News Hawks Team Notes

PTH Roundtable: what is your bold take for the season?

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This is the next question in a series of roundtable questions I’m asking the staff here at Peachtree Hoops about the Hawks this upcoming season. The previous roundtable can be found here. Today’s question: what is your boldest take for the Hawks in 2025-26?



Wes: The Hawks finish top 10 in both offense and defense this season. The franchise hasn’t accomplished this since 2014-15. I think they finally have the pieces to do it, which should put them on the fringe of the top five in net rating for this upcoming season.

I shouldn’t have to sell you too hard on a top 10 finish on offense. The Hawks accomplished this in every season between 2020-21 and 2022-23 and were on pace to do so in 2023-24 until Trae Young tore a finger ligament late in the season. Last year was the transition year, but with Kristaps Porzingis, Luke Kennard, Nickeil Alexander-Walker and others here now, I think the offense hums.

Other than Trae Young and Keaton Wallace, every player is at least 6’5”, and the roster is littered with great athletes with impressive measurables. The Hawks also stocked up on reserve big men between Mo Gueye, Asa Newell, and N’Faly Dante, so even if injuries hit, they have the bulk and rim deterrence to play consistently tough defense from game 1 to game 82.

Chase: Trae Young finishes top five in MVP voting. He’s led the league in assists per game and has already taken this team to the Eastern Conference Finals. There’s no doubt he has the talent. His numbers speak for themselves, and while he still needs to improve his efficiency, this year he’s set up with arguably the most talented group of teammates he’s ever had. With the Hawks’ predicted success, the league will be forced to take notice and Trae Young will be seen as the player Hawks fans know him to be.

Graham: I’ll preface my ‘bold’ take with this: I try to be fair and objective as much as I can and try remove bias from my writing. That being said, I think this team – if everything clicks – can go to the NBA Finals this season. I think you can make a fairly solid case for it now.

Everything is in place that you could possibly hope for. There’s never been this level of defense around/behind Young, never this much overall talent around him, nor this level of passing around him to take the pressure off him to run everything and hope to survive the non-Trae minutes. The roster is deeper in quality with a mix of developing youth that should be able to contribute, and experience. Outside of what’s going on with the Hawks, the East is considerably weaker this year. Boston are limited in what they can achieve without Tatum, Haliburton is out for the season, the Sixers are injury prone, etc. The main barriers to the Finals include the Cavaliers, Knicks, potentially Magic and Bucks – none of those teams should be considered out of the Hawks’ grasp at this moment, and certainly teams the Hawks wouldn’t fear in the postseason.

I can just see all of this working. I see the defense around and behind Young working well, I see players like Jalen Johnson, Dyson Daniels, Zaccharie Risacher improving this season, I see the Hawks having enough ball-handling and creation around Young to ease the playmaking and scoring load, and perhaps with all of that – plus the ingenuity of Quin Snyder – it can unlock more out of Young. All of this is ‘In best case scenario,’ but I can see it working.

But it also has to work this season. If the Hawks can’t make it work this season, I don’t think it’s outrageous to believe that it’s just not going to happen for this iteration of the Hawks with Young as the star leader. They could run it back next season but would their best chance have passed them by as other teams re-arm/get their guys back? They’re young enough that it could be done, but they may not get an opportunity like this again with this current iteration of the Trae Young-Hawks. I believe in it, and I think they have everything in place to make it happen.

Malik: My boldest take is that the Hawks finish as the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference.

Hassan: I’ve got three bold predictions for you. First, I think Trae Young becomes the third player in NBA history to average 12+ assists per game this season – joining Magic Johnson and John Stockton. Young averaged 11.6 dimes per game last season, and has increased his assists average in each season of his career. This season, given Atlanta’s new additions as well as the pace that this team is expected to play at, he should have an ample amount of opportunities to rack up assists.

Second, Zaccharie Risacher cements his status as the player with the highest ceiling in the 2024 draft class. Risacher started off slowly last season, but still managed to finish second in Rookie of the Year voting (though he only received 5 first-place votes) after averaging 14.9 points on 51.8% shooting from the field and 42.1% from three (5.1 attempts per game) over the final 35 games of the season. After spending the summer working on his game and competing in Eurobasket with the French national team, Risacher appears poised for a year-two leap.

This season, if he can play with more force on both ends, improve his scoring and passing ability off the drive, and continue to shoot the ball at a high rate, the sky is the limit for him as a player. I’m excited to see what he does in year two.

Third, and the spiciest of the three, I think that by January, the Hawks will have engaged the Milwaukee Bucks in trade talks for Giannis Antetokounmpo. Antetokounmpo is 30 years old with two years left on his contract and has made it clear that he intends to compete for a championship for as long as he is in his prime, either in Milwaukee or elsewhere. Even after sacrificing Damian Lillard to free up the cap room to trade for Myles Turner, Milwaukee’s roster still has more than a few holes – especially on the wing and in the playmaking department – and I’d say their chances of competing for a championship this season are slim-to-none.

While it’s a little complicated with the protections, Atlanta has part-ownership over Milwaukee’s 2026 and 2028 first-round picks as well as a few picks of their own to include in a potential deal. They also have a burgeoning young star (who happens to be from Milwaukee) in Jalen Johnson. The ingredients are there for the Hawks to cobble together an extremely enticing offer if Milwaukee’s season goes sideways.

There are a lot of factors at play here, but if the situation and price are right, Atlanta could emerge as a destination for Giannis.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/atla...g-giannis-antetokounmpo-jalen-johnson-opinion
 
Raptors at Hawks: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Hawks kick off their 2025-26 season with a visit from the Canadian neighbors from up north.

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen​


Location: State Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA

Start Time: 7:30 EST PM

TV: FanDuel Sports Network Southeast (FDSNSE)

Radio: Sports Radio 92.9 the Game (WZGC-FM)

Streaming: FanDuel Sports Network app, Fubo (out of market), NBA League Pass (out of market), Youtube TV (NBA League Pass out of market)

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/atla...wks-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Raptors run wild in Atlanta

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On the heels of an offseason deemed as the “best in the NBA” by the league’s general managers, the Atlanta Hawks got stomped in their season opener on Wednesday night, losing by 20 points to the Toronto Raptors in a game that was basically over by the 10:00 mark of the 4th quarter.

Trae Young finished with 22 points and five assists, however he shot just 5-for-14 from the floor and just 1-for-7 from the perimeter (11-for-13 at the free-throw stripe). Defensively, he struggled against a physical group of Raptors guards.

Jalen Johnson put up 22 points (7-for-13 from the floor), eight assists and seven rebounds in his first regular season minutes since January. Kristaps Porzingis finished with 20 points (5-for-12 from the floor, 4-for-7 from three), seven rebounds and two blocks in his Hawks debut.

Zaccharie Risacher briefly exited the game in the third quarter with an ankle injury but returned shortly after, and finished with 16 points (7-for-13 from the floor, 2-for-6 from three) in 21 minutes. Nickeil Alexander-Walker shot just 2-for-15 from the floor in his Hawks debut, but he redeemed himself with an outstanding showing on the defensive end of the floor (despite the final scoreline).

Dyson Daniels had a game to forget, getting into foul trouble early on, finishing with four points, two assists, and three turnovers (five fouls) in 23 minutes.

Meanwhile, it was a balanced offensive attack for Toronto, with seven players finishing in double digits. RJ Barrett led all scorers with 25 points on 9-for-12 shooting. Scottie Barnes finished with 22 points, nine assists and six rebounds.

While Toronto led for the majority of the night, this was a competitive game in the first half. Atlanta closed the second quarter on a 13-6 run to cut the Raptors lead to 65-59, and the home team had some momentum heading into the halftime break.

Unfortunately, it all came apart in the 3rd quarter. Atlanta were outscored 45-28 in the period, providing no resistance on the defensive end of the floor as Toronto shot 14-for-19 from the field (12-for-12 in the restricted area) and 16-for-18 from the free-throw line.

The Raptors led 110-87 after three quarters and never looked back, dealing Atlanta a harsh reminder that wins are earned – not given – in the NBA.

All in all, Atlanta were outscored 86-56 in points in the paint. They were outscored 34-11 in fastbreak points, and were outrebounded 54-34, with Toronto holding a slight edge in second-chance points as well.

Quin Snyder struck a disappointed figure after the game, saying:

“Toronto played hard. They ran. Anytime you give up 30+ fastbreak points and you couple that with 86 points in the paint. They were getting in there a lot of different ways but I think transition, having urgency to get back, you start there. If you don’t get back and give teams easy baskets in transition it’s going to be tough to do anything after that.”
“On some level, games like this, you know they’re going to come in some capacity. It’s tough to have this on your home opener. The enthusiasm that we have needs to get channeled correctly into the things that are going to help us win games. For our team, we know what those things are, but they require focus and they require work. Tonight we felt the level that we have to work on. If we don’t do that, this is the result that we get.”

Trae Young, true to character, didn’t sugarcoat things in his postgame presser:

“I don’t think there’s too many positives you can take from tonight. Obviously the result was what it was and it’s embarrassing the way we started it. A lot of it comes from the preseason, obviously it carried over, we didn’t play all five of us, and you could tell by the continuity we had out there and it wasn’t right. But that’s the part of the NBA, the cream always rises to the top. So we got some time to make it up and we got to get going.”
“A lot of it is on us. Transition defense is on us… we gotta be better as a team and understand that’s what the scouting report is, teams think they can get a lot of transition points on us so they’re – even when we’re scoring – they’re grabbing the ball and throwing it full court. Guys are leaking out. If we’re missing like we did tonight, they’re able to get out and get in transition. Obviously we have to be better about making shots, that cuts out transition defense. But at the same time if we do miss, we gotta get back regardless. It doesn’t matter if we miss or make, we gotta get back and that’s on us as the players because [coach] has definitely emphasized that especially after the last preseason game.”

The Hawks will have a chance to right the ship and earn their first win of the season on Friday in a road tilt against the Orlando Magic. Below are a few takeaways from Atlanta’s season opener. Let’s get to it.



Paint Defense Was A Catastrophe

Neither team shot the ball well from the outside in this one, with Toronto going 6-for-25 (24%) from three and Atlanta just 10-for-35 (29%), however the story of the night was the Hawks getting outscored 86-56 in the paint. The 86 paint-points they allowed was a staggering number, ranking as the sixth-most points in the paint conceded by an NBA team over the past three seasons. Not great, Bob!

In terms of how Toronto got there, it was a mix of transition leakouts and poor half-court defense. The Raptors turned 10 steals into 18 points (1.8 points-per-possession) and really made an effort to push the pace off Atlanta’s misses, turning 49% of their ‘live’ defensive rebounds into a transition possession, scoring 1.31 points per possession (ppp) on these possessions per cleaningtheglass.

In the half-court, the Hawks just couldn’t contain Toronto’s drives.

Dyson Daniels being in foul trouble for the majority of the contest didn’t make life easier for Atlanta on the defensive end but even so, the Hawks have to show more fight on this end of the floor. The defensive woes were a major talking point in the postgame press conference, and it’s going to be interesting to see how they respond against Orlando on Friday.

Mixed Bag for the New Additions

Atlanta made waves over the summer when they added Kristaps Porzingis, Nickeil Alexander-Walker and Luke Kennard to their roster, and while all three players showed flashes of their ability, Hawks fans will be hoping that the best is yet to come for their new additions after their regular season debuts.

Starting with Porzingis, while his final numbers were decent, it (understandably) still seems like he’s feeling out his role in the offense. The Unicorn scored 20 points in 26 minutes, but shot 5-for-12 from the floor (6-for-6 from the free-throw stripe), and went just 1-for-5 from inside the arc. He is an expert at destroying mismatches in the post, but perhaps due to Toronto’s size, it seemed like Atlanta had a hard time getting him switched onto smaller defenders in this contest.

Porzingis did hit four threes – two in transition and two in the half-court – and I especially enjoyed the setup on this play in the fourth quarter. Young and Johnson occupy the defense’s attention running a pick-and-roll at the top of the key while Porzingis comes off a baseline screen for a catch-and-shoot corner three.

I’m excited to watch Porzingis find his footing in Atlanta’s offense as the season progresses.

As for Alexander-Walker, it was a dismal shooting night for the former Timberwolf, finishing with 10 points on a measly 2-for-15 shooting effort. That said, I absolutely loved the energy he played with on the defensive side of the ball. He is a certified pest who seems to raise the level of his teammates with his effort and aggression. His impact on this end goes beyond the box score, though I thought it was notable (even though we’re dealing with miniscule sample sizes here) that Atlanta posted a defensive rating of 100 in his 28 minutes of action – the best mark amongst the top-eight.

Alexander-Walker will shoot better, though he might do well to reign in the shot selection. If he can improve the offense and keep up the level of defense he showed in the preseason and against Toronto, the 4-year/$60-million contract he signed last summer will begin to look like a steal.

Lastly, Luke Kennard was the least impressive of Atlanta’s new signings in the opener. He finished with six points (2-for-7 shooting, 1-for-5 from three), three assists and three turnovers in 30 minutes and wasn’t particularly impactful on either end of the floor.

Kennard was never projected to be an above average defender, but even so, he really struggled on that end last night. In particular, lineups with Kennard and Young together have a lot of scope for improvement, as they were smoked on the defensive end (144.7 defensive rating) in their 17 minutes on the court together against Toronto.

On the offensive end, I’d like to see Kennard be more aggressive from beyond the three-point arc. The box score shows he took five threes last night, but three of them (including his lone make) came in the last eight minutes, when the game was well out of reach.

If Atlanta can find a way to get him going earlier in the contest, it will give the defense another threat to account for, making the overall offense more difficult to guard. Kennard has the ability, he just has to let it fly within the flow of the offense.

Jalen Johnson: Good at Basketball

While it was a disappointing performance from the Hawks last night, one bright spot was the play of Jalen Johnson, Atlanta’s 23 year-old rising star playing in his first regular season game since his season-ending shoulder injury back in January.

Johnson finished with 22 points on 7-for-13 shooting, eight assists and seven rebounds and was back to his usual tricks – killing the defense with his off-ball movement and transition drives.

Nickeil checks in and immediately dimes up Jalen for a jam! pic.twitter.com/llflec1xni

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 22, 2025
Tried to tackle Jalen and it didn't matter 😂😂 pic.twitter.com/2OKmiC07WU

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 23, 2025

Of course, it would not be a Jalen Johnson game without him throwing some outrageous passes, and he certainly had his fair share of impressive dimes last night.

Look at Jalen's hangtime on this assist 😮 pic.twitter.com/mO7Q2JfPeO

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 23, 2025
Jalen is absurd making this pass so simply pic.twitter.com/MSIMkOwbo3

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 23, 2025
Point JJ lobs to OO 🍊 pic.twitter.com/pgUxQyiYRM

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 23, 2025

While it was an impressive showing from Johnson, the one area he needs to improve this season is his outside shooting ability. He went 0-for-2 last night, and if he can start to knock these down with any level of consistency, it will help raise Atlanta’s offensive ceiling even higher.

I said it in preseason, I’ll say it again – and I’ll probably keep saying it as the season goes on. It’s an absolute pleasure watching Jalen Johnson play basketball. It’s great to have him back.



Take a deep breath Hawks fans. There’s a ton of basketball left to be played. This is a young team, and growth isn’t linear. Watching a team as talented as this one build chemistry, find their groove and unlock their full potential is one of the most enjoyable parts of being a fan – no matter the sport. I’m excited to see how this team evolves over the next 81 games.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...analysis-quotes-video-stats-jalen-johnson-nba
 
Hawks disqualified for false start, blown out 138-118 in opener

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The Hawks at long last tipped off their season against the Toronto Raptors on Wednesday night in State Farm Arena.

Atlanta deployed their expected new lineup with Kristaps Porzingis at the five to make his Hawks debut. For Toronto, it was the first time Brandon Ingram suited up for them since being acquired at the last trade deadline.

Offense was difficult early on against a long Raptors team with active hands. Their first basket wasn’t until four minutes in via a long Jalen Johnson out of bounds outlet to Zaccharie Risacher.

Dyson Daniels picked up two early fouls, and so the first substitution of the season was him going out for new acquisition Nickeil Alexander-Walker.

He made an immediate impact:

Nickeil checks in and immediately dimes up Jalen for a jam! pic.twitter.com/llflec1xni

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 22, 2025

Jalen Johnson was a big reason behind the Hawks handing in the contest until the rest of the team woke up. He has a nice layoff pass to Onyeka Okongwu for a dunk below:

Look at Jalen's hangtime on this assist 😮 pic.twitter.com/mO7Q2JfPeO

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 23, 2025

Towards the end of the period, the Hawks were able to string together some stops and capitalize on offense. They pulled to within two after a deep Young trey in the final seconds and they trailed 36-34 after one.

The start to the second quarter was rough, however. Atlanta’s bench unit largely struggled to get anything going, and they quickly found themselves down by 10 points.

Keaton Wallace took a spill after coming up with a steal, and he had to leave the game with a towel over his face after falling to the floor hard. Nickeil Alexander-Walker later joined him in the locker room due to injury, although his visit was brief. These incidents really symbolized the first half for the Hawks.

With most of the starters back in, the offense flowed better, and Atlanta was able to cut into the lead. Kristaps Porzingis helped by doing unicorn things on both ends of the floor:

KP for 3 💦 pic.twitter.com/tqcklB2rX7

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 23, 2025

At the half, the Hawks trailed 65-59. Kristaps Porzingis and Jalen Johnson both had 12 at the break, and Trae Young added 10.

It was a chippy affair in the second half, and Dyson Daniels picked up his fifth foul in the game just a few minutes in forcing him to hit the bench for a long stretch. Atlanta kept giving up transition points off misses, and without Johnson’s stellar game, they would have found themselves a long way adrift.

Despite a decent game in the halfcourt on both ends, Toronto’s relentless pushing of the ball after Hawks misses gave Atlanta tons of fits and easy points for the foes. By the end of the third quarter, it was a 28-6 margin in fast break points for the foes.

After three quarters, the Hawks trailed 110-87.

The fourth quarter came and went, and little changed. The Hawks fell 138-118. Jalen Johnson and Trae Young both led the Hawks with 22 points. RJ Barrett was the high scorer in the game with 25.

The Hawks head to Orlando to try to bounce back on Friday.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/reca...news-trae-young-jalen-johnson-toronto-raptors
 
PTH Rountable: what is everyone’s record and playoff predictions?

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This is the next question in a series of roundtable questions I’m asking the staff here at Peachtree Hoops about the Hawks this upcoming season. The previous roundtable can be found here. Today’s question: what is your prediction for record for the Hawks this season? And how far do they go in the playoffs?



Wes: I think the Hawks just crack 50 wins (50-32), get to the second round of the playoffs, and fall to the top-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers in seven games.

Chase: My bet is the Hawks finish at 52-30. It should be good enough to finish as a top 3 seed in the Eastern Conference.

Graham: While I believe in this team’s ability to be able to go all the way to the Finals, there is an element that may force them to manage/rest players (such as Porzingis) in the regular season to keep them fresh for the playoffs. While that may take away a few wins here and there, it’s always – always – worth remembering the Hawks play in a shite weakened Eastern Conference, and if the Hawks are a properly good team, they will eat up wins against the Eastern Conference if everyone is healthy. Put me down for 52 wins.

I get a lot of similar vibes to the 2015-16 Hawks: a team I believed in their postseason ability even if their regular season wins total didn’t reflect that. While that team won 48 games (and, while I loved that team, I’ll never forgive them for not being able to beat the Wizards’ C-team on that final day of the regular season to break that hectic tiebreaker that doomed them to a second-round matchup against the Cavaliers), I believed they could have gone toe-to-toe with anyone in the conference…other than the Cavs.

The current iteration of the Cavaliers could present a similar dynamic to the Hawks, but I think after last season people aren’t going to take them seriously until they get to the playoffs, even if they win 60+ games again this season.

Malik: I think the Hawks will finish 48-34 and finish as a top 4 seed in the East.

Hassan: 49 wins – good for the 4 or 5 seed in the East. Provided everyone is healthy for the postseason, I think this team can win a first-round playoff series too.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/atla...ks-prediction-opinion-nba-analysis-trae-young
 
Hawks complete fourth quarter comeback, defeat Magic 111-107

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The Atlanta Hawks were in Orlando on Friday evening to face the Magic after a disappointing season opener against the Toronto Raptors. It would be a tough battle to redeem themselves, as they came into the matchup down Zaccharie Risacher with an ankle injury and Kristaps Porzingis with flu-like symptoms.

Nickeil Alexander-Walker and Onyeka Okongwu took their places, and the Hawks went to battle. After not being able to make an impact against the Raptors because of foul trouble, Dyson Daniels got the first points for the Hawks with a spin layup.

Dyson spins to his spot ™️ pic.twitter.com/jsIUFZu8oK

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 24, 2025

Already down one player in the frontcourt, Okongwu picked up two early fouls, which led Mouhamed Gueye to come in early. He made his presence known early, turning defense into offense for the Hawks.

Major Mo SWAT to a Nickeil Euro bucket pic.twitter.com/EtTHsXXhiI

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 24, 2025

Later on, Gueye knocked down a wide-open 3-pointer to give the Hawks a three-point lead in the first.

Mo corner 3 yessir!! pic.twitter.com/4OBdkJuCXh

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 24, 2025

He then showed off his playmaking with this pass to Vit Krejci.

Quick strikes ⚡pic.twitter.com/qzlvF0Wnfj

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 24, 2025

The game was physical in the first quarter, and it definitely set the tone for what it was going to be like for the remainder of the game. Going into the second quarter, the Hawks led 25-24.

The Magic started to string some shots together to the start the second quarter, and they took the lead and extended it. On the other hand, the Hawks had a hard time getting anything to go offensively. Things started to get physical again midway through the second, as Gueye and Paolo Banchero got into it.

That didn’t bother Gueye, and he got this easy dunk after the Hawks forced a turnover.

Keep working Mo ‼️ pic.twitter.com/gpIaNgeh2a

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 25, 2025

Despite making plays on the defensive end, the Hawks were still stagnant on offense, and they found themselves down as much as 14 points in the quarter because of it. The one thing is that the Hawks didn’t let it get too out of hand, and they kept their deficit around 10 points.

The one constant in the first half was the strong play of Gueye, and he got an and-one to go on a fast break.

MO MO MO pic.twitter.com/EMXUExO42X

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 25, 2025

Going into halftime, the Hawks trailed 61-51. To start the third quarter, the Hawks found a rhythm on offense for a little bit, but the Magic continued to extend their lead. The Hawks kept fighting, and turned defense into offense again. This time it was Okongwu on the break with the and-one.

O all by himself plus the foul 💪 pic.twitter.com/71q4ihhgnT

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 25, 2025

All it took was one run for the Hawks to cut their deficit, and that’s what happened late in the third quarter.

Alexander-Walker was a big reason for their run, as he scored 10 points in the quarter.

Back-to-back buckets by Nickeil brings him to 17 points for the night pic.twitter.com/lXKlqvqhbS

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 25, 2025

Gueye continued to make plays as well.

Mo Gueye is everywhere!! pic.twitter.com/Zr2XFSoHX3

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 25, 2025

The Hawks cut their deficit down to as much as four points, but the Magic made a run as well and brought their lead back up to eight points going into the fourth. There was still some fight left in them, and the bench unit got things rolling.

Vit opens the 4th with a triple 🎯 pic.twitter.com/8gjYjDV2s9

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 25, 2025

The Hawks continued to chip away, and the rookie got in on the run with a corner 3-pointer.

Asa Newell Welcome to the NBA!!! pic.twitter.com/hWoifPRcYo

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 25, 2025

Asa Newell came back again, and Young found him for an alley-oop dunk to tie the game.

Asa Newell AGAIN

12-0 Run

Tie Game! pic.twitter.com/RhEy5OmbR3

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 25, 2025

Young started to get it going himself, and he gave the Hawks their first lead since the second quarter.

Trae from Epcot 📍

15-0 run, and the Hawks lead!! pic.twitter.com/wI13jRiWzE

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 25, 2025

The Hawks kept executing down the stretch, and it got Okongwu an open 3-pointer.

BIg O corner pocket YESSIR 🎱 pic.twitter.com/m96cqePwaw

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 25, 2025

The Magic came back with their own mini-run and tied the game at 105 with 54 seconds left in the game. Out of the timeout, Young knocked down a floater to give the Hawks the lead. Jalen Suggs came down and answered with his own layup to tie the game.

Young made it a chess match, and came right back down and got Wendell Carter Jr. switched onto him, and drew a foul to go to the free throw line, knocking down both and giving the Hawks the lead again with 21 seconds remaining.

The Hawks put all their defenders in, and it worked as they forced Banchero into a tough 3-pointer that he missed, and Gueye ended up with the ball to call a timeout. Young was fouled, knocked down both free throws, and that put the nail in the coffin, giving the Hawks a four-point lead their first win of the season.

HAWK HUSTLE pic.twitter.com/KAXd1zNcMp

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 25, 2025

Young finished with 25 points and six assists, Alexander-Walker finished with 19 points, Okongwu finished with 17 pointa, and Gueye finished with 13 points, eight rebounds, and three assists.

The Hawks will be back in action tomorrow to face the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/reca...-fourth-quarter-comeback-defeat-magic-111-107
 
Thunder at Hawks: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Hawks welcome Nickeil Alexander-Walker’s cousin, Keaton Wallace’s brother, and the rest of the defending champion Thunder.

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen​


Location: State Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA

Start Time: 7:30 EST PM

TV: FanDuel Sports Network Southeast (FDSNSE), NBA TV

Radio: Sports Radio 92.9 the Game (WZGC-FM)

Streaming: FanDuel Sports Network app, Fubo (out of market), NBA League Pass (out of market), Youtube TV (NBA League Pass out of market)

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/atla...wks-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Hawks unable to keep pace in loss to defending champions Thunder

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The Atlanta Hawks were unable to take their first home victory of the new season on Saturday night at State Farm Arena, falling short 117-100 at the hands of the NBA’s defending champions, the Oklahoma City Thunder. Nickeil Alexander-Walker led the Hawks in scoring with 17 points, while Trae Young notched a double-double with 15 points and 10 assists. For the visiting Thunder, Chet Holmgren scored a game-high 31 points with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander adding 30 points.

For the second game in a row, the Hawks were dealt with less than ideal injury news prior to the game. Jalen Johnson was ruled out with a right-ankle sprain, with Kristaps Porzingis (flu-like symptoms) and Zaccharie Risacher (right-ankle sprain) continuing to miss out having missed the Orlando game on Friday night. In their place, Onyeka Okongwu and Alexander-Walker remained in the starting lineup as they did in Orlando, joined by Mo Gueye. For the Thunder, Jalen Williams, Alex Caruso, Kenrich Williams and Isaiah Joe all missed out of this contest.

A less than ideal start for the Hawks to be already down three starters against a team like the Thunder, and matters unfolded perhaps as expected as the Hawks went down by double-digits in the first quarter as Holmgren hit four three-pointers en route to 14 first quarter points.

The Hawks made a strong reply in the second quarter, cutting the lead to one point late in the first half, before the Thunder entered the break with a five point lead. It was in the third quarter where the game was blown open in the Thunder’s favor.

The Hawks started the third quarter slow, and the Thunder opened the lead up to 13 points behind an 8-0 run to begin the second half behind Gilgeous-Alexander and Holmgren. The Thunder would go on to outscore the Hawks 39-25 in the quarter — the big difference in this period were the turnovers.

Turnovers were incredibly costly for the Hawks not just in the third quarter (eight) but for the game itself (16). It’s not so much the number (though, eight in a quarter is far too many) but how good the Thunder were off of them, scoring 16 points off the Hawks eight turnovers in the third quarter, and 29 for the game. Let’s look at the third quarter turnovers that cost the Hawks.

Alexander-Walker does well to telegraph the pass to the perimeter but his attempted pass inside to the running Gueye is itself intercepted as Holmgren steams back to take the pass away from Gueye. Gilgeous-Alexander then brings the ball up the floor, drives, and pulls up on a dime to hit the jumper over Dyson Daniels:

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This was not the only time Holmgren came up with a play similar to this; it’s remarkable how well he moves and his height just gives him great defensive tools to be able to intercept lobs.

One reason any matchup with the Thunder becomes complicated is their defensive versatility: they have so many guys who can defend, and defend on the perimeter. This makes life difficult for Young on this possession as he’s swarmed on the pick-and-roll with Daniels as both Gilgeous-Alexander and Luguentz Dort converge to deflect Young’s pass and come up with the steal:

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Again, the Hawks would come up with a good play, then turn the ball over, and the Thunder capitalize. This time in a late-clock situation, Gueye gets a good block in on Holmgren and then leads the break, but his pass back to the oncoming Daniels is picked off by Cason Wallace. Gilgeous-Alexander picks up the loose ball, weaves his way up the court, draws two to the ball and shifts it back to Holmgren who hits a three-pointer:

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A good contest from Daniels all things considered (i.e., the size of Holmgren) but not sure what Gueye was doing doubling Gilgeous-Alexander and leaving Holmgren when Alexander-Walker is capable of defending.

Again, another situation where the Hawks come up with a good play, turn the ball over, and the Thunder punish it. Alexander-Walker again comes up with a steal — this time on the baseline — and delivers the ball to Young, who is almost certainly going to find Gueye for an alley-oop.

Once again, it’s thwarted spectacularly by Holmgren, who not only has the awareness to see the the play unfold and intervene, but keep the ball alive and lead the break himself, drawing a foul from Daniels with the Thunder already in the bonus and Holmgren converts the two free throws:

The Hawks come in transition, with Alexander-Walker’s probing drive unable to yield an opportunity at the rim, so he passes to Daniels. Daniels fakes and drives but his pass back to the corner is deflected by Isaiah Hertenstein for another turnover. The Thunder push ahead to Wallace, who finds Gilgeous-Alexander in the mid-range for another basket, leading to a 15 point lead and a Hawks timeout:

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The Thunder were so methodical off of turnovers — they didn’t tend to rush and push it in transition hard and charge to the rim though that did happen on this possession where Ajay Mitchell comes up with the steal — pushing ahead to finish at the rim to punish another Atlanta turnover:

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The Hawks did a better job holding onto the ball in the third from this point forward, though there was one more turnover which led to another OKC basket, as Gilgeous-Alexander pokes the ball away from Luke Kennard before finding Mitchell in the corner for a three:

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The Hawks didn’t shoot poorly in this third quarter, shooting 53% from the field and 5-of-8 from three, but they gave up a lot of possessions and points to the Thunder, who blew the game beyond the Hawks.

Another issue the Hawks had in this game was keeping OKC off the offensive glass and second chance opportunities. While the Thunder grabbed 15 offensive rebounds, they were extremely efficient in converting these second chance opportunities, scoring 30 points. Contrast that with the Hawks, who also grabbed 15 offensive rebounds but could only manage nine second chance points — OKC’s size and length was too much for the Hawks all night long.

Wallace makes up for his own missed shot as he grabs the offensive rebound and finds Mitchell, who drives and (I promise) scores at the rim on the drive:

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A missed three as the shotclock is about to expire from Jaylin Williams is collected by Aaron Wiggins and scored in amidst the crowd:

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This was one of those possessions — and there were so many of these — where the Hawks almost come up with the steal. Daniels in particular knocked so many balls loose but the Thunder were able to recover them. On another night Daniels has maybe six steals. Poor from Okongwu here, ball-watching the shot going up and allows Wiggins to get in ahead for the offensive rebound.

Holmgren, as you can probably imagine, was a thorn in the Hawks’ side on the glass, steering home this miss from Wallace at the rim:

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Similarly, his front-court running mate Hartenstein was able to tip in a couple of offensive rebounds himself, such as this one off the Wiggins miss:

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Off of a well-contested Gilgeous-Alexander shot/miss, Dort collects the rebound and finds a cutting Holmgren, who is fouled at the rim by Okongwu, and would dispatch both free throws:

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Off of a wild shot inside by Mitchell, Wiggins does a great job of hustling in front of Kennard to get to the loose ball and whips it back out to Williams, who drains the three:

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With the game long gone in the fourth quarter, down 20 points, the rebounding concerns continued, as first Holmgren steers home a Hartenstein miss:

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Before Hartenstein notches home a miss from Holmgren:

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Difficult to win games conceding 30 second chance points on a night where the Hawks’ frontcourt is depleted. Throw in the turnovers — and OKC’s efficiency off turnovers — in that third quarter and the end result isn’t too much of a surprise. The fourth quarter was a slow affair, with both teams slowing down offensively, but by this stage the damage was done and the Hawks couldn’t find the same heroics from Orlando, and were consigned to their second home defeat of the season.

Speaking postgame, Hawks head coach Quin Snyder focused on the Hawks’ turnovers in the third quarter that saw the Thunder’s lead quickly increase back to double-digits, citing both the Thunder’s — and Holmgren’s unique ability to intercept plays — as well as mistakes from the Hawks.

“The third quarter, I don’t know how many of the first six of the first eight, four of the first five, possessions we turned over,” said Snyder postgame. “All of a sudden a four point (Thunder) lead jumps and now you’re looking at a double-digit lead again. Your margin for error, given some of the guys being our and, more importantly, playing a team of that calibre — Shae didn’t miss much, Holmgren came out making threes, I thought we adjusted to some of that. There’s a lot of things you have to overcome and you can’t be yourself. It wasn’t just one guy, everyone got into it — some of them were unfrorced, some of them were good passes. The one Trae tried to throw the lob, there’s not too many people in the league who make that play other than Chet Holmgren. But there were others where we handed them the ball, and when we do that we’re not going to be able to score.”

The Hawks’ offense just struggled to find the scoring output it needed to live with the efforts of Holmgren and Gilgeous-Alexander. It was Alexander-Walker who led the Hawks’ scoring effort with 17 points on 6-of-10 shooting from the field and — encouragingly — a much improved outing from three: 3-of-6 from downtown following his 1-of-10 display in Orlando. This type of output from Alexander-Walker — in addition to another two steals and a block — you can’t ask much more out of him. It’s the consistent players already on the squad who you expect more from.

Dyson Daniels has had a slow start to the season offensively, scoring eight points on 2-of-6 shooting from the field. While I think there’s some room for concern, I’m not going to react too strongly to difficult nights shooting the ball against this OKC side — that includes Trae Young.

Young scored 15 points on 5-of-12 from the field, 2-of-3 from three, and while he did have 10 assists on the night it also came with five turnovers. Young has, in seasons past, had some slow starts and two difficult defensive coverages in Orlando and OKC I think exacerbate those issues somewhat.

Elsewhere, Okongwu was drawn into shooting five three-pointers last night — a shot OKC were more than happy to live with — and Okongwu only converted one of those five attempts. The sample size is of course very small, but 30% on 3.3 attempts — off the back of an encouraging end to last season shooting the three — wouldn’t have been the start Okongwu was hoping for from three, but it’s a very small sample and early days. OKC were just happy to let him have those shots last night. On the plus for Okongwu, monster dunk to begin this game.

With no Porzingis or Jalen Johnson last night it meant more minutes for both Gueye and Asa Newell than they would ordinarily have seen.

Just like the Orlando game, Gueye was solid in his 23 minutes of action, scoring 11 points on 4-of-10 from the field and 2-of-6 from three (which is absolutely fine for Gueye). Gueye’s production right now I think is all relative — it’s a huge win for the Hawks that he’s playable at this stage of the season, because it would have been completely inconceivable at this point last year, and it speaks to his development. He had a couple of rough shots, but given that backline of Hartenstein and Holmgren I wouldn’t hold that against him too much.

Newell saw a lot more time on the court last night, playing just under 25 minutes and, similar to the Orlando game, was productive in his time on the floor scoring 12 points on 4-of-9 shooting from the field and 3-of-5 from three to go with 10 rebounds (seven of them being offensive rebounds) — his first double-double of his young NBA career.

Newell is taking — and hitting — his threes with a lot of confidence, such as this three on the catch in the first quarter as Wiggins closes out:

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This next three in the second half was probably his most impressive last night; converting a straightaway three in the corner despite the contest:

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“I think he’s worked at that, and guys find him” said Snyder of Newell’s three-point shooting. “That corner three for a player coming out of college that hasn’t taken a lot of threes, that’s a good place to begin to build your confidence. His instincts for the ball are really good. They (OKC) are big, and if you have to double SGA or trap in pick-and-roll, you’re in rotations and it makes it harder to rebound. Our ability to come up with some of those loose balls, like the turnovers, those things are impactful. I thought Asa did a good job for us not just making shots but his nose for the ball.”

Newell gave credit to his coaching staff, teammates, and his own preparation for his early success behind the arc, as well as highlighting the spacing difference between the NBA and college.

“It’s just my preparedness,” said Newell of shooting threes. “I’m in the gym every single day. It means a lot that the coaching staff has belief in me, and my teammates as well. In college, it’s just a different offense. In the college game, the floor is more shrunken and in the NBA there’s more space.”

On the glass, Newell was able to make a couple of plays happen, one for himself as he fights for the rebound against Holmgren and knocks the ball loose, resulting in an easy dunk off of his own making:

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Off of a missed three from Kennard in the corner, Newell grabs the offensive rebound and finds a relocating Kennard, who doesn’t miss the second and hits the three:

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“Asa is just being himself right now, playing with a lot of confidence and understanding he’s going to get open looks when he’s out there so just take them with confidence,” said Young of Newell. “He’s been doing it, and rebounding which he’s always been able to do. Those two things can get him on the floor and make an impact for us.”

Outside of Newell, there wasn’t a ton of positives for the Hawks last night. While a second successive home loss to start the season is disappointing, bearing in mind it was the second night of a back-to-back having been on the road the night before, in addition to being down three starters and against the defending champions I think probably should be taken into account before the pitchforks come out.

Players will return, the offense will improve, individuals like Daniels and Young will find better offensive rhythms because what they’re currently averaging just isn’t sustainable.

For now, the Hawks rest and regroup, and then head off to Chicago for a matchup against the Bulls (2-0) at the United Center. That game marks the first of a four-game roadtrip for the Hawks, which will take them into November.

Until next time!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...olmgren-quotes-notes-video-analysis-breakdown
 
Hawks notch first victory of regular season in comeback effort vs. Magic

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The Atlanta Hawks secured their first win of the 2025-26 regular season with a comeback victory against the Orlando Magic on Friday night at the Kia Center, 111-107. Trae Young led the Hawks with 25 points, while Nickeil Alexander-Walker added 19 points. For the Magic, Franz Wagner scored a game-high 27 points with Desmond Bane adding 15 points.

Heading into last night’s contest, the Hawks were forced to make two changes to the starting lineup as Kristaps Porzingis (flu-like symptoms) and Zaccharie Risacher (right-ankle sprain) were ruled out prior to the game.

In their place Onyeka Okongwu stepped back into a familiar role as started at center, while Alexander-Walker stepped into the starting lineup. Immediately, this speaks to the Hawks’ depth that they can slot in two starting-caliber players off the bench.

Affairs were physical, with both sides getting into respective bodies; this was something that was attempted to be snuffed out by the refs, who played the whistle tightly throughout the contest. That didn’t stop the two division rivals going at each other or barking at each other — it was chippy throughout.

The basketball itself was slow at times, but it was the Hawks who ended the first quarter with a narrow margin, despite foul trouble for both Jalen Johnson and Onyeka Okongwu. It was in the second quarter where the Hawks’ offense really bogged down, and the Magic were able to put a double-digit distance between the two sides. The Hawks would spend most of the game chasing this lead, and it wasn’t until the back end of the third quarter when the Hawks really dug into this Orlando advantage.

Alexander-Walker deserves a lot of credit for keeping the Hawks hanging around in the third quarter, scoring 10 points in the third alone and just keeping the Hawks within that 10-12 point range. Alexander-Walker, while he very much struggled shooting the three (1-of-10), was excellent at getting into the paint and scoring around the rim, such as this play as he cuts the Orlando lead to nine points:

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The Hawks’ run in the third would start just after this play — and after the Magic went back up by 11 points — as Mo Gueye proved important in this stretch, first hitting the three in the corner:

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And then to follow-home an offensive rebound after Goga Bitazde blocks Luke Kennard at the rim:

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Another basket by Young would cut the Magic lead to just four points, but between conceding a three-pointer (and the foul underneath the basket, leading to a four-point play) and a slow start to the fourth quarter saw the Hawks quickly back down by 11 points in the fourth quarter (93-81) with over nine minutes remaining.

It’s from this point forward where the Hawks flip the game on its head, proceeding to reel off a 15-0 run which would take the lead. It begins with a Keaton Wallace three-pointer and is added to by a drive by Kennard, which takes the Magic lead down to seven points. After Dyson Daniels and Young return to the game, as well as the introduction of Asa Newell, the Hawks continued to rally.

Young gets downhill and finds Newell in the corner, who hits the three-pointer and, with it, his first NBA points:

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Daniels continues the Hawks’ run as he drives, spins, and hooks the shot over Wendell Carter Jr.:

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The Magic missed a number of poor shots in this stretch, but this next play is fuelled by Daniels’ reach-around on Wagner for the steal, and ends with Daniels finding Young, who throws a beautiful alley-oop for Newell to tie the game:

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Great patience there by Young to wait for Newell’s run, and then finds him with the oop. Great for Newell as well to be rewarded for his run down the floor and a great confidence boost for him coming off of that three just a moment prior.

After an Orlando timeout, the Magic miss on a three by Bane, and Young operates behind the screen and hits the deep three to complete the turnaround — a 15-0 run to turn a double-digit deficit into a lead in the fourth quarter:

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The Hawks would build a five-point lead with 2:56 remaining behind two Jalen Johnson free throws; a lead that was erased by a Paulo Banchero three and two Carter Jr. free throws, tying the game at 105 with 54 seconds remaining.

The Hawks would take a timeout after these free throws, needing to come through in the clutch to emerge with a win in what, up to this point, had been a chippy and physical affair. The Hawks got exactly that as Young comes through as he gets separation from the persistent Jalen Suggs, and Young gets to the free throw line and hits the floater:

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The Magic would make a quick reply, with Suggs driving by Young to score at the rim, around the contest of Okongwu:

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A bit easy for Suggs at this time of the game. I thought Young had some good defensive moments in this game, but this was not one of them.

Young makes up for this possession as he draws the foul and free throws on a switch from Carter Jr., sending Young to the line where he hits both free throws to give the Hawks a 109-107 lead with 21 seconds remaining:

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The Magic take a timeout, their last of the game, and have the choice to either take the best shot available to them — at the risk of leaving time on the clock for the Hawks — or take the last shot of the game and, at worst, go to overtime. The Magic chose neither of these things.

Daniels does a great job containing Bane, who has to deliver a messy pass to Banchero. Banchero, guarded by Gueye, must have believed he had a great chance to score with Gueye on him, and launches a three-pointer over him but misses, and the Hawks secure the timeout as Alexander-Walker and Gueye hit the floor:

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A good defensive job by the Hawks here, but the overriding sentiment from this last play is what a horrid decision by Banchero. Not only was it an extremely opportunistic shot, but with the shot clock off and the amount of time remaining…

It’s just a terrible decision, no matter how confident he felt hitting that shot over Gueye. Following the timeout, the Hawks hit both free throws with Young and seal a fantastic road win to wash away some of the bad taste from the season-opener on Wednesday.

“Although the result in the first game wasn’t what we wanted, we got back and regrouped and you could tell the focus was there,” said Trae Young. “We got back to doing what we were preparing for all training camp and all summer. Even tonight, it’s just one game. We did what we needed to do, we beat a really good team tonight, we’ve got another one tomorrow. Just have to continue to take it day-by-day and one game at a time.”

Hawks head coach Quin Snyder was unhappy with the transition defense on Wednesday, and while conceding a few similar opportunities early in this game, Snyder was pleased with the job the Hawks did as the game progressed, as well as being pleased with the Hawks’ rebounding.

“As the game went on we did a much better job of not giving up easy baskets, and we rebounded really well as well,” said Snyder.

Asked about the third quarter run, the names that Snyder mentioned relating to that run weren’t the usual suspects; your Trae Young’s, Jalen Johnson’s etc. It was Asa Newell, Mo Gueye, Keaton Wallace, and Vit Krejci, who were on the floor at the time when the Hawks began their rally, before Young, Daniels, and Newell checked into the game to continue the run.

“Asa, Mo, Keaton, Vit those guys they put time in,” said Snyder. “Our coaching staff does a great job of teaching, and they’re competing too. They compete, that’s the biggest thing. Asa didn’t think, that’s a shot he’s been preparing to take for a while, he took it. Same thing with Mo. It’s telling that they both got their shots because it shows their teammates had confidence in them as well, and that gives you confidence.”

Newell only played three minutes and was a plus-9 in those three minutes, and while his role is naturally limited at this early stage in his career this mini-stint will be an encouragement to Newell.

As Snyder referenced, the confidence to shoot the ball with the one opportunity he got to shoot three is what you want to see, and running with a guard like Young is always bound to be rewarded. Young encouraged Newell to stay ready and praised his rookie teammate for his contribution last night.

“He didn’t have too good of a preseason but I told him to stay with it, stay focused, stay locked in, and when his number’s called we’re going to need him,” said Young of Newell.

“Tonight, he made two big plays; running down and got a dunk, and that was a big three he hit. A lot of people may think that’s an easy shot but sitting on the bench that long, not knowing if you’re even going to get in the game, that’s not easy. You’ve got to give the rook a lot of props.”

Mo Gueye saw more minutes in this spot, too, with Porzingis ruled out prior to the game. That, in addition to foul trouble for Onyeka Okongwu, saw big minutes for Gueye: 29 in total. Gueye scored 13 points on 5-of-9 shooting, 2-of-5 from three to go with six rebounds and three assists.

There were times last season where the idea of playing Gueye 29 minutes would just not have been feasible for the Hawks, but it’s a great credit to Gueye’s development that he was solid in that large playing time — a few bad turnovers here and there and some shots missed, but he was a positive overall in this game especially in that third quarter.

Like Newell, Gueye knows he just has to stay ready.

“Really just understanding my job, my role in the team” said Gueye postgame. “I know we got ‘KP’, an All-Star, NBA champion. Just be ready, today he was down, hopefully we get him tomorrow. Just be ready and know my role.”

Looking at other individual performances, it’s a tough spot for anyone to have an explosive night. The Magic are a great defensive team and their size and length makes life difficult, and so it proved to be the case. Jalen Johnson and Okongwu were limited by foul trouble but still contributed 12 points and 17 points respectively, in addition to their defensive contributions (Snyder was particularly praiseful of Johnson’s defense, especially in the fourth quarter with five fouls).

Dyson Daniels had a good start to the game but faded a little more offensively as the game went on, scoring six points on 3-of-7 shooting. Nickeil Alexander-Walker, as mentioned earlier, could not hit a three to save his life, but did save the Hawks’ life in this game with his ability to get toward the rim and score inside; especially in the third quarter.

Trae Young led all Hawks scorers with 25 points on an inefficient 7-of-18 from the field and 1-of-7 from three. However, as seen throughout Young’s career, he can contribute to his team even on poor shooting nights and this was no exception.

While Young’s six assists is below his normal standard, he shot 10-of-12 at the free throw line, including the clutch free throws at the end of the game, and several go-ahead baskets when the Hawks rallied.

Snyder was impressed with Young’s poise, especially in the face of the defensive challenge that Jalen Suggs brings to the equation — again, a very physical affair between the two guards; these two really get after each other.

“This is a game where he’s pressured the whole game,” said Snyder of Young. “I thought he kept his composure throughout the course of game. He was running in transition. I thought there were times we could’ve thrown ahead to him; he’s committed to that. That last six minutes, he’s in a position where that’s time for him to assert himself. I love that he drove the ball too; a guy in the lane, he hit a floater, got a foul. He managed the game as well as I’ve seen him manage a game late, just directing people where to go and our guys were listening to him. They were trying to get certain matchups, changing matchups. The poise that Trae showed in addition to his production, I think you saw that because of his poise. Suggs is one of the best defenders in the league, Trae got off the ball and used himself as a screener. So that recognition, to me, is really important.”

For the game as a whole, the Hawks did a great job in the second half limiting the Magic to just two three-pointers; an area of the game the Magic had separated themselves from the Hawks in the first half: shooting 7-of-16 in the first half compared to the Hawks’ 2-of-14 from three. The second half saw a reversal: 6-of-15 for the Hawks compared to 2-of-15 for the Magic.

The Hawks also did a great job limiting Paulo Banchero, who scored just 4-of-15 from the field. Johnson did a great job in this regard, but it’s really helpful for the Hawks that they can throw multiple defensive bodies at Banchero and this was huge in the greater context of securing this victory for the Hawks as Franz Wagner was able to have a very efficient scoring night, scoring 27 points on 10-of-17 from the field.

All in all, this was a great response for the Hawks. This was a physical, chippy affair, and there’s definitely some animosity between these two teams. Not only did the Hawks suffer a loss in the play-in against the Magic, but both teams here are expected to take big leaps in a weakened Eastern Conference this season.

Both teams played as though they wanted to show that they wanted that spotlight; this game felt like a battle, it felt personal. And it’s only going to get more personal as the season goes on, playing each other three more times this season. If last night’s game was anything to go by, these two sides will provide great entertainment this season.

For last night at least, a great Hawks comeback and execution to end the game; a good note to start in clutch situations led by Trae Young.

Next up for the Hawks (1-1) is a home tilt against the Oklahoma City Thunder (2-0) at State Farm Arena. The Thunder are carrying some early injuries and have played, already, in two double overtime games to start the season. There’s, usually, never a great time to play the defending champions this early in the season, but if there was…

Until next time!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...ae-young-analysis-nba-opinion-video-breakdown
 
Hawks at Magic: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Hawks truly begin their 81-game schedule tonight in Orlando in a big division matchup.

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen​


Location: Kia Center, Orlando, FL

Start Time: 7:00 EST PM

TV: FanDuel Sports Network Southeast (FDSNSE)

Radio: Sports Radio 92.9 the Game (WZGC-FM)

Streaming: FanDuel Sports Network app, Fubo (out of market), NBA League Pass (out of market), Youtube TV (NBA League Pass out of market)

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/atla...gic-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Hawks come up short in final minutes, lose to Bulls 123-118

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The Atlanta Hawks were in Chicago on Monday evening to face the Bulls as they start their four-game road trip. Coming off a loss against the defending champs, the Hawks are looking to get back on track this week, and they should be able to as they were fully healthy coming into the game, with Zaccharie Risacher, Jalen Johnson, and Kristaps Porzingis back in the lineup.

Porzingis let his presence be known early, getting on the board with a dunk and then a 3-pointer. It didn’t stop there, as he knocked down another 3-pointer and had eight early points.

Welcome back KP! pic.twitter.com/PptxO31ym4

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025
Kristaps letting that thing FLY 🦄 pic.twitter.com/uZxUNoTC2A

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

Risacher got in on the fun after missing the past few games, and had an easy flush on an outlet pass from Trae Young.

How do you say "Woo woo woo outlet!!" in French?? pic.twitter.com/2CZregthqw

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

Johnson, another returnee to the lineup, got this and-one to go in the quarter to extend the Hawks’ lead.

Jalen finishes through the contact for the and-1 💪 pic.twitter.com/lmlIwnuSuR

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

The Hawks continued to flow throughout the quarter on offense, while also defending the Bulls well on the other end. The second unit came in and made an impact, and Nickeil Alexander-Walker knocked down a 3-pointer.

NAW for 1-2-3 pic.twitter.com/moaN5STGaX

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

Going into the second quarter, the Hawks led 35-27. They continued to keep the pressure on the Bulls, despite them making a small run early. The Hawks buckled down on defense, and Risacher led the way with this good possession, guarding Matas Buzelis.

Zacch Clamps 🗜️ pic.twitter.com/FjVotADqZY

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

Johnson followed it up with a steal, and getting out for an easy flush on the other end.

JJ steal and flush!! pic.twitter.com/1cRc8gvLgy

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

Young and Johnson connected on an easy pick-and-roll layup later in the quarter.

Peanut Butter Jelly Time 🥜🍇🍞 pic.twitter.com/nY7KRbf21I

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

Johnson got another easy paint look after Dyson Daniels got a steal. Porzingis got the ball out to Young, and the rest is history.

Dyson steal ❗
Trae behind-the-back pass ‼️
Jalen dunk ‼️❗pic.twitter.com/RAN6ft6H5A

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

Though the Hawks were flowing on offense, the Bulls came back fighting toward the end of the first half, going on a 16-6 run to cut their deficit down 58-57 going into halftime.

The Bulls took the lead to start the second half, and the Hawks went back and forth with them throughout the quarter. Down the stretch of the third quarter, the Bulls kept scoring while the Hawks went through a cold spell, and they went up as much as 11 points.

Young got the Hawks back going late in the quarter, making plays for others and getting his own. He got Alexander-Walker and Luke Kennard easy 3-pointers.

Nickeil & Luke splash threes from nearly the same spot 💦💦 pic.twitter.com/SrTI3OfQWA

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

Young then got to his bread and butter.

Toughhhh floater for Trae 🛟 pic.twitter.com/2xb2LQjI0U

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

Going into the fourth, the Hawks trailed 98-92. It was still the Trae Young show, and he found Okongwu for an easy shot in the paint. Then found him again minutes later.

Nique & Trae saw the mismatch at the same time 👀 pic.twitter.com/nt9MNewnGa

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025
Trae is finding everybody everywhere ❄️👁️ pic.twitter.com/BzcYxmDH9s

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

The Hawks turned it up on defense and started to string along a few stops, while also executing and knocking down shots on offense. Okongwu got an above the break 3-pointer to go and gave the Hawks a six-point lead.

Double O-ski for threeee ⛷️ pic.twitter.com/DErTuWskmb

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

That lead didn’t last for long, and the Bulls went on a 7-0 run to take it back. The frontcourt passing was big down the stretch of the game, with Porzingis and Johnson finding each other several times in the paint.

The passing by this trio >>> pic.twitter.com/5sfzpVaj93

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 28, 2025

The Hawks found themselves down three points with less than a minute left, and Alexander-Walker knocked down a 3 to cut their deficit. The Hawks got the stop, but Daniels missed an easy layup to cut their deficit to one. The Bulls came down and missed their first attempt, but Josh Giddey got his own rebound, and the Hawks had to foul. Giddey knocked down both free throws and gave the Bulls a five-point lead with seven seconds left.

Young then missed the 3-pointer, and the Hawks walked out of Chicago with a loss.

Porzingis finished with 27 points, Johnson finished with 25 points, six rebounds, and three assists, and Young finished with 21 points and 17 assists.

The Hawks will be back in action on Wednesday against the Brooklyn Nets.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/reca...-short-in-final-minutes-lose-to-bulls-123-118
 
Hawks come up short in the clutch in loss to Bulls

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The Atlanta Hawks began their first game of a four-game trip with a loss to the Chicago Bulls on Monday night, falling 128-123. Kristaps Porzingis led the Hawks in scoring with 27 points with Trae Young adding 21 points and 17 assists. For the Bulls, Ayo Dosunmo led eight Bulls in double-digit scoring with 21 points.

The Hawks’ road trip began with a boost to the lineup, as Porzingis, Jalen Johnson, and Zaccharie Risacher all returned to the starting lineup. Porzingis in particular returning with a bang, scoring 10 points in the opening frame as the Hawks opened up a double-digit lead and looked comfortable in the first quarter and for most of the second quarter. Atlanta held an 11 point lead with 3:50 remaining in the first half, but the Bulls would go on a run that would see the hosts trim the lead down to one point heading into the locker room.

Speaking at halftime, Porzingis believed that allowing the Bulls to close the gap gave them life, and that proved to be prophetic heading into the second half as the Bulls not only re-took the lead but built up a double-digit lead of their own, scoring 41 points on 64% shooting and hitting 7-of-10 from three in the third quarter.

Looking at the stats, you’d be forgiven for thinking the Hawks didn’t have any offensive issues in the third quarter, scoring 34 points on 53% shooting in the quarter. But the Hawks’ offense did get bogged down in the third quarter, going through a scoring rut of four points in just under four minutes. Young was on the floor to begin this stretch, and then off of it, but the Hawks struggling at this time in the third quarter may not be coincidence with Young off the floor.

The cold stretch begins with two Nickeil Alexander-Walker misses; one of them is an open three created by Young:

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A great find by Young, drawing the crowd and an unfortunate miss by Alexander-Walker on this possession.

The next shot by Alexander-Walker isn’t a high quality, attempting to beat Josh Giddey off the dribble and tries to rise into hitting a runner but is slightly off balance and misses:

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Young hits a shot and exits the game in between two missed Onyeka Okongwu free throws (0-of-4 last night from the line for Okongwu), and Okongwu would miss a three in the corner on the next possession in transition:

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Johnson was able to get the ball out to the corner here to Okongwu to make this a passable shot, but Dyson Daniels gets caught in the air and the ball should’ve popped out to Luke Kennard, who would’ve been a significantly better option in this spot than the shot the Hawks got.

The Hawks get a better shot on their next trip, as a great screen from Okongwu for Alexander-Walker opens up a path of Alexander-Walker, who pulls up against the back-pedalling Nikola Vucevic but misses the shot:

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To end this stretch for the Hawks, Daniels drives inside but takes a shot inside the paint in a crowd and misses:

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A poor shot from Daniels here, and one I don’t think occurs if Young is on the floor here. The Bulls, as this stretch has continued for the Hawks, stretch their lead out to 10 points; this cold stretch from Atlanta certainly playing its part.

The Hawks ended the third quarter well, and reduced the gap heading into the fourth quarter to just six points as Young finds Mo Gueye for a last-second dunk. The Hawks would go on to overturn that deficit and create a six-point lead of their own behind an Okongwu three with 5:45 remaining in the final quarter. By the 2:46 mark, the Bulls had already re-taken the lead, only for Pozingis to tie the game game at 118 with 2:46 remaining. The Hawks, again, enter a clutch situation where the visitors need to make plays in order to leave Chicago with a victory. So, let’s go through it.

The Bulls break the tie with a three from Matas Buzelis, who pulls up with Johnson and Porzingis nearby:

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It’s a ballsy shot from Buzelis but did Johnson and Porzingis get this switch wrong? Did Johnson need to switch to Vucevic, did Porzingis need to leave Vucevic in the first place? Porzingis still gets a contest in, and it’s not the easiest shot from Buzelis but on the surface I don’t know if that was a switch that needed to happen.

From the post, Porzingis tries to pass out to the perimeter but the ball is picked off by Vucevic, who finds the streaking Kevin Huerter, who beats Young and scores at the rim, lifting the Bulls’ lead to five points:

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Porzingis could, probably should, have spun to his left because the space that was available to him on that side would’ve been extremely useful for him to use and shoot over Buzelis.

Instead, he spins towards the help defense, and Vucevic is placed perfectly here — he can block the shot if Porzingis tries to shoot over Buzelis, and he’s a huge man himself that he’s one of a few players who can intercept a pass from someone as tall as Porzingis. It’s an offensive possession that got away from the Hawks and directly fueled a Chicago basket in transition.

Following that basket, Young uses the slip from Johnson to try get a half yard to pull up from three but misses. Daniels shifts the offensive rebound to Alexander-Walker, who drives to the rim and misses at the rim after the contest from Vucevic, and the fight for the rebound from Porzingis goes out of bounds and to Chicago (after a coach’s challenge):

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A bit of a hero shot from Young here, there’s still plenty of time for the Hawks to close that lead — you don’t need a hero shot there. Perhaps Alexander-Walker may have found Johnson after forcing Vucevic to rotate, but it’s a good play from Vucevic to give him credit.

The Hawks produce a great defensive possession, led by Daniels, to force a shotclock violation, and Johnson does what Alexander-Walker could not and, somehow, finds a way to finish over Vucevic:

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To respond, Tre Jones and Vucevic engage in the pick-and-roll — understandable, putting Young through pick-and-roll defense. The Hawks, mostly, have a handle on the play but Daniels gets sucked into the lane, and it leaves Giddey open for a three which he hits off the find of Jones to give the Bulls a six-point lead:

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It’s a tough one, that. Daniels, while getting sucked in, still gets a good contest in on Giddey, who is a player you’d live with shooting that shot in this pressure situation. Give Giddey credit, he made that shot in that pressure moment.

An immediate reply by Alexander-Walker for three followed by an offensive foul by Vucevic gives the Hawks a chance to cut the lead to one, or tie with a three with time remaining on the shotclock that they would get the ball again to end the game. The Hawks get a great look, as Young gets downhill and can hit Porzingis in the corner or, as he does, find the cutting Daniels underneath the rim but cannot guide the ball home:

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This was a bad miss from Daniels — he has to score that and there’s no other way around it. Young does brilliantly here, and Porzingis spacing the floor and being an option here helps opens up Young’s options — he had choice of pass here, in the end it was Daniels and unfortunately it was a miss.

Still, there’s hope for the Hawks as they should get the ball back with time to spare, providing they can produce a defensive stop. Giddey drives into the paint and misses his runner inside but rebounds his own miss, and the Hawks are now forced to foul:

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That’s a tough break for the Hawks; Porzingis is tied up with Vucevic underneath the rim (Vucevic has 17 rebounds and four offensive rebounds, I do not blame Porzingis for being preoccupied down there), and Johnson can’t shade over with Buzelis in the corner, meaning it falls to Daniels to rebound with the way this ball bounces out. Giddey’s size helps him compete in moments like this, and it just fell for him nicely, not sure what else Daniels can do in this situation.

The Bulls seal the game at the line and inflict a third loss of the season already for the Atlanta Hawks. Despite conceding 128 points on 52% shooting from the field, Hawks head coach Quin Snyder believed that the Hawks defended well in periods of the game, but conceded the Bulls’ pick-and-roll offense and drives caused the Hawks issues.

“There were stretches of the game where we really defended,” said Snyder. “They put a lot of pressure on you. I thought we did a pretty good job in transition. Pick-and-roll they didn’t always score on but they were able to get some advantages and we had some long closeouts. They’re very good at driving the ball and at that point started making some shots.”

“I think we have good moments defensively but we have moments throughout the game where they go on runs and those are moments we have to bite down (defensively) and not let them build on those moments,” added Kristaps Porzingis.

The Bulls’ scoring effort wasn’t led by one player in particular, it was offense by committee. Dosunmo led with 21 points but eight Bulls players scored in double-digits, with the efforts of Vucevic (17 points, 17 rebounds, and nine assists) in particular key to the Bulls’ victory.

While the Hawks didn’t have as many scorers, they did have three 20+ point games from Porzingis, Johnson, and Young. Porzingis enjoyed some of the smaller-ball matchups against the Bulls when Vucevic was off the floor, especially in the second quarter, and went on to score 27 points on 11-of-16 shooting.

While two rebounds isn’t ideal, there wasn’t much more you could ask from Porzingis — he hit his threes, took advantage of smaller matchups and scored efficiently. I wasn’t a huge fan of his late turnover and the decision leading up to it, but other than that a strong offensive game from Porzingis.

Johnson, similarly, enjoyed an efficient night scoring 25 points on 11-of-18 shooting and looked a lot more like the player the Hawks expected to see heading into the season. There were strong games off the bench for both Okognwu (18 points on 8-of-11 from the field) and Alexander-Walker (17 points on 6-of-11 from the field and 4-of-6 from three). Snyder was asked about the efforts of Okongwu and Alexander-Walker postgame and outlined the strengths of players he believed were starting calibre.

“We look at those guys as starters,” said Snyder of Okongwu and Alexander-Walker. “They’ve been consistent. Onyeka is very poised when he gets the ball and is able to pass, playmake and score. Nickeil’s ability defensively on the ball is really important for us. We believe in him as a shooter, too. He’s knocking down shots and making plays. We continue to learn how to make plays for one another. Those guys thrive in those situations.”

There were shooting struggles, however, for Trae Young, who has continued his slow offensive start to the season shooting 7-of-22 from the field and 1-of-10 from three last night. A couple of these Young was looking for a foul but while the output is OK (21 points) the efficiency is concerning. Young typically starts season’s inefficient shooting the three, but the inefficiency inside the arc is arguably a greater concern right now, and at times he’s forcing it.

He was brilliant distributing the ball, absolutely slicing the Bulls’ defense open in the pick-and-roll — particularly with Johnson — and dished out 17 assists with one turnover (!!). That is an unbelievable return, it’s just a shame that he’s struggled to shoot the ball so far this season because the Hawks really need Young to be efficient offensively — there was easily a 30 point-plus game available to him last night.

While Johnson and Porzingis made strong returns to the lineup last night, Zaccharie Risacher certainly did not — two points on 1-of-5 from the field in 20 minutes of action. Whether he’s still carrying lingering effects of the ankle sprain is not clear, but Risacher added very little to the game last night — in fact, outside of those two points he added almost nothing that was reflected in the boxscore: zero rebounds, zero assists, zero steals, zero free throws, and one turnover. He was pulled in the fourth quarter in favor of Alexander-Walker who closed the game and made a big three to cut the lead to three. Risacher will have much, much better games than last night but last night was poor — especially on a night where the Hawks could’ve done with any production from him in a five-point loss.

While adding more than Risacher on the defensive end — and speaking of potential lingering injuries — it was another tough night for Dyson Daniels offensively: four points on 1-of-8 shooting and no three-point attempts, which was unusual. Daniels is clearly bothered offensively right now, and if he is carrying a lingering injury he needs to rest because he has an important offensive role to play not just in terms of not being a negative on offense (which he is right now) but the Hawks need his ball-handling when Young isn’t on the floor, and that hasn’t been seen as much to start the season.

With the full compliment of players available, we saw a little more diversity in rotation last night — not all of it good. The Hawks ran out a Young/Kennard/Alexander-Walker/Mo Gueye/Okongwu lineup in the first quarter, a Keaton Wallace/Risacher/Kennard/Okongwu/Porzingis lineup in the second quarter, which I wasn’t the biggest fan of from a ball-handling perspective.

Snyder was asked about the Porzingis/Okongwu combination postgame and outlined the dynamic of having those two players playing next to each other.

“Onyeka is a really good player and we want to get him on the floor,” said Snyder of playing Porzingis and Okongwu together. “We think those two guys together, they’re both skilled. They’re learning how to do that. Onyeka hasn’t defended as much on the perimeter, and teams will cross-match against us so there’s a learning curve for those guys doing that. That’s another component of our team we need to continue to work on and cultivate and be better. I thought the two of those guys on the floor together tonight were solid.”

With Porzingis, Johnson, and Okongwu all healthy, available, out of foul trouble, and producing (combining for a very efficient 70 points), there was little room for Mo Gueye to get a ton of minutes last night (playing just nine minutes), nor Asa Newell. Newell has played well but he has little realistic chance of getting into the rotation when those four guys are ahead of him, and the big three producing as they did last night.

All in all, this was a disappointing loss for the Hawks. They had this game under control in the first half, allowed the Bulls to see life with that run late in the second quarter, came out strong in the third while the Hawks went cold, and made more plays than the Hawks down the stretch in the clutch.

The Hawks simultaneously saw really good and poor individual games, and they just couldn’t stop the Bulls in the second half when it mattered. It’s a disappointing start to the trip in the type of game, with everyone healthy as they were, that the Hawks are just expected to win this year. There’s no good excuse as to why the Hawks couldn’t have taken that game last night, but credit must go to the Bulls who made the plays down the stretch and have began the season now 3-0.

For the Hawks (1-3), they continue their road-trip against the Brooklyn Nets (0-4) at Barclays Center. If there’s a chance to get the trip back on track, the Nets represent a great opportunity to do so.

Until next time!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...-notes-video-jalen-johnson-kristaps-porzingis
 
Hawks at Bulls: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Hawks try to get back to .500 on their first game of a road trip in Chicago.

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen​


Location: United Center, Chicago, IL

Start Time: 8:00 EST PM

TV: FanDuel Sports Network Southeast (FDSNSE)

Radio: Sports Radio 92.9 the Game (WZGC-FM)

Streaming: FanDuel Sports Network app, Fubo (out of market), NBA League Pass (out of market), Youtube TV (NBA League Pass out of market)

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/atla...ago-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Hawks survive Nets’ late push, win 117-112

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The Atlanta Hawks were in Brooklyn on Wednesday evening to face the Nets. The Hawks are coming off a wire-to-wire loss on Monday against the Chicago Bulls, and were looking to get back in the win column. For the Nets, they were still looking for their first win of the season.

It was a very slow start for the Hawks, as they found themselves in a 12-0 deficit in the first quarter. Jalen Johnson broke the ice for the Hawks, and the flood started on offense.

JJ hits the offensive glass and gets the putback and-1 pic.twitter.com/jktJxdo9fb

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 29, 2025

The Hawks started 0-for-6 from the field, and the Hawks then they made their next six shots in a row to cut their deficit down to just one point. Trae Young was a part of the offensive surge, and got his own and-one to go in the process.

Trae's turn for a hoop plus the harm 💪 pic.twitter.com/5kUiJTIKpM

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 29, 2025

The Hawks were able to grab the lead after Johson found Onyeka Okongwu for an easy layup in the paint.

JJ & OO run the Give & Go-O pic.twitter.com/koKw0h4vyR

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 30, 2025

From there, the Hawks continued to pile on the points, and Young got Luke Kennard an easy 3-pointer with a behind-the-back pass.

Trae behind-the-back pass to a Luke 3 🤩🤩 pic.twitter.com/9ti6zXqYon

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 30, 2025

Later in the quarter, Hawks fans probably held their breath when Mouhamed Gueye was pushed on an out-of-bounds play, running into Trae Young’s knee. Young stayed on the floor for some time, but got up on his own. On the next play, Young did a sprint down the court, but he looked to be in pain and ended up going to the locker room.

Without Young, the Hawks were still able to generate some offense and finished the quarter with a 34-27 lead. To start the quarter, the Hawks ruled out Young for the remainder of the game with a right knee sprain. That meant the Hawks would have to generate offense without their engine, but they were still able to score at ease.

Kennard continued to light it up in the second quarter, scoring eight early points. Everyone else joined suit, including Johnson, who got another and-one to go in the first half.

Jalen Johnson's nightly you-can't-stop-him-in-transition bucket pic.twitter.com/lF3ziS3HAN

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 30, 2025

The Hawks led by as much as 17 points in the first half, and went into halftime with a 64-51 lead. Third quarters have been rough for the Hawks this season, and the trend looked to continue as Michael Porter Jr. got hot and cut down the Nets’ deficit to single digits.

Dyson Daniels made life hard for Cam Thomas, and got this steal which turned into easy points for the Hawks.

The Great Barrier Thief doing what he does! pic.twitter.com/vcH4TuGfWd

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 30, 2025

The Nets were able to stick around because of Porter’s hot shooting, but when that flame died out, the Hawks took advantage. Keaton Wallace benefited from good ball movement and got a 3-pointer.

Top of the Keaton 🔑 pic.twitter.com/jilWJVA1Kx

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 30, 2025

Mouhamed Gueye had some nice sequences down the stretch of the third, getting a one-handed dunk in transition and then knocking down a 3-pointer in front of the Nets’ bench. Of course he let them hear about it afterwards.

Let 'em MO 🗣️ pic.twitter.com/FRc4BZD08k

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 30, 2025

Kennard kept his hot shooting going in the game.

Luuuuke pic.twitter.com/gJrrMl3DxP

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 30, 2025

Going into the fourth, the Hawks led 94-83. Wallace found Kristaps Porzingis for a 3-pointer early in the quarter.

KW to KP 🦄 pic.twitter.com/PSjdmWNxeX

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 30, 2025

While Porzingis had knocked down a fair share this season, Johnson knocked down his first one of the season in the fourth.

Jalen knocks down his first three of the season 🎯 pic.twitter.com/LO7G02yK70

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 30, 2025

At the same time, why settle for 3-pointers when you can just dunk on people?

JALEN JOHNSON FIRST POSTER OF THE YEAR pic.twitter.com/TpSoLkykX8

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 30, 2025

Though the Hawks were rolling on offense, the Nets were still able to stick around. That didn’t stop the Hawks from continuing to score, and Johnson and Nickeil Alexander-Walker traded buckets to keep them in the lead.

Nickeil Alexander-Baller pic.twitter.com/7OQjkTuS3T

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 30, 2025

The Nets made it game late in the fourth, and cut their deficit to three points. The Nets had a chance to tie or cut their deficit down to one point, but they missed the attempt, and the Hawks went to the free throw to extend their lead to five points.

The Nets missed another opportunity to score, and the Hawks were able to walk away with the win.

Johnson finished with 23 points, seven rebounds, and five assists, Nickeil Alexander-Walker finished with 18 points, Kennard finished with 17 points, and Okongwu finished with 12 points and 14 rebounds.

The Hawks will be back in action on Friday against the Indiana Pacers.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/recaps/65676/hawks-survive-nets-late-push-win-117-112
 
Hawks find enough playmaking in absence of Young in win over Nets

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The Atlanta Hawks notched their first win of their four-game road-trip with a narrow 117-112 over the Brooklyn Nets at Barclays Center on Wednesday night. Jalen Johnson led the Hawks in scoring with 23 points, Nickeil Alexander-Walker added 18 points. For the Nets, Michael Porter Jr. scored a game-high 32 points, and Cam Thomas added 19 points. Lots to discuss today, so let’s get to it!

The game started poorly for the Hawks, quite poorly in fact, falling behind 12-0 to begin as the Nets started the game well. The Hawks managed to recover from this wobble to begin, and it wasn’t long until they found themselves back in the lead before long behind some good defense.

“From the time we got down early and called timeout, our guys were focused on that end,” said Hawks head coach Quin Snyder of the early Brooklyn run. “Thomas and Michael Porter Jr. are hard to guard. Trying to do some different things with them to break their rhythm. Thought our guys executed and competed on the defensive end.”

However, the Hawks were dealt a major blow in the game after this incident saw Mo Gueye collide into Young’s knee:

Of course, it wasn’t that Gueye ‘fell’ into Young, but was pushed into him by Noah Clowney…and the foul was called on Gueye, somehow. Anyways, Young tried to carry on, walk it off, and play on, but it was soon apparent he could not continue and headed straight to the locker room, where he would not return to the game.

The Hawks listed Young out with a right-knee sprain, but will have to wait to discover the full extent of the injury. The good news, according to Snyder, is that the injury is not believed to be an ACL injury.

“The most important thing is that it’s not his ACL,” said Snyder of Young’s injury. “He’s going to get an MRI tonight or tomorrow and we’ll make a determination from there. Not sure how long or what respect but it’s something he’ll hopefully be back from whenever possible. He didn’t want to come out of the game. He’s such a competitor and takes a lot of pride being available. There’s been a lot of times in the time we’ve been together where he’s banged up and he goes out and plays, and you saw that tonight, too. He tried to stay in there. I told him, he said ‘Just give me a couple of minutes,’ and I said ‘If I don’t like what I see I’m taking you out.‘”

In the absence as to the degree of Young’s injury, the Hawks were left with the task in seeing this game out without their star guard.

So, how did they do it?

The answer was they did it by committee, with everyone chipping in not just with scoring but ball-handling, representing an early and unwanted test as to the ball-handling and creation the Hawks’ front office surrounded Young this offseason.

The Hawks were able to establish a double-digit lead in the second quarter and would lead by as many as 17 points, and one reason for this was the emphasis on attacking in transition and in the open court, with the Hawks at a bit of a disadvantage in half-court creation in Young’s absence (though this was more prevalent in the second half than the first — the Hawks did very well in first half in half-court offense).

After a steal from Luke Kennard, he pushes up the floor and while he effort at the rim is thwarted Kristaps Porzingis is on hand to follow home the second chance:

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After a block from Porzingis, Johnson attacks in transition, bullying his way to the rim and finishing, drawing the foul for the ‘and-1’ opportunity:

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After a Nets miss, Alexander-Walker pushes in transition and while he misses at the rim, Johnson is on hand to follow home the miss:

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While not every opportunity was taken advantage of, it was clear to see a shift of pace when Young was off the floor to attack more in transition, and with Johnson and Zaccharie Risacher the Hawks have the potential to run the floor, while others — like Kennard — can space the floor in transition, too. Part of this was also likely down to the Nets missing quite a number of shots in the second quarter, giving the Hawks an easy chance to fuel some offense. In the end, the Hawks scored 14 fastbreak points in the first half.

They were good in the half-court in the first half, too, but individual players made plays happen for themselves. Kennard was great in the first half, scoring 12 points in the first half (eight of those coming in the second quarter) in what was his best showing in an Atlanta uniform so far.

He reads this play very well, as Porzingis is about to get doubled in the post, Kennard directs a swap with Keaton Wallace, drawing Kennard’s man (former Hawk, Tyrese Martin) toward him and leaving Kennard open for a three off the find from Porzingis:

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Next, Kennard waits for the fly-by from the defender and then steps back behind the line to drain another three-pointer:

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Off the feed from Porzingis (who helped facilitate a team-high seven assists last night), Kennard quickly reads the defense doesn’t step up to meet him, and Kennard rises for the mid-range jumpshot:

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Kennard finished with 17 points on 5-of-8 shooting from the field and 4-of-5 from three, a timely showing for Kennard when the Hawks needed his shooting and his efficiency, and he certainly provided them with that. Kennard would go on to close much of the game as affairs tightened in the fourth quarter, and while he was found out defensively in that time his play overall in this game can only be considered a positive.

“A lot of it is the game revealed himself to him where he had looks, he was spaced, he was aggressive,” said Snyder of Kennard. “That’s something we’ve discussed a lot. People forget sometimes that he’s not just a shooter but we do need him to shoot, because that sets up other parts of his game. Some of it is adjusting to know what this team needs from him. He played very well. If he can knock shots down he’s capable of making plays for other people when he gets in the lane. He’s a really skilled basketball player.”

Elsewhere, Johnson and Porzingis (seven points apiece in the second quarter) were hugely important in the Hawks building a double-digit lead without Young.

We’ve looked at a number of plays they’ve been invovled with, but they made some individual plays, too, including this authoritative drive from the corner from Johnson to take advantage of his matchup to score in the paint:

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This is a play you really like to see. Yes, Johnson should thrive in that kind of matchup, but you still love to see him attack it and look smoothing doing it.

Porzingis also used his advantage, his size, in making a play as he shoots over the defender:

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And, to finish looking at plays from the second quarter, we see Johnson and Porzingis combine to make a play in a pick-and-pop scenario, with Johnson handling the ball and finding Porzingis after being doubled, with Porzingis cashing in on the three:

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The Hawks took a 13 point lead into the locker room at half time, and looked fairly comfortable after that really encouraging second quarter. However, the Hawks lost some control as Johnson picks up three fouls in two minutes to reach four fouls with 9:29 remaining in the third, a long time for Johnson to be pulled from the action, which he was, playing just two minutes in the third.

Similarly, Porzingis also picked up three fouls in the third quarter, limiting him to just four minutes in the third. The Nets, in particular Michael Porter Jr. (who, may as well say it now, hit tough shots all night long — he was fantastic for the Nets last night) hit some shots and brought the Hawks’ lead down to six points within three minutes, leading to a Hawks timeout.

Out of the timeout, the Hawks stabilized and eventually re-established their double-digit lead to 15 points briefly. Behind another three from Kennard to end the third quarter, the Hawks entered the final quarter with an 11-point lead and looked back in control of affairs.

Even with four minutes remaining, behind an Alexander-Walker three, the Hawks still led by 10 points, and a quick reply from Porzingis after a Martin three gave the Hawks 115 points on the board with 3:24 remaining.

A quick look at the final scoreline would tell you the story of how the Hawks managed offensively down the stretch: poorly. They went completely cold, and the absence of Young was very sorely missed in this spot as the Hawks ran out of half court offense — their only points for the remainder of th game were two free throws from Kennard.

The Nets closed in, but only had one chance to tie the game, or reduce the lead to one, as Nic Claxton misses at the rim, and the Hawks — with great difficulty — claim the defensive rebound in the hands of Kennard, who puts the game beyond the reach of the Nets:

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Onyeka Okongwu is a little fortunate here, as Claxton gets a very open look at the basket here but misses. Okongwu does fight for the rebound and it eventually ends off the fingertips of Dyson Daniels to Kennard.

The Hawks survive, but it was clear to see — especially at the end of the game — how Young was missed.

“Any time a player of Trae’s caliber — particularly someone who has the ball and is orchestrating situations on the offensive end, that’s an adjustment that we had to make on the fly,” said Snyder of losing Young. “Whether it was Luke, Nickeil, Dyson, JJ, the key thing when you play that is that everybody has to be willing to play with the pass and try to get advantages that way. It’s something we’ll have to keep working on depending on where Trae is with his health.”

The good news for the Hawks — while the clutch offense wasn’t great — is that they do have the personnel to make plays by committee.

A drive from Alexander-Walker opens up the defense to find Gueye in the corner for a three:

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Keaton Wallace gets his head down and drives, kicking the ball back out to Porzingis for a three:

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We probably won’t mention Wallace again in this piece, so it’s a good time to mention I thought he gave the Hawks good minutes last night in Young’s absence, and the Hawks will need to rely on him in in the event of any future absence for Young. That could have varying results, but last night Wallace played well, dishing out five assists.

Elsewhere across the roster, Daniels gets inside in the half court and finds the cutting Johnson for a dunk:

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There’s a separate discussion that needs to be had surrounding Daniels. Even before Young’s injury, we saw an increase in his ball-handling responsibilities — mostly to start the game where it seemed intentional that Daniels was doing the early handling while Young was more off the ball.

Judging by the Nets’ 12-0 run to start, that strategy didn’t go well last night but it’s more so to point out that Daniels was already doing more ball-handling this game (which is something I commented on perhaps the Hawks needed more of after the Bulls loss). Daniels’ usage percentage was 20% in the first quarter and finished at 15% — for reference, his usage rate against the Bulls was 11%. The ball was in Daniels’ hands a lot more (especially given Young’s injury) and he did a good job facilitating, finishing with six assists. The Hawks already needed more of that while Young was on the floor, but they’ll need it especially more so if Young is out for a period of time.

Offensively, however, it was another difficult night for Daniels as he shot 3-of-10 from the field, scoring just seven points. While Daniels was a little more aggressive on his drives last night, he is still having trouble finishing right now, and he seems incredibly reluctant to shoot from the outside. He has attempted just three three-pointers in five games now, and while he’s not a volume shooter he still averaged 3.1 attempts from three last season — he’s averaging 0.6 threes this year.

Clearly, there’s an injury that he’s surely carrying that’s affecting his willingness to shoot, but we don’t know for sure what that is because it’s not listed on the injury report and no one has seemed to ask about it, but clearly there’s something going on there. Defensively, Daniels is doing what Daniels does: another three steals to go with a block and his usual excellent defense, but offensively something strange is afoot.

Daniels talk aside and going back to the ‘playmaking by committee’ topic, as mentioned earlier the Hawks looked to push the ball more in the absence fo Young, and this will have to be a point of emphasis until he comes back.

After a steal from Alexander-Walker, Daniels pushes in transition, gets inside the paint and finds the trailing Porzingis for the dunk:

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On a drive from the Nets, Gueye digs down with his long arms and comes up with a steal. Kennard picks up the loose ball and finds Daniels, who pushes ahead and finds the streaking Gueye for the dunk:

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After a block from Daniels underneath the rim he grabs the rebound and sets off in transition, finding Kennard, who drives to the rim and kicks the ball out to Johnson on the perimeter. Johnson could shoot at this point, but fires the ball back inside to Okongwu for the dunk:

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Off of a Nets miss, Risacher gets the chance to push in transition, getting to the rim but missing in front of it. Okongwu grabs the offensive rebound and kicks it out to Johnson, who this time does take the three and drains it:

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In the end, the Hawks finished with 18 fastbreak points, 15 second chance points, and 27 points off of turnovers, with the Hawks’ increased tempo in transition proving vital in fuelling easier offense, as the half court offense would eventually stall in the fourth.

It really was playmaking by committee, with Porzingis dishing out seven assists, Daniels six assists, Johnson and Wallace five assists. In fact, every Hawks player other than Risacher (zero) had at least two assists (not counting Young’s one assist before having to leave). Speaking of Risacher, we need to have a conversation about this.

Prior to Young’s injury, Risacher was again struggling to make an impact on the court, and I just don’t believe he works with that starting lineup. He’s the fifth option out there, and outside of spacing the floor or running in transition, the Hawks don’t find him in the half court — he’s just not an offensive option out there and I think he may be better served coming off the bench and finding some offense with the second unit because he is borderline ineffective with that starting group of Young/Daniels/Johnson/Porzingis.

He was able to get some points in transition, but only scored eight points on 2-of-7 shooting, and had zero assists. It’s been a tough start to the season as both he and the Hawks are still trying to figure where he stands amongst all of this talent that has been brought in around him, but right now (well, prior to Young’s injury at least) he’s just not working with that starting lineup.

Looking elsewhere across the roster, Mo Gueye and Okongwu were fantastic last night. Gueye may have only scored nine points but he made some great offensive plays in the second half, and defensively he was active and right where the Hawks needed him. Okongwu continues his great start to the season, scoring 12 points and grabbing 14 rebounds.

It’s early, but if Okongwu continues playing like this I think he will begin to generate some Sixth Man of the Year buzz. In terms of who other players not really yet discussed, Nickeil Alexander-Walker was fantastic, scoring 18 points on 7-of-17 shooting from the field to go with three assists, two steals, and three blocks. While it wasn’t the best night shooting the ball for Alexander-Walker (2-of-8), his drives were so important to the Hawks — they all felt like important baskets when they came. Not to mention his defense…whew, he was impressive to watch. Finally, Jalen Johnson led the way with 23 points — including nine in the fourth quarter — on 10-of-16 shooting from the field; another efficient night’s work from Johnson, who led the charge with Young injured.

All in all, while there was a lot to like about the Hawks’ win last night, I’d be concerned about its replicability given that the opponent was the now 0-5 Brooklyn Nets.

It remains to be seen what the timeline of absence is for Young, and I’d be apprehensive about the Hawks repeating this performance on Sunday against Cleveland, for instance, but they played well last night in Young’s absence and just about held on. That will do, for now. And all of that was before any mention of rebounding, which again, was not great last night as the Nets grabbed 15 offensive rebounds.

The Hawks (2-3) continue their road trip against the Indiana Pacers (0-4), who will be on the first night of a back-to-back.

Until next time!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...ets-quotes-notes-video-analysis-jalen-johnson
 
Porzingis post touches, Jalen Johnson’s finishing and more Hawks topics

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It’s been a frenetic start to the 2025-26 season for the Atlanta Hawks.

Atlanta opened the season with a blowout loss at home against the Toronto Raptors – a performance deemed as “embarrassing” by Trae Young postgame. They bounced back a couple nights later, notching an impressive comeback victory over the Orlando Magic (who have stumbled out of the gates as well with their record sitting at 1-4), then lost their next two games – a 17-point home defeat to the defending champions, Oklahoma City (6-0), and a heartbreaker on the road against a plucky Chicago Bulls team (4-0)*.

*Team records are accurate prior to the five-game Thursday night slate.

On Wednesday night, they got back on track, beating the hapless Brooklyn Nets (0-5) on the road in a game that was a little too close for comfort given the opponent – though they were without Trae Young for the majority of the contest, who exited the game early with a knee injury after a frightening collision with Mouhamed Gueye in the first quarter. Head coach Quin Snyder said postgame that the injury “wasn’t [Young’s] ACL”. The four-time All Star was scheduled to have an MRI yesterday, and there’s no timetable on his return.

With their record standing at 2-3, the Hawks are scoring 1.11 points per possession on offense (a bottom 10 mark) and are conceding 1.18 points-per-possession on defense (also a bottom 10 mark). While these numbers carry little meaning this early on in the season, it is worth noting that the Hawks have already been dealing with injury trouble thus far.

Kristaps Porzingis and Zaccharie Risacher both missed the Orlando game. Jalen Johnson joined them on the injury report against Oklahoma City. All three players have since returned to the lineup, suiting up in the last two games against Chicago and Brooklyn. However now the team will be without Trae Young for a period of time as he recovers from a knee injury.

Injuries were a concern for this team going into the season, and unfortunately the first five games have done nothing to allay those anxieties.

The Hawks will finish out their road trip against Indiana (NBA Cup game) and Cleveland, before returning to Atlanta for a three-game home stand against Orlando, Toronto and Los Angeles (purple and gold).

After five games, here are a few Hawks topics that are top of mind for me on this Halloween Friday.



Porzingis Post Touches

When Atlanta acquired Kristaps Porzingis, they knew they were not only getting one of the league’s premier three-point shooting big men, but also one of the best post scorers in the NBA. Over the past two seasons, Porzingis has scored 1.25 points per post up possession – the no. 1 mark amongst players who averaged at least two post ups per game over this span.

After he logged just one field goal attempt out of the post in the season opener, the Hawks have done a better job of utilizing Porzingis’ size down low in their last two games, and I’d expect possessions like these to become a bigger part of Atlanta’s offense as the team grows more comfortable playing with each other.

While Porzingis can score over stronger, taller defenders, he thrives when mismatched against non-centers, utilizing his enormous 7’2” frame to shoot over the top of them. His first two field goal attempts out of the post this season (both misses) came when he was matched up against Jakob Poetl and Nikola Vucevic.

Since then, the Hawks have done a better job of getting him matched up against smaller players. In the play below from their game against Chicago, Porzingis gets the switch onto Josh Giddey and goes straight to work.

Early in the second quarter, Porzingis is matched up against Okoro at the elbow and the outcome is similar.

In the fourth quarter, Porzingis finds Okoro on him again and he muscles his way through for the score (a more generous referee may have even given him an and-one).

Against Brooklyn, going head to head against our old Hawks pal Terance Mann, Porzingis finds the bottom of the net once again.

Porzingis also flashed his passing ability from these positions against Brooklyn – with three out of his seven assists on the night coming out of the post.

Atlanta will be in need of reliable sources of offense for however long Trae Young is sidelined for. Exploiting Porzingis’ ability to score over smaller defenders is a safe bet to put pressure on defenses.



Jalen Johnson’s Supreme Finishing Ability

News flash: Jalen Johnson is a stud (you heard it here first!), and it’s been great to see him back on the court and up to his usual tricks this season. Appearing in four out of Atlanta’s first five games, Johnson is averaging 20.5 points on 59% true shooting to go along with 7 rebounds, 4.3 assists and 1.5 steals for good measure.

One aspect of Johnson’s offensive game that’s really stood out for me this season is his improved confidence scoring from inside the arc. So far, Johnson is shooting 23-for-30 (76.7%) at the rim*, the third best mark amongst players who have taken at least 30 rim attempts this season (only Giannis and Wemby have been more efficient). He’s also shot 7-for-15 (46.7%) from floater distance**. Now it’s still early, and there’s still plenty of time for these numbers to truly take shape, but even so, Johnson’s short-range finishing has been really impressive thus far.

*Up from 72.2% last season

**Up from 37.2% last season

Always a menace in transition, his grab-and-go game has been a positive this season.

He’s also done a good job using his physicality in the half-court.

A dangerous roll man, he’s thrived in these situations as well.

Two of Jalen Johnson roll-man finishes vs Chicago 10.27 pic.twitter.com/I5HUQaEABn

— Hassan Ladiwala (@ladiwala_hassan) October 30, 2025

It hasn’t all been rosy for Johnson. His defense needs to be better. He’s also shot just 1-for-8 from three-point distance. Still, it’s great to see the shoulder injury Johnson suffered last season hasn’t negatively impacted his finishing ability. It will be interesting to see if he can sustain his efficiency from the interior as the season goes on.



Who Steps Up With Young Sidelined?

The Hawks have yet to release an update on the knee injury Trae Young suffered against the Brooklyn Nets on Wednesday night, though based on how it looked, I’d be surprised to see Young suit up in tonight’s contest against the Indiana Pacers. Regardless of how long Young is sidelined for, Atlanta is going to need everyone on the roster to step up on offense in his absence.

Through five games, the Hawks have a 116.2 offensive rating with Young on the court relative to an ugly 106 offensive rating with him on the bench. His importance on offense is undeniable – as it has been throughout his entire career. So where can Atlanta turn with their star point guard on the sidelines*?

*Anywhere but Ben Simmons is one correct answer, but we’ll carry on

I’d expect Nickeil Alexander-Walker to replace Young in the starting lineup, and for Atlanta to use a committee of ‘NAW’, Dyson Daniels and Jalen Johnson to shoulder the ball handling duties in the starting unit. All three players can be a little turnover prone but are all good passers capable of initiating the offense.

We also do seem set for an increased dose of Keaton Wallace going forward. Wallace is a second-year pro who has had some nice moments in his brief NBA career. He’s averaged around 10 minutes per game this season and has played in all five of Atlanta’s games – primarily serving as the second-unit point guard when Young is on the bench.

I like Wallace as a player — he generally makes good decisions and will always give 100% effort. He is also a favorite of Quin Snyder. However, given that his skill set leans more towards the defensive end than the offensive end, I’d be surprised if we see him out there for more than 20 minutes a night with Young out (and even that could be pushing it).

Fan favorite, Vit Krejci, is a player who could be called upon to help buoy the offense in Young’s stead – and is my preferred candidate (over Keaton) for increased minutes. The 6’8” Czechia native has made just two appearances this season, but he is a serviceable ball handler and a wildly understated passer who shoots 40+% from three (43.1% since the 2023-24 season). Krejci is more than capable of giving Atlanta’s offense a lift if he is called upon.

Another candidate for increased ball handling duties is Luke Kennard. Kennard has averaged just over 24 minutes of action a night this season and finally got going as a scorer against Brooklyn – pouring in 17 points on 5-for-8 shooting (4-for-5 from three), but he is also a fine ball handler who has averaged 3.5 assists per 36 minutes for his career. While I’d prefer for the Hawks to keep Kennard in his current role as a secondary ball-handler (I like the scoring punch he brings in an off-ball role), I wouldn’t be surprised to see him bringing the ball up some more with Young on the sidelines.

These are all internal solutions for a reason, and I don’t expect Atlanta to peruse the free agent scrapheap* for guards unless Young’s injury turns out to be serious.

*Names like Cam Payne, Markelle Fultz and Dennis Smith Jr. come to mind.



End of Quarter Heaves (metaphorically)

It’s early so the following numbers should be taken with a grain of salt, but here are a few more stats that caught my eye I wanted to share…

  • Atlanta’s starting lineup of Trae Young, Dyson Daniels, Zaccharie Risacher, Jalen Johnson and Kristaps Porzingis have played at a ferocious pace of 118.7 in their 24 minutes on the court together – the fastest pace of any five-man lineup this season (min. 15 minutes played)
  • The Hawks defense has not been great to start the year. In particular they’ve struggled to contain their opponents on the offensive glass and on the interior, allowing the third most second-chance points per game and the second most points in the paint per game this season.
  • The Hawks rank in the bottom five in both offensive and defensive rebounding percentage.
  • Atlanta ranks just 21st in three-point attempt rate this season, but the breakdown of their three-point shots has been interesting. They rank third in corner three frequency (the second-most efficient shot in basketball after a layup), taking 11.4 attempts per game. They also rank 28th in above-the-break three frequency, taking 22.4 attempts per game. Clearly, the Hawks are making an effort to generate corner threes and eschew (relatively) above-the-break threes. My guess is this has something to do with the transition defense, but nonetheless, I’m curious to see if this trend continues.
  • Dyson Daniels and Jalen Johnson have played in all but one game this season (Johnson missed the Oklahoma City game), yet the pair have combined to knock down just two three-pointers in five games and are shooting a combined 2-for-11 (18%) from deep. Long term, this number has to improve.
  • Atlanta’s 12.3% turnover percentage is a significant improvement from last season, and is a mark which ranks second in the league at this early stage of the season. Can they maintain this with Young sidelined? We will find out.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...a-hawks-topics-video-stats-breakdown-analysis
 
Hawks dominate 3rd quarter, defeat Pacers 128-108

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The Atlanta Hawks were in Indiana on Friday evening to face the Pacers in their first game of the NBA Cup this evening. With Trae Young ruled out, the Hawks were looking to get another win on their road trip as it’s near its end. That meant that players would have to step up, similar to how they did against the Brooklyn Nets on Wednesday.

As for the Pacers, the injury bug has hit them hard to start the season, and outside of Tyrese Haliburton being out, Andrew Nembhard, Benedict Mathurin, TJ McConnell, Obi Toppin, and Kam Jones were also out for the game.

Jalen Johnson is one of those players, and he made his presence felt early, scoring four early points for the Hawks.

Couple lefty lay-ins for JJ early on 🫲 pic.twitter.com/jaKLG79VXh

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 31, 2025

The Hawks couldn’t get much going on offense throughout the first, and they led them to go down as much as 12 points. After a while, the Hawks started to get into a rhythm and cut down their double-digit deficit. Johnson connected with Nickeil Alexander-Walker for this 3-pointer.

Jalen grabs a steal and whips & pass to Nickeil for 3 in transition 🎯 pic.twitter.com/IjhlOnMxJS

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 31, 2025

Keaton Wallace and Luke Kennard knocked down some 3-pointers in the first, courtesy of each other.

Last one was Kennard to Keaton

This was was Keaton to Kennard 💦 pic.twitter.com/ahyfTD6pXX

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 31, 2025

The Hawks turned defense into offense, continuing to cut down their deficit. Onyeka Okongwu was big down the stretch, getting a block and then knocking down two 3-pointers. To end the first quarter, the Hawks led 32-29.

Big O with an even bigger block 😳

Then knocks down the 3 on the other end pic.twitter.com/QwDxdTB6dO

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 31, 2025

Dyson Daniels was on the attack in the first half, and had a nice few drives to the basket that he was able to convert.

Slicin' & Dyson pic.twitter.com/AWqJxGVdSO

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) October 31, 2025

Alexander-Walker got a couple of buckets to go in the second quarter, keeping the Hawks afloat.

NAW with the tough tear drop 💧 pic.twitter.com/cnyerXzp61

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 1, 2025

The Hawks kept pushing the pace which led to easy buckets, like this one from Daniels to Johnson.

Dyson hit JJ on the go route 🏈 pic.twitter.com/K3LzFOc9sW

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 1, 2025

If anybody has watched the Pacers in the calendar year, you know that it’s hard to put them away. They continued to stay in the fight despite being short-handed, and they went back and forth with the Hawks. The one area where the Hawks showed their weakness was on the boards, and the Pacers were able to create multiple opportunities because of it.

The Hawks made sure to make up for it on the other end, and Kristaps Porzingis got his first 3-pointer of the game to go in.

KP's makes from 3 have that oddly satisfying feel 🙂↕️ pic.twitter.com/rLl57rPSmu

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 1, 2025

Daniels and Alexander-Walker took turns guarding Siakam, and they did everything they could to contain the Pacers’ main threat. They were successful at times, and on this specific possession, they got him to cough up the ball for an easy two on the other end.

Dyson & Nickeil at the point of attack are MENACES 🔒🔒 pic.twitter.com/B4dF0u4WGa

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 1, 2025

Going into the halftime, the Hawks led the Pacers 63-59.

The Hawks came out on a mission in the second half, and it was to outrun the Pacers as much as they could. It worked, and the Hawks started to extend their lead.

Jalen two-hand DIME

Zacch two-hand SLAM pic.twitter.com/0Mz5d2zFQj

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 1, 2025

Alexander-Walker went coast to coast and punched in the dunk of the game to continue to extend the Hawks’ lead.

NICKEIL ALEXANDER DUNKER pic.twitter.com/3nGmmCScyp

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 1, 2025

It was a 20-point lead for the Hawks midway through the third, and they continued to try and create distance with them and the Pacers. Wallace had a nice sequence in the corner on both sides of the ball, making the most of his time on the court.

Keaton just went:
Steal
Three
Driving layup pic.twitter.com/gmJ5oQ19Pz

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 1, 2025

Zaccharie Risacher got a few shots to go in toward the end of the quarter, and the Hawks went into the fourth leading 97-76. Risacher kept it going to the start the fourth, and knocked down another 3-pointer to extend the Hawks’ lead.

Zacch is COOKING in the second half 🥘🍳

He has 13 PTS since the break pic.twitter.com/ik3h2lSSnS

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 1, 2025

The Pacers slowly started to get some shots to fall and cut their deficit down a little, but the Hawks answered back.

Dyson getting to the bucket like there's candy in it 🍬🍫 pic.twitter.com/DuwoFzUadh

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 1, 2025

From there, the Hawks controlled the game, and with the NBA Cup games being big on point differential, most of the key guys stayed in late into the fourth.

Johnson finished with 22 points, 13 rebounds, and eight assists, Alexander-Walker finished with 21 points, Daniels finished with 18 points, nine rebounds, and six assists, and Okongwu finished with 14 points, nine rebounds, and two assists.

The Hawks will be back in action on Sunday against the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/recaps/65767/hawks-dominate-3rd-quarter-defeat-pacers
 
Third quarter run powers Atlanta past Indiana

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The Atlanta Hawks defeated the Indiana Pacers in their first game of the NBA Cup on Friday night, bringing their regular season record to an even 3-3 as the calendar flips to November.

Jalen Johnson led the way for Atlanta with 22 points (9-for-16 shooting, 0-for-3 from three), 13 rebounds, and eight assists. Nickeil Alexander-Walker chipped in 21 points (8-for-14 shooting, 1-for-5 from three), three assists and two steals. Dyson Daniels turned in his best game of the season, finishing with 18 points (8-for-13 shooting), nine rebounds, six assists and three steals.

Kristaps Porzingis added 15 points (6-for-12 shooting, 1-for-3 from three) and eight rebounds. Onyeka Okongwu finished with 14 points (5-for-8 shooting, 2-for-4 from three), nine rebounds and two assists. Pascal Siakam led the Pacers in scoring with 18 points (5-for-15 shooting, 2-for-6 from three).

The Hawks were without Trae Young for this one – who underwent an MRI yesterday for the knee injury he suffered against Brooklyn. Meanwhile Indiana were down more than a few key players, with Obi Toppin, Bennedict Mathurin, Johnny Furphy, Andrew Nembhard, Kam Jones and TJ McConnell all joining Tyrese Haliburton on the injury report.

Game 6/82 Hawks @ Pacers starters pic.twitter.com/fiSjjXsMQR

— Lauren L. Williams (@WilliamsLaurenL) October 31, 2025

For the second consecutive game the Hawks found themselves in a 12-point hole early on*, allowing Indiana to race out to an 18-6 lead within the first five minutes. Looking to his bench for reinforcements, Quin Snyder inserted Mo Gueye, Onyeka Okongwu and Luke Kennard for the rest of the quarter, and the substitutes certainly did their part in helping Atlanta get back on track. The Hawks closed the quarter on a 26-11 run, walling off the rim on defense and catching fire on offense. Atlanta hit four threes during this stretch, courtesy of Okongwu (2), Alexander-Walker (1) and Keaton Wallace (1)**.

*They also went down 12-0 in the first three minutes of Wednesday’s game against Brooklyn

**Who dished out six assists in 8 first-half minutes. I see you Keaton.

The two sides essentially played each other even in the second quarter and the Hawks took a 63-59 lead into the halftime break.

While Atlanta shot the ball much better than Indiana did in the first half (62% true shooting vs. 50% true shooting for Indiana), one problem area for them was the offensive glass. Indiana nabbed 12 offensive rebounds (43% offensive rebounding percentage!) in the first two quarters, which they turned into 10 second-chance points. The Hawks also struggled to stay disciplined on defense and had a hard time keeping Indiana off the free throw line, gifting the Pacers 23 first half free throw attempts (they shot 16-for-23) which helped keep them in the game.

Both of these areas were a clear point of emphasis for Atlanta coming out of halftime, as they allowed Indiana just one offensive rebound and four free throw attempts in the third quarter – which Atlanta won 34-17, to put the game out of reach.

Said Quin Snyder after the game:

“The first half was good apart from the first few minutes, but we didn’t defensive rebound, we couldn’t close possessions. Then in the second half we started getting stops and then securing the ball and I think that’s why we had a big third quarter and opened up the game.”

The defining stretch of this game came in the first six minutes of the second half, where Atlanta went on a 22-5 run to blow the game open. Let’s take a look at a few key plays from this third quarter run.

After a Porzingis putback to open the scoring, the Hawks push the pace off of a Nesmith miss and find the big man again for an early shot clock post score over Isaiah Jackson. Opportunities like this in transition have been rare for Porzingis this season (likely due to the pace the Hawks play at), but it was good to see him capitalize here.

On the following defensive possession, Zaccharie Risacher does a good job navigating his way around the off-ball stagger screens from Indiana and forces another miss from Nesmith.

A couple possessions later, the Hawks burn Indiana in transition again, this time off a Siakam miss. Jalen Johnson pulls off a gorgeous bounce pass to unleash Risacher for a slam to put Atlanta up by 10. A little béarnaise on that dunk from Risacher — I like it!

After Siakam and Alexander-Walker trade misses, Porzingis does a good job walling off Jarace Walker’s drive and Atlanta steps on the gas pedal once again as Alexander-Walker finds Risacher in the corner for an early shot clock triple.

After spending most of the first half in the doghouse with foul trouble, Risacher bounced back really nicely in the third quarter, scoring 10 points on 4-for-5 shooting (2-for-3 from distance) while playing solid defense on the other end.

Quin Snyder was complimentary of Risacher after the game, and preached patience and nuance when it comes to evaluating the second-year pro:

“I feel like people evaluate Zacch every game. Someone’s asking he got two points, why didn’t he get ‘x’ points and that’s just not the right way to look at his game – particularly for a 20-year-old. If he were to react to that and start pressing, I think it would be harder for him but he’s unfazed. And you saw what he came out and did in the 3rd quarter which was big for our team. The biggest thing is if he’ll defend, because he can defend multiple guys, that lets him immerse himself in the game and then the offense will come.”

After a RayJ Dennis layup (thanks to a blown switch from Alexander-Walker and Jalen Johnson), the Hawks go to Porzingis again for an interior score (plus the foul) to extend the lead to 14.

Jarace Walker knocked down a three on Indiana’s next possession, but the Hawks come right back and attack the interior – a major theme from this run. This time it’s Alexander-Walker’s turn to finish from close range (shooting 12-for-17 (71%) at the rim so far this season).

On Indiana’s next possession, Siakam misses a 9-foot turnaround over Risacher (the dig from Daniels here forces Siakam to reroute his path to the basket).

The Hawks come back down and earn free throws off of a Jalen Johnson drive.

After a missed three from Ben Sheppard the Hawks push the pace and attack (any guesses?) the interior, as Nickeil Alexander-Walker throws down a vicious slam over Jarace Walker to put Atlanta up by 17.

More good defense from Atlanta forces an interior miss from Ben Sheppard on the other end – and it’s telling that Indiana shot just 1-for-8 in the paint in the third quarter.

After more free throws by Jalen Johnson and consecutive misses from the Pacers, Mo Gueye caps off the run with a tough bucket over Jay Huff. Timeout Indiana. Hawks lead by 21.

Atlanta didn’t extend the lead over the final five minutes of the quarter but the damage had been done, and the 21-point lead they took into the fourth quarter proved to be unassailable. They kept the Pacers at arms length the rest of the way and when the dust settled, the Hawks claimed a conclusive 128-108 victory.

There was a spot of drama after the final buzzer sounded as Indiana’s coaching staff seemed to take issue with Keaton Wallace looking to score on Atlanta’s final possession of the game.

🎵 𝘐𝘵'𝘴 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘮𝘰𝘴𝘵 𝘸𝘰𝘯𝘥𝘦𝘳𝘧𝘶𝘭 𝘵𝘪𝘮𝘦 𝘰𝘧 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘺𝘦𝘢𝘳… 🎵

(… if you like the confusion surrounding players trying to score on the last possession in an event where scoring differential is quite relevant.) pic.twitter.com/6UbsqYV0dN

— Kevin Chouinard (@KLChouinard) November 1, 2025

For me, this is much ado about nothing. First of all, it looked like Wallace was ready to dribble out the clock, however the ball pressure from Mac McClung made it difficult for him to do so after he crossed half-court. Not wanting to add an unnecessary turnover to his final numbers, Wallace opted for a more aggressive face up strategy.

Second, every point matters in the NBA Cup, so in the spirit of competition, Wallace was well within his rights to do his best to score and raise Atlanta’s points total, as this number could be important in a tiebreaker down the line.

Third, Wallace didn’t even shoot the ball so what are we even doing here? For what it’s worth, Quin Snyder was apologetic in his postgame interview, though this incident struck me as unprofessional from Rick Carlisle*.

*To be fair, I’d be grumpy too if I had to give Mac McClung 19:00 of playing time in an NBA basketball game.

In terms of takeaways from this contest, while it was a good performance in their first game of the season without Trae Young, it has to be said that this was a very banged up Pacers side. While Atlanta were only slightly favored entering the contest (-2.5 point favorites), based on the talent disparity between the two teams, a comfortable win should have been expected.

Still, a few things that stood out to me were:

  • Mo Gueye continued his reign of terror on the defensive end of the floor, with Atlanta allowing just 0.89 points per possession in his 16:00 of action against Indiana. For the season, the Hawks are allowing 1.02 points per possession with Gueye on the floor – the best mark on the team amongst players who have logged at least 30 total minutes this season.
  • Dyson Daniels offensive production will be under the microscope with Trae Young out and it was encouraging to see him looking aggressive on that end last night after a rough start to the season. Daniels finished with 18 points, 6 assists and 1 turnover against Indiana. Entering the game, he had shot just 10-for-32 (31.3%) from two-point range. Against Indiana, he shot 8-for-13 (61.5%) from inside the arc. Hopefully a sign of things to come.
  • Atlanta locked in on the defensive glass in the second half, however rebounding still projects to be an issue for this team going forwards. Entering the contest, Atlanta ranked in the bottom-five in both offensive and defensive rebounding percentage. They also ranked second to last in second-chance points conceded. I’m curious to see how they go about addressing this problem going forwards.
  • While the defensive glass was a problem, this was still a dominant paint performance from Atlanta. The Hawks outscored Indiana 74-38 in points in the paint, and they now rank second in the NBA in paint-points per game. Last night, they took 45% of their field goal attempts at the rim – their highest rim frequency in any game this season.
  • Despite Trae Young’s absence, the Hawks did a good job taking care of the ball last night, only turning the ball over 10 times. The Hawks rank second in turnover percentage on the season, and it will be interesting to see if they can sustain this ranking with Young on the sidelines.

All in all, this was a comfortable victory for Atlanta and an encouraging first step as they navigate their next few games (at least) without Trae Young. The Hawks are back in action on Sunday at 6 PM, taking on the Cleveland Cavaliers (3-3) on the road.

Until then!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...s-nba-cup-jalen-johnson-quotes-video-analysis
 
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