Hawks lose control in 4th quarter, lose to Spurs 135-126

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The Atlanta Hawks were in San Antonio on Thursday night to face the Spurs. Coming off a loss against the Detroit Pistons at home, the Hawks were back on the road for two games, and luckily enough, they were able to get Kristaps Porzingis and Zaccharie Risacher back. On the other hand, the Spurs were missing some of their key players, as Victor Wembanyama, Stephon Castle, and Dylan Harper were out with injuries.

The Hawks let the three-ball fly early against the Spurs, and Porzingis got one to go to give him 10,000 career points. It was a back-and-forth game throughout the quarter, and the Hawks used ball movement like always to stay afloat. Jalen Johnson found Onyeka Okongwu cutting to the basket for an easy dunk.

That's far too easy for JJ & OO pic.twitter.com/SU9TMkxgb8

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

Minutes later, Okongwu knocked down a three-pointer, something he’s been doing at a high rate this season.

Big O buries one from the top 🔑 pic.twitter.com/IkYQlgR8Cp

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

The three-pointers didn’t stop there, as Vit Krejci and Luke Kennard got back-to-back shots to extend the Hawks’ lead toward the end of the first. Going into the second, the Hawks led 34-28.

Vit back in the kitchen with another triple pic.twitter.com/FHPJhmRNIN

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

The defense was strong to start the second, and Porzingis got an easy block off the backboard.

KP protecting the house and scoring against the mouse in the house pic.twitter.com/fa3TIS8Sii

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

Though the defense was strong at the moment, as the quarter continued, it started to decline as the Spurs took the lead and Keldon Johnson began knocking down several three-pointers. The Hawks stayed in a drought for some time, and the Spurs extended their lead.

Nickeil Alexander-Walker did his best to keep the Hawks alive with his three-point shooting.

Needed this Nickeil three pic.twitter.com/czxmX2cEQP

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

Johnson showed off his footwork for this easy score in the paint.

Excellent footwork JJ pic.twitter.com/aKvQzIyCmd

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

After a rough shooting half, Zaccharie Risacher got an easy dunk to go from a pass from Johnson.

Oh man beautiful find from Jalen to a Zacch jam 🤩 pic.twitter.com/bl42OhFgaU

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

Though the Hawks continued to stack points, they couldn’t get stops on the other end, which hurt them the most. Toward the end of the first half, the Hawks were able to cut down their deficit as much as 13 points, but they went into halftime down 74-60.

The Hawks came out fighting in the third quarter, despite being down double digits. Alexander-Walker kept the three-pointers going, and he helped the Hawks cut their deficit down to single digits.

Nickeil is SIZZLING

6 threes tonight & 3-3 in the quarter pic.twitter.com/aBVVRKF3eA

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

The Spurs left Johnson for a moment on this possession, and he took advantage of it by driving to the lane and getting Porzingis a lob.

JJ found himself all alone 😅

Easy lob to KP ✅ pic.twitter.com/fUZLxoniCm

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

The Hawks kept at it, as they continued to knock down shots and get stops on the other end. Kennard was wide open for a two-pointer to cut the Hawks deficit to two.

Luke from the elbow that is pretty pic.twitter.com/d5yEscJvsS

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

Keaton Wallace hit back-to-back three-pointers to tie the game late in the third.

Two BIG Keaton triples in his college stomping grounds pic.twitter.com/7xY68GqqBj

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

The Hawks went into the fourth down 95-92, and they kept the hot shooting going. Of course, Okongwu was a part of that hot shooting.

ONY333KA pic.twitter.com/qJTMRuaHyw

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

The Hawks eventually took the lead after Alexander-Walker drove to the lane for a layup, but the Spurs got it back after a three-pointer from Devin Vassell. The Hawks missed some shots and had some turnovers from there, and the Spurs capitalized, extending their lead.

Dyson Daniels tried to stop the bleeding for the Hawks, and got a tough layup to go.

Needed this bucket from Dys pic.twitter.com/HKv7FcSHhw

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

Alexander-Walker kept fighting to the end and eclipsed the 30-point mark.

30 ball for NAW 🔥 pic.twitter.com/FiXoDEy8pp

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 21, 2025

There was still enough time for the Hawks to make one more run, but the turnovers continued to pile up and they couldn’t get stops on the other end. In the end, the Spurs walked away with the win.

Alexander-Walker finished with 38 points, Johnson finished with 26 points, 12 rebounds, and seven assists, and Porzingis finished with 16 points.

The Hawks will be back in action on Saturday to face the New Orleans Pelicans.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/recaps/66358/hawks-lose-control-in-4th-quarter-lose-to-spurs-135-126
 
Hawks at Spurs: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Atlanta Hawks (9-6) travel to San Antonio to try to start another winning streak.

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: 8:00 PM EDT

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...urs-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
The Hawks need mo’ Gueye

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A lot has happened in just 16 games.

In just the fifth game, Trae Young going down due to a freak collision into his knee turned the entire season on its head.

In order to tread water, the Hawks have leaned on Dyson Daniels and Nickeil Alexander-Walker in the backcourt and turned to Jalen Johnson to shoulder the load on offense. The latter two have broken out on offense in his stead, but there’s also been a defensive renaissance — until this week — that had the Hawks flying high at 9-5 at one point.

For a reminder of the recovery timeline, on November 1 the Hawks released a statement saying in part Young, “underwent an MRI on Friday [October 31].” That MRI revealed a right knee MCL sprain but no additional structural damage. He would then be re-evaluated in four weeks’ time as he rehabilitates the knee. So best case scenario, there’s a pathway for him to ramp up late this month, but his actual return could take longer.

It’s not surprising that the halfcourt offense has suffered in the wake of losing Young. Per the NBA’s tracking powered by Synergy, the 22.3% of the Hawks’ offensive possessions are transition — fourth in the league — and they log a 117 offensive rating from these possessions. For the remaining 77.7% of halfcourt possessions, their offensive rating is 114.7.

Since that fateful day in Brooklyn, Atlanta’s plan of attack has been to grab and go whenever possible. Jalen Johnson is often seen leading the break after securing a defensive rebound or forcing a turnover, and they’ve done major damage in those situations.

But lately, it’s been hard to generate those stops or live ball takeaways. In their past four games, they’ve surrendered a 121.3 defensive rating (per basketball-reference) and have only forced five steals per contest over that span. Compare that to a 111.3 defensive rating and 9.5 steals per game in all games prior to this stretch.

It’s clear the Hawks could use an injection of something — or someone — to recharge the defense and turn that defense into easier offense for the Hawks down their star point guard.

Third-year player Mouhamed Gueye has been a nice story since being drafted in the second round out of Washington State. He has worked his way past some nasty back injuries to contribute to the squad in big moments. And while he flashes some ability to stretch the floor and rim run, his defense is the real area where he’s been able to turn heads.

As Hassan wrote for us last week, his rim protection ranks among the NBA’s upper echelon. Gueye holds opponents shooting inside the restricted area to -15.7 percentage points fewer than they normally shoot there (i.e. from shooting 68.4% normally to 52.6% when defended by Gueye). That figure ranks second on the team behind Kristaps Porzingis, excluding the low minutes of N’Faly Dante.

Gueye is also contributing 1.8 blocks per 100 possessions and 1.1 steals per 100 possessions, things that can lead to runouts for easy points. His ability to play the 4 or the 5 in a variety of different positions is also valuable in an ever-changing NBA when playing two or even three big men in the same frontcourt is en vogue.

Defense takes a commitment from all five players on the floor to do their jobs, of course. It’s rare that one player can prop up a bad foundation. But it’s becoming more and more obvious that Gueye is someone that can more than merely contribute to a unit that desires to finish with a top-half defensive rating for the first time since 2016-17. He could raise the defensive ceiling.

The Hawks have tried to form an identity as a long, harassing, switchable defense, doubling down minus their 6’1”, offensively slanted guard. Gueye, who stands in at 6’11” with a 7’3” wingspan, would seem to fit this vision. He can set the tone, deny and deter easy shots near the rim, and even switch out to perimeter players and hold his own

But to date, he’s only played 256 minutes total — 16 minutes per game — despite being available for every contest. And this is despite starting center Kristaps Porzingis missing six out of 16 possible games due to injury or rest.

Yes, the Hawks have more than treaded water at 9-7. But after a strong start culminating in a strong 4-0 Western Conference road trip, bad habits plagued the team as they sought to break through from good to great.

Against a bruising Detroit Pistons squad on Tuesday, the Hawks could not find a way to corral Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart, two brawny big men who had their way in the paint. They lost the points in the paint battle 66-50 as part of a 122-110 loss.

Mouhamed Gueye, however, was able to flash some fortitude against the center duo:

View Link

Then on Thursday, Gueye was reduced to just four minutes of playing time with Kristaps Porzingis returning to the lineup. The Hawks proceeded to give up 135 points to a shorthanded Spurs in a completely lackadaisical defensive performance.

Gueye got his in his four minutes, though:

View Link

“Well, he’s playing behind Jalen Johnson who’s a pretty good player,” head coach Quin Snyder had to say after the Pistons game when asked about Gueye’s minutes down the stretch. “He was the Player of the Week last week. And that takes nothing away from Mo. The other guy that’s out there, Onyeka, has played really well for us.”

Even if Gueye is fourth on the big man pecking order, there is an opportunity to open up more minutes for him. It’s clear Jalen Johnson has struggled defensively to begin the season (although he’s more than made up for it on the offensive end). Pushing Johnson to the 3 on occasion can simplify his defensive responsibilities and allow Gueye to patrol the backline.

Yes, Gueye has limitations on offense, but he’s certainly not alone among rotation players in that regard. Yes, Gueye is young and inexperienced, but this the third youngest team in the league and there’s only one way to get the requisite playing experience.

It’s time for the Hawks to put aside the idea of being a great halfcourt offensive team until the return of Young and embrace grinding out games. That takes defending with tenacity, limiting teams to one or fewer shots a possession, and getting out in the open court. Mo Gueye with his 12 rebounds and 2.9 stocks (steals plus blocks) per 100 possessions can be a real asset toward these ends.

After a listless two, well really four, games on defense, the Hawks need a kick in the rear. They need a wakeup call to recommit to the less glamourous side of the floor.

It’s as plain as day: the Atlanta Hawks need mo’ Gueye.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...e-nba-video-analysis-breakdown-advanced-stats
 
Porziņģis leads Hawks past Pelicans in 115–98 victory

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The Atlanta Hawks and the New Orleans Pelicans met tonight in a matchup that placed two teams at different stages of their early-season rhythm on the same stage, each looking to make a statement. For Atlanta, the game served as an opportunity to extend momentum and continue refining the chemistry within their dynamic backcourt. For New Orleans, it offered a chance to stabilize at home and break out of recent inconsistency.

The Atlanta Hawks defeated the New Orleans Pelicans, 115–98, marking the first time this season Atlanta has held an opponent under 100 points.

The Hawks were led by a standout performance from Kristaps Porziņģis, who recorded 29 points and seven rebounds on an efficient 11-of-17 shooting night. His blend of size, mobility, and perimeter skill consistently challenged the Pelicans’ defense. Whether spacing the floor or finishing inside, Porziņģis anchored Atlanta’s most decisive runs.

Jalen Johnson nearly posted a triple-double, contributing 18 points, 11 rebounds, and nine assists. Off the bench, Vit Krejci added 21 points, providing valuable scoring depth.

The opening quarter belonged to New Orleans, which jumped ahead 25–21 through assertive rebounding and early-paced offense. However, the momentum shifted quickly. Atlanta responded with a dominant 35–21 second quarter, transforming the tone of the matchup. Increased defensive pressure, improved ball movement, and efficient transition play allowed the Hawks to convert Pelicans turnovers into scoring opportunities.

That surge extended into the third quarter, where Atlanta outscored New Orleans 32–24, effectively putting the game out of reach. Despite a slow start, the Hawks’ explosive middle quarters buried the Pelicans. Atlanta continued to execute in the fourth, adding 27 more points to seal the win.

Overall, the Hawks shot 46% from the field and 37% from three-point range, demonstrating consistent offensive discipline. Their ability to control tempo, value possessions, and maintain defensive engagement prevented New Orleans from generating any late-game momentum.

The Pelicans struggled throughout, particularly in the third quarter, and were notably without Zion Williamson and Dejounte Murray due to injury. Their 18 turnovers proved costly, especially compared to Atlanta’s season-low mark of seven. While New Orleans outrebounded Atlanta 48–42, the advantage did little to compensate for their inefficiency and inability to protect the ball.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/reca...anta-pelicans-recap-latest-news-jalen-johnson
 
Big win in the Big Easy, Hawks cruise to victory over Pelicans

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The Atlanta Hawks were back in action on Saturday night, taking on the sputtering New Orleans Pelicans (losers of eight straight entering last night’s contest) on the road with an opportunity to not only improve their regular season record, but their draft position as well*.

*Reminder, Atlanta has control over New Orleans 2026 first-round draft pick

The Hawks were without Trae Young (MCL sprain), Keaton Wallace (personal reasons) and Onyeka Okongwu – who sat this one out due to left ankle inflammation. Dejounte Murray (torn achilles), Jordan Poole (quadricep strain), Zion Williamson (left hamstring strain), Herb Jones (back spasms), and Karlo Matkovic (right calf strain) were all out for New Orleans.

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Atlanta shook off some cold first quarter shooting to come away with a comfortable 115-98 victory. Kristaps Porzingis poured in a season-high 29 points on 17 shots, schooling whoever the Pelicans tried guarding him with (though rookie forward Micah Peavy took the brunt of the damage*). Jalen Johnson finished one assist shy of a triple-double with 18 points, 11 rebounds and nine assists.

*More on this below

Vit Krejci, aka ‘Pistol Vit’, kept up his red-hot shooting streak* – going for 21 points on 7-for-10 shooting from beyond the arc. Dyson Daniels guarded Pelicans first-round pick Derik Queen for the majority of the contest, and finished with 14 points, eight rebounds and four assists against his former team.

*More on Vit below!

Queen finished with 20 points, nine rebounds and three assists for New Orleans. Former Hawk Saddiq Bey added 18 points, 11 rebounds and five assists.


Summary


A sloppy first quarter on both ends of the floor saw Atlanta trailing 25-21 after the first 12 minutes, and New Orleans led by seven early in the second quarter before Jalen Johnson took over.

A three from Jose Alvarado put the Pelicans up 32-25 with 9:21 left in the period, then Johnson scored or assisted on 16 of Atlanta’s next 23 points as part of a 27-8 run over the next eight minutes to put them in the driver’s seat the rest of the way.

Let’s take a closer look at this stretch from Johnson.

After a jumper by Porzingis got the party started, Johnson cans a corner three off the drive and dish from Luke Kennard. Poor defense from New Orleans here as nobody closes out to the corner shooter until it’s too late.

On the next possession, Johnson meets Jordan Hawkins at the rim for a denial, then takes it coast to coast for a two-handed jam*. A quintessential Jalen Johnson play.

*Question: Are we going to see Johnson pull out an in-game free throw line slam at some point? The hangtime on this slam was pretty nuts.

JALEN JOHNSON HELLO pic.twitter.com/iD7te7HKpi

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 23, 2025

A few possessions later, Atlanta comes up with a stop then Johnson takes it the other way and draws a shooting foul on Queen in transition. He sinks both free throws – giving him nine straight points for the Hawks, getting them back in the ball game.

After a bucket from Queen, both teams trade misses before Johnson completes an outrageous full court pass to Risacher, who (all in one motion) catches it and throws a lob to Porzingis who hammers home the slam to complete the highlight. A lovely play, all started by Johnson’s hit-ahead pass.

Full-court BEAUTY 🤩 pic.twitter.com/ONh8lupAnf

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 23, 2025

Queen turns the ball over on the Pelicans next possession and subsequently commits a transition take-foul. Then, on the next play, Johnson finds ‘KP’ in the corner for a practice three to put the Hawks up six. Nice job from Alexander-Walker to flip the screen, Johnson beats Fears, engages the help defender, then kicks it to Porzingis.

A few plays later, with the margin still at six, Johnson completes another highlight play in transition – this time finding Porzingis himself for an alley-oop.

JJ no-look lob to KP 😳 pic.twitter.com/GDQTXL2rmc

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 23, 2025

After a miss from New Orleans, Johnson comes down, gets the switch onto Queen, drawing him out of the paint while Porzingis posts up on rookie guard Jeremiah Fears. Johnson sees this all the way, dumps the ball down to ‘KP’ in the post and Fears can’t do anything but foul the big man, resulting in free throws for Atlanta (New Orleans is in the bonus).

Just a dominant stretch from Johnson and the Hawks – who also locked in defensively over this stretch – to seize control of the game. New Orleans turned the ball over six times in the second quarter directly leading to 14 points for the Hawks.

“It’s big for us,” said Snyder of the team’s defense after the game, “We’re able to run off our defense when we get stops.”

Atlanta led by 10 at the half and had the momentum at the beginning of the third quarter, but couldn’t pull away until Vit Krejci caught fire at the end of the period.

Krejci checked in midway through the third and scored his first points of the night off this pretty feed from Alexander-Walker.

Nickeil drops a DIME for a Vit triple 🪙 pic.twitter.com/JipdJQDV2v

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 23, 2025

A few possessions later, he benefits off some nice ball movement in the half-court, kicked off by a Dyson Daniels drive. Nailing a three from the opposite wing.

After a turnover from Daniels on Atlanta’s next possession, Vit wastes no time on the following possession, hitting a three from the top of the key just seconds into the shot clock.

Then to close the quarter, Daniels sets up Vit again, who hits his fourth three in a row – then lets the bench know about it* as the buzzer sounds.

*Vit with a little motion is a scary sight for the rest of the league.

HEAT CZECH 🔥

Vit with 4 threes in the 3rd quarter pic.twitter.com/eWwlKPD09T

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 23, 2025

Atlanta led by 18 going into the final frame and never let the lead slip below 15 the rest of the way. Vit added three more triples in the fourth, and the Hawks emptied their bench in the final minutes. After some tomfoolery by Derik Queen in the final seconds, Atlanta went home with a 17-point win.

The Hawks tried to run out the clock but Derik Queen had other plans 💀

(h/t @Fullcourtpass)pic.twitter.com/s1F18WNEGm

— Legion Hoops (@LegionHoops) November 23, 2025

A few observations on last night’s victory.


Frontcourt Dominates


This was Kristaps Porzingis’ highest scoring outing of the season (29 points on 17 shots) and watching back his buckets, looking at who was guarding him, it’s really no surprise he looked so comfortable.

Early in the second, Porzingis (7’2”, 240 pounds) has Micah Peavy (6’7”, 215 pounds) guarding him in the post. He backs him down and powers through him for an easy bucket.

A few plays later, Peavy finds himself in a similar situation, and is powerless to stop ‘KP’ once again.

Early in the third, Atlanta pushes the pace off a Pelicans make. Porzingis is matched up on Trey Murphy III (6’8”, 205 pounds) on the interior and it’s an easy slam for the big man.

In the fourth, the Pelicans leave Peavy on an island against Porzingis (perhaps rookie hazing?), and the result is unsurprising.

The Pelicans present an extreme example given their lack of size, but this is just a taste of what Porzingis – one of the most efficient post scorers in the NBA over the past few seasons – can do when presented with a mismatch. New Orleans had no answers for him last night.

Another player who (as always) deserves praise for their performance was Jalen Johnson. Johnson did most of his scoring in the first half – with 15 of his 18 points coming in the first two quarters – then played the role of a distributor in the second half, racking up six out of his nine assists in the second half.

As a scorer, Johnson shot 2-for-4 from beyond the arc last night and is now shooting 41% from three through his first 14 games of the season (3.2 attempts per game) – a big-time improvement after converting just 32.3% of his threes over his first four seasons in the league. Whether or not he can sustain this efficiency going forwards is to be determined, but one encouraging sign is that he’s raised his free throw percentage to 81% this season after shooting just 71% at the stripe over his first four seasons.

Still, the part of Johnson’s game that popped for me last night was his transition playmaking. All of Johnson’s assists last night resulted in either a dunk or a three, with six of them coming against an un-set defense.

In the first quarter, he drives baseline early in the shot-clock then kicks to Kennard for a corner three. Credit to both Gueye and Kennard for filling their lanes in transition.

In the third, he hits Risacher for an alley-oop on the fastbreak.

In the fourth, the Hawks have a five-on-four advantage and Johnson connects with Porzingis for an easy two.

Johnson’s unselfishness is, in my opinion, his very best quality on the offensive end and while he does need to reign in the turnovers, I’ve really enjoyed watching him come into his own as a playmaker over the past few games (8.9 assists per game over his last seven games).

Turnover Margin a Crucial Difference


While Porzingis and Johnson were certainly catalysts for Atlanta’s win last night, one key difference between the two sides last night was seen in the turnover and points-off-turnovers margin. New Orleans turned the ball over 18 times, directly leading to 25 points for the Hawks. Meanwhile Atlanta turned the ball over just seven times, leading to only nine points for New Orleans. Those numbers are slightly inflated by Derik Queen’s steal and slam at the death too.

While the Pelicans were missing some key players, they actually ranked 12th in defensive turnover rate entering last night’s matchup, making Atlanta’s ball security all the more impressive. Their seven turnovers last night was their second-lowest total in a game this season, and the lowest since Trae Young has been out of the lineup.

“That’s been something that’s really been a point of emphasis, and something we’ve done poorly. It makes it difficult to defend when you turn the ball over, so it was good to see our guys collectively improve in that area,” said Snyder postgame.

On the other end, the Hawks came into the game ranked fourth in defensive turnover rate, and they continued to wreak havoc on that end last night. While the Hawks only came up with six steals and primarily used the defensive glass to spark their transition attacks, they were extremely disruptive, making it hard for the Pelicans to get into a rhythm offensively.

Vit Czech!


How could I sign off without saying a few words about the player who is currently leading the NBA in three-point shooting percentage* at 50% (!) for the season on 5.7 attempts per game. Krejci hit seven threes last night – the third time this season he’s made at least six threes in a game. He is one of six players** to have hit six or more threes on at least three different occasions this season.

*min. 5 attempts per game

**Joining ‘Pistol Vit’ on this list: Miles Bridges, Steph Curry, James Harden, Lauri Markkanen, Tyrese Maxey and Donovan Mitchell.

He is shooting 29-for-48 (60.4%) from three over his last seven outings, something that’s only been accomplished by 11 other players in NBA history (including current teammate Luke Kennard!).

Last player to shoot 60+% from three on at least 48 attempts over a seven game span… Luke Kennard in 2023.

Only 11 players ever (!) have experienced the type of heater Vit is on at the moment. Pretty incredible.#PistolVit https://t.co/h7B13UOfex pic.twitter.com/8U1MB0eBbf

— Hassan Ladiwala (@ladiwala_hassan) November 23, 2025

Just absurd stuff from a player whose contract isn’t even guaranteed for next season.

Many of you will remember that Krejci was an extremely timid shooter when he first arrived in Atlanta back in 2022. He first made a name for himself with an absurd razzle-dazzle assist (honestly one of my favorite plays ever), and he was profiled as a pass-first playmaker rather than a play finisher.

The growth we’ve seen from then until now has been absolutely breathtaking. The confidence he’s playing with at the moment is truly a joy to behold.

Every Vit Krecji 3-pointer from his absurd hot streak, sit back and enjoy:#Hawks https://t.co/BTxbWEE84r pic.twitter.com/S447AjVFex

— Off Peachtree (@OffPeachtree) November 23, 2025

What’s next?


Quick turnaround for Atlanta, who play the Charlotte Hornets at 6 PM today on their home floor. Both teams are on the second leg of a back-to-back, though Charlotte played at 1 PM yesterday giving them a few extra hours of rest.

The Hornets haven’t done many things well this season (19th in offense, 24th in defense), but they will present a test on the glass – ranking in the top five on both ends of the floor. The Hawks have notably struggled in the rebounding department this season, ranking in the bottom five on both ends, making this an area to watch in tonight’s matchup.

Stay tuned!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...is-vit-krejci-kristaps-porzingis-video-quotes
 
Nickeil Alexander-Walker’s two-way efforts power Hawks past Hornets, 113-110

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The Atlanta Hawks were in action on Sunday evening to face the Hornets. After a comfortable win against the New Orleans Pelicans the night before, the Hawks were looking for a back-to-back victory, but this time, at home. The Hawks were without Kristaps Porzingis and Luke Kennard in this one, but the Hornets were missing a few of their key players as well.

Zaccharie Risacher was active to start the game, getting an easy dunk and 3-pointer.

Zacch corner pocket 🎱 pic.twitter.com/DDbIl7bwLA

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 23, 2025

The Hawks got out to a 12-6 lead, but the Hornets stormed back and went on a run themselves. They continued to score at will in the paint and extended their lead to as much as eight points. The Hawks didn’t falter for too long and went on their own run down the stretch of the first.

Nickeil Alexander-Walker started the run with a 3-pointer.

NAW for 123 pic.twitter.com/P7ResaDsmn

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 23, 2025

Jalen Johnson connected with Onyeka Okongwu for an alley-oop dunk.

Alley OOp pic.twitter.com/1Os5sZO8up

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 23, 2025

Going into the second, the Hawks led 28-25. The beginning of the quarter belonged to the Hornets, and more specifically, Kon Knueppel and K.J. Simpson, who had the first ten points for them. The Hawks stayed in, and they got a 3-pointer from Dyson Daniels later in the quarter.

Dyson, Jalen, back to Dyson, 3 points pic.twitter.com/yys57mpVx0

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 23, 2025

Johnson knocked down a 3-pointer to keep the Hawks in the game, his second of the game.

JJ knocks down his 2nd triple of the night pic.twitter.com/KXJQYeRCYf

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 24, 2025

It was pretty much a back-and-forth game going into the second half, as the Hawks trailed 55-53. To start the third quarter, Daniels got a few of his floaters to go.

Dyson drops in a couple floaters to start the 3rd 🛟🛟 pic.twitter.com/BQ0G3xwdwz

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 24, 2025

Momentum continued for the Hawks throughout the quarter, and Johnson got the crowd rocking after this dunk.

JJ Flyinggggggg pic.twitter.com/NNhnipTrbB

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 24, 2025

Keaton Wallace turned defense into offense late in the quarter, getting the steal and throwing it down on the other end.

Keaton cookies and jam!! pic.twitter.com/J0mnsIRqzu

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 24, 2025

Mouhamed Gueye then got a big block on Miles Bridges, and the Hawks turned it into three points on offense. Going into the fourth, the Hawks led 92-88.

Mo protecting that rim ☝️ pic.twitter.com/RT4uMGCLaY

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 24, 2025

They kept that momentum from the end of the third and rolled it into the fourth, especially Wallace.

Three-ton Wallace 💪 pic.twitter.com/rSmnbOJ4L3

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 24, 2025

The Hawks had a lead as big as ten in the fourth, but the Hornets fought their way back into the game. The Hornets took the lead late in the quarter, and the Hawks had to find a way to weather the storm. They did, with Johnson hitting a tough fadeaway.

Tough bucket JJ pic.twitter.com/Ui4Gnhad38

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 24, 2025

Alexander-Walker then got a layup on the net offensive possession to give the Hawks the lead.

NAW for the LEAD pic.twitter.com/MhEKMPuVYQ

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 24, 2025

The Hawks got several stops on defense to maintain the one-point lead, and the Hornets had to play the foul game. Alexander-Walker went to the free throw line and split the two, giving the Hawks a 112-110 lead with 11.3 seconds left. The Hornets were not able to get a clean shot off, as Alexander-Walker came up with the steal, and was fouled. He split the free throws once again, and the Hawks led by three with 4.9 seconds.

NICKEIL STEAL pic.twitter.com/XjXGnEV273

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 24, 2025

The Hornets had another shot, but were unsuccessful in their efforts to tie the game, and the Hawks took the win.

Johnson finished with 28 points, eight rebounds, and 11 assists, Alexander-Walker finished with 23 points, and Daniels finished with 22 points, nine rebounds, and six assists.

The Hawks will be back in action on Tuesday against the Washington Wizards.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/reca...-way-efforts-power-hawks-past-hornets-113-110
 
Hornets at Hawks: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Hawks meet their Southeast Division rivals for the first time this season.

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: 6:00 PM EDT

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...time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread-charlotte
 
Hawks rally late to recover victory from Hornets

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The Atlanta Hawks returned to State Farm Arena following their victory in New Orleans on Saturday night and swept the back-to-back as Atlanta rallied in the fourth quarter to secure the 113-110 victory.

Jalen Johnson led the Hawks with 28 points, 11 assists, and eight rebounds and Nickeil Alexander-Walker added 23 points as four Hawks scored 20 or more points. For the Hornets, Kon Knueppel scored 28 points with Collin Sexton adding 22 points.

A game of runs would be best way to describe this game, particularly in the first half as the Hawks began well, before a Hornets run swung the early advantage in their favor…then the Hawks went on a run… you get the general idea.

It was a closely contested first half, with no team leading by more than eight points in the first half. That trend would continue for much of the second half, including towards the end of the third quarter, where the Hornets held a one point lead but a great sequence for the Hawks saw them flip this small advantage, and momentum, on their side.

It starts with a great find by Johnson to set up Mo Gueye for a dunk at the rim:

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Gueye then follows this up with a great block at the rim, blocking Miles Bridges at the rim and right into the arms of Keaton Wallace, who can begin the fastbreak:

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This fuels the Hawks’ transition, who swing the ball around to Alexander-Walker, who hits the three at a pivotal point in third quarter:

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Some good plays by Vit Krejci here, who may not have been able to impact the game scoring-wise last night but came up with a good offensive rebound and assist in that sequence.

The Hawks kept this momentum rolling in the fourth quarter and took the game’s first double-digit lead with 7:59 remaining in the fourth. Alas, similar to the previous 36 minutes, any advantage either side in this game never lasted long.

The Hornets dug into the Hawks’ lead, who hit offensive trouble to the stage where their once strong-looking fourth quarter momentum into a three points Hornets lead with 3;17 remaining. The Hawks would have to find one more run within themselves if they wanted to secure this game, so let’s take a look at how it happened.

The first stage of the comeback isn’t even the Hawks getting on the board, it’s, arguably, the offensive foul call on Sexton which, if uncalled, would’ve given the Hornets a five point lead. Instead, Dyson Daniels draws the offensive foul on the drive:

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With the shot clock winding down on the Hawks’ next offensive trip, Johnson bails out a difficult possession as he drains the clutch turnaround jumpshot over Bridges:

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Johnson is present in the Hawks’ defensive sequence that follows, and between himself and Onyeka Okongwu they do a good job forcing a difficult pass by Knueppel in traffic to Moussa Diabate, with Alexander-Walker in close proximity to put pressure on the attempted catch, as the ball trickles out of bounds:

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The Hawks ensure to make a quick reply as Alexander-Walker gets his head down on the drive, getting into the chest of Sion James to score at the rim after carving an opening:

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This was the last made field goal of the game, by either side, and the Hawks — while missing some shots offensively — locked in on the defensive end to produce consecutive stops.

The first comes courtesy of Daniels, who contains the Sexton drive and contests the shot, only for the loose ball to be contested by Alexander-Walker and Diabate for the jump-ball:

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Unsurprisingly, Diabate wins the tip but Krejci does a great job containing Bridges and his physicality, and forces a tough, turnaround shot as the clock winds down:

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Krejci had a bit more of a difficult time keeping Knueppel in front of him, and after a late rotation from Okongwu to make life difficult at the rim the shot is missed, with Daniels, Okongwu and Krejci all scrambling for the rebound:

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Sexton and Krejci get tied up for the jump ball, with Krejci winning the tip and Okongwu saving the possession to return the ball to the hosts:

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This was a hugely important pay not just from Krejci, but a great save by Okongwu to save possession and essentially force the Hornets to have to play the fouling game. Alexander-Walker made life perhaps a little more stressful than need by by splitting two trips to the line, but not before he produces a potentially game-saving strip at the rim:

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“We know what kind of defender he is,” said Hawks head coach Quin Snyder of this Alexander-Walker play. “When you have guys who have that ability, there’s times in the game where they raise their level: that’s what I saw.

A fantastic defensive highlight, but one that is short-lived as his second split pair of free throws in the clutch gives the Hornets one final chance to tie the game at the buzzer. As he often is, Daniels is in place to offer strong perimeter defense — combined with a poor shot from Bridges — which fails to draw iron, and the Hawks secure the victory:

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Another successful sweep of the back-to-back for the Hawks, who did not want to use fatigue as an excuse in this game, especially as the Hornets were also on the second night of a back-to-back.

“Those games are tough ones, both coming off of back-to-backs“ said Dyson Daniels postgame. ”They came in and fought hard, we strung stops together. Shoutout Nickeil getting a strip at the end. It’s what we pride ourselves on is our defense, get stops, get out running and that’s how we want to play. Whenever we do that, we’re going to be alright on the offensive end.“

“Being in the present moment,” added Alexander-Walker of how to fight off fatigue in a back-to-back situation. “They were on a back-to-back so I think it took away the excuse we had … trust me, we felt it, I felt it all game.

Jalen Johnson believed it was more a case of ‘mind over matter.’

“It’s all just mental at the end of the day,” said Johnson. “They’re coming off a back-to-back too, not to make excuses, or we can find a way to scrounge out those type of wins, dig deep. It was big on our end to not let fatigue play a factor at the end.”

Fatigue certainly didn’t seem to evident in the Hawks’ four 20+ points scorers: Jalen Johnson (28 points), Alexander-Walker (23 points), Dyson Daniels (22 points), and Okongwu (20 points).

Johnson was excellent last night, truly the leader of this team behind an efficient 28 points (11-of-22 from the field), eight rebounds, and perhaps the most impressive stat of the night from Johnson: 11 assists with zero turnovers. Point-Jalen was finding his teammates all night long, picking his own spots and his teammates spots with patience and control all night long.

“His decision-making is a huge thing for us,” said Snyder of Johnson. “He’s really taken pride in that. That, and defending are two areas of the game where he’s watching a lot of tape. Usually, he’s so dynamic in transition and some of the turnovers for him are careless passes which he’s tightened up on. In the half-court, being in situations where he’s poised in the lane, he’s patient, and he really is able to read the defense.”

From finding the baseline cutter in Zaccharie Risacher with the bounce pass:

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To getting into the Hornets’ defense and spraying out to the perimeter, finding Okongwu for a corner three:

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In transition, Johnson finds Okongwu for an alley-oop, contributing to two of the Hawks’ 17 fastbreak points on the game:

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As a side-note, impressively, the Hornets scored zero fastbreak points last night — a huge credit to the Hawks’ defense getting back down the floor off of their misses.

Continuing with Johnson’s playmaking, Johnson combined on a number of occasions with Daniels, and these plays were fun to watch as they combined for similar plays. On the drive from the wing, Johnson finds Daniels — who sets a screen for Johnson prior to receiving the ball — who gets into his floater:

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Next, Daniels tries to get inside the paint but is cut off by Mason Plumlee, and passes the ball back out to Johnson. Johnson drives and Daniels runs this beautiful faux-screen/spin into the open pocket where Daniels gets into his floater:

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Johnson and Daniels also found themselves working into some three-point opportunities such as this one, where Daniels sets the screen on the drive for Johnson, while Daniels fades to the three-point line as the defense leaves him open on the perimeter to swarm Johnson:

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While Daniels made this three, the Hornets allowed this play to happen on a number of occasions, with Daniels shooting 1-of-4 from three.

Daniels was asked about these opportunities postgame, and described how the Hawks can work such scenarios to their advantage, and outlining the need to continue to work on his three-pointers.

“It’s about mixing it up,” said Daniels. “If they’re dropping, I’m going to keep taking shots and I made one, the last three didn’t drop so it’s about getting into the paint and creating for myself, creating for others. If they’re going to be that far off me we can use that to our advantage. We can be setting screens and getting guys like ‘JJ’ downhill on open play in the pocket, use my floater. There’s a lot of ways to work around that when they’re dropped off like that, it’s just about exploiting that matchup. For me, it’s about getting in the gym and becoming more comfortable shooting those threes so they do have to respect me more out there. I also have got to take them with confidence and knock them down.”

Daniels is beginning to attempt more threes now compared to the start of the season. In his last two games he’s attempted eight total threes, but only shooting 1-of-8 of those opportunities.

“Sometimes teams want to bait you into an early shot,” said Snyder of Daniels postgame. “…You’ve got to stay aggressive, whether it’s taking your shot or driving to the basket. I thought he made really good decisions in there, too. When it’s crowded in there, sometimes it’s the threat of him passing out which creates the shot…”

Outside of those threes, Daniels enjoyed a great game: 22 points on 10-of-17 from the field, nine rebounds, six assists and two steals. Daniels’ floater was excellent last night, combining with Johnson on a number of possessions.

Alexander-Walker, meanwhile, had a slow start to the game but found his rhythm to finish with 22 points on 8-of-17 from the field, 3-of-7 from three, and 4-of-6 from the free throw line.

Defensively, Alexander-Walker’s contribution late on was huge in the context of this victory, something that Alexander-Walker takes pride in and described how he sees plays such as the strip on Knueppel.

“I try to pride myself on being a defender in this league and understanding where my minutes were going to come from,” said Alexander-Walker. “It’s just instinctual, one-on-one, playing defense understanding guys on the gather, on pick-ups and ball placement. Sometimes you kind of bait into it with body placement, forcing him, cutting him off on one side. Once you do that, there’s only so many alternatives to a counter. Once he gets into that counter you try to know ‘OK, this is the motion.’ More times than not, doing it offensively you’re going to know ‘I’m can either to scoop here or try go quick.‘ I knew the time, and the feel in the moment, to time it.”

With Kristaps Porzingis resting on the second night of a back-to-back, Okongwu got the nod again at center and he delivered, as he often does, scoring 20 points on 8-of-18 shooting. He took a lot of threes this game, shooting 2-of-7 from distance, but came up with some big plays throughout the night, and a big play to save the possession after the late jump ball.

Those four, Johnson, Daniels, Alexander-Walker, and Okongwu have consistently performed and contributed in their own way as Trae Young, and others during this stretch, have missed time.

With the bench not quite having a huge impact scoring, their production was essential on the night. Keaton Wallace was solid off the bench with 10 points, but Krejci struggled to get involved scoring the ball, and Risacher — while starting strong — seemed to float through this game, scoring just five points in 21 minutes.

As a team, the Hawks took great care of the ball, registering 32 assists for just seven turnovers. Similarly, the Hawks punished the Hornets for their turnovers, scoring 23 points off of the Hornets’ 15 turnovers. For the second night of a back-to-back, the Hawks played well and executed well down the stretch to overturn, albeit, a small Hornets lead — less so with their offense but sealing the game with their defense once they took the lead. This was a victory that was secured with the Hawks’ defense, which is always an encouraging outcome for the Hawks when they’re able to seal games like this.

The Hawks (11-7) will now travel to Washington to take on the 1-15 Washington Wizards. While that may seem like a good thing, there are lingering memories from last year where the Hawks lost two straight games to the Wizards, which were both awful losses but more demonstrated that, despite the record, upsets of this nature can happen in the NBA if the Hawks underestimate their opponent.

They will be, of course, heavy favorites to win and should see a comfortable victory, but last season serves as a solid cautionary tale!

Until next time!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...ohnson-dyson-daniels-nickeil-alexander-walker
 
Hawks at Pelicans: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Atlanta Hawks have a chance to help themselves in the standings and in the NBA draft lottery odds at the same time against the New Orleans Pelicans.

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen​


Location: Smoothie King Center, New Orleans, LA

Start Time: 7:00 PM EDT

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...ans-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Hawks trip on several rakes, giving Wiz their second win, 132-113

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The Hawks have had a strangely competitive recent streak against the moribund Washington Wizards. Tonight, they looked to handle business in NBA Cup action against their division rivals.

Minus Trae Young, the Hawks had everyone available for this one. The Wizards were without their breakout player Kyshawn George, lottery pick Tre Johnson, and veteran former lottery pick Marvin Bagley III.

The early minutes were one-sided against the Hawks’ favor. They simply couldn’t buy a bucket, and CJ McCollum and company poured in almost every attempt on the other end. In a flash, the Hawks were in an 18-2 hole. The had to get out their shovels and start digging.

Somehow, it got worse. The Hawks defense parted like the Red Sea for a few possessions and gave up open layups. The score ballooned to 31-8 with under eight minutes played in the game.

And then, amazingly, it got worse. The Wizards began 8-for-8 from three and Atlanta just looked mentally checked out before the first quarter had ended.

After one quarter, it was a blowout, 45-23.

The Hawks regained some footing in the second quarter, but it was difficult to put a dent in the huge deficit. Still, they registered some nice defensive stops and cut a once 29-point gap into just being down 13 points around halfway through the second quarter.

Here, Jalen Johnson more than meets Bub Carrington at the rim:

Jalen with an outstanding blocked shot ☝️ pic.twitter.com/oZWqSBWjO3

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 26, 2025

But the Wizards pushed back, and, led by CJ McCollum’s 27 on 10-for-13 shooting, they took a 77-55 lead into halftime.

The second half isn’t even worth recapping. It was a dreadful showing against a previously one-win team that the Hawks need to never let happen again.

Wizards won 132-113. CJ McCollum dropped in 46 points on 17-for-25 shooting. No Hawks deserve their stat line highlighted.

The team will have almost 72 hours to stew on this awful performance before they play the Cavaliers at home on Black Friday.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/reca...-washington-final-recap-nbn-score-latest-news
 
Hawks at Wizards, NBA Cup: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Hawks travel to DC to take on a Southeast Division rival and an NBA Cup group rival, the Washington Wizards.

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen​


Location: Capital One Arena, Washington D.C.

Start Time: 7:00 PM EDT

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...-cup-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-discussion
 
25 in 25: No. 6 Jeff Teague

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This is a series that looks at the best Atlanta Hawks of the past 25 seasons dating back to the 2000-01 season. No. 7 Kyle Korver can be found here.



You thought I had forgotten about this series, huh? Well, that’s where you’re wrong — it’s back.

Jeff Teague may be known by Generation Z for being a part of the funniest basketball podcast out there, but despite his self-deprecating humor, back in the day he could no doubt hoop.

The Indiana native Teague was drafted by the Hawks with the 19th overall pick of the 2009 NBA Draft after two years at Wake Forest. At 6-foot-2 with a lightning quick first step, Jeff Teague was a downhill, score-first point guard with a deep bag of moves to finish in the paint.

The backdrop is that the Hawks had established veteran point guard Mike Bibby — and that very offseason they also acquired sixth man extraordinaire Jamal Crawford. Additionally, he was drafted to a team on the rise after breaking a nine-season playoff drought. So, it was immediately clear that he’d have to fight for minutes on a competing team.

The first two years of his Hawks career were largely just deep bench contributions as expected with so many guards ahead of him on the depth chart. But when his number was unexpectedly called in a big moment, he stepped onto the stage, and in the process, he let all Hawks fans know who he really was.

During the 2010-11 season, the Hawks traded Bibby as part of a package that netted Kirk Hinrich, a more defensive-minded guard to shore up the perimeter. The Hawks managed 44 wins that regular season, but in the process of upsetting the fourth-seeded Orlando Magic in the first round, they lost Hinrich to a hamstring injury.

In order to preserve Crawford’s role coming off the bench, Teague was promoted to the starting role for the next series against the top-seeded Chicago Bulls despite averaging just 13.8 minutes per game that regular season.

With reigning MVP Derrick Rose on the other side, Teague averaged 14.8 points and 4.2 assists to just 1.2 turnovers in 38.2 minutes per game while shooting 54% from the floor and 84% from the line across the six-game series.

(fair warning — R-rated language below and in all clips that follow):

From there, he never looked back, starting 373 games over the next five seasons for the Hawks. Ultimately, he spanned two different iterations of Hawks teams that make it past to the second round in the playoffs.

Over the years, he grew into more of an off-ball three-point shooter to better compliment the team, willing passer and pick-and-roll operator, and team defender — even if limited physically on that end.

Just like the previous member of this list, his high-water achievement came during the 2014-15 season — you know, the 60-win season. That year, Teague averaged 15.9 points and 7.0 assists per game and shot 46/34/84 (57% true shooting, six percent better than league average) on the traditional shooting split.

As part of the team’s collective success, Teague was both named the January Player of the Month (along with the rest of the starting lineup) for the 17-0 run that month and was named an All-Star for the only time in his career.

However, by the end of a 2015-16 season where the Hawks won 12 games fewer than the previous season and were swept in the second round, the organization decided to turn the reins over to Dennis Schröder, whom the Hawks had drafted back in 2013. In the 2016 offseason, Teague was shipped to his hometown Indiana Pacers for a pick that became Taurean Prince.

But that wasn’t the end of Teague’s career with the Hawks. After a number of productive seasons with the Pacers and Timberwolves, Teague was traded back to Atlanta at the trade deadline of the 2019-20 season. At this point in his career, he was no longer a starting caliber player, and with the team rebuilding around Trae Young, his presence was largely to help mentor the young guard.

Overall, Teague appeared in 543 games for Atlanta across two different stints from 2009 to 2020, putting him 16th in franchise history in that category. He’s also currently sixth in assists with 2771 and seventh in steals with 632 in the franchise career leaderboard.

But his new calling as a hilarious storyteller with his longtime friends on the 520 Club Podcast might have earned him more fame than his playing career. There was the incredible recounting — alongside Josh Smith — of the saga of former Hawks head coach Mike Woodson’s burnt off eyebrows:

On the latest episode of the Club 520 Podcast, Jeff Teague and Josh Smith recount 2004-2010 Hawks head coach Mike Woodson shaving his eyebrow(s) pic.twitter.com/CNlIgMF59j

— Wes (@bloghawk) November 19, 2024

Or the time when his rookie hazing included a buttery and salty substance taking over the inside of his car:

Even years after his retirement from basketball, Jeff Teague jerseys fly off the shelves — although, truthfully, that’s likely because of #TeagueTime more than anything else.

Finally, I leave you with 10 minutes of beautiful on-court basketball chemistry with Kyle Korver:



1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.
Jeff Teague

7. Kyle Korver

8.
Clint Capela

9. John Collins

10. Jalen Johnson

11. Jason Terry

12. Bogdan Bogdanović

13. Dejounte Murray

14. Shareef Abdur-Rahim

15. Marvin Williams

16. Kevin Huerter

17. Dennis Schröder

18. Onyeka Okongwu

19. Lou Williams

20. Zaza Pachulia

21. De’Andre Hunter

22. Kent Bazemore

23. Mike Bibby

24. DeMarre Carroll

25. Jamal Crawford

Honorable mentions

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/atla...ks-history-nba-franchise-videos-funny-stories
 
Jalen Johnson’s triple-double pushes Hawks past Cavaliers, 130-123

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The Atlanta Hawks were in action on Friday evening to face the Cleveland Cavaliers in the final game of their NBA Cup group stage play. Unfortunately for the Hawks, they’ve been eliminated from advancing, so this was basically just another regular-season game for them.

The Hawks were without Kristaps Porzingis in this one as he was ruled out with an illness, so Onyeka Okongwu started in his place.

The team started off slow with three turnovers and zero points, and saw themselves down 7-0. They started to find a rhythm after some time doing what they do best, which is run the floor. Zaccharie Risacher got a dunk over De’Andre Hunter in transition.

Zacch outlet jam ‼️ pic.twitter.com/7BGVBf49ca

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025

Nickeil Alexander-Walker pulled up for this 3-pointer to extend the Hawks’ lead.

Keil from the top of the key 🔑 pic.twitter.com/0qHK003fed

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025

The Hawks really started to get into a groove, and got flashhy with a few of their plays, and Risacher found Mouhamed Gueye for an alley-oop dunk.

Zacch lob to Mo 🤯 pic.twitter.com/xXEMvSO5K2

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025

The Hawks had a lead as much as 13 points in the first, and they maintained it going into the second. Things got spicy early in the second, when Hunter dunked on Gueye, and the two got tangled up going down the court. Both were called for a foul, and Gueye got technical.

From there, the Cavaliers woke up and the Hawks fell asleep, which caused them to cough up their lead. Vit Krejci kept the Hawks afloat during that run with two 3-pointers, and they kept working on defense to get some stops.


Johnson found Alexander-Walker on the leak-out for an easy transition bucket.

JJ must have been watching the game across the street 🏈 pic.twitter.com/4KYOCsa910

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025

Okongwu got it going from the perimeter and knocked down a 3-pointer to keep the Hawks in it.

Triple O, corner pocket 🎱 pic.twitter.com/TQizcEyQR8

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025

It was a back-and-forth game down the stretch of the first half, and the Hawks went into the locker room trailing 62-60.

The Hawks fell in love with the lob passes in this game, and Johnson connected with Risacher for one early in the third. They turned defense into offense later on, with Daniels intercepting a pass from Hunter.

Great Barrier Theft 🤗🤗 pic.twitter.com/NYHI3ICywN

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025

The Hawks kept using ball movement to their advantage and it paid off with this Johnson dunk.

JJ COMIN THROUGH 🚂 pic.twitter.com/dEzcisp8kL

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025

Just like the first quarter, the Hawks were able to maintain their lead going into the next quarter, and they led 97-90 heading into the fourth. Krejci and Luke Kennard got some 3-pointers to go down early in the quarter to keep the Hawks afloat.

Vit & Luke both knock down threes to open the 4th pic.twitter.com/gVHUHK9z5c

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025

Donovan Mitchell went on a heat during a stretch to cut down the Hawks’ deficit, but it wasn’t enough for them to take the lead. The Hawks kept playing their game, and once again turned defense into offense for any easy bucket.

30 seconds of defense rewarded with a Vit hammer 🔨 pic.twitter.com/VeyP01hkBW

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025

The Cavaliers did eventually end up making it a game, and actually took the lead at one point, but the Hawks were resilient enough to keep fighting.

OO sticks with it for the and-1 💪 pic.twitter.com/XXa3rbNgJx

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025
Dyson steal and Zacch SLAM 💥💥 pic.twitter.com/vg0uVutjcZ

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025

The game was tied with less than two minutes left, and Johnson found Risacher in the corner for a 3-pointer to give the Hawks the lead. They got a stop on the other end, and Alexander-Walker followed it up with another 3-pointer to give the Hawks a six-point lead.

ZACCH & NICKEIL CLUTCH THREES pic.twitter.com/S9d3XquYLr

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) November 29, 2025

The Hawks were able to maintain the lead from there, and they walked away with the win.

Johnson finished with 29 points, 12 rebounds, and 12 assists, Alexander-Walker finished with 29 points, and Daniels finished with 10 points, eight rebounds, and nine assists.

The Hawks will be back in action against the Philadelphia 76ers on Sunday.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/reca...le-double-pushes-hawks-past-cavaliers-130-123
 
Hawks pick up Pistons, 76ers games from NBA Cup schedule gap

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The Atlanta Hawks finished 2-2 in NBA Cup play this season, failing to qualify for the knockout stage of the tournament after losses to the Toronto Raptors — who have won Group A and advanced — and the Washington Wizards.

In order to reach 82 games for this season, there were two previously unscheduled games pending the results of NBA Cup action. Now, the NBA and the Hawks have announced those makeup games, both against teams from other Eastern Conference groups that also didn’t qualify for the next round.

Atlanta will now travel to Detroit for a game on Friday, December 12, making it three total times the team will play at the Eastern Conference-leading Pistons this regular season. Two days later, they will take on the Philadelphia 76ers in State Farm Arena in a 3:30 PM tipoff — bringing that season series to two games at home and two away.

That means that after the December 6 game at the Wizards, the Hawks will have six days between games. Similarly, then they’ll have three full off days after the added Sixers’ game before taking on the Charlotte Hornets on Thursday, December 18.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/late...a-sixers-detroit-nba-cup-schedule-latest-news
 
Cavs at Hawks, NBA Cup: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Hawks’ NBA Cup hopes are over, but they still have a tough test against the Cleveland Cavaliers tonight.

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 PM EDT

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...cup-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Hawks recover for 2OT victory over Sixers behind Johnson career-high

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The Atlanta Hawks survived a double overtime encounter with the Philadelphia 76ers on Sunday night, securing the 142-134 victory at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Jalen Johnson posted a new-career high of 41 points to go with 14 rebounds and seven assists. Nickeil Alexander-Walker added 34 points, eight rebounds, and seven assists. For the Sixers, Tyrese Maxey scored 44 points, and Quentin Grimes added 28 points.

In a closely contested affair for three quarters when neither team led by more than nine points at any stage, the Hawks faced their biggest deficit of nine points towards the end of the third quarter. The reintroduction of Alexander-Walker — as it was in the first half — was key in the Hawks overturning this lead, and in the fourth quarter the Hawks open with a 11-0 run, producing multiple defensive stops over and over in the fourth quarter.

The Hawks did not shoot the ball well in the fourth quarter, shooting 33%, but they held the Sixers to a similar percentage (38.5%) and contested shots well on the perimeter, and defended the Sixers late into the shot clock often. Not to mention, the Hawks came up with five steals in the fourth quarter alone.

A number of these steals came to begin the fourth, such as this drive from Maxey, which is disrupted by Mo Gueye, leading to a turnover and a fastbreak basket by Alexander-Walker:

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On another drive by Justin Edwards, Onyeka Okongwu telegraphs the pass back out to the perimeter, setting up another fastbreak opportunity. This time Alexander-Walker finds Vit Krejci who is fouled at the rim for free throws:

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The Hawks did well to limit the Sixers to a number of perimeter shots, and contested those perimeter shots well.

On the Joel Embiid-Maxey give-and-give-back, Gueye doubles Embiid, and Krejci does well to adjust and fly out to Maxey on the return to contest the missed three:

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On a switch against Paul George, Okongwu does well to contest, getting a hand in George’s face, and the three is missed:

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Near the end of the clock, the Sixers shift the ball to Maxey, who turbos to the rim but is well challenged by Johnson, forcing the miss:

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Off the catch as the clock begins to wind down, Maxey gets Dyson Daniels off his feet but Johnson steps up to help Daniels, contesting the shot that Maxey has to let go, resulting in another miss from three:

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Free throws were…frequent in this game, and this was how the Hawks manage to extend their lead down the stretch in the fourth quarter. It was painful to watch all night long, but the upshot, eventually, was that — after a split pair of free throws from Daniels — the Hawks held a 114-108 lead with 39 seconds remaining. A strong position in which to be: a two-possession lead with 39 seconds left…the Hawks would have to work hard to let this one slip.

The Sixers spend 16 of those 39 remaining seconds missing a three from George in the corner before Embiid tips in the rebound to reduce the lead to four with 23 seconds remaining:

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A great scenario for the Hawks there; the three doesn’t fall, they’re still up by two possessions, the shot clock is off, and now they can extend the lead again. Johnson is fouled and, even after splitting the pair, the Hawks extend the lead to five points.

The Sixers push the ball up the floor, and George manages to turn the corner, drawing Johnson away from former Hawk Dominick Barlow. George wraps the pass for Barlow, who will score a certain two-pointer. This is fine, because the Hawks will still lead by three and can shoot more free throws, only needing one to push the lead back up to two possessions. Johnson, however, gets off his feet and ends up fouling Barlow on the made basket:

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This was a really poor decision from Johnson, especially in hindsight. The play was essentially decided when George turned the corner and drew Johnson’s attention, leaving Barlow with an easy two. Johnson ending up on Barlow’s back just compounds how silly this play was, and Snyder’s reaction on the sideline provides an accurate summary.

Off the free throw, Barlow misses, the Sixers grab the rebound and kick it out to Maxey, who finally connects on a three-pointer (shooting 2-of-13 from three in the game) to tie the game:

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Tough on Johnson, who is bodied by George underneath the rim to establish a better rebounding position, who grabs the all-important rebound, setting up the three. It also compounds the Hawks throwing away a strong, advantageous situation all caused by a pointless foul underneath the basket by Johnson, undoing a lot of the good work he had done up to this point because if the Hawks had lost this game this stretch would obviously have been defining.

“The last 30 seconds, what could go wrong did go wrong,” said Dyson Daniels. “I missed a free throw, I think JJ missed one, Quentin Grimes missed a three, they got an offensive rebound. We’ve got to be better, we’ve got to boxout, we’ve got to come back and crackdown on that boxout to help JJ down there. It was hard to defend the three-point line when they got the kick-out, Maxey made a big shot…”

“There was a lot of things in that last minute that could have been better that got us to double overtime,” added Nickeil Alexander-Walker.

The Hawks, however, had one more chance to win the game, and Daniels does well to maneuver his way beyond Embiid, but leaves his attempt offline, giving the Sixers a chance to now win the game. Nick Nurse’s calls for timeout go unheard, and George heaves from halfcourt, misses, and to overtime we go:

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Daniels did the hard part in shedding Embiid, but the finish eludes him. The Hawks could count themselves lucky the Sixers didn’t get their timeout — which they were unlucky not to get.

First overtime saw the Sixers take a two point lead in the final minute, and out of a timeout with 14 seconds remaining, Johnson drives to the rim but is contested, misses at the rim, and the Sixers now have control of this game: a chance to go up by four points with eight seconds remaining:

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Maxey, however, misses both free throws, giving the Hawks a chance. Sure enough, Johnson is able to draw the foul on Barlow, earning a chance to tie the game with 0.3 remaining on the clock:

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Johnson dispatches both free throws under enormous pressure, delivering the Hawks a lifeline in this game that looked like it had slipped away mere seconds earlier; to second overtime we go!

Second overtime saw the Hawks find some form from three-point range, each three hugely important in their own right.

The first comes from Alexander-Walker, who converts on a three after the Hawks tap out the offensive rebound from Krejci off of a Johnson miss:

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It wouldn’t be long before Johnson would finally see a shot go down in 2OT, facilitated by Alexander-Walker as he engages in the pick-and-roll with Okongwu, with Barlow making the wrong read on where the play was going next (gambling that the ball would be delivered to Okongwu on the roll), and Johnson receives the ball from Alexander-Walker and hits the three:

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Johnson gets a better look at another three off of the find by Okongwu on the drive, and Johnson is afforded all the time he needs to set himself and hit the three, giving the Hawks a commanding six-point lead in overtime:

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I have no idea what the Sixers were thinking here. I can only imagine they thought Okongwu (who was 0-of-7 from three) was shooting because, otherwise, why would they just allow Johnson an open three at this stage? Johnson was 3-of-7 from three before this shot, and had scored 38 points already… it’s baffling, the lack of urgency at this stage of the game.

Alas, control was now in the Hawks’ hands and, this time, they see the job through and take the 142-134 victory. Postgame, Hawks head coach Quin Snyder praised his side’s perseverance as the Hawks endured heavy minutes across their starting lineup, with Okongwu playing 47 minutes.

“It was more about perseverence than it was about poise,” said Snyder postgame. “When we didn’t have poise, or made mistakes, we were able to move forward and made enough plays when it counted. We put ourselves in a position, as did they, and we’re just happy it went our way. It was a gritty game for our group, and that’s a group of guys who haven’t been in games like that. It’s a pretty young group we have out there.”

“It was a tough, grit it out win,” added Jalen Johnson. “We just did what we needed to do down the stretch.”

Despite being pleased with the victory, Snyder acknowledged the Hawks made many mistake, citing the frequency of which Atlanta put the Sixers to the free throw line, leading to 38 free throw attempts. This, Snyder described, impacted the Hawks’ ability to get out in transition.

“We made mistakes, it started in the third quarter with all the fouling,” said Snyder of the Sixers comeback. “That’s tough on us because it doesn’t give us a chance to run. If you’re taking the ball out of the net you can still try to push the pace, but free throws are hard. It affects your ability to defend aggressively. We didn’t rebound, we turned the ball over. Those two things, usually for this group, impacts us in the most negative way. We didn’t get deflated. The perseverance the guys showed, when you feel you’ve got the game and you’re in another overtime, and you feel you get the advantage and you make some mistakes, or they make some plays. A good and important win for a young group of guys to come together. Onyeka doesn’t make a three but does a lot of really good things. We don’t get discouraged, that was the big thing for us.”

Jalen Johnson’s free throws to end the first overtime period and perimeter shots in 2OT made up for his blunder at the end of regulation, and it’s good to see that career-night for Johnson came in a win. Johnson finished with 41 points on 1-of-21 from the field, 4-of-8 from three, and 17-of-22 from the line.

“I think he’s doing the same things,” said Snyder of Johnson’s career-night. “He’s making quick decisions, not hesitating to shoot the ball when he’s open, which sets up a lot of other things. When you talk to him, he’ll notice his turnovers. He’s capable in those situations of making the right reads, but that’s part of it. That’s been the exciting thing about the things he’s doing: when he’s made mistakes he hasn’t let it get to him, he’s responded and adjusted. That’s the sign of a more mature player when you’re able to make adjustments during the game. He’s as happy as anyone about the win because he’s the guy we’re playing through most of the time late in the game. We’re trusting him to make a play, and that’s the thing he’s embracing.”

Johnson was a little sloppy with the ball at times (six turnovers) and forced a couple of shots in the fourth/overtime, but prior to that he had done a fantastic job of letting the game come to him and picking his spots in the natural flow of the game. It’s, generally, a big step in Johnson’s game last season where he would, at times, try to do too much and force the issue. This year, this is much improved and last night was a great example of that. He’s emerged as a leader and his play has backed that up in the fourth quarter. Mistakes were made at the end of regulation, but in both overtimes Johnson stepped up when the Hawks needed him, speaking to the ‘perseverance’ Snyder spoke of earlier.

Johnson’s continued success isn’t a surprise to any of his teammates.

“I’m not really surprised,” said Alexander-Walker of how he’s observed Johnson. “I have been given the opportunity to observe as a professional, as a person, teammate. How he carries himself, how he handles his approach to taking care of his body, working on his game and craft. I’ve been able to notice great strides even in that, which is what leads to here. For me personally, having to do a lot of work behind the scenes to get to my position, I know what that feels like for him and so watching it, seeing it, it makes a lot of sense because he’s dedicated to his craft. He’s just very dedicated at what he does, and it’s starting to show. He doesn’t really force much, he takes what’s there, he plays confident and we have confidence in him.”

Alexander-Walker himself was excellent in this contest, too: 34 points on 11-of-22 from the field, 6-of-11 from three, and 6-of-6 from the free throw line. Alexander-Walker was another player who let this game come to him. I thought he was actually a bit slow to open this game, but he certainly found his form in the second half where 27 of his 34 points arrived.

As has been the case during this stretch without Trae Young and Kristaps Porzingis, the Hawks’ starting five all contributed with double-digit scoring, with Daniels adding 17 points, Zaccharie Risacher adding 12 points, and Okongwu adding 10 points and 13 rebounds. Mo Gueye provided a good lift off the bench in the first half, scoring 13 points, but the bench impact in this game was difficult.

When Alexander-Walker was off the floor, the production was poor, not helped by Luke Kennard’s illness, with Snyder revealing postgame he was throwing up at halftime — it was surprising to see him again in the second half after being ruled questionable to return in the first half. He deserved to be commended for giving it a go and did dish five assists.

The Sixers have been a surprise in the Eastern Conference with their play, so this was a quality victory for the Hawks (13-8) in the end on the first night of a back-to-back. With the heavy minutes played and on the road in Detroit (16-4) tonight, it may provide the Hawks an ample opportunity to perhaps rest some players in a game where the Hawks will be up against it before the jump ball.

Until next time!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...ickeil-alexander-walker-video-quotes-analysis
 
Slugfest ends with missed tip-in, Hawks fall to Pistons, 99-98

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The Hawks visited Detroit for the first of three times this regular season. Missing in action were Trae Young to knee rehabilitation, Kristaps Porzingis due to illness, and two-way player Jacob Toppin.

After failing to hit a three in the double overtime thriller last night in Philadelphia, Onyeka Okongwu made quick work of starting a new streak of games with a three:

OO inside, OO outside pic.twitter.com/KPEAF3up73

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 2, 2025

The first quarter was a defensive struggle with both teams owning minutes-long cold stretches. The Hawks even picked up two 24-second shot clock violations. Still, they created enough offense to hang in there like Okongwu putting in a second three with seconds remaining in the period to give him 12 points total.

After one quarter, the Hawks led 27-25.

Atlanta struggled with Detroit’s physicality on the glass, but they were able to make up for it by turning the Pistons over and over.

‘Double O’ did his part on this play, however:

Big O is EATING pic.twitter.com/vEVoVCzyo4

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 2, 2025

Points were tough to come by all half, including from the 41-point man Jalen Johnson himself. He didn’t hit a single field goal in three attempts in the first half and finished with just four points.

With their rebounding issues (32-15 edge Detroit) and Jalen’s less than par scoring, the Hawks had to feel happy with just a one-point deficit at half, 50-49.

Onyeka Okongwu, on the other hand, stepped up with 18 points on 8-for-11 shooting.

You knew it was only a matter of time before Jalen Johnson got his. He exploded in the third quarter for 13 points on 5-of-7 shooting, including this strong take:

JJ silky smooth Euro and-1 pic.twitter.com/cSoh6lEGI5

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 2, 2025

But the Pistons pulled away at the end of the period as the Hawks continued to struggle on the glass.

After three quarters, Detroit led 74-68.

With the Hawks staring down a deficit, Nickeil Alexander-Walker caught fire and pulled the Hawks even almost single handedly:

Nickeil
Alexander
Walker

8-0 run by himself pic.twitter.com/pnMdmruu6j

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 2, 2025

From there, both teams traded the lead back and forth like it was a sports card.

This game went all the way down the final moments. The Hawks hit a lull, and the Pistons were able to rattle off a 11-0 run to take a 95-89 lead with 2:37 remaining.

After Atlanta went on a 6-0 run of their own curtesy of Johnson and Alexander-Walker threes to tie the game up, the Pistons pulled away with some big Cade Cunningham buckets.

The end of the game did have a bit of drama. Down four points, the Hawks scrambled for another Alexander-Walker three with under two second left. A couple of missed free throws did give the Hawks a sideline heave for a tip with just 0.1 seconds, but they couldn’t convert.

The game ended 99-98 with the good guys on the wrong side of the final. There were 27 lead changes and 14 ties in this close affair.

Jalen Johnson put up 29 points, 13 rebounds, and seven assists in a big second half showing. Nickeil Alexander-Walker added 26 points.

The Hawks now return home to face the reeling Los Angeles Clippers on Wednesday night.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/reca...hnson-onyeka-okongwu-nickeil-alexander-walker
 
Hawks fall to late Pistons in loss to Detroit

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The Atlanta Hawks were unable to sweep their Sunday-Monday back-to-back, falling to a narrow 99-98 defeat the Eastern Conference leading Detroit Pistons at Little Caesars Arena on Monday night.

Jalen Johnson led the Hawks with 29 points and 13 rebounds, Nickeil Alexander-Walker added 26 points. For the Pistons, Jalen Duren scored 21 and 11 rebounds, and Cade Cunningham added 18 points.

The Hawks were considered significant underdogs heading into this contest, and for good reason. Atlanta is on the second night of a back-to-back, played a double overtime game, and had to travel from Philadelphia to Detroit. The Pistons, meanwhile, managed to recover somewhat themselves from their travel schedule over the weekend, but were more rested, last in action on Saturday.

The game unfolded similar to an early 2010’s game in terms of its low scoring, with both teams playing a combination of tired and sloppy basketball: Atlanta shooting 6-of-20 from three in the first half and Detroit committing 13 turnovers in the first half.

Onyeka Okongwu produced a great first half scoring 18 points, helping carry the load offensively as Johnson and Alexander-Walker saw slow starts to this game (combining for just 12 points between them in the first half).

After an encouraging start to the third quarter behind an 8-0 run, the Hawks found themselves pegged back by the hosts, first, by a 12-2 run to take — up to this point — the largest lead for either side in the game at six points into the fourth quarter. Detroit extended this lead to its largest of the game, seven points, and on the precipice of being opened out to double-digits, at which point you begin to question — with the back-to-back and travel — if that’s something you can overcome.

Enter, Nickeil Alexander-Walker.

Alexander-Walker begins a stretch of eight straight points, beginning with a miscommunication from the Pistons amidst a crowd of Hawks, and Johnson finds Alexander-Walker for three:

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Alexander-Walker attacks Ron Holland off the dribble on this next play, hitting a tough, stepback jumpshot over the outstretched defense:

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To tie the game, Johnson’s initial drive inside is checked by Tobias Harris, and Alexander-Walker comes over to set a screen for Johnson. While no switch is instigated, the exchange buys Alexander-Walker enough space to pull up from three after the pass from Johnson, and the game is now tied:

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The Pistons would form a breakaway again — fueled by the Hawks — in order to take a 95-89 lead.

Both of these opportunities come off of Atlanta turnovers, first, from Johnson as he drives inside and Caris LeVert strips the ball away and streaks ahead in transition where he finishes at the rim:

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Alexander-Walker loses the ball on the drive, collected by LeVert, and Cunningham is fouled by Johnson with the Pistons in the bonus:

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Cunningham dispatches both free throws to give the Pistons a six point lead with 2:37 remaining, but the Hawks had another run in them, and would claw back to tie the game.

Johnson and Alexander-Walker, again, combine for big threes as Johnson hits the first three on the hit-ahead in transition to slice the gap in half:

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Johnson then swings the ball to the weakside corner to find Alexander-Walker, and he drains the three to tie the game:

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A couple of occasions the Hawks looked a little on the ropes, but this group, again, finds a way to respond when they would have a right to hang their heads and play the tired card. Now, the game is tied with 1:12 remaining, and both sides have to produce plays in order to emerge victorious.

The Pistons provide an immediate response, as Cunningham hits a tough jumper at the free throw line over Daniels to re-take the lead:

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Full credit to Cunningham here, that is a tough shot to make. The Hawks defended this possession well, defending the screening action from Isaiah Stewart well (Johnson shows well on the ball and returns back to Stewart) before Cunningham makes his move, shadowed by Daniels, and contests the shot. It’s just a well made basket at a big moment in the game.

Following a Pistons foul, the Hawks are unable to make a reply out of the out-of-bounds play, as Daniels inbounds to Keaton Wallace and makes a great cut, receives the ball, finds Okongwu in the corner for the three, but it’s missed:

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I didn’t like a couple of things from this play, including Okongwu taking this shot when he seemed surprised — and unprepared — to receive the ball, then comes the contest on top of that, and it’s a shot the Pistons are more than happy to accept at this stage of the game.

It’s not that Okongwu should be making the pass to an open teammate off the ball (there was none), but there’s still 10 seconds to work another opportunity. I also can’t say I was a huge fan of the lineup featuring Wallace at this stage of the game. Zaccharie Risacher didn’t have the best game, and teams have been very wary of Vit Krejci recently and not allowing him a ton of opportunities, but I’d still have one of those two guys in the game at this point.

Time is now not on the Hawks’ side, but there’s still a five second offset between shot and game clock. Hawks head coach Quin Snyder, however, wants his side to commit the foul on Cunningham — he’s clearly motioning for that from the touchline. Johnson’s attempted reach is not called as Cunningham spins away and heads to the rim, where another reach from Daniels is not called, and Cunningham finishes amidst the crowd to give the Pistons a four point lead with 17 seconds remaining, and an Atlanta timeout is called:

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Cunningham scoring the basket here I actually don’t think is the main issue here; it’s the decision to want the foul from Snyder that I think is problematic.

What was the upside to wanting to foul in this spot? It’s not as though they’re sending someone like Duren to line. Cunningham is the player the Hawks tried to foul. Cunningham is an 84% free throw shooter in his career; he’s probably making both of these free throws if Daniels or Johnson is called for the foul.

And then what? You’re in the exact same position than what actually happens when Cunningham scores anyways — down four points and behind by two possessions with no shot clock . Five seconds between shot and game clock is more than enough to work with, especially if you only need a two to tie if you get the stop.

I know the Hawks have had issues rebounding all game long — and that must surely play a part in the decision to foul with so much time on the clock — but I’d rather take the chance on fighting for the rebound and be down two points than chase the game at four. It just seemed an odd decision given who was involved at the time.

Alexander-Walker misses the now-needed three out of the timeout, and the Pistons now have the chance to ice the game at the line. LeVert misses both free throws, and while the Hawks do eventually hit a three through Alexander-Walker, with under two seconds remaining, the Pistons call timeout, advance the ball, throw it into the backcourt and try to kill the small remaining time left on the clock to seal the victory, but the officials call the foul, sending Daniss Jenkins to the line, who also misses both free throws and the Hawks get the timeout with 0.1 seconds remaining.

With 0.1, there’s only time to throw the ball at the rim and hope someone can tip it in. The Hawks give this an attempt with Johnson, who is almost able to guide the ball in but it’s not enough:

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Perhaps another odd call here by Snyder to not have Mo Gueye, standing at 6’11”, be the one to try tip this one in. Alas, Johnson and his athleticism were the choice, it didn’t work, and the game is over.

Postgame, Snyder credited his side for their mental toughness and performance on the second night of a back-to-back against the conference-leading Piston, crediting the performance of Jalen Johnson in particular after a difficult first half.

“One of the things that’s hard to work on is your mental toughness,” opened Snyder postgame. “Not that we’re talking about last night, but tonight to come out against a team that is doing what Detroit is doing this year, leading our conference, and for our guys to play through what was a really physical game… Jalen in particular, to have the first half he had. He just had great poise on the bench, there wasn’t any part of him that was frustrated. We didn’t get discouraged. That was what we take from this game. Obviously you want to win, that’s a given. A few things we could’ve done better here, and there but the mental toughness of our group is encouraging, especially a very young team.”

The Hawks themselves were fully aware of their situation and knew they could have easily mailed this game in, but stuck with it and fought until the last possession.

“Our ability to stay together through adversity, that’s the main thing,” added Johnson. “We could have gave in tonight on the second night of a back-to-back coming off of Philly. We could have hung our hats on that game and gave in tonight, but we didn’t. We gave everything we got tonight, so I’m proud of competing tonight.”

After not making a field goal in the first half and scoring four points and just one assist, Johnson finished with 29 points on 9-of-17 from the field, 4-of-8 from three, 7-of-8 from the free throw line and seven assists. Johnson believed that his first half had not been aggressive enough, and stepped up his aggression in the second half (scoring 13 points in the third quarter alone).

“I wasn’t aggressive enough in the first half,” said Johnson. “The second half I tried to be more aggressive and assert myself on the offensive end.”

Alexander-Walker, similarly, stepped up in a big way in the second half, scoring 16 points in the fourth quarter alone, finishing with 26 points on 10-of-19 from the field and 6-of-10 from three. However, Alexander-Walker was quite critical of his performance, citing his three rebounds as detrimental to the team.

“As much as we fought to make it a game, we put ourselves in a position to have to fight,” said Alexander-Walker. “That starts with me. Towards the end I had a blocked shot, missed shot. Maybe I could have drove, heat check type thing — I wish I had that back — and rebound … I can’t have leave the game with three rebounds, that’s unacceptable for me. Everybody’s fighting so well but it hurts that I feel I could’ve done better to help.”

The rebounding issues were tough to escape last night as the Pistons out-rebounded the Hawks 60-34, including 18 offensive rebounds leading to 19 second chance points.

“The defensive glass is the thing that hurt us the most,” said Snyder. “We’ve got to continue to grind on that. We’re going to be at a disadvantage, and everybody’s got to rebound. Whether we’ve got to tip it to each other or get on the floor, it doesn’t matter what it looks like, we’ve just got to kill possessions with the ball.”

Normally, such a disparity in rebounds, paired with offensive rebounds, can create a giant offset in field goal attempts, where the team with significantly more rebounds/offensive rebounds attempting perhaps 10-plus more shots, but not in this case. The field goal attempts were very even amongst the two sides, with the Hawks actually attempting three more shots (89-86). Still, Duren was a constant thorn throughout, and Stewart’s physicality off the bench was similarly present.

Duren is a difficult matchup for Onyeka Okongwu on both ends of the ball, but Okongwu was excellent offensively in the first half scoring 18 points on 8-of-11 shooting, and showing a fine touch on his hook shots.

“The way he attacks and the touch he has is unique,” said Snyder of Okongwu. “In spite of the fact he’s shooting threes, he’s not just a three-point shooter, he’s a playmaker too. They were making it hard in hand-offs, blowing stuff up. His ability to put the ball on the floor becomes really important.”

However, in the second half he failed to have a similar impact. He became more limited to the three-point line, shooting 0-of-4 in the second half from three, and 1-of-7 overall as he finished with 20 points on 9-of-18 shooting to go with six rebounds, four assists, and three blocks.

It was still a good game overall, but between Johnson and Alexander-Walker waking up in the second half, there was always going to be a bit of regression of opportunities for Okongwu compared to the first half.

Johnson and Alexander-Walker representing a two-headed snake for the Hawks on offense has been great to watch, but they do need help. Okongwu and Dyson Daniels are usually dependable at providing this help (though, a difficult night shooting for Daniels, 5-of-14, but still scored 10 points), but — without Kristaps Porzingis — the Hawks actually need Risacher to contribute, which he has done recently but production is still a bit inconsistent at the moment.

Last night, Risacher scored four points on 2-of-7 shooting and 0-of-3 from three in just 21 minutes. The minutes distribution for Risacher has been odd at times as well — only two games this season has he played 30 or more minutes.

Outside of Risacher, the Hawks need more from their bench, which was outscored 37-9 last night. Wallace is not a high volume scorer, Mo Gueye can be up and down, Krejci has been defended tightly of late, and I’ve been disappointed by the lack of plays drawn to Luke Kennard a bit more open. He’s obviously an elite shooter but hasn’t had a ton of opportunities to get open looks.

A game of fine margins — between the bench, rebounding, odd coaching decisions — and one the Hawks had enough within to win on the night, but came just short. The Hawks (13-9) return to Atlanta where they await the Los Angeles Clippers (5-16) on Wednesday night, who are on the second game of a five game road trip having begun the trip with a loss in Miami.

Until next time!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...jalen-johnson-quotes-analysis-breakdown-video
 
Hawks at Pistons: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Atlanta Hawks (13-8) try muster a second wind against the Eastern Conference-leading Detroit Pistons (16-4) after a marathon game in Philadelphia last night.

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen​


Location: Little Caesars Arena, Detroit, MI

Start Time: 7:00 PM EDT

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...ons-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Charting the early season Atlanta Hawks (part 1)

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It’s been an enthralling start to the season for the Atlanta Hawks (13-9), who have had to re-engineer their style of play on both ends of the floor after losing Trae Young to an MCL sprain just minutes into their fifth game of the season.

The team has responded beautifully in the wake of Young’s injury, doubling down on their activity and aggression on the defensive end of the floor while emphasizing pace, proper spacing and quick decision making on offense. Of course, there have been a few bumps in the road*, but on the whole, it’s been really fun watching this young roster surprise us – and maybe even themselves – with some of their performances as of late.

*Atlanta dropped a winnable game in Detroit on Monday night – albeit on the second night of a back to back. Their rebounding numbers have also been a disaster all season long.

Since sitting out of the Lakers game with a right quad contusion, Jalen Johnson has averaged 24.9 points, 11.1 rebounds and 8.8 assists (3.6 turnovers) on 52/47/78 shooting splits (five three-point attempts per game) over the last 12 contests*. Onyeka Okongwu is shooting a career-best 37% from three this season on a career-high 5.1 attempts per game. Okongwu has also been tremendous at spotting cutters in the halfcourt and is averaging a career-best 3.4 assists per 36 minutes.

*Nikola Jokic is the only player who has topped these numbers over this span.

Nickeil Alexander-Walker has more than doubled his scoring output from last season, averaging 20.4 points per game (up from 9.4 last season) while improving his efficiency. Vit Krejci has cooled off over the last few games but still ranks eighth (!) in the NBA in three-point percentage (45.8%).

Quibble about Zaccharie Risacher’s output all you want, but the second-year pro leads the Hawks in on/off impact this season – with the offense scoring 5.2 more points-per-100-possessions, and the defense allowing 7.7 fewer points-per-100-possessions with him on the floor. If anyone is selling Risacher stock, I’ll gladly buy it up.

Roughly six weeks into the NBA season, I figured now is as good a time as any to check in on some Hawks’ numbers – in chart form!


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First up is a simple look at how the Hawks stack up to the rest of the league in offensive and defensive rating. Through the first 22 games of the season, Atlanta ranks 17th in offensive rating (scoring 114.4 points per 100 possessions) and eighth in defensive rating (allowing 112.4 points per 100 possessions). In terms of net rating, the Hawks rank in the middle of the pack — though they are a positive (+2 points per 100 possessions) on the season.

A few (non-Hawks) things that jumped out to me from the plot above. A) OKC’s defensive rating is comically good. The gap between them and the second-best defense in the league (Detroit) is wider than the gap between Detroit and the 23rd ranked defense in the league (Chicago) – wild stuff. B) All of the teams that rank below league-average in defensive rating have also struggled offensively, as none of them have posted an above-average offensive rating this season – exemplifying the relationship between defense and offense on a league-wide scale this season*.

*Per cleaningtheglass, there were five teams who ranked in the bottom half of the league in defensive rating and the upper half of the league in offensive rating last season.

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Looking at the two plots above, you can see that while there has been some variance, Atlanta’s defense has, on the whole, been stingier in Trae Young’s absence, holding their opponents to a below league-average offensive output in 12 out of their 17 games with Young sidelined.

On the other end, their offensive has improved after a rocky start to the year. Two of their five worst offensive showing of the season came in the first three games of the season. Since then however, they’ve topped the league-average offensive rating mark in 12 out of their last 19 games. I look forward to seeing how the offense performs with Young back in the lineup.

Digging a little deeper into their performances on offense and defense, the boxplots below show how the Hawks stack up relative to the rest of the league in offensive shooting frequency, offensive shooting accuracy, defensive shooting frequency and defensive shooting accuracy (using data from cleaningtheglass).

If you’re unfamiliar with shooting frequency, it’s simply the percentage of a team’s shot attempts that come from each location of the floor (rim*, short-mid**, long-mid***, corner threes and non-corner threes).

* Shots within 4-feet of the basket

** Shots between 4-feet and 14-feet away from the basket

*** Shots outside of 14-feet, inside the three-point arc

Offense Shooting Frequency

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Offense Shooting Accuracy

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Defense Shooting Frequency

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Defense Shooting Accuracy

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Atlanta has done a good job attacking and converting at the rim through the first 22 games – ranking 10th in rim-shooting frequency and 12th in rim-shooting accuracy. Their efficiency at the rim (68.1%) has been a pleasant surprise given that they ranked 21st in this area last season (65.1%), though there is still room for improvement.

From beyond the arc, the Hawks rank right around league average in overall three-point attempt rate, but as you can see from the plot, they’ve done really well at creating/converting from the corners*. Nickeil Alexander-Walker leads the team in both makes and attempts from this area (20-for-41, 48.8%), though Onyeka Okongwu (15-for-35, 42.9%) and Luke Kennard (11-for-22, 50%) have also shot well.

*The second-most efficient shot location!

On the other end, Atlanta’s defensive shot profile is not pretty – with the team allowing the third highest frequency of rim attempts, and the 11th highest frequency of corner threes – though they are still making it work, as evidenced by their top-10 ranking in defensive rating.

Part of the reason for their unfavorable defensive shot profile is that the Hawks are hyper-aggressive when it comes to forcing turnovers, ranking fourth in defensive turnover rate on the season. If one player gambles and it doesn’t pay off, it puts the rest of the defense in a tough position – however that’s just the nature of how they operate, and it’s paid off more often than not this season.

Another reason the defense is working despite their opponent’s shot profile is that their opponents haven’t had a ton of success from the high-value areas of the floor (the rim and the corners). Despite allowing a ton of shots at the rim, the Hawks rank 15th in opponent rim-shooting accuracy – with Mouhamed Gueye and Nickeil Alexander-Walker making a big impact in this area*. Additionally, Atlanta has gotten fortunate** with some of their opponents misses from beyond the arc, ranking third in opponent corner three accuracy, and eighth in non-corner-three accuracy.

*Per cleaningtheglass, Hawks’ opponents are shooting 60.9% at the rim with Mouhamed Gueye on the floor – 8.1% lower than they shoot when he is on the bench. Similarly, opponents are shooting 64.9% at the rim with Alexander-Walker on the floor – 4.5% lower than they shoot when he is on the bench.

**And it’s about damn time! Atlanta ranked 28th in overall opponent three-point accuracy in each of the last two seasons.

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Last but not least, I thought I’d include a scatter plot to help visualize how the Hawks roster has performed in the EPM metric (from dunksandthrees) through the first 22 games of the season. As it’s still early on, these numbers are going to be impacted by how these players performed last season (except for rookie Asa Newell!). It’s also important to keep in mind that EPM is not a holy grail. Nevertheless, I thought this chart provided a nice snapshot of the roster’s strengths and weaknesses. Only players who logged at least 97 minutes this season were plotted.

Including Alexander-Walker (who curiously rates below the league average in D-EPM), Atlanta has seven players in the current rotation who I’d say are average to above-average defensive players. It’s hardly surprising to see Dyson Daniels and Mouhamed Gueye rated as the team’s top two defenders.

Additionally, as you can see, Atlanta also has three players who firmly rate as above average two-way players in Porzingis, Johnson and Okongwu. Okongwu’s play, in particular, has been a real positive and I’d be surprised if Quin Snyder and his coaching staff aren’t planning to deploy more Porzingis/Okongwu frontcourt lineups when Porzingis is back in the lineup.



That’s it for part one of this two-part series. I’ve got some more visuals in mind for next week but if there’s anything in particular that you’d like to see, let me know in the comments!

The Hawks are back in action tonight, taking on the Los Angeles Clippers at State Farm Arena. Tipoff is at 7:30 PM on FanDuel Sports Network Southeast. Stay tuned!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...s-advanced-stats-jalen-johnson-trae-young-nba
 
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