The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hawks' front office has work to do just ask Capela

- Ken Sugiura

It came time Friday for the Hawks to recount their versions of the 2023-24 season. When it was Clint Capela’s turn at the end-of-season news conference at the team’s training complex, his comments were unsparing.

In the perspectiv­e of the veteran center, selfishnes­s and a lack of commitment undid a team that had aimed to build on last season’s 41-41 record but instead fell back, finishing 36-46. Its final gasp was a blowout loss to Chicago in the Play-In Tournament last Wednesday.

As Capela saw it, the Hawks were capable of reeling off three- and four-game win streaks, but “we’re not willing to keep doing it because we think more about ourselves.”

Like windshield wipers in a mist, team-oriented play was intermitte­nt.

“That consistenc­y wasn’t there,” said Capela, the team’s leading rebounder and shotblocke­r. “Sometimes being selfish was overpoweri­ng that common goal.”

The headline of the Hawks’ offseason will be what the front office, headed by general manager Landry Fields, will do with the backcourt partnershi­p of Trae Young and Dejounte Murray. The experiment of pairing the two star point guards appears to have run its course. The Hawks were 84-70 in the two seasons before Murray’s arrival by trade from San Antonio (including the 2021 run to the Eastern Conference finals that witnesses continue to insist actually happened). But in the two seasons of the DejounTrae tandem, the record is 77-87.

The data from an entire season of play: The Hawks were outscored by 6.3 points per

‘That consistenc­y wasn’t there. Sometimes being selfish was overpoweri­ng that common goal.’ Clint Capela, Hawks center

100 possession­s when Murray and Young were on the court together, according to cleaningth­eglass.com, an analytics-based site. When it was Murray on the floor without Young, the Hawks had a 0.8-point edge. With Young on and Murray off, the Hawks held a 3.1-point advantage. Of the three combinatio­ns — Young and Murray together, Young without Murray, Murray without Young — lineups with Young and Murray were the least efficient on offense and defense.

At least publicly, Fields was not ready to abandon the partnershi­p when he spoke Friday, saying that there have been “plenty of moments where I can say, ‘Hey, it looks really good right now.’ You’re always going to take those moments and try to figure out, ‘OK, how can we continuous­ly get better?’”

In that moment, he sounded less like someone who, minutes earlier, had emphasized the importance of “making sure that we’re in a state of neutrality” before making offseason decisions and more like someone who gave up three first-round picks for Murray and feels trapped by that decision.

Whatever the Hawks do, that’s far from Fields’ only conundrum as he completes his second season as general manager.

He has made it clear that he is trying to build a team of players who are selfless, play to their roles and are connected to one another. But the assessment from his starting center would indicate that Fields presides over a roster that is incapable or unwilling to do those things on a consistent basis. Being unable to win consistent­ly “because we think more about ourselves” is quite a label, and it wasn’t only Capela who saw it that way.

“We didn’t sacrifice enough,” veteran guard Bogdan Bogdanović said.

He was asked what that looked like. He gave an example of players being told to do something in a certain way, then not following through.

“That’s the sacrifice,” said Bogdanović, who set a career-high in scoring at 16.9 points per game this season. “You’ve got to do it. That’s it.”

The disregard happened on offense and defense.

“Sometimes we are too locked in on ourselves and individual stats or whatever,” Bogdanović said.

To that end, it’s worth revisiting what Fields said before the season when asked about the main goal for the season. It was an opportunit­y to give fans something substantiv­e and bold, like advancing in the playoffs or winning 50 games. Fields answered that “it’s about stressing the fact that we are unified, and we want to play unselfish basketball.”

Which is fine; it’s his answer. But the problem is that not only did the Hawks register their lowest win percentage in the past four seasons, they also didn’t achieve Fields’ warm-and-fuzzy goals.

For instance, the Hawks were second-worst in the NBA in defending in transition and third-worst defending the 3-pointer per Cleaning the Glass. There are a number of reasons for both, including lack of effort, communicat­ion, size and quickness. But teams generally don’t get steamrolle­d on fast breaks or lit up from 3-point range because they’re unified and unselfish.

“When we play a game, we can’t always allow the best players to have the best nights and just let it happen,” Capela said. “At some point, as a team, we need to show character or, I don’t know, even one elbow. Something. Just that you’re not going to come in here and have a nice night.”

It’s unassailab­ly true that the Hawks were crushed by injuries, which hampered continuity and negatively impacted the record. But having to play shorthande­d should have nothing to do with being, in Bogdanovic’s words, “too locked in on ourselves.” If it does, then you probably need to find new players or leadership.

“It’s more about a mindset than just injuries,” Capela said.

There were some bright spots. Forward Jalen Johnson took big steps in his third season. Forward De’Andre Hunter arguably had his best season, although injuries again limited his availabili­ty. Young made his third AllStar team.

This isn’t entirely on Fields or coach Quin Snyder. They inherited a lot of these players. But they also have chosen to keep them. They’re welcome to take big bites out of the responsibi­lity pie and are charged to get this right.

This offseason would be a nice time to start.

 ?? JASON GETZ/AJC 2024 ?? It might have looked good on paper, but the oncourt pairing of guards Trae Young (left) and Dejounte Murray hasn’t been that effective the past two seasons; the Hawks were a combined 77-87 in that span. But the team’s issues are deeper than its guards.
JASON GETZ/AJC 2024 It might have looked good on paper, but the oncourt pairing of guards Trae Young (left) and Dejounte Murray hasn’t been that effective the past two seasons; the Hawks were a combined 77-87 in that span. But the team’s issues are deeper than its guards.
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 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Hawks GM Landry Fields, named to that role in June 2022, figures to be a busy man this offseason.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Hawks GM Landry Fields, named to that role in June 2022, figures to be a busy man this offseason.
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