News Hawks Team Notes

25 in 25: No. 5 Josh Smith

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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. 6 Jeff Teague can be found here.



Even though Josh Childress was the higher selection in the 2004 NBA Draft, the selection of Josh Smith at 17th overall ultimately became the turning point for a franchise that was careening toward rock bottom. After a 13-win season in 2004-05 in Smith’s rookie season, the Hawks slowly grew into being a consistent playoff team by the end of the decade.

‘J-Smoove’ is from nearby Powder Springs, GA, and after graduating from McEachern High School, he went to Oak Hill Academy — a preparatory academy that has seen many NBA players come through their doors over the years like then teammate Rajon Rondo. Smith decided to enter the draft, bypassing college when it was still fairly common and easy to do so, and the Hawks pounced with one of their two first-round picks.

Very quickly, it was easy to see how physically mature the 6-foot-9 forward was despite entering the NBA at 18 years old. His acceleration and agility let him fly 94-feet down the court for lob finishes or chase-down blocks, and his long wingspan quickly became an obstacle for opposing players.

His rookie season, Smith averaged 9.7 points, 6.2 rebounds, 1.7 assists, 1.9 blocks and 0.8 steals per game. His 3.7 blocks per 100 possessions (minimum 2000 minutes) as a rookie are the second-best mark of any non-center (per Stathead/basketball-reference), trailing only Andrei Kirilenko.

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He also made his mark in the dunk contest during All-Star Weekend in 2005, recording three dunks with perfect score en route to taking home the title. With every lefty windmill jam, almost overnight Smoove went from just a local Atlanta kid to a household name.

Smith played both forward spots over the next few years, developing into a force as a downhill finisher at the rim, intelligent passer, and one of the best defenders on the planet as the Hawks built up their team towards their breakthrough in 2008.

Josh Smith signed an offer sheet with the Memphis Grizzlies during his restricted free agency in the summer of 2008, but the Hawks matched the five-year offer to keep him in Atlanta. While his production plateaued alongside the Hawks’ performances over the years, he remained a perennial fringe All-Star during the heart of his career, and in my opinion is one of the best players in league history never to earn that honor.

One persistent knock was Smith’s penchant for shooting medium to long mid-range jumpers despite no track record of being a good jump shooter. When Smoove was left alone near the elbow, a roar came over crowds in then Philips Arena pleading him not to shoot.

And yet he did. A lot.

Across his nine-year career in Atlanta, Smith took 32% of his shots from 10-feet out to the three-point line per basketball-reference’s shot tracking. He hit 33% of those for his Hawks career. 0.66 points per shot for those inclined towards math. Ew.

His three-point shooting during his nine-season career here was rather bad as well (28.3%). Not good, but at least that worked out to 0.85 points per shot.

As the league trended towards smaller, more skilled forwards who can handle and space the floor in the mid 2010s, Smith’s skillset wasn’t quite a fit for this new era.

The Detroit Pistons, however, didn’t get this memo.

When Smith reached unrestricted free agency in 2013, the Pistons inked him to a four-year deal to play the 3 alongside Greg Monroe and Andre Drummond. Smith only lasted one and a half of those seasons before his contract was amnestied (essentially stretched and waived for salary cap relief). He then bounced around the league until his last season in 2017-18.

2009 Josh Smith explosive athleticism pic.twitter.com/eBps6ltxv3

— Pitless (@pitlessball) December 9, 2025

For his Hawks career from 2004 to 2013, Smith averaged 15.3 points, 8.0 rebounds, 3.2 assists, 2.1 blocks, and 1.3 steals per game. His standing in the franchise leaderboard is undeniable:

  • 676 games — ninth all-time
  • 23,078 minutes — fifth all-time
  • 10,371 points — ninth all-time
  • 4,030 field goals — seventh all-time
  • 5,407 rebounds — seventh all-time
  • 857 steals — fifth all-time
  • 1,440 blocks — second all-time to Tree Rollins

The accolades shelf looks a little light for a top five Hawk of the past 25 years, but in reality, Smith should have one or two All-Star appearances and multiple more All-Defensive Team appearances. Every season from 2006-07 to 2011-12, he received votes for Defensive Player of the Year. But somehow, he only landed on a single All-Defensive Second Team in 2009-10 — a year in which he finished second in Defensive Player of the Year voting behind Dwight Howard.

Ultimately, Smith made an underrated impact for this franchise. He was a key piece of six straight playoff teams. And while it’s sad that his game never quite matched up with his talent level — and that his playstyle quickly went the way of the dinosaur — the hometown kid is still remembered fondly.

Let’s take one last trip down memory lane:



1.

2.

3.

4.

5.
Josh Smith

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...ta-hawks-history-nba-video-stats-notes-review
 
Charting the early season Atlanta Hawks (part 2)

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Giannis rumblings aside, it’s been a quiet week for the Atlanta Hawks (14-11), who are enjoying a few days off as part of an unofficial quarter-of-the-season break thanks to the NBA Cup schedule — and boy have they needed a rest.

As of last Saturday’s win in Washington, the Hawks were tied with three other teams for the most games played this season (25). Through seven weeks, they are tied with Portland and Golden State for the most road games played this season (15). While they haven’t faced the toughest opponents – they’re 20th in strength of schedule so far – the travel has been relentless, meaning that a few days off to rest and recharge the batteries is just what the doctor ordered.

Last week, I made some charts to help visualize Atlanta’s performance through the first quarter (ish) of the season. This week, I’m back to talk about a few more early season trends.

Here’s an updated look at where the Hawks stack up relative to the rest of the league in offensive and defensive rating (good lord, OKC).

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Through seven weeks, Atlanta ranks 15th in offensive rating and 11th in defensive rating. They are 16th in net rating.

Let’s take a look at some intriguing Hawks numbers!


Rebounding Woes

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The first trend is an obvious one that’s been quite apparent when watching the Hawks early on this season, but to put it in writing: they have been one of the worst rebounding teams in the league – ranking 24th in offensive rebounding percentage, and 22nd in defensive rebounding percentage thus far.

Rebounding wasn’t a problem area for this team last season, as they ranked 11th in both offensive and defensive rebounding percentage in 2024-25, and while I’m not all that concerned about the drop-off on the offensive glass (more on this below), the team’s struggles on the defensive glass have been a major worry. Atlanta’s inability to consistently close out defensive possessions with a rebound has been one of the biggest factors dragging their 11th ranked defense closer to the league average. The Hawks are 22nd in second chance points allowed this season (16.0 per game), giving up 2.3 more points per game off second-chance opportunities than they were last season (12th, 13.7).

Head coach Quin Snyder spoke about the team’s defensive rebounding issues prior to the Nuggets game, saying that they understand that the possession battle is ‘incredibly important’.

“We just have to keep grinding.” said Snyder, “There’s times where we’re not 7’2”, 6’11”, 6’8” across the front line. Even when we are big, the question there is competing physically. If you’re giving up height, or you’re giving up weight, we have to rebound as a ‘pack’ and we have to get it done together. That means everybody’s got a job to do. But when you miss an assignment, the quarterback gets sacked.”

Snyder also noted that they are trying to study officiating tendencies to try and gain an edge on the glass, saying:

“The defensive glass gets called a lot of different ways in various games, and it’s something to me that we’re trying to study and understand what we can do. You can’t face guard a guy like an offensive lineman, but what can you do to be effective in those situations? We’re studying it a lot and trying to figure out how to get better. We’ll just keep doing that.”

As observers, we’ll get a chance to see if the team has made any breakthroughs in this area against Detroit (second in the league in offensive rebounding percentage) tomorrow night.

One note on the offensive rebounding before moving on to the next section. While the Hawks have seen a decline in their offensive rebounding percentage this season, this appears to have been a calculated decision in an attempt to improve their transition defense – and the math is working out in their favor thus far.

Looking at Atlanta’s second chance points numbers, they are scoring 13.8 second chance points per game this season – one of the lowest figures in the league, however it’s only slightly below their mark from last season (14.6 second-chance points per game). A difference of 0.8 points per game.

On the defensive end, the Hawks are conceding the lowest frequency of opponent transition possessions (15.5%) and rank fifth in transition points allowed per game (21.0) – a significant improvement from last season when they ranked seventh in opponent transition frequency (17.8%) and 18th in transition points allowed per game (23.5). A difference of 2.5 points per game.

While the relationship between offensive rebounds and opponent transition possessions is not perfect (live-ball turnovers typically lead to transition opportunities as well), I’d be willing to wager that a fair amount of the decline in opponent transition frequency is a result of the Hawks eschewing the offensive glass in favor of bolstering their defense. Given that they’re coming out a net-positive relative to last year, I’d say the strategy is working out so far.

Quin Snyder talked about the offensive glass on Friday as well, noting that the frequency at which the Hawks drive to the basket is another reason for the low offensive rebounding numbers:

“We have to be careful because we have a lot of guys that are driving to the rim. It’s very difficult to crash the offensive glass without putting yourself in a very difficult possession to defend. But there are times, particularly on three-point shots where we crash and try to get extra possessions. That’s been something that I’ve talked about.”

Friendly Opponent 3P-Shooting Numbers


One more trend we’ve seen take shape through the first seven weeks of the season has been the drop in opponent three-point shooting percentage – something I noted in last week’s article as well. Per nba.com/stats, Atlanta ranks ninth in the league in overall opponent three-point accuracy, with their opponents shooting just 34.8% from beyond the arc. This is a massive improvement from last season when they ranked 28th in opponent three-point accuracy (37.7%), and a difference that ranks as the fourth biggest year-to-year improvement in the NBA through the first seven weeks of the season.

While there is certainly some luck involved when it comes to opponent shooting, given how drastic this improvement is, I figured I would dig a little deeper into the data to try to find an explanation. The charts below plot NBA team’s opponent three-point shooting frequency and accuracy, sorted by defender proximity. The ‘x axis’ shows the percentage of the opponent’s overall shot attempts that the shot type makes up – naturally, teams shoot fewer ‘contested’ threes than ‘open’ ones.

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A few things jump out from this plot. First, the Hawks are doing a good job on closeouts — with their opponents taking the fourth-highest frequency of ‘contested’ three-pointers in the league – though they are getting rather unlucky as their opponents are converting these looks at a 36.1% clip, the fifth-highest opponent accuracy on this shot type this season.

Second, while the Hawks are allowing the 10th lowest frequency of ‘open’ threes, their opponents are shooting just 35% on these looks – the fourth lowest mark in the NBA. Last season, Atlanta allowed a similar frequency of ‘open’ threes, though their opponents converted them at a 39.7% clip, the eighth highest accuracy on this shot type in 2024-25. With these shots making up over 20% of their opponent’s overall attempts, it’s safe to say there is some luck involved in this area this season.

Atlanta rank in the middle of the pack in both opponent frequency and accuracy on ‘semi-contested’ looks this season, though they’ve seen a significant drop in their opponent’s accuracy on these attempts, with their opponents shooting 34.2% through the first seven weeks after shooting 37.2% (the highest mark in the NBA) last season.

Overall, while I do believe the Hawks have been slightly better at defending the three-point line this season, their opponent’s three-point shooting numbers are somewhat deflated as Atlanta have gotten fortunate with some of their opponent’s misses.

The Importance of Turnover Creation and Prevention

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One more area I wanted to discuss today is how important turnover creation (on defense) and turnover prevention (on offense) has been to the Hawks success this season.

Per cleaningtheglass, Atlanta are fourth in the league in defensive turnover rate (16.3%) and rank fourth in points scored off turnovers (21.4). On the other end, despite losing their All-Star point guard just five games into the season, the Hawks haven’t seen a significant difference in this category from last season to this season, ranking 15th in offensive turnover rate and 20th in points allowed off of turnovers (18.9).

Leading the charge for Atlanta on the defensive end is none other than Dyson Daniels. After leading the league in steals last season, ‘The Great Barrier Thief’ ranks second* in the league in steals so far this season with 2.2 swipes per game. Jalen Johnson is second on the team in steals at 1.6 per game.

*Cason Wallace is the league leader

As you can see in the plot below, the battle in ‘points off of turnovers’ has been a pretty strong indicator of Atlanta’s success from game to game this season, as they are 12-4 in games where they’ve outscored their opponents in ‘points off turnovers’, and just 2-7 in games where they’ve been outscored by their opponents in this category.

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That’s all for this piece! The Hawks return to action on Friday, taking on the Detroit Pistons on the road in what should be a hard-fought matchup. Atlanta have lost both of their games against the Pistons this season with their most recent matchup being decided by a single point.

Tipoff for that one is at 7 PM EST on FanDuel Sports Network.

Until next time!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...ta-hawks-analysis-stats-figures-dyson-daniels
 
Hawks get dominated after mini-break, lose 142-115 to Pistons

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The Atlanta Hawks were in Detroit on Friday evening to face the Pistons. It was a much-needed break for the Hawks, as they haven’t played since last Saturday against the Washington Wizards. They had a lot of time this week to practice, something they haven’t had much time to do so far this season because of the schedule.

Unfortunately, even though the Hawks had a long break, Kristaps Porzingis was ruled out a day before the game with an illness.

The Hawks came out pretty efficient, and it started at the three-point line. Nickeil Alexander-Walker knocked down three of them early, while Zaccharie Risacher added one.

Nickeil has drained 3 threes in less than 5 minutes 🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/2TTivSW3sI

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 13, 2025

Later in the quarter, Mouhamed Gueye joined in on the fun and knocked down a triple in the corner.

Dyson offensive board ⏩ Mo corner triple pic.twitter.com/NnKRO4w1F1

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 13, 2025

There was a lot of nice shotmaking in the first by both teams, and Jalen Johnson was able to get this turnaround jumper to go.

Jalen that is too pretty 🤩 pic.twitter.com/MhqkLXSNMI

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 13, 2025

It was a tight game in the first, with neither team breaking away by as much as a five-point lead. The shots were falling for both, and going into the second quarter, the Hawks trailed 34-33.

The Pistons started the second quarter with more energy, and they were able to knock down a few shots to extend their lead. On the other hand, the Hawks had a few miscommunications early and some shots that didn’t go in, which led to them staying stagnant to start the quarter.

Johnson kept the Hawks afloat in the quarter, knocking down this three-pointer.

Top of the key JJ 🔑 pic.twitter.com/VZhi8l8j4A

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 13, 2025

After that shot, the Hawks went into an offensive slump, and the Pistons used that to their advantage, extending their lead to double-digits. Alexander-Walker did his best to get the Hawks back in it down the stretch of the first half, and he was hitting shots from anywhere.

Nickeil connects on the tough runner pic.twitter.com/zLOgsA6dmZ

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 13, 2025

He used the glass to his advantage on this one.

Always use the glass 🪟 pic.twitter.com/kjP35ewnzb

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 13, 2025

In the final minute heading into halftime, the Hawks were able to cut their deficit to single digits after Johnson was able to find Dyson Daniels for a dunk down the lane. Going into the second half, the Hawks trailed the Pistons 69-60.

JJ to DD!

We trim it to 9 at the half pic.twitter.com/EmSHHRKFXa

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 13, 2025

The Hawks didn’t start the third quarter the way they wanted, as the Pistons went on a 10-2 run to extend their lead to double digits again. Turnovers and missed shots continued to hurt the Hawks, which made it hard for them to get any momentum.

Things didn’t get much better for the Hawks as the quarter continued, and they found themselves down as much as 23 points. Daniels tried to lighten the blow for the Hawks, getting to the rim for an easy dunk.

Dyson right to the rack pic.twitter.com/QWPqIr87xU

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 13, 2025

Going into the fourth quarter, the Hawks trailed 104-79.

Much of the same happened in the fourth for the Hawks, and they just could not dig themselves out of the hole. In fact, the hole got much deeper, and the Pistons extended their lead to as much as 30 points.

On a brighter note, Johnson was able to record his third triple-double in a row.

Jalen Johnson has recorded his 3rd triple-double in a row! pic.twitter.com/jwN3KjorOY

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 13, 2025

Quin Snyder cleared the bench with about four minutes left in the quarter, but it really wasn’t much of a clearing with the Hawks only having ten players available.

Johnson finished with 19 points, 11 rebounds, and 11 assists, Alexander-Walker finished with 22 points, and Daniels finished with 18 points, 10 rebounds, and five assists.

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

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/reca...ated-after-mini-break-lose-142-115-to-pistons
 
Defensive breakdowns and turnovers doom Hawks in road loss to Pistons

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The Atlanta Hawks’ road trip encountered a significant setback on Friday night at Little Caesars Arena, as the Detroit Pistons secured a decisive 142–115 victory over Atlanta. Detroit’s balanced offensive approach and sustained tempo overwhelmed the Hawks across all phases of the game, preventing Atlanta from maintaining early momentum.

Atlanta began the contest with noticeable energy despite the road environment. The Hawks moved the ball effectively and generated early offense through Nickeil Alexander-Walker, who attacked off the dribble and converted jump shots to keep pace with Detroit.

Atlanta traded baskets with the Pistons for much of the opening quarter and briefly held a lead midway through the period. Although defensive lapses were evident, the Hawks’ spacing and effort allowed them to remain competitive early.

The game began to shift during the second quarter as Detroit increased its defensive pressure. The Pistons forced turnovers and capitalized on missed Hawks field goals by converting in transition.

As a result, Atlanta’s offense stagnated for extended stretches, struggling to produce efficient looks in the half court. Detroit used a decisive run, fueled by ball movement and perimeter shooting, to extend its lead into double digits by halftime. Despite continued efforts from Jalen Johnson and Dyson Daniels, Atlanta was unable to disrupt Detroit’s offensive rhythm.

Detroit further separated itself in the third quarter, extending the lead beyond 20 points. The Pistons combined efficient three-point shooting, physical defense, and consistent ball movement to maintain control. Atlanta continued to compete but remained unable to string together defensive stops or sustained scoring runs.

Turnovers proved to be a critical factor in the outcome. Atlanta committed 20 turnovers, many of which resulted in immediate scoring opportunities for Detroit, limiting the Hawks’ ability to regain momentum.

Detroit’s offensive efficiency compounded the issue, as the Pistons shot approximately 58% from the field and 41% from three-point range, while Atlanta connected on roughly 46% of its field-goal attempts and 31% from beyond the arc.

Despite the loss, several Hawks delivered encouraging individual performances. Jalen Johnson emerged as the team’s most consistent contributor, recording his third consecutive triple-double with 19 points, 11 rebounds, and 11 assists, demonstrating the two-way impact Atlanta hopes he can provide.

Alexander-Walker led the Hawks in scoring with 22 points, supplying early offensive sparks, while Dyson Daniels contributed a well-rounded performance with 18 points, 10 rebounds, and five assists.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...ers-doom-hawks-atlanta-pistons-recap-analysis
 
Hawks at Pistons: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Atlanta Hawks (14-11) face the Detroit Pistons (19-5) for the third time already in the young season.

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...oit-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Hawks rely on fast start and balanced effort to edge 76ers

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The Atlanta Hawks secured a 120–117 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers on Sunday night at State Farm Arena, improving their record and sweeping the season series against Philadelphia to date. The contest featured multiple lead changes and sustained intensity, with Atlanta relying on a dominant first quarter and balanced scoring to hold off a late push by the 76ers.

Atlanta set the tone early, jumping out to a fast start behind efficient scoring from Dyson Daniels and Vit Krejci. The Hawks’ defensive pressure forced several turnovers, which translated into transition opportunities and helped them build a double-digit advantage by the end of the first quarter, leading 39–29. Philadelphia responded in the second quarter by tightening its half-court defense and increasing offensive efficiency. Despite the push, Atlanta maintained control and entered halftime with a four-point advantage, supported by consistent contributions from both the starting lineup and the bench.

The third quarter remained highly competitive, as both teams traded baskets. Joel Embiid and Paul George anchored the 76ers’ offense, keeping Philadelphia within striking distance. George led all scorers with 35 points, while Embiid added 22 points and 14 rebounds, continuing to apply pressure inside. Nevertheless, Atlanta preserved a narrow lead heading into the final period.

The game was decided in the closing moments of the fourth quarter. With the score tight in the final minute, Nickeil Alexander-Walker converted two critical free throws to extend Atlanta’s lead. Philadelphia had a final opportunity to force overtime, but Quentin Grimes’ potential game-tying attempt rimmed out as time expired, sealing the Hawks’ win.

Daniels led Atlanta with a standout performance, recording 27 points and 10 rebounds while impacting the game on both ends of the floor. His defensive intensity set the tone early, and his offensive versatility proved decisive. Reflecting on the performance, Daniels emphasized the team’s competitive mindset following a previous loss, noting his effectiveness attacking the rim and highlighting Krejci’s second-half scoring surge along with the team’s defensive execution.

Onyeka Okongwu provided a strong interior presence, finishing with 20 points and 15 rebounds and generating key second-chance opportunities. Jalen Johnson recorded another triple-double, posting 12 points, 10 rebounds, and 12 assists, which helped stabilize the Hawks’ offensive flow. Krejci contributed 19 points, including several timely three-pointers that stretched Philadelphia’s defense.

Atlanta’s performance was particularly notable given the absence of two key scorers. Kristaps Porzingis is expected to miss the next two weeks while recovering from illness, and Trae Young has resumed practice as he works toward rejoining the lineup. Despite these challenges, the Hawks demonstrated depth and resilience, securing a hard-fought victory.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/reca...a-stats-recap-notes-latest-news-jalen-johnson
 
Hawks finish off 76ers in the clutch, win 120-117

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The Atlanta Hawks were back at home Sunday evening to face the Philadelphia 76ers. After a rough loss against the Detroit Pistons following their mini-break, the Hawks were looking to get back on track.

The last time these two teams saw each other, the game went into overtime, with the Hawks coming out on top. This time around, the 76ers were without Tyrese Maxey, as he deals with an illness.

Nickeil Alexander-Walker seemed to have hurt his ankle on the first play of the game, but came back out after the timeout and knocked down a three-pointer. A signal that all was well.

Nickeil is all good pic.twitter.com/gkgZozw3tj

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 14, 2025

Dyson Daniels knocked a three-pointer a few minutes after.

Dyson triple it pic.twitter.com/CN6cREZ2W7

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 14, 2025

The Hawks were able to force the 76ers into some turnovers early in the game, and the Hawks were able to capitalize, whether it was in transition or at the free-throw line. They were able to maintain the lead throughout the quarter, even with the 76ers knocking down some threes.

Vit Krejci started feeling it down the stretch of the first, and he knocked down two three-pointers, and he got fouled while shooting another one. He finished the quarter with 11 points and helped the Hawks go into the second quarter with a 39-29 lead.

The Hawks let go of the lead in the second quarter, with not much coming offensively from the group that was in. They were to hold their own a little on defense, but the 76ers were able to take the lead. It wasn’t for long, because the Hawks fought back, and it became a back-and-forth contest from there.

Late in the quarter, Daniels showed off his defensive prowess and met Quentin Grimes at the rim for an impressive dunk.

Dyson DENIAL ☝️ pic.twitter.com/piXlegw4Mh

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 15, 2025

Right after that play, Krejci hit a wide-open three-pointer.

Viiiit feed him and fan him pic.twitter.com/FW9LvsVbsy

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 15, 2025

Things got a little testy down the stretch, as Joel Embiid elbowed Onyeka Okongwu in the chin going up for a shot. Okongwu hit the ground, and Jalen Johnson came over and gave Embiid a slight push, which got both teams tangled up. Embiid was called for a flagrant, and Okongwu knocked down 1 of his 2 free throws.

The Hawks were able to keep the lead going into halftime, as they led 59-55.

To start the third quarter, Okongwu and Daniels got to their bread and butter for an easy bucket in the paint.

Dyson & O rock a beautiful give & go 🤩 pic.twitter.com/ytegF7gPIt

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 15, 2025

Zaccharie Risacher got things going in the third, knocking down two three-pointers.

Three-sacher 🎯 pic.twitter.com/hh7LLQ5FmH

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 15, 2025

The Hawks had a lot of success getting to the rim, more specifically, Daniels, who got a few floaters and layups to go in the third.

Spin-o-rama pic.twitter.com/EqMihoNXJy

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 15, 2025

Krejci continued his hot night from the perimeter, knocking down another three-pointer to add to his scoring total.

Vit is on one tonight baby 🍳

He's up to 19 points pic.twitter.com/ROFxfDMja4

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 15, 2025

Asa Newell came in toward the end of the third and scored five points for the Hawks, keeping them afloat and helping them maintain their lead going into the fourth.

Asa is WORKING pic.twitter.com/ivdewoMUyK

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 15, 2025

The Hawks continued to use ball movement to their advantage, getting easy shots in the paint and out on the perimeter. The 76ers kept themselves in the game, but the Hawks did everything in their power to break away. Risacher continued playing well in the second half, and knocked down a big three-pointer in transition.

Zacch clutch pull-up jumper 😁 pic.twitter.com/Gf8EA6P4Oi

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 15, 2025

Okongwu knocked down a three late to give the Hawks a five-point lead.

Triple O! pic.twitter.com/6TJZ8ZVP0k

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 15, 2025

The 76ers stayed in it, and with less than a minute remaining, they made it a one-point game. The Hawks were not able to convert a shot on the other end, and the 76ers had a chance to take the lead. After several chances, they were not able to knock down a shot, and the Hawks got possession with 2.5 seconds left in the game.

Called for Vit on the switch and got NOTHING 🔒 pic.twitter.com/0sIhwT56ah

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 15, 2025

The 76ers played the foul game, and Alexander-Walker knocked down both free throws to give the Hawks a three-point lead with 1.5 seconds left. Grimes got a shot off, but it did not go in, and the Hawks walked away with the win.

Daniels finished with 27 points and 10 rebounds, Okongwu finished with 20 points and 15 rebounds, Johnson finished with 12 points, 10 rebounds, and 12 assists, and Krejci finished with 19 points.

The Hawks will be back in action on Thursday against the Charlotte Hornets.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/recaps/67003/hawks-finish-off-76ers-in-the-clutch-win-120-117
 
76ers at Hawks: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Atlanta Hawks (14-12) look to flush their previous effort against the Philadelphia 76ers (14-10).

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...wks-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Rumor Roundup: Trade SZN. Trae back? Porzingis gone?

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We have reached December 16th, one day after players who were signed in free agency can be included in trade and 52 days until the trade deadline on February 5th.

For the Hawks, they have two players who meet the former criterium: Nickeil Alexander-Walker (highly unlikely to be traded given his production and contract length) and Luke Kennard (an expiring contract who very well could be on the move).

The Hawks don’t play again until Thursday, so let’s take a moment to delve into the recent rumors and pertinent updates on injured players.

Trade candidate Giannis Antetokounmpo​


I talked here about the Giannis Antetokounmpo saga recently in regard to what happens if a trade with the Hawks or Knicks goes down between now and the trade deadline. There has been some recent sourcing from connected people around the NBA on this ongoing melodrama in the past few weeks.

Eric Nehm of The Athletic just yesterday shed some light on the idea that Milwaukee still wants to appease Antetokounmpo. Instead of entertaining trades for him, they may instead add to their team this trade season:

Five months after the Bucks’ stunning decision to waive Damian Lillard en route to adding big man Myles Turner on a four-year, $107 million deal, it appears they aren’t waving the white flag on Antetokounmpo’s future in Milwaukee just yet. Instead, league sources said they’re considering making yet another significant addition that might aid their chances of convincing him to stay.

Additionally, there’s little smoke connecting Antetokounmpo to the Hawks despite the picks they own. Per Chris Haynes of the NBA on Prime and NBA TV:

I think the Knicks have interest in Giannis—strong interest. The Miami Heat have interest in Giannis. The Golden State Warriors have had interest in Giannis for a long time. The San Antonio Spurs. The Minnesota Timberwolves. The list goes on and on. Ultimately, for Giannis, wherever he lands, I think he’d prefer some sun, probably a big market. Outside of that, he wants to be on a team that can contend for a championship. He’s been very clear that this is a top priority for him throughout his career

There is a little less than two months between now and the trade deadline, and so circumstances can quickly change in that time period. But for now, with an extension in the offseason absolutely imperative for any team trading for the two-time MVP, it seems Atlanta will merely monitor the situation from the sidelines for now.

Trade candidate Anthony Davis​


Anthony Davis is the most recent star linked with the Atlanta Hawks this trade season. After the (immediately) ill-fated Luka Doncic trade and the Mavs’ slow start this season, it seems a shakeup is in store in Dallas.

League sources indicated to Shams Charania of ESPN that the Atlanta Hawks are among the teams expected to be a suitor for Davis. ‘AD’ is still a premier defensive force in this league and skilled scoring big, but his injury history, age, and salary (including an extension opportunity in the near future) should give teams like the Hawks a bit of pause.

Davis makes $54.1 million this season, $58.5 million next season, and has a player option for $62.8 million in 2027-28. Do the Hawks really want to give up assets for a 32-year-old player with their young roster? Or will the asking price from the Mavericks be so low as to entice a team like Atlanta? Who knows, but it’s an interesting wrinkle to watch for going forward.

Trae Young​


Trae Young has only played five games this season due to a knee sprain he picked up in a game against the Brooklyn Nets. Young has been re-evaluated a couple of times since that incident, and the breadcrumbs are indicating that he is close to returning to action.

Could we see him in the lineup for the next game on Thursday against the Charlotte Hornets?

On Saturday, December 13, the Atlanta Hawks issued this statement regarding Young:

Guard Trae Young sustained a right knee MCL sprain on Oct. 29 at Brooklyn. He continues to increase his reconditioning activities and is expected to return to practice next week. His status will be updated as appropriate.

If all things go as expected, he’ll re-join practice with the Hawks — although no word on his actual status for games yet. So, if his injury designation changes from “out” to “questionable” for Charlotte when the report is released tomorrow afternoon at 5 PM EST, that could be a really good sign on this front.

Young has documented his rehabilitation process in a vlog series on his Youtube channel, if you’re interested in a behind-the-scenes look at the progress.

Kristaps Porzingis​


Porzingis opened up about his fight with postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), something that hindered his performances with the Celtics in the past two seasons. The hope was that the Latvian international was over this ailment when the Hawks acquired him this summer, but with him missing some recent games officially with “illness”, it has quickly become clear that those hopes have faded into the ether.

To date, Porzingis has only played 13 out of a possible 26 games this season — and unfortunately, that ratio is about to get a lot worse. On Sunday, the Hawks released the following statement:

Center Kristaps Porzingis has missed multiple games while dealing with a recent illness. To ensure he continues to make progress toward a full recovery, he will continue this period of limited basketball activities and evaluation for two weeks, after which time his status will be updated.

What does that mean for his status with the team going beyond that? Well, Marc Stein shines a bit of light on his Substack blog the Stein Line on Sunday saying, “any significant trade business that Atlanta does in-season is expected to include the $30.7 million expiring contract held by Kristaps Porziņģis.”

If you ask me, it sounds like the Hawks simply can’t count on his availability anymore, and his expiring deal would then be a great way to grease the wheels of any big trade executed. We’ll have to stay tuned on this front.

Jacob Toppin​


Toppin is someone that impressed in Summer League, and he was looking to use that momentum to crack the rotation for the Hawks on a two-way contract.

Unfortunately, while playing with the College Park Skyhawks, he suffered a torn labrum in his right shoulder a couple of weeks ago — something that will cause him to miss the remainder of the season.

Now, on Monday, the Hawks waived him from his two-way contract to allow them to sign someone else to that open roster spot.

All the best for Jacob Toppin going forward.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/atla...nis-antetokounmpo-anthony-davis-atlanta-hawks
 
Injury report is big news for Trae Young’s return

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As of today, Trae Young has missed the last 22 games after suffering an MCL sprain in the fifth game of the season. The Hawks have gone 13-9 without him, but there’s no question his return will be a big boost to a team looking to push their way up towards the top of the Eastern Conference standings.

I talked about Young’s rehabilitation timeline previously, but in the past 24 hours things have trended upwards toward a welcoming back to play.

Yesterday, Trae Young was assigned to the Hawks’ G League affiliate, the College Park Skyhawks, in order for Young to practice in a professional setting:

The Atlanta Hawks announced today that guard Trae Young and center N’Faly Dante have been assigned to the College Park Skyhawks from the Hawks.

— Hawks PR (@HawksPR) December 16, 2025

Then, earlier today, the Hawks recalled him to the senior team:

The Atlanta Hawks announced today that guard Trae Young has been recalled to the Hawks from the College Park Skyhawks.

— Hawks PR (@HawksPR) December 17, 2025

Trae Young got in a practice with the Hawks this morning at the practice facility in advance of their next game, and he even won a shooting contest that Luke Kennard often dominates.

Does that mean Young’s return is imminent? Well, after being listed as ‘out’ on every injury report since the beginning of November, his designation changed for the better this afternoon:

An @emoryhealthcare injury report for tomorrow’s game at Charlotte:

Trae Young (right knee MCL sprain): Questionable

Kristaps Porzingis (illness): Out pic.twitter.com/oI0UigUJeK

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 17, 2025

The Hawks face off against the Charlotte Hornets in Charlotte tomorrow, and Young is expected to make the trip given his ’questionable’ designation. It will likely be a game-time decision. Stay tuned to see if he truly is welcomed back to action Thursday evening.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/late...ws-trae-youngs-return-atlanta-hawks-nba-rumor
 
Young return, Johnson birthday bash marred by missing defense in 133-126 loss

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Trae Young returned to action with the Hawks with fanfare after missing 22 games. He bumped Nickeil Alexander-Walker to the bench, although head coach Quin Snyder did state Young would be on a minutes restriction.

The opening minutes of the game was a boondoggle, however, as an 8-0 Hornets run prompted an early Snyder timeout. Things were just as rough post-timeout, as Charlotte’s ball movement was multiple steps ahead of Atlanta’s defense almost every possession. The Hornets used this sharpness to jump out to a 24-9 lead.

The Hawks found their footing a bit, but they face a pretty big deficit. The defense remained a step behind, but the offense matched Charlotte’s almost shot for shot after the opening minutes.

Young does still know how to run a pick-and-roll:

Trae & Jalen in the pick & roll sets up a pretty lob to Mo 🤩 pic.twitter.com/GzNeFugwel

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 19, 2025

After one quarter, Charlotte led 37-32.

And then an even bigger flurry hit the Hawks in the second quarter. Bad offense led to easy chances in transition, and the Hawks bench had no idea what hit them it seemed. They couldn’t find a man to defend, and Charlotte got open three after open three to break the game wide open.

The only thing that made the game respectable at half was the scoring explosion from Nickeil Alexander-Walker within the final two minutes of the first half:

NAW 3 threes in less than a minute 🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/NZYp3o7h5W

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 19, 2025

At half, the Hawks trailed 80-69.

The third quarter was, again, another dumpster fire. But amazingly, the Hawks were still in the game after the defensive disaster. They found themselves down 107-95 heading into the fourth quarter.

Jalen Johnson’s scoring was absolutely vital as the Hawks sought a huge comeback. The Hornets couldn’t match up with his physical, downhill drives, and he neared a 30-10-10 triple-double by early in the fourth quarter.

Here is just one example:

Transition JJ 🚂 pic.twitter.com/avqXVbNqni

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 19, 2025

With the lead cut to four points, a new game was born out of what looked like it was headed for a blowout.

But numerous 50/50 plays went Charlotte’s way down the stretch. The Hawks even trimmed the lead to three multiple times within three minutes remaining in the game. Though Johnson tried to will the Hawks to victory, the Hornets pulled one rabbit out of the hat after another.

Atlanta fell 133-126.

Johnson continued his rampage with 43 points (a new career-high), 11 rebounds, and nine assists on his 24th birthday. Alexander-Walker added 28 points, seven rebounds, and two assists.

The Hawks will aim for a better result Friday night against the San Antonio Spurs.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/reca...nta-hawks-charlotte-hornets-final-video-recap
 
Hawks at Hornets: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Atlanta Hawks (15-12) welcome back Trae Young as they look to pick up a victory over the Charlotte Hornets (8-18).

Please join in the comments below as you follow along.

Where, When, and How to Watch and Listen​


Location: Spectrum Center, Charlotte, NC

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...ets-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Hawks can’t find rhythm, lose 126-98 to Spurs

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The Atlanta Hawks were back at home on Friday night to face the San Antonio Spurs. Coming off a game against the Charlotte Hornets, where they stormed back late but lost, the Hawks were looking to get a win on the first game of their five-game homestead.

The Spurs were also coming off a back-to-back, but won their game against the Washington Wizards.

After returning from injury yesterday, Trae Young was ruled out for right knee management, but head coach Quin Snyder noted that he would play in the Hawks’ next game.

Zaccharie Risacher popped it off for the Hawks, knocking down a three-pointer.

What a pass from Nickeil to Zacch for 3! pic.twitter.com/9AKBMG1Ocj

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 20, 2025

The Spurs were clicking on all cylinders to start the game, knocking down a few threes early to take the lead. The Hawks tried to match, but they weren’t able to leading to more opportunities for the Spurs to get points on the other end.

The Hawks tried to stay in it, and Jalen Johson got this tough layup to cut down their deficit.

Tough pass tough finish pic.twitter.com/QedLpuCKVo

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 20, 2025

Things didn’t get better for the Hawks down the stretch of the first, and they went into the second trailing 32-19. Things got worse before they got better for the Hawks to start the second, as they couldn’t get any shots to fall, while the Spurs stayed consistent.

Asa Newell made his presence felt in the second, using his body to get the easy bucket in the paint.

NAW draws 2, gets it to Jalen

Jalen draws 2, finds Asa 🥽 pic.twitter.com/i6nkP2fWaw

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 20, 2025

Onyeka Okongwu turned defense into offense, and Daniels was able to finish it at the rim.

Big O gets the steal & finds Dyson for the bucket pic.twitter.com/AmX7aL56wo

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 20, 2025

Though the Hawks were making plays here and there, the Spurs had an answer for almost everything they do. The Hawks trailed by as much as 24 in the first half, and the hope was that when the second half started, they could get into a rhythm.

Work to do at the break pic.twitter.com/znKW5bnf1U

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 20, 2025

The Hawks fought to try and get themselves back in it coming into the third, but they were already too deep in a hole. Johnson took it almost 94 feet and got a layup early in the quarter.

JJ going coast to coast 🏃‍♂️💨 pic.twitter.com/OuzFOrQWk9

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 20, 2025

Later on in the quarter, the Hawks used ball movement to get Risacher a clean three.

Ball moves around for a Zacch triple pic.twitter.com/zM9Dm5TKHP

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 20, 2025

Okongwu got this floater to go over the tall hands of Victor Wembanyama.

OO with some nice footwork in the post pic.twitter.com/jPqcAmhC6T

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 20, 2025

More so similar to the first half, the Hawks would make a few plays, but the Spurs had an answer for every call. Going into the fourth, the Hawks trailed 102-72.

The Spurs went on a 10-2 run to start the fourth, and they pulled their starters afterwards. The Hawks still had most of their rotation players in throughout the fourth. With about nine minutes left, Quin Snyder pulled the plug, with the only starter left in the game being Risacher.

Zacch knocks down his 3rd three of the night pic.twitter.com/aGEqJVV5oL

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 20, 2025

From there, it was the battle of the reserves, and the Spurs walked away with the win.

Alexander-Walker finished with 23 points, and Johnson finished with 17 points, 11 rebounds, and six assists.

The Hawks will be back in action on Sunday afternoon against the Chicago Bulls.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/recaps/67094/hawks-cant-find-rhythm-lose-126-98-to-spurs
 
Spurs at Hawks: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Atlanta Hawks (15-13) kick off a five-game homestand against the San Antonio Spurs (19-7).

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), Atlanta News First (WANF), Peachtree Sports Network (PSN)

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

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

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/atla...wks-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Hawks get smoked by Spurs in biggest loss of the season

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After falling just short against a scorching Charlotte Hornets side on Thursday, the Atlanta Hawks were blown out on their home floor on Friday night, looking lifeless in a 126-98 defeat to Victor Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs. The 28-point margin of defeat was Atlanta’s worst loss of the season.

Atlanta were without both Trae Young (right knee injury management) and Kristaps Porzingis (illness) for the contest while San Antonio were essentially at full strength. Victor Wembanyama was on a minutes restriction, coming off the bench for the third straight game as he plays himself back into full form after missing four weeks with a calf strain.

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Nickeil Alexander-Walker led the Hawks in scoring with 23 points and also dished out four assists. Jalen Johnson finished with 17 points, 11 rebounds and six assists. Dyson Daniels and Zaccharie Risacher chipped in with 11 points apiece.

Victor Wembanyama led the way for San Antonio, finishing with 26 points, 12 rebounds and two blocks in just 21 minutes of action. Stephon Castle added 17 points and seven assists. Devin Vassell finished with 18 points and seven boards.

How It Happened


San Antonio took control of the game early on and didn’t look back, jumping out to a 32-19 lead by the end of the first quarter. Vassell (11 points) and Castle (10 points) were instrumental for the Spurs in the opening, combining to score 21 points in the first period. Atlanta shot the ball miserably in the opening frame, with 15 out of their 23 field-goal attempts coming from beyond the arc, converting just three of them.

San Antonio continued the onslaught in the second, outscoring Atlanta by 11 to take a dominant 68-44 lead into the break. Turnovers really hurt the Hawks in this phase of the game, as they committed seven of their 17 turnovers in the game in the second quarter, directly leading to 11 points for the Spurs.

“I didn’t think we started the game out really [well]. We weren’t running with a purpose. We weren’t running with space.” said Snyder in the post-game press conference.

“If you’re not initiating the possession with force, they’re dictating, and that aggression offensively is everything.” Snyder continued. “It’s a very physical group, particularly on the perimeter, and they also have rim protection, you know, I thought we have to break the paint. We have to get in the lane. You may not be able to get all the way to the rim but when we don’t do that, whether it’s a turnover or shots that aren’t the best shots…”

“Our execution, it will never be flawless. But whether it’s spacing, passing quickly, one extra dribble, running but not running hard enough, spacing but not getting all the way to the corner, all those details against a team that’s as talented as they, and are playing as well as they are, you’re going to struggle if you don’t do all those things.

While the Hawks did show the ability to drive the ball on a couple of occasions early on, there were many possessions where, as Snyder described, Atlanta weren’t able to penetrate the defense which led to undesirable outcomes.

This is one example of a good possession. Johnson drives on Wembanyama, looking to score. After Wemby stifles the drive, Johnson kicks it out to Daniels, who takes it right at Castle to the rim for a score.

Here are a few not so good possessions. Below, Harper applies ball pressure on Alexander-Walker, forcing him to give the ball up to Okongwu early in the shot clock. Okongwu looks to go into a hand-off with Krejci, but Castle sees it all the way, forcing the turnover before finishing the play off on the other end.

On this possession, the Hawks have a 5-on-4 advantage with Wembanyama trailing the play, but instead of attacking the paint, Krejci fires up a contested early shot clock three and it’s an empty possession.

Here, Johnson gets his drive cut off so he kicks it out to Asa Newell. Newell drives before Daniels is able to clear the lane (not that Daniels is much of a threat from beyond the arc these days) and commits a turnover with Wembanyama lurking.

Out of the halftime break, a mini-run from the Hawks cut the deficit to 18, however any hope of a comeback was dashed as soon as Wembanyama checked back into the game with 8:35 to go in the period. San Antonio outscored Atlanta 28-16 over the rest of the quarter, with Wembanyama scoring 9 points and blocking two shots over this span.

The Spurs led by 30 going into the fourth quarter.

After failing to make a dent in San Antonio’s lead in the first few minutes of the fourth, Snyder waved the white flag with about 8:00 to go, emptying the bench with the remainder of the contest amounting to little more than garbage time.

When the buzzer sounded, Atlanta trudged off the floor having to stomach a disappointing 126-98 defeat.

“They’re playing at a very high level and our margin for error is really small, so we have to embrace a gameplan urgently and completely. We weren’t able to keep them out of the paint – that was really the biggest thing. A lot of the time the paint means threes for them but they’re on the rim [too] and so I think defensively, we have some things that we have been committed to, and know that we need to do to compete against a team that’s playing at a very high level.” said Snyder after the game.

San Antonio scored 60 points in the paint – tied for the sixth-most paint-points allowed by Atlanta this season – while Atlanta managed just 50 on the night. The Hawks shot just 16-for-30 (53.3%) in the restricted area (well below their average on the season) and were also outscored from the perimeter, shooting just 10-for-40 (25%) from three while the Spurs shot 13-for-36 (36.1%).

Simply put, not a recipe for success.

The Hawks also scored just 13 fastbreak points, tied for their seventh-lowest total in a game this season. The last time they played San Antonio (with Wembanyama sidelined), Atlanta scored just six fastbreak points in a 136-125 defeat, their fewest in a game this season, so perhaps the Spurs have figured something out in this regard*. My hunch is that it has a lot to do with the ball pressure their guards (Castle and Harper in particular) are able to exert over the length of court.

*Atlanta rank fifth in the league in fastbreak points per game (17.6)

All that aside, perhaps the biggest (no pun intended) reason Atlanta lost so definitively was due to the jaw-dropping performance from Victor Wembanyama. In just 21 minutes off the bench, Wembanyama scored 26 points on 15 shots (4-for-7 at the free-throw stripe), grabbed 12 rebounds, dished out three assists and blocked two shots, finishing with a team-best +29 ‘plus-minus’ in the 28-point win.

A double-double night for @wemby!

📊: 26 PTS, 12 REB, 3 AST, 2 BLK pic.twitter.com/p2K2d0iMUc

— San Antonio Spurs (@spurs) December 20, 2025

I mean… what are you even supposed to do?

Keep in mind, this was only Wembanyama’s third game since returning from a four-week absence and he was on a minutes restriction, so we didn’t even see him at the peak of his powers.

The good news?

Atlanta won’t have to worry about solving that puzzle for quite some time as they won’t play the Spurs again until next season (unless they meet in the Finals, which… I wouldn’t bet on).

What’s Next?


The Hawks are home for the holidays as last night’s contest was the first of a five-game homestand. Their next game is against the Chicago Bulls on Sunday at 3:30 PM EST.

With last night’s defeat, Atlanta have now lost six out of their last eight games and will look to get back to winning ways against Chicago.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...rs-recap-stats-analysis-nba-victor-wembanyama
 
Bulls at Hawks: start time, TV, streaming, radio, game thread

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The Atlanta Hawks (15-14) engage in a home-and-home doubleheader with the Chicago Bulls (12-15).

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: 3:30 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...wks-start-time-tv-streaming-radio-game-thread
 
Hawks’ vapid thoughts and prayers on defense do nothing in loss, 152-150

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For the first time since October 25, Trae Young played in from of the home crowd at State Farm Arena on a Sunday afternoon matinee game against the Chicago Bulls.

In a continuing theme, the Hawks went down eleven within the opening minutes. Chicago started 8-for-10 from the field, and once again the Hawks defense looks like they had never played as a unit before.

Eventually, the Hawks woke up and strung together a couple of stops to stop the bleeding. Neither team covered themselves in glory on the defensive side of the ball, so it looked like this would be a high-octane battle.

Atlanta at least had the firepower to match Chicago blow for blow. Onyeka Okongwu had a lot to say with 15 opening quarter points (a career-high for a quarter), including these three:

Triple O is 3-3 from long range in the opening quarter 🎯🎯🎯 pic.twitter.com/67fRuJLTvl

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 21, 2025

Trae Young continues to be crafty coming off high screens:

One-legged three by Ice he is back baby 🧊 pic.twitter.com/SpX3gMENPH

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 21, 2025

After one quarter, the teams were knotted at 38-38.

Vit Krejci continued his incredible shooting season, hitting his first three attempts of the game. Then the Frenchman joined the Czech with his third triple of the game by the second quarter:

Threeeeeesacher 💦 pic.twitter.com/VaIXnUsDTi

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 21, 2025

But the Hawks still struggled to slow down the relentless Bulls offense, and the two teams traded leads throughout the second quarter.

Jalen Johnson took a hard fall on a layup attempt, and he left down the tunnel to get checked out after attempting two free throws. Thankfully, he checked back into the game with around four minutes remaining.

Unfortunately, the Hawks finished the first half the same way they started: by absolutely bleeding points on defense. It was an ugly display, as the Bulls were able to find open threes and blow by Hawks defenders like they weren’t even there.

At halftime, the Hawks trailed 83-73. Chicago shot 73% from two, 45% from three, and posted an offensive rating of 152. If the Hawks give up anything like that in the second half, their hopes for this game are dead in the water.

Atlanta got a few stops early in the third quarter, but they were still few and far between. But Jalen Johnson got going on the offensive end to narrow the margin, and Nickeil Alexander-Walker woke up to help the Hawks tie things up at 102-102:

Point Jalen ⛹️

Corner Nickeil 🪣 pic.twitter.com/iSUMZcCSCy

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 21, 2025

Later in the third quarter, Vit Krejci dislocated a finger on a rebound attempt. But he toughed it out with help from the trainers and stayed in the contest.

After three quarters, the Bulls held a slim edge, 116-115.

Both sets of defenses finally showed up after 36 minutes (briefly anyway), but the Bulls were able to claw ahead. The Hawks tried mightily to catch up, but the hot shooting of Matas Buzelis and others continually kept them in front.

With under two minutes left to play, the Hawks were down three, managed a stop, and a Johnson turnaround in the lane put them within one. But then a wide open Giddey three followed by an Okoro take down the lane seemingly gave the Bulls the victory for good.

But then a three by Young, free throws by Alexander-Walker, and a desperation three from Johnson gave the Hawks hope with 4.6 seconds left. Buzelis split the pair on the ensuing intentional foul, but a Young leaner at the buzzer went awry.

The Hawks fell 152-150. Young and Johnson both topped 35 points, but the Hawks allowed an unacceptable 138 offensive rating to slump to their fourth loss in their last five.

The Hawks next see the same opponent at home this Tuesday.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/atla...is-recap-video-trae-young-jalen-johnson-final
 
Defense optional as Hawks drop high-scoring affair to Bulls

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The Atlanta Hawks suffered their third loss in a high-scoring contest against the Chicago Bulls on Sunday afternoon, 152-150. Four players scored 20 or more points for the Hawks, led by Jalen Johnson’s 36 points, 11 rebounds, and nine assists. Trae Young added 35 points and nine assists. For the Bulls, nine players scored in double-digits led by Matas Buzelis’ 28 points.

The Hawks continue to tread through somewhat unfamiliar territory this season, this game representing the second game with Young back in the fold having missed 22 games due to injury. There’s certainly still a ‘feeling out’ process going, particularly between Johnson and Young as both players are clearly trying to adjust to Johnson’s elevated role offensively which emerged during Young’s absence. We’ll discuss this a little more later.

In the meantime, the Hawks began on the back foot as the Bulls ran out to an early 21-10 lead. The opening stretch was a reminder of the not-so-great aspects of Young’s game returning to the Hawks. His defense in the opening stages was particularly poor, leading to a number of early Chicago baskets.

A poor attempt on the steal, allowing Isaac Okoro to get in rim-side and score a very easy basket:

View Link

While this next lapse didn’t lead to a basket, it’s just poor defense from Young which allows Josh Giddey a look at three, which is missed:

View Link

Young, again, loses Okoro on the perimeter carelessly, and Giddey finds Okoro for three despite the challenge of Dyson Daniels:

View Link

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For what it’s worth on this possession, I don’t think Young should ‘get away’ with this defensive lapse in justification for sticking to Coby White on the perimeter — that part of the play doesn’t unfold until much later after Young has already just given up on covering Okoro.

Young adds a lot of positives for the Hawks offensively — all of which were showcased in this game: scoring, getting to the free throw line, and a high number of assists to a low number of turnovers — but, sadly, this part of his game also accompanies all of those other good aspects of his game.

And to be absolutely clear: Trae Young was not the only reason the Hawks were so poor defensively in this game. This is just to highlight a bigger picture defensive issue the Hawks face with Young in the starting lineup to begin the game compared to how the Hawks fared defensively when the Young was absent.

The Hawks quickly cut into this early Bulls advantage in part thanks to a 15-point first quarter from Onyeka Okongwu behind three three-pointers and 6-of-7 shooting. However, the Bulls would again extend their lead to double-digits to take an 83-73 advantage into the locker room. Both sides were rolling offensively — the Bulls shooting over 60%, the Hawks shooting 55%, and both teams hitting 12 threes in the first half.

“It’s tough winning games when you give up 80 points in the first half, kind of embarrassing in a sense,” said Jalen Johnson. “We’ve just got to get better and we’ll see them again in two days. Hopefully we cut down on some of the things we were doing.”

Both sides exchanged blows for much of the second half, with the Hawks eventually retaking the lead of the contest in the fourth quarter. However, the Bulls made a run and put enough distance between themselves the Hawks to change the dynamic of the game — one the Hawks spent the majority of the fourth quarter chasing. Matters got particularly grim with under a minute to go, beginning with a Giddey three which puts the Bulls up four points:

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While Giddey is initially Young’s man on defense, this possession is poorly communicated defensively. Young does well to keep up with Giddey on the drive, and the help from Daniels helps prevent Giddey from backing out of his failed drive on Young. Simultaneously, Nickeil Alexander-Walker does well to rotate and cover White in Daniels’ place. Okongwu then rotates away from Nikola Vucevic in the corner in order to plug the gap in front of the rim to cover the driving Tre Jones.

All of this has gone well for the Hawks so far; everyone’s done their defensive job so far, but Daniels now leaves the wing and is drawn to the drive, leaving Young in a rough spot on the wing between Giddey (a 40.8% shooter from three this season) and Vucevic (shooting 38% from three). Young elects to cover Vucevic, and Jones finds the open Giddey for the three. Daniels, I don’t think, covered himself in glory on this play — he probably didn’t need to get drawn into the paint here.

The Hawks’ response is suboptimal, as Johnson drives inside before his intended pass is intercepted by Vucevic, fueling a fastbreak led by Giddey, who finds Okoro for the basket plus the foul:

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You can see how this play was about to set up: a screen from Daniels to prevent Vucevic from being able to close out an open corner three from Okongwu (a corner where he shoots over 40%) but the play is telegraphed before the opportunity is given to him. The ‘and-1’ from Okoro in transition adds insult to injury on what was already a tough sequence for the hosts, though Okoro misses the free throw.

The game seemed all but over after Young misses a quick attempt at a reply from three, returning the ball back to the Bulls leaving the Hawks to foul:

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White splits the free throws, but the Bulls hold a strong lead of seven points with 48 seconds remaining. The Hawks begin to make inroads through two Johnson free throws after a miss from three from Alexander-Walker:

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The Hawks continue to play the foul game, sending White back to the line where he, again, splits the pair. The Hawks, now gunning for threes, initially attempt a three in the corner from Okongwu. Johnson collects the long rebound after the miss, and the Hawks move the ball well to return it to Young, who hits the corner three to reduce the lead to three points:

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White is sent to the free throw line and, again, can only split the pair. The Hawks, now running out of time with the shotclock turned off, grow a little desperate as Young and Okongwu cross paths in the corner, before Okongwu finds Johnson, who hits a very tough, contested three to bring the lead down to one point with six seconds remaining:

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Even if the Bulls hit both free throws, the Hawks were now trailing by one possession. Buzelis is the player who is fouled this time, but he can only split the pair, giving the Hawks a chance to tie with a two or win with a three. Out of the timeout, the ball is inbounded to Young, who tries to turn the corner, tries to draw to the foul as he puts the shot up. However, the shot is missed and the foul is uncalled, and the Hawks’ comeback falls short:

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“We always thought it was the last play,” said Hawks head coach Quin Snyder of the final play. “Curl for Trae in the lane; how the in-bounder plays the pass is a big part of whether you’re able to receive those passes. He backed up, took that initial pass away, run down the floor, Trae gets his floater. He did a good of reacting to that and bouncing back. Those are shots that he makes. It’s always hard to get a wide open look at the end of the game. You feel good about getting the ball in the right guy’s hands. If he couldn’t get it inbounds there was a back end for JJ.”

The initial shot here would appear to indicate Young and the Hawks have a legitimate gripe, but looking at other angles the contact from Giddey is so minimal, and this was a very optimistic hope from Young to get a foul call for that. It’s quite disappointing in the end, and the game ends drably after what was a spirited Atlanta comeback after all those big threes.

Ultimately, this was a game where defense truly seemed optional. The Bulls’ 152 points ties an NBA season-high for points scored in a game this season. While the Hawks poured out 150 points themselves and, in one sense, can consider themselves unfortunate, as teams this season are 54-5 when scoring 136 or more points. However, their defense was porous for the majority of the night, conceding 20 three-pointers and 26 points in transition. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the Hawks’ transition defense was a point of focus for Hawks head coach Quin Snyder.

“I think in the first half we had a lot of breakdowns from an execution standpoint,” said Snyder. “Both teams shot it well, but we have to do more to try impact the percentage where shots aren’t quite as clean. I thought we did a better job of that in the second half as far as making them work harder. In the first half our transition defense wasn’t as good as it needs to be. By and large, we need to be better defensively. It wasn’t one particular thing that impacted it but it was a lot (of things that impacted the defense).”

Trae Young commented on the nature of how both teams play, and the trend he has noticed of opponents playing against the Hawks.

“Both teams played fast,” said Young. “Teams are coming in here and playing fast against us and we’ve got to figure out how to stop teams that can only play fast beating us this way. They’ve had our number the last couple of years playing this type of way, and we’ve got to figure out how to stop it for the next game.”

The Hawks will square off against the Bulls on Tuesday, so there will be a chance to take immediate learnings from this game and apply them, and hope the result isn’t similar. Both teams are extremely unlikely to score 150 points apiece again in a short space of time after making adjustments. Similarly, the Hawks will have to hope for the strong individual games they saw on Sunday afternoon.

Young had himself a very notable game, scoring 35 points on 10-of-15 shooting from the field, 7-of-8 from three, and 8-of-9 from the free throw line in just his second game after returning from injury.

Young is operating on a minutes restriction, limited to just 26 minutes. Young was asked how he felt postgame, commenting that he could’ve played more had the Hawks allowed him to.

“I felt amazing,” said Young. “They (the coaching staff) do their job and putting me right around 26 minutes. That’s all I had tonight, they weren’t allowing me to do any more. I felt great, I could have played some more.”

“Everybody is excited to have Trae back,” added Jalen Johnson. “He’s been out for a while, so the fact he found his rhythm in the second game is a good sign. We’ll look to keep building with each other, keep getting our chemistry together.”

Young hit seven threes on Sunday, smashing his previous season-high of two threes in a game — albeit in a very small sample size. However, seven threes is the most Young has hit in a game since December 29th 2024, where he hit seven threes in a win against the Toronto Raptors. While Young’s output was high, it didn’t result in the victory Young desired.

“It was good, not good enough because we didn’t win the game,” said Young. “For me, that’s all I care about. I’ve put up numbers before, but we’ve got to win. Tonight, we couldn’t get enough stops. 150 points is plenty enough to win a game. It’s not like they were stopping us at all, we weren’t stopping them in transition points. We’ve got to figure out how to get back and stop them from scoring fast.”

Jalen Johnson, meanwhile, scored 36 points on 12-of-20 from the field, 2-of-6 from three, and 10-of-11 from the free throw line. Johnson’s scoring picked up on a couple of occasions while Young was off the floor, both in the first half and in the second half. This is going to be really interesting to monitor going forward; to see if Johnson feels he can operate at his best while Young is on the floor, or if he can only be at his best with Young off the floor. Up until the fourth quarter of this game, it certainly looked like a theory that needed to be tested further.

However, it was debunked somewhat in the fourth quarter as both Young and Johnson scored 11 and 13 points respectively in the fourth quarter. It’s an on-court partnership the Hawks have clearly discussed and want to see succeed.

“I thought Trae and JJ really found a rhythm together,” said Snyder. “We’ve talked about that the last few games. That was good to see.”

Young outlined, in detail, the dynamic between himself and Johnson, and what Johnson brings to the table offensively, and how Young can play with Johnson in order to seek double teams, which Young believes are key.

“Me and Jalen have a connection since the beginning of last year,” said Young. “Before he got hurt last year we were a really good team and had a really good connection. If you double me and I’m able to throw it to Jalen, Jalen can make plays out of the double team or in the middle of the pocket and can find others. That’s the name of the game: how many guys on a team can draw two? When you can create an advantage and make it 4-on-3 on the back-side, that’s the name of the game and then everybody else has to make plays out of that and you’ve got to live with the results. When you have a guy like Jalen who, if I come off the screen and they’re doubling, now you have to pick and choose. Just getting more reps with each other, this is our fifth game together this year. We’ve got other guys around that we’ve got to continue to bring along with us that make plays outside of me and Jalen. Obviously we want to play as much with Jalen and I, because he creates so many advantages for us. I’ve just got to continue to get him the ball in the right spots.”

The dynamic between Young and Johnson pre-and-post Young injury has clearly changed, and will need to evolve. The Hawks and Johnson can’t go back to how it was prior to Young’s injury, having seen what everyone has seen from Johnson in Young’s absence. Their continued time together on the court, how each picks their moments offensively, are going to be carefully curated in order for games like this one (where they combine for 71 points) can occur more frequently. Both, however, will need to do more defensively: neither can say they enjoyed a good defensive game in a game where defense was obviously a defining factor.

Johnson poured out those 36 points despite taking a scary fall in the second quarter on a drive to the rim, challenged by Zach Collins. Johnson briefly exited the game before returning, and admitted to feeling the effects of the fall.

“(Felt it) a little bit but I’m good,” said Johnson of feeling the effects of the fall. “The adrenaline was flowing, I’ll probably be a little sore tomorrow but I’m alright.”

Another player who sustained an injury and played through it was Vit Krejci, who enjoyed a hot shooting game. Krejci had hit five threes before dislocating a finger on his left-hand. Krejci would return, hit another three, but cooled off after the dislocation. Krejci would finish with 20 points, shooting 6-of-10 from three. Both his efforts, and that of Johnson, playing through injury did not go unnoticed.

“Those were both significant plays,” said Snyder of the injury scares. “We weren’t sure if JJ was going to come back into the game, same with Vit shooting the free throws. Both of them, there’s a level of toughness that’s required to that. It’s hard to shoot the ball like Vit did early after he dislocated his finger. Courage. He hit another one, he missed a couple. With JJ, he found a way to stay focused and compete, and you figure that part out after the game.”

Elsewhere across the roster, Zaccharie Risacher enjoyed a good game, scoring 17 points on 6-of-11 shooting from the field, and 4-of-7 from three in 24 minutes, while Onyeka Okongwu scored a productive 23 points on 10-of-18 shooting from the field, 3-of-7 from three, seven rebounds, and six assists. Both really chipped in across the board, particularly Okongwu who was faced with a tough matchup against the significantly larger Nikola Vucevic. There were struggles for Alexander-Walker, who shot 3-of-12 from the field, and while Dyson Daniels shot 3-of-9 from the field, he contributed nine assists and two steals in 39 minutes.

Ultimately, this game was not lost due to individual contributions, or poor shooting nights. Defense was the name of the game, or lack thereof. While certain individuals are always going to be more prone to contributing to defensive breakdowns, it was a team-wide issue last night. The Bulls, to their credit, had contributions all across the board, but their life was made far too easy by the Hawks on Sunday.

The Hawks (15-15) are back in action on Tuesday against the Bulls (13-15) back in Atlanta — an opportunity to right the many defensive wrongs of this contest.

Until next time!

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/anal...o-bulls-analysis-breakdown-video-stats-quotes
 
The season will spiral if the Hawks don’t fix these three things

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It hasn’t been a fun brand of basketball as of late in the A.

Despite the loss of Trae Young and Kristaps Porzingis for long stretches this season, the Hawks’ offense has held their heads above water.

Young and Porzingis, the two highest-salaried players on the team, have only shared the court for 51 minutes through 30 games. Somehow, the Hawks have managed a 114.8 offensive rating, good for 12th as of the end of play on December 21 despite their respective health setbacks.

But I’m not going to put lipstick on a pig: the Hawks’ defense as of late has been an unmitigated tire fire.

It’s the main reason that the Hawks have gone from 13-8 to 15-15, and it’s something that threatens to torpedo their season if they can’t find some solutions quickly. The team may have reached a breaking point after giving up 152 points to the Chicago Bulls in regulation on Sunday afternoon, but maybe that experience will inspire change.

It’s been clear for years that Trae Young is an easy target for opponents to attack. But even more alarmingly this season, Jalen Johnson — for as huge a breakout as he’s having offensively — is a target for defenses as well. He’s providing next to no weakside rim protection (a career-low 0.5 blocks per 100 possessions), and he’s gotten lost in rotations much more frequently than in years past.

But the team needs that duo in order for the offense to hum, and while the team’s defensive issues don’t stop there by any means, it will take the right lineup balance around those two to make things work.

Make no mistake — defense takes all five players being in rhythm, and every rotation player for the Hawks could stand to do their jobs a bit better towards team success. Everybody owns a part of the collective fault here — but similarly a spark to a better performance there can start with anyone.

So, let’s go through the three biggest issues damaging their defense — and the three biggest issues that threatens any hope of a playoff appearance in 2026.

(Mis)communication​


Beyond good old-fashioned talent level, this is often the one biggest decider between a good defense and a bad defense. With so much space to cover in the modern game, the entire defense needs to be on the same page at all times when it comes to screen action coverages and abiding by help principles.

How a five-man unit communicates to navigate these difficulties that modern offenses pose is the difference between a well-defended possession and a blown assignment.

The Hawks have a 115.5 defensive rating so far this season, 18th in the NBA — identical to their finish among the league a season ago. But they were supposed to take a step forward on that end with the core of their team a year older and wiser and the additions of Kristaps Porzingis, Nickeil Alexander-Walker, and others.

Most concerning has been the slump in defense over the past month and change. Since the Hawks were pasted by the moribund Washington Wizards on November 25, that defensive rating has ballooned to 119.6 — 27th in the NBA over that span.

Opponents have shot 40% from three against Atlanta over that stretch — partially due to bad luck and partially due to leaving open too many shooters. The Hawks have ceded tied for the fifth most open threes (defined as the nearest defender being between four and six feet away) in the NBA over this same time span.

These types of breakdowns are far too common. Onyeka Okongwu is defending at the level of the Cunningham-Duren ball screen here. Nickeil Alexander-Walker does the right thing to help at the nail on the roll, but there’s a clear miscommunication as to who should jump out to Cade Cunningham after Dyson Daniels switches onto Alexander-Walkers’ previous man:

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Against the Clippers, they handled looks with multiple people in the same corner poorly. First, Vit Krejci and Okongwu can’t handle the low man pass off well. Krejci anticipates stepping up from the baseline to stop a drive, and once a cut occupies Okongwu as well, Nic Batum is left in the corner alone:

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The very next defensive possession, Zaccharie Risacher and Keaton Wallace engage in a similar tangle. You can see Risacher direct Wallace to take the Kobe Sanders to allow him to stay low and tag the cut, but Wallace is a beat late:

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And during a 132-point blitzing from the Charlotte Hornets, the Hawks looked even more out of sorts. Off a Spain pick-and-roll where Ryan Kalkbrenner screens the screener Brandon Miller, Young switches off onto Miller even as Dyson Daniels continues to track him. That leave Okongwu between both Kalkbrenner and a wide-open LaMelo Ball:

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A similar thing happens off a double staggered screen for Miller. Mouhamed Gueye sinks to cut off the drive, but you can see Okongwu gesturing for someone to pick up Tidjane Salaun. Nobody does:

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These miscommunications have been more and more evident in recent games. Some of it seems to be due to the shuffling of lineups, including incorporating Trae Young back into the fold. But this deep into the season, they simply shouldn’t be happening with this frequency.

There’s too much ball watching, too much waiting to react to the play unfolding in front of their eyes, and too hand gesturing and visible frustration. Most of the other competitive teams around the league looked dialed in on their defensive principles while the Hawks look stuck in mud too often of late.

The team played pretty inspired defense for a stretch during November, so it’s evident they have that ability in them. And so, they need to find that form again in a hurry, or else this season will quickly get out of hand.

Turnovers (with a dash of missed shots)​


Trae Young’s return should help this area. Whenever Trae Young is on the floor over the past two season, the team as a whole turns the ball over less.

Per pbpstats, the Hawks turn the ball over on 14.4 possessions per 100 with Young and 15.9 possessions per 100 without him. Young’s ball handling and quick decision making takes the pressure off others to have to shoulder a big offensive load.

Since October 20, the date of Young’s knee injury, the Hawks have turned the ball over on 15.1% of their possessions. Until last game against the Bulls, Atlanta had committed at least 14 turnovers in every game dating back to the Wizards blowout loss — a stretch of 11 games where they coughed the ball up an average of 16.8 times a game.

Needless to say, the majority of these are live ball turnovers which lead to fast break opportunities for opponents. Of course, you can still push off a miss as well, so a Young-led more efficient offense should help in that regard as well.

Here is what that looks like over the past 12 games in reverse chronological order to better illustrate how these things affect winning:

  • 26 Chicago fast break points off 10 turnovers in an Atlanta loss
  • 24 San Antonio fast break points off 17 turnovers in an Atlanta loss
  • 20 Charlotte fast break points off 15 turnovers in an Atlanta loss
  • 12 Philadelphia fast break points off 12 turnovers in an Atlanta win
  • 30 Detroit fast break points off 20 turnovers in an Atlanta loss
  • 5 Washington fast break points (!) off 15 turnovers in an Atlanta win
  • 26 Denver fast break points off 14 turnovers in an Atlanta loss
  • 25 Los Angeles Clippers fast break points off 14 turnovers in an Atlanta loss
  • 21 Detroit fast break points off 15 turnovers in an Atlanta loss
  • 14 Philadelphia fast break points off 23 turnovers in an Atlanta overtime win
  • 17 Cleveland fast break points off 14 turnovers in an Atlanta win
  • 28 Washington fast break points off 19 turnovers in an Atlanta loss

Any game when they give up fewer than 20 fast break points, they win and vice versa. Clearly when the Hawks suppress turnovers and fast break opportunities, positive things happen. It’s not always that cut and dry over the course of a season, but this recent stretch is illuminating as to how important one side of the floor is towards influencing the other side.

Defensive rebounding​


Rebounding is often the forgotten area of basketball wedged between offense and defense. It’s the special teams of basketball. But it can be the difference between giving the opponent, say, ten or even more extra possessions every game to score. It’s something you usually don’t notice until things have gone very wrong.

For the Hawks, things have gone very wrong this season.

Despite investing in size and length over the past few seasons, Atlanta is now one of the worst rebounding teams in the league. As of December 22, the Hawks rank 24th in defensive rebounding, capturing just 68% of available defensive boards. This comes after they were 10th last season at 71.5% defensive rebounding percentage.

What’s the cause of this backsliding in my opinion? There is definitely an element of personnel at play. The inexperience of this year’s Hawks (especially the young big men) plus the fact that they’re a pretty slightly built team at all positions is part of it.

The Hawks lost an elite (albeit rapidly declining) rebounder in Clint Capela and replaced him with a shaky rebounder in Kristaps Porzingis (who can’t stay on the floor anyway). The young, healthy players they have on this team too often get pushed out of good rebounding position.

There has to be an amount of want to when it comes to defensive rebounding. The willingness to sacrifice your body for a box out even if it means that don’t secure the rebound for yourself. Based on my watching of tape, there’s a bit too much eagerness to hunt for the ball as opposed to performing the fundamentals of team rebounding.

This rebound attempt encapsulates that. Vit Krejci loses track of Kawhi Leonard and can’t reestablish position as the shot goes up. Both he and Mouhamed Gueye lunge at the ball, but Leonard just ends up with the ball for an easy paint fallaway shot.

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The Hawks really struggle with burly centers like Nikola Jokic (who doesn’t?), Jonas Valanciunas, and Ivica Zubac. In this clip, Nickel Alexander-Walker doesn’t even come close to knocking Zubac off his spot when the shot goes up.

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Quin Snyder was asked by Brad Rowland of the Locked on Hawks podcast ahead of the Clippers game earlier this month about the poor rebounding performance so far this season. He answered, in part, “a tremendous amount of emphasis. Guys seeing film as a team to understand that and own it. Guys seeing film individually about what more they can do. Are they missing a block out? Are they not being aggressive enough when they get a block out?”

Before the Nuggets game, Snyder was posed a similar question. This time, he pulled back the curtains on the coaching staff’s attempts to analyze things, saying “on the defensive glass, we keep track of missed block outs. We keep track of when you get a block out but it’s not effective. And all those things are calculated and tallied. We just gotta keep grinding at that. There are times when we’re not 7’2”, 6’11”, 6’8” across the front line. And even when we are big, the question there is competing physically. If you’re giving up height or you’re giving up weight, we have to rebound in a pack. And that’s how we gotta get it done together. And that means everybody’s got a job to do.”

There are just so many examples of the team just not doing enough to seal off opponents on the glass. Against Charlotte below, Zaccharie Risacher misses a box out on Miles Bridges. At the same time, Jalen Johnson tries a little shoulder push on Ryan Kalkbrenner, and both Hornets combine for a tip out. Trae Young recovers to no man’s land after being sent to the floor, and Brandon Miller gets an open gym three.

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In conclusion​


The Hawks can’t afford these kinds of breakdowns with the way the team is built. In the rotation are multiple perimeter targets that do a poor job of stopping drives and navigating screens. They also lack an elite rim protector to put out fires and deter shots at the rim when faced with driving opposition.

In theory, Kristaps Porzingis was supposed to provide some level of rim protection with his height and reach, and his absence has been felt — even as his mobility has waned in recent years. Onyeka Okongwu has come into his own with his shooting, passing, and overall versatility, but it too much to ask of him to drop and protect the rim at the level the Hawks need.

Maybe the solution is shaking up the personnel, but that likely wouldn’t happen until sometime near the trade deadline. For the moment, the Hawks needs to find solutions from within. Because if they don’t, by the team we even get to the trade deadline, we might be looking at yet another lost season.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/opin...-breakdown-advanced-stats-nba-trae-young-news
 
Hawks lose another close game to the Bulls, 126-123

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The Atlanta Hawks were back in action Tuesday evening to face the Chicago Bulls. No one will forget the game two days ago, where both teams scored 150, but the Bulls came out on top, finishing with 152. Defense was hard to come by in that game for both teams, and the goal for this game was to make sure that didn’t happen again.

Unfortunately, the Hawks came into the game without two of their best defenders in Dyson Daniels and Mouhamed Gueye, so it would have to be next man up in that department.

The Hawks got on the board first, thanks to Nickeil Alexander-Walker.

Easy offense pic.twitter.com/gYKLxgJQ2p

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

Alexander-Walker got right back to that shot possessions later, extending the Hawks’ lead.

Nickeil footwork 👟 pic.twitter.com/oWWYalXBwi

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

The Hawks had a seven-point lead early, but the Bulls erased that quickly, grabbing a three-point lead. The Hawks fought back and got a few shots to go, and Trae Young did a few sit-ups after his and-one.

Trae got the and-1 then did some sit-ups on the court 😂 pic.twitter.com/utXStfGOzv

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

Hurt finger and all, that didn’t bother Vit Krejci, as he kept the three-pointers falling after his big game a couple of days ago.

Krejci Kounter 🔥 pic.twitter.com/XAsD4eCWRc

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

Going into the second quarter, the Hawks led 36-30. The second unit came in and controlled the game for the Hawks, and Luke Kennard got on the board with this open mid-range shot.

Smooth middy from Luke pic.twitter.com/jIWM325IA8

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

Asa Newell played some big minutes in the first half with injuries to the frontcourt, and he did some good things on both sides of the ball to help the Hawks keep their lead through the quarter.

Asa board and slam 💪 pic.twitter.com/KmELpe4rxy

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025
ASA is EVERYWHERE pic.twitter.com/Bz3GRjbYpz

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

Jalen Johnson did a bit of everything in the first half for the Hawks, per usual.

JJ already has 14/6/5 pic.twitter.com/0LIAQDXVc4

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

The ball movement was huge for the Hawks as they had 24 assists in the half, and this was one of them that led to another Krejci three-pointer.

That's beautiful hoops right there 🤩 pic.twitter.com/tkBqNDYwL8

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

It was a completely different half from the last game, and the Hawks actually went into this halftime leading 68-55.

The Hawks maintained their lead to start the third, even with the Bulls picking it up on offense. Young drove to the lane and got another and-one, his second of the game.

Trae fakes the behind the back then gets the and-1 🥶 pic.twitter.com/0UcKuDQKSg

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

Alexander-Walker went 94-feet to guard Josh Giddey, and he was rewarded in the end with a steal and an easy bucket on the other end.

NAW COOKIES 🍪🥛 pic.twitter.com/KZXpYbmTY6

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

The Bulls tried to cut their deficit as much as they could, but the Hawks had an answer for every potential run. Young turned full playmaker late in the third quarter, dissecting the Bulls’ defense and getting his teammates involved.

Trae lob to Onyeka ‼️ pic.twitter.com/vDcp4zRzDG

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

Going into the fourth quarter, the Hawks led 105-92. It was rough to start the quarter for the Hawks, as it took them some time to get some points on the board, and that helped the Bulls trim their deficit to single digits. Luckily, Krejci came in to save the day with another three-pointer, his fifth of the night.

Krejci Kounter 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/VJZBfHVaoO

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

Johnson got this tough and-one to go.

Yessirrrrrrr JJ 💪💪 pic.twitter.com/ZcajoAlMmk

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

As Johnson was going to shoot his free throw, Young and Ayo Dosunmu got tangled up at midcourt, and both received technicals.

That didn’t affect Young, as he continued to find his teammates, racking up the assists.

Trae's 15th AST of the night is a DIME to Zacch for 3 🥶 pic.twitter.com/WFPM9r4ujT

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

The Bulls started to fight back late in the quarter, getting their deficit down to one point. It was a game from there, and the Hawks needed to do everything they could to keep the momentum. Unfortunately, the Bulls were able to take the lead late in the quarter.

The Hawks had a chance to take the lead back, but they had missed opportunities, and the Bulls came down and made it a three-point game. Young was able to score quickly and cut the Hawks’ deficit to one, and they came down on defense and eventually fouled. Coby White went to the line and split the free throws, and the Hawks trailed 123-121 with 11 seconds left.

Alexander-Walker was able to get downhill and tie the game at 123 with 1.9 seconds left in the game, enough time for the Bulls to get a shot off.

Nickeil for the tie!! pic.twitter.com/QGOsFhazJU

— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) December 24, 2025

The Bulls didn’t have to do too much hard work for a shot, as Risacher was called for an out-of-bounds foul at a pivotal time in the game. White went to the line and made his free throw, and then they got the ball back, was fouled, and Nikola Vucevic knocked down both of his free throws to give the Bulls a three-point lead. The Hawks were not able to make the half-court heave, and they suffered another loss.

Johnson finished with 24 points, nine rebounds, and 10 assists, Young finished with 22 points and 15 assists, and Alexander-Walker finished with 21 points.

The Hawks will be back in action on Friday to face the Miami Heat.

Source: https://www.peachtreehoops.com/recaps/67230/hawks-lose-another-close-game-to-the-bulls-126-123
 
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