirst half of the season. Two weeks ago, the Hawks were tied for the worst fourth- quarter point differenti­al in the league (- 1.9); they’ve performed so well in the last fifive fourth quarters that they’ve vaulted to No. 17 at - 0.2.

They won the fourth quarter against Miami 31- 14, coming back from a threepoint defificit to win 94- 80; won it 37- 22 against Orlando ( 12- point defificit) to win 115- 112; and won it 37- 26 against Toronto

( 10- point deficit) to win 121120. They lost the fourth 25- 23 in a blowout 121- 106 win over Sacramento, with starters playing less time than they would in a close game. Sunday, they had a threepoint lead against Cleveland and won the fourth quarter 31- 16, turning a close game into another big win, 100- 82.

Through their 14- 20 start, the Hawks had a 120.4 defensive rating in the fourth and a - 8.2 net rating ( both marks are 30th in the league). With an absurd 86.6 defensive rating in the fourth over the past five wins, coming in a small sample size with some struggling teams in the mix, they’ve now got a 116.1 defensive rating ( 28th) in the fourth and a - 1.0 net ( 16th).

After previous Hawks coach Lloyd Pierce was fired, Mcmillan took over for the final two games before the All- Star break, the wins in Miami and Orlando. Before that, the Hawks hadn’t won more than three games in a row, which they had done twice.

“We continue to show growth and we continue to understand how to finish, how to win these games, and playing in the fourth quarter, understand­ing time- score situations, that you can’ t play the fourth quarter like you play the first quarter,” Mcmillan said. “You have to understand the time, the score, the situation. We talk about our three C’s, in the sense of being calm, clear on what we need to do out there and being connected on both ends of the floor.

“That’s a process, of learning how to win ballgames. Getting stops, defensivel­y, executing offensivel­y, and we’ve been able to do that in these last few games.”

Mcmillan has said he can’t change much of the Hawks’ strategy in the middle of the season, but he wanted the Hawks to take what they were already doing and execute better. When asked if Mcmillan had implemente­d anything particular that had helped the Hawks get over their fourth- quarter struggles, Collins gave him credit for gradually adjusting things since taking over.

“I definitely feel like coach is trying to change things over his way, slowly but surely, obviously it’s a process and not something that he can just come in as a new coach and just put all this stuff on us and it’d be really tough,” Collins said. “So I feel like he’s doing a good j ob of making small changes here or there and just implementi­ng what he wants to implement slowly and it’s successful.”

The Hawks still have a long way to go to achieve their goals, and they’re still hopi ng to get much healthier in the coming weeks, with De’andre Hunter, Kris Dunn and Cam Reddish out. But a stretch like this, one they haven’t achieved in more than four years, can bring confidence to a group that needed a boost.

“Once you know that you can do it, you’ve got to bring it every night,” said forward Danilo Gallinari. “And you’ve got to believe that you can do it every night.”

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON/ AP ?? Hawks interim coach Nate Mcmillan has said he can’t change much of the Hawks’ strategy in the middle of the season, but he wanted the team to take what they were already doing and execute better.
BRYNN ANDERSON/ AP Hawks interim coach Nate Mcmillan has said he can’t change much of the Hawks’ strategy in the middle of the season, but he wanted the team to take what they were already doing and execute better.

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