HAWKSVILLE – We apologize in advance for interrupting your viewing of the NBA Finals with hypothetical questions about the Hawks, but admit it, you’ve seen enough of the Los Angeles Lakers and Orlando Magic to last all summer.
But what if Mike Bibby moves on?
And Zaza Pachulia, too?
What if Flip Murray finds a new home?
And Josh Childress stays in Greece?
What if all these hypothetical scenarios we’ve been speaking of recently go up in smoke between the draft and training camp?
What if the Hawks can’t keep their team together because of finances, dumb luck and the aggressive pursuit of their free agents by other teams?
Like most of you, I’ve (foolishly) been operating under several assumptions the past few weeks. But after speaking with several NBA players, coaches and other sources around the league over the last week, it seems we’ve all been a bit too optimistic about the chances of all these guys reuniting next season.
“Unless I’m mistaken, getting all these guys in uniform for next season will cost a whole lot more than the Hawks are used to spending,” one Eastern Conference front office man told me Monday afternoon. “Check their roster and see how many guys they spent serious money on. It’s a short list. They inherited Bibby’s big deal and now that’s gone. They signed Joe [Johnson] and Josh [Smith] to their deals. Beyond that, there wasn’t a single guy on their roster they spent mid-level money on, not one, and that says something.”
When I asked him to elaborate, he had an interesting take what we’ve watched the past few years, the last two in particular.
“They got more out of their money than a lot of other teams these last two seasons,” he said. “That’s good while it lasts. It just doesn’t last forever. Sooner or later you have to pay to win in this league. The Hawks have gotten away without paying that price the past two years. They’ve done some things that their payroll suggests they shouldn’t have. But those days are probably over, because the teams they leapfrogged in the standings the past two years are not going to stay down forever.”

There's a possibility Mike Bibby and Josh Childress have worn Hawks jerseys for the last time in their NBA careers.
That’s probably true. But maybe they just made wise decisions about how to spend. They didn’t spend the kind of money championship teams do, but you have to crawl before you walk. And the Hawks crawled for years.
One player pointed to last summer’s free agent season as proof that the Hawks didn’t exactly swing for the fences and insisted that their frugal ways will come back to haunt them eventually, perhaps as soon as this summer.
“They waited until the last minute on [Smith] and had to wait for Memphis to put something on the table to get a deal done,” he said. “They lost the other Josh to Greece and then filled the holes with role players. Let’s be real man, and I’m not disrespecting anybody but signing Randolph Morris, Othello Hunter and Thomas Gardner doesn’t translate into championship moves. That sounds more like a team worried about spending some real money. And to players, that’s the kind of franchise you don’t want to deal with when you’re a free agent.”
That’s the real question for the Hawks this summer. Are they going to spend the money required to compete at the level they’ve become accustomed to the past two years?
This summer is about dollars and sense. The Hawks have to spend their cash wisely or all the work they’ve done the past few years could disappear by Labor Day.
Keeping Bibby, if that’s what the Hawks intend to do, won’t be easy. Anyone expecting Bibby to work for anything less than the mid-level is dreaming. In a league where starting point guards are at a premium (and starters that shoot as well as Bibby command even more attention), the price usually starts at the mid-level and rises. The key in the Bibby situation will be the length of the contract. If three years works for both sides (and I can’t see why it would not), then I can see the negotiations having some legs. If not, get ready for a divorce on the grounds of irreconcilable (financial) differences.
Pachulia clearly wants to come back here. He said as much during our conversation last week. But he’s been here before, in free agent land, so he knows what a player wants doesn’t always jive with the reality of his situation. Unlike when the Hawks nabbed him from Milwaukee four years ago, teams aren’t spending as freely as they were then. Still, Pachulia was a bargain four years ago at $4 million per season. He’s a bargain at that price now if the Hawks can swing it. But with the lack of quality bigs running around the league these days, that $4 million price tag might not be enough to retain Pachulia’s services.
Murray’s destined for a substantial raise from the $1.5 million the Hawks paid him last season. You don’t put together the type of season he did without seeing a surge in interest for your services. The Hawks have the benefit of being the one team in the league willing to take a chance on him last year. But sentiment crashes into reality and loses all the time in the NBA, particularly during free agency. If the Hawks want to keep Murray, a serious raise is in order.
Childress added to a bench that includes Pachulia, Murray, Mo Evans and whatever player the Hawks could take with the 19th pick in the June draft would be a massive upgrade over what they used during a 47-win season. But three different sources I’ve spoken to in recent days insist that they don’t expect Childress to return to the NBA this summer (he has until July 15 to opt out of his Greek contract or remain there for another season). The dynamics of his situation in the NBA haven’t changed from last summer. He’s still a restricted free agent and would be subject to dealing with a Hawks organization that couldn’t get a deal done with him last summer. So it was a serious miscalculation of mine to blindly assume he’d bolt Europe for the comfort of the states.
“I don’t know why he would come back,” a Western Conference scout told me. “There’s so much uncertainty in the league this summer. Teams are holding back because of the economy and plotting for the summer of 2010. Plus, he’s still bound by restricted free agency, which means he can’t really come back and shop around for the best situation. If the Hawks didn’t get a deal done with him last summer I don’t see any way they get one done now. No way.”

Two years into his NBA career no one is sure if Acie Law IV is the answer at point guard for the Hawks.
With Childress subtracted from the potential mix, that leaves the Hawks with gaping holes on the roster heading into the draft and free agency. And from all the conversations I’ve had, the Hawks are torn between using the 19th pick and Speedy Claxton’s contract (along with other potential considerations) to grab an established point guard or gambling that the player they deem worthy will still be available at 19.
Another split, from what I’ve gathered, is that there remains some debate as to whether any of the point guards available in this draft are better prospects at the position than Acie Law IV, who despite having spent two years on the roster still has to answer major questions about his readiness to not only be a potential starter but a solid rotation player.
The Hawks’ previous front office regime was notoriously unimpressed by point guards in past drafts. Chris Paul was “too small,” Deron Williams worried them because his “body looked too soft” and Rajon Rondo was a “reach” with the fifth pick, just to highlight a few of the explanations given for passing on three big time NBA starters at the position. That sort of faulty logic led the Hawks to draft picks like Shelden Williams (a reach if ever there was one) and botched free agent signings like Claxton (who was Paul’s backup when the Hawks whisked him away from the Hornets for a cool $25 million).
I won’t pretend to speak for Hawks GM Rick Sund, who has not indicated that he has any sort of prejudice against rookie point guards. But I also won’t assume that he’ll address the Hawks’ point guard situation in the draft.
There’s just so much work to be done in such a short period of time. For once, I can honestly say I wouldn’t want to be the Hawks’ general manager right now.
MY SPLIT SCREEN IS WORKING THESE DAYS. I’M WATCHING THE FINALS, TOO. I’m watching Orlando suffer through the same things the Hawks did when they faced Cleveland in the Eastern Conference semifinals and the same thing the Cavaliers did when they fell to the Magic in Eastern Conference finals.
Some teams just present matchup nightmares for other teams. The Magic and Lakers are about as evenly matched as two teams could be in the Finals. Spot for spot up and down the rotation there are compelling matchups (my man Mickael Pietrus did his thing again, pushing Kobe Bryant late, sinking two free throws in the final 30 seconds to help seal his team’s Game 3 win). You can’t ask for much more than that at this stage of the season, save for the somewhat tiresome Van Gundy family reunion going on every game night (Stan’s a riot from the national anthem to the post game presser but I’ve listened to just about all I can take from Jeff on the broadcast).
One thing I noticed that’s been bothersome I have to ask you to weigh in on. Is there a more disappointing player in all of these playoffs than Andrew Bynum? I know the Lakers’ big man has already had to battle back from two serious knee injuries in his young career, but he doesn’t have any bounce at all.
He’s a shell of the dude the Lakers refused to give up in any deal a couple years back and for the life of me, I don’t see why. I don’t see anything in Bynum that would make him untouchable other than he’s a legitimate 7-footer. And these days, that’s just not enough.
Like most people whose team of interest is already do for the season, my attention has shifted dramatically in the direction of the NBA draft.
I know it’s fool’s gold, thinking teams are going to find answers to all their problems in a shallow draft. But what else can we bank on?
Combining my two pet topics of the month, I came up with another theory that requires your input.
After watching the Magic shoot a blistering (and Finals record ) 62.5 percent from the floor to win Game 3, I wonder if some teams will have the guts to rethink their draft strategy and identify the best shooters available?
For a team like the Hawks that would mean giving serious consideration to a player like North Carolina’s Wayne Ellington with that 19th pick. If Ellington’s still on the board, chances are there won’t be a better shooter or offensive player the Hawks could take in that range. I know he doesn’t address a particular position need for the Hawks (point guard or center) but he does address a skill need (the Hawks are in desperate need of more quality shooters).
Some teams aren’t going to wait until the draft to start adding shooters. Philadelphia pulled off a trade Tuesday for one of the league’s best shooters, stealing Jason Kapono from the Raptors for Reggie Evans.
Kapono, even in limited minutes, can change the game for the 76ers just by parking on the perimeter and posing as a deep threat. That’s a weapon teams will need, especially in the improving Eastern Conference. I suspect this won’t be the last trade of this kind we’ll see between now and draft night. Teams are going to be forced to explore every option they can to improve without adding salary.
Finally, and before I forget, the best NBA news of the week comes not from the Finals or the draft but from the real plague of the league – brutal officiating. We’ll have three fewer relics to pick on next year if this report in the Boston Globe is true.
Reportedly Jimmy Clark, Luis Grillo and Jack Nies are taking their combined 73 years of experience/service to the retirement village with them. Adios fellas, the hecklers will miss you.
514 comments Add your comment
MannyT
June 10th, 2009
12:01 pm
Quest, it’s always easier to spend someone else’s money.
It’s a lot easier for me to say you should go to Bone’s for lunch today and get a spinach salad, not a steak.
The reality is that it is more than the money. There is also a level of flexibility in team planning that you lose. Look at the Knicks. The owner, James Dolan, has cash & spent way over the cap. That did not mean more wins, just more luxury tax payments to other owners.
BWAF
darrell starks
June 10th, 2009
12:03 pm
If chill dont come back its a must we resign marvin and bring him back if chill do come back we can do a sign and trade with marvin or just keep him the option will be good for us.
GO HAWKS!!!!!!!!
HawkKingBibby
June 10th, 2009
12:08 pm
Sekou ,Im with you on Bibby as well. How quickly folks forget where this team was without Bibby.I would love to keep Bibby and somehow move up to get Curry in the draft to develope behind Mike for a year or two. I hear people compare Curry to Bibby in a negative fashion. They say the best he can be is another Mike Bibby. How fast we have forgotten just how good Bibby was in his early Sactown years. He was one ” mysteriously refed” game away from likely leading his team to winning an nba title. Id love to know who your fill in the blank guy is and if there is a realistic chance of the Hawks aquiring him.
Ray S
June 10th, 2009
12:15 pm
Sekou, Who is your “fill in the blank” choice?
niremetal
June 10th, 2009
12:15 pm
The ownership situation is no longer really in doubt. Belkin is gonna get bought out. The only Q is who does the appraisal and how much it’ll be. That certainly will make some impact, but I can pretty much promise you that the Hawks’ spending won’t be affected by that. Assuming you have a minimum level of assets (which ASG most certainly does), team salaries are set based on cash flows, not fixed assets. So the buyout of Belkin won’t affect the Hawks’ payroll, because it won’t alter whether the Hawks turn an operating profit. The state of the economy and how that affects ticket sales and other operating revenues WILL affect payroll, but that is true of every team.
That being said, $5M is not chump change if you’re not making the operating revenues to back it up. Just as the underlying assets rarely affect payroll, the fact that these guys are rich won’t really affect their willingness to pay the luxury tax. As MannyT implied, these guys are businessmen. They won’t spend money unless they know they’ll earn it back. So going into luxury tax land – where every $1 spent means you have to earn $2 more in order to justify the expense – is not a move that a smart business would make unless they’re pretty sure they’ll make that money back.
Big Ray
June 10th, 2009
12:19 pm
Some really good comments by MannyT and Astro Joe.
I realize the ASG spent a decent chunk this past year by retaining Bibby. The cheap stuff has been on the bench, as Sekou originally said. We got good bang for the buck from Pachulia and Flip. Anything else that wasn’t a starter was forgettable, and that’s putting it nicely.
Sure, Bibby has to take a paycut to stay (if he stays), but how much of one? The other question is what are we doing for a backup/future pg? Sorry, but Bibby as a starter for 34+ mpg and Flip as backup to both Joe AND Bibby isn’t going to cut it. And that’s just assuming that we retain him…which will be more expensive.
I like the idea of picking up a guard in the draft, be it pg or sg. I’m pulling for just about anything but a low post player. Why? Anybody worth having will already be snapped up.
15 more days until the draft. *Yawn*…
Big Ray
June 10th, 2009
12:30 pm
Niremetal,
No, the ownership situation certainly is NOT in doubt. And nobody cares about Belkin anymore, I’m sure. Perhaps now with Bibby taking a paycut (assuming he’s re-signed here), we can wisely spend money elsewhere, in places it’s needed.
Well, once we’re guaranteed to earn back what we spend, of course. I’d sure like to know how to guarantee such a thing…
darrell starks
June 10th, 2009
12:31 pm
Sekou im continue to say this on your blog only if chill come back make this trade horford and marvin and the 19pick for bosh and chill can starte at the 3position.
GO HAWKS!!!!!!!!!!
A Tribe Called Quest
June 10th, 2009
12:35 pm
How about Smoove + Speedy + picks for Kaman + Zbo?
Lets get some real bigs in here
Can we please see a freaking trade for once
I.MUS WRITE- INTERNATIONAL MAN OF MYSTERY
June 10th, 2009
12:51 pm
Sign- Flip, ZAZA, Birdman,Marvin
Draft -Terrance Williams, Toney Douglas,Patty Mills, C Jerrels……Any two of the 4
Hms
June 10th, 2009
12:55 pm
Yes, let’s get Kaman and Randolph. Then the Clippers won’t look like the most stupid organization in the league anymore. Kaman is twice the big man that Horford and Smith are. Twiced the missed games per season that is. Randolph is twice the big man too. Twice the headache for the coach and between him and Kaman probably twice the price of Horford and Smith combined.
Daddyrich
June 10th, 2009
1:03 pm
Youre right Sekou. I guess the draft will be a big clue as to what the Hawks will do after July 1st with these free agents. I agree that with money not part of the factor of the pg’s listed above, Bibby is the best choice.
SWAT Native
June 10th, 2009
1:34 pm
Niremetal,
Very insightful response. I wasn’t just thinking about the financial position of the ownership group, but I think any organization would be better off if they could get a distraction like a lawsuit among the partners resolved.
Doesn’t anybody want to bite on SSI’s suggestion that ASG has quietly put the Hawks, Thrashers and Philip Arena on the market?
O'brien
June 10th, 2009
1:41 pm
Sekou, I think Bibby’s worth to the Hawks has been magnified because we havent had a steady PG in years. But I would not want Bibby for 3 more years. I agree he is a shot maker, and he has swagger. But he is getting slower, his defense is bad (which forces Joe to guard quick PG’s, and our bigs end up out of position), and he doesnt penetrate and dish. Bibby is merely a stop gap.
Speaking of Chemistry, Orlando acquired Rafer Alston during the season, and he fit right in. If we get a new PG during the offseason, they will have a chance to learn our offense (whatever that might be) and mesh with our players. I would much rather have Jack or Sessions than Bibby. They probably cost less, they are much younger, more upside, their defense is better, and they can work on their shot making. Plus in 3 years, they are still young.
I do like Hinrich too, but he makes over $8 mil per, and I dont know if we have the assets to trade for him.
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
1:42 pm
Bibby for 3 years? No way. 2 at the most. And if we trade #19 and go out and get another aging pg(Lue, AJ, Craig),I’m done with this team. PERIOD! I’m sick and tired of all of these stop-gap pg’s. We need our pg of the future. We have to take a chance this year, with the draft being so pg heavy. We just have to. If we miss, we miss, but we better take one. Fire Woody’s dumbass if he has a problem with it.
sd
June 10th, 2009
1:43 pm
I think we lose Bibby, and either Joe or Josh.
Honestly, unless Josh learns to shoot, it should be him. We have Mark Price there to teach. Last off season we found out what he could do by watching the improved shot of Marvin Williams. So far, Josh has lacked the work ethic needed to improve. He has one of the WORST jump shots I’ve ever seen. Other than that HUGE hole in his game, he is a beast.
But the fact is that this team can NOT win it all without getting a true center. We need a BIG man.
sd
June 10th, 2009
1:44 pm
And can ANYONE tell me how much longer we have to pay Speedy Claxton for nothing?????
Speedy Claxton is to the Hawks; as Mike Hampton was to the Braves
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
1:47 pm
Nunnayobizznezz, excellent post about Gardner and Hunter. I agree totally. Once again Sekou, it’s all about the players, and not the Coach. Come on now, your’re better than that.
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
1:51 pm
Mike Bibby will be a Laker next year. IMO. A STOP-GAP of course, but he’ll be a Laker.
cp
June 10th, 2009
1:57 pm
Last summer Sund was kind of slow with everything and it worked out. I don’t think he can afford to do that this summer.
Dennis
June 10th, 2009
2:05 pm
I say we do a sign & trade on Bibby, #19, & Claxton’s contract to get Johnny Flynn from Syracuse. Mark my words, he’s going to be something in the pro’s, along the lines of CP, & athletically, he is probably a shade better than CP, according to the #’s he put up at the NBA’s measurables camp. He’s also a leader. Law will be a good back up, but he doesn’t have the X factor, he didn’t have it in college either. In college, he was a scoring point guard but struggled to put the ball in the hoop, his stroke is suspect. He reminds me of a small Jalen Rose, which if he can get some fire lit inside of him, would make him a great pro as Jalen was.
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
2:37 pm
Astro, what about Jeff Teague?
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
2:39 pm
Hell no to Ridnhour!
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
2:45 pm
Tribe called Quest, they are rich Millionaires, but have you seen the stock market lately. I’ve lost thousands myself, so just imagine how much they’ve lost. I’m not defending em, just saying.
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
2:50 pm
Sekou, I’d have to go with Hinrich over Bibby. He’s faster, he can shoot just as good as Bibby, considering Bibby is on and off like a light switch. And he plays DEFENSE, unlike the before mentioned.
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
2:51 pm
Hinrich can also guard the opposing pg like he is SUPPOSED to do.
MBZ
June 10th, 2009
3:02 pm
The problem is the offensive philosophy. We hear Sund say that he wants to model this team after the 2004 Pistons, but this team leans on Joe Johnson to much for offense. When we get a coach that has a grasp of what it means to utilize and develop players then we can start addressing free agency. Does Sund go with the guy that is best for the team? Or does he go with the guy Woodson wants? An already hard process becomes even harder when you have a coach that refuses to reimagine his offense.
O'brien
June 10th, 2009
3:03 pm
tb, I agree 100%. Bibby is a stop gap, and a liability. Get a solid young PG (who will be here for more than 3 years), like Jack or Sessions, and then draft a PG (or develop Acie), to go along with Flip.
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
3:04 pm
I’d rather just draft a pg and let Acie, Flip, and the rookie battle it out.
ant banks
June 10th, 2009
3:08 pm
the rest of the league will start dealin’ july 1st. the hawks will start dealin’ aug. 1st for the scraps left in free agency.
they have been doin’ this for the last 3 friggin’ years, why should i believe this year will be any diff?
ant banks
June 10th, 2009
3:10 pm
TERRELL,
accordin’ to all of the sites that i have been readin’, none of the guards comin’ out are as accomplished as acie law was comin’ out of college?
why waste a 19th pick on a guard? package it with somethin’ else is what i say.
ant banks
June 10th, 2009
3:13 pm
if we don’t make hella moves this summa, i see us droppin’ back to battlin’ for the 8th seed in the east. clev, boston, orlando have the top 3 locked up. philly is gettin’ betta as i type, indy will be betta, miami will be in the mix, big time, chicago will be betta, charlotte, too.
i don’t see how hawks will maintain 4th seed if they don’t lock up some major pieces
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
3:16 pm
HawkKigBibby, taking nothing away from Mike Bibby, as he has definetely helped this team, but when you’ve been trotting out guys like Tyronne “dribble,dribble” Lue and Anthony “old enough to be my grandaddy” Johnson, you cant go anywhere but up.
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
3:28 pm
“As accomplished as Acie Law was coming out of college”? That means absolutely nothing. Sheldon Williams was one of the most ACCOMPLISHED players ever, coming out of College. Look at him now. The draft is a crap shoot. You just gotta hope and pray.
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
3:34 pm
There’s a rumor going around that the Jazz will let Boozer walk, use his salary to re-sign Milsap, and go after a FA like Zaza Pachulia with the leftovers. Good luck Zaza. Tell us how it feels to play for a real Head Coach.
Hawksfanatic
June 10th, 2009
3:43 pm
This Eastern executive (my guess is a Pacer because they spend a lot with little results lately) surely doesn’t know our roster. We spent more than the MLE on Speedy Claxton, sure he doesn’t play but we did spend it. I also don’t know what the difference is between signing a contract and “inheriting” one. You have to trade contracts that you signed at some point in time to be able to “inherit” someone like Bibby, so outside of semantics whats the difference?
Ramon
June 10th, 2009
3:46 pm
Sekou, what would have been the answer for the fill in the blank? You know we’re anxious to see.
Ramon
June 10th, 2009
3:47 pm
I’m curious to know everyone’s opinion. Would you be willing to trade Marvin, Joe, and Speedy’s contract for CP and Stojakovic?
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
3:55 pm
Read a rumor that said Utah will let Boozer walk, re-sign Milsalp, and sign a guy like Palchulia with the leftovers. It this comes to fruition, Good luck Zaza. Let us know how it feels to play for a REAL Head Coach.
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
3:56 pm
Sorry for the double post. The 1st one disappeared and the re-appeared. Wtf? lol!
terrell barron
June 10th, 2009
4:00 pm
Ramon, in a heartbeat. CP3’s dont come around that often. He’d turn Horford and Smith into All-Stars, just like he did David West. Can we have Chandler instead of Peja if we throw in #19? lol!!
niremetal
June 10th, 2009
4:02 pm
if we don’t make hella moves this summa, i see us droppin’ back to battlin’ for the 8th seed in the east. clev, boston, orlando have the top 3 locked up. philly is gettin’ betta as i type, indy will be betta, miami will be in the mix, big time, chicago will be betta, charlotte, too.
i don’t see how hawks will maintain 4th seed if they don’t lock up some major pieces
Didn’t people say the same thing last year about us maintaining the 8th seed? Just sayin’.
I’ll say what I did a year ago: The East is still the East. We need to make “hella moves” if we want to crack the top 3. But resigning everyone and picking up one decent rotation player should be enough to make sure we finish 4-6 next year.
I know everyone will say “no, we’re on the way down,” but we’re still one of the league’s 2-3 youngest teams. Horford will be a little better; Marvin was (to paraphrase Sekou) having a breakout year before he went down, as anyone who watched actual games this year knows; and Smoove will rebound from a sub-par season. Long as we re-sign our Big 4 free agents, we’ll make the playoffs. Long as we do that and pick up 1 decent rotation player, we’ll cruise into the 4-5 seed.
And even if that weren’t true, Philly is most certainly NOT getting better as we speak, They’re trying to figure out what the hell to do with Elton Brand since they’re locked into his huge contract for the foreseeable future. Miami is an even worse jumble of mismatched pieces. Detroit is rebuilding. Charlotte showed guts last year, but they’re still a long way off, especially if Felton leaves. Indy is WAY overrated (does anyone here REALLY think that Danny Granger would score 22ppg or Troy Murphy would average 15ppg if he played for a coach that made his team play defense every once in awhile?). They’re also not getting any younger. All the rest are trash teams that don’t know the meaning of the word “defense.” The ONLY team that really worries me is Chicago, which is a young team that plays hard and plays solid defense. They are the 2009 model of the 2008 Hawks.
One last time: The East is still the East.
niremetal
June 10th, 2009
4:03 pm
*25ppg for Granger
Ramon
June 10th, 2009
4:04 pm
Terrell, I think they would actually do it if they’re really trying to cut spending. And they still get an all start in return, and cap flexibility next season. If they were crazy enough to put in Chandler instead of Peja, then I could really smile for about 3 months straight. All would be missing is more shooters on the bench.
Big Ray
June 10th, 2009
4:08 pm
From DraftExpress.com. An assessment on the Hawks, and the upcoming draft:
NBA Team Needs: Southeastern Division
by: Kyle Nelson
June 9, 2009
Atlanta Hawks 47-35
Draft Picks #19 and #49
Draft History:
2008- None
2007- PF/C- Al Horford (#3), PG- Acie Law IV (#11)
2006- PF/C- Shelden Williams (#5), PF/C- Solomon Jones (#33),
Depth Chart:
PG: Mike Bibby*/ Speedy Claxton/ Acie Law IV
SG: Joe Johnson/ Ronald Murray*/ Mario West*/ Thomas Gardner*
SF: Josh Smith/ Maurice Evans
PF: Marvin Williams*/ Solomon Jones*/ Othello Hunter*
C: Al Horford/ Zaza Pachulia*/ Randolph Morris
After taking the Celtics to seven games during the 2007-2008 season, the Hawks returned in 2008-2009 and logged their most impressive season in years, cumulating with a second round sweep at the hands of the Cleveland Cavaliers. Thus, the season was bittersweet, one in which the Hawks showed their potential as one of the top teams in the NBA, but also their tremendous vulnerability. Despite possessing one of the most athletic starting lineups in the NBA, the Hawks had trouble replacing injured combo-forward Marvin Williams and finding players to step up when star Joe Johnson went cold. This team needs a second unit capable of stepping up in the clutch and helping to take some of the responsibility off its stars, but they also face plenty of uncertainty at the point guard position as well.
If this post-season proved anything, it was that the Hawks are a team on the cusp, missing a few essential components before they can consider themselves an elite team in the NBA. The most significant problem lies in the weakness of the bench. Any bench anchored solely by Flip Murray, Maurice Evans, and Zaza Pachulia is badly requiring an upgrade. While the Hawks could use reserves at every position, the shooting guard and small forward positions badly need an infusion of youth, talent, and versatility. Bringing Josh Childress back to Atlanta would be a very positive step in the right direction, while former draft pick David Andersen would also fit in very well with the team’s existing personnel. With Mike Bibby rumored to be looking for a long and very expensive contract now that he’s a free agent, the team will reportedly look in the direction of Ramon Sessions as a cheaper and younger option.
Since Acie Law failed to make the next step in the right direction, it makes sense for Atlanta to look at the depth of this year’s terrific point guard class and see if they can pluck a productive rotation player from this group. With how shallow their bench is, though, any player that unexpectedly falls out of the lottery should be considered regardless of position. The Hawks have a lot of different options in this draft, but have the potential to get better. While this draft might not put them over the top, the Hawks could get a solid role player to fortify their bench.
First Round Candidates: Ty Lawson, Eric Maynor, Jeff Teague, Earl Clark
tbhawksfan
June 10th, 2009
4:14 pm
When you think about what to do witht he off-season; think about the fact that slipping one spot in the play-off seeds probably gets us home after the first round.
Money has to be spent. No more unoaid contracts. No more “I’m going to take the first year to get to know the team” BS.
Put up or shut up.
glw
June 10th, 2009
4:29 pm
Ramon,
IM sure most anyone would trade for CP3, he is a special player, and I think New Orleans is looking to dump some salary, but CP3 is their one true drawing card. He is into New Orleans, what Lebron is to Clevaland. I am sure they would almost give away Chandler or Stojakovic if they could, but CP3 is untouchable.
Ramon
June 10th, 2009
4:38 pm
Glw, so if they were able to get a lower salary, with even more coming off the books (Speedy), and getting another all star back, I think they would have to consider it possibly. What does Sund have to lose by proposing it? lol.
Big Ray
June 10th, 2009
4:42 pm
A few comments about the ones made on Draftexpress:
1)Interesting that they mention Bibby and what they think his contract demands might be.
2)Also interesting that they mention Ramon Sessions by name.
3) I don’t see Childress coming back to Atlanta, at least not this year. Not only will the money be less than what he could’ve gotten last year (as far as I know, could be wrong), but he’s also not coming back to 30 mpg either. I could be wrong, though.
4)I think the comments about the bench are dead on. Just about all of them, in fact.
5)Interesting that it mentions how we “had trouble replacing injured combo forward Marvin Williams” and didn’t have guys to step up when Joe wasn’t doing so well. Those comments speak for themselves, despite those that still say otherwise.
6)I think the comments are the pg issue are dead on as well, even where Law is concerned. Time to move on with the youth infusion movement, but also time to be very careful about it. Don’t do too much youth, just for the sake of youth itself.
7) The comments on the draft are pretty solid, too, in my opinion. Anything falling out of the lottery should be considered. As for the rest of it, it’s a crapshoot, and I think everybody knows that. I’m more up for a guard than a forward, though…
O'brien
June 10th, 2009
4:54 pm
Ray, this is one of those examples where coach and GM need to be on the same page. What if Sund likes Sessions (i do), but Woody doesnt like him because last season he only shot 20% or so from the 3pt line. Then what? Does Sund still go after him?