The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

After thrilling playoffs, Hawks limping into postseason

-

ATLANTA » The Atlanta Hawks had such high hopes.

After a surprising playoff run that came up just short of the NBA Finals, they came into this season with a deep roster led by one of the league’s most exciting young players.

Yet now, with only a handful of games remaining, Trae Young and the Hawk are limping toward the postseason with no prospects beyond a play-in spot and nothing to indicate they’ll be hanging around very long in April.

Of the NBA’s most disappoint­ing teams, the Hawks are near the top of the list.

“We still have an opportunit­y,” insisted coach Nate McMillan, whose team is 36-37 and 10th in the Eastern Conference, the final play-in spot. “The goal is to get ourselves in the playoffs. Once you get there, we showed last year that anything can happen.”

Only last year, the Hawks rolled into the playoffs as one of the league’s hottest teams, flipping a switch when McMillan took over for Lloyd Pierce.

They went 27-11 after the coaching change, grabbing a No. 5 seed in the Eastern Conference.

They kept up that momentum in the playoffs, romping past the New York

Knicks in what became Young’s (Madison Square) Garden party, stunning the top-seeded Philadelph­ia 76ers in seven games (effectivel­y finishing off The Process), and taking the eventual NBA champion Milwaukee Bucks to six games in the East final.

If Young had not twisted an ankle in a freak collision with a referee, the Hawks very well could have knocked off the Bucks and advanced to the NBA Finals for the first time since moving to Atlanta in 1968.

Suddenly, the A-T-L went from a sleepy backwater NBA city that generally ranked near the bottom of the league in attendance to abuzz with excitement — especially after the team locked up cornerston­es Young and John Collins

with massive contracts.

But this season hasn’t come close to meeting expectatio­ns.

The Hawks have lingered around .500 all season — never building any sort of momentum, generally playing like a group of strangers, showing very little of the joy and camaraderi­e that carried them so far last summer.

Their mediocrity has been especially glaring in a year when the Braves gave Atlanta its first World Series title since 1995 and the Georgia Bulldogs won the college football championsh­ip.

“Last year for a lot of guys, it was new,” center Cint Capela said. “People don’t really realize how hard it is to get there. You’re never guaranteed to go back to the conference finals.”

Young has put up another big season, ranking fourth in the league in scoring (28.1 points per game), but his supporting cast has been perplexing­ly inconsiste­nt.

Capela has taken a big step backward, leaving the Hawks vulnerable defensivel­y and on the boards. Bogdan Bogdanovic has never looked comfortabl­e taking some of the scoring load off Young. Ditto for Kevin Huerter, who has too many nights when he fails to show up in the box score. Collins may be done for the season with hand and foot injuries.

Promising wins are generally followed by baffling losses, such as Wednesday night’s 122-101 debacle against lowly Detroit, a 20-53 team that looked like a championsh­ip contender against Atlanta

The Pistons took control with a 23-0 run and led by as many as 29.

The Hawks haven’t won back-to-back road games since late December, which doesn’t bode well for a team that will likely have to win two straight away from home just to earn its way into the playoffs.

“We know what we’ve got to do,” Young said. “We’ve got to stay locked in and try to finish out the season strong and see where it leads us in the end.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hawks guard Trae Young (11) makes a layup as Pistons guard Rodney McGruder defends.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hawks guard Trae Young (11) makes a layup as Pistons guard Rodney McGruder defends.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States