Are you ready for opening night?

Al Horford and the Hawks insist they are ready to get things cracking in the Eastern Conference this season. We'll all find out soon enough. Horford and the Hawks face the Pacers Wednesday night at Philips Arena.

Al Horford and the Hawks insist they are ready to get things cracking in the Eastern Conference this season. We'll all find out soon enough. Horford and the Hawks face the Pacers Wednesday night at Philips Arena.

HAWKSVILLE – Answer the question.

Are you ready?

Are you ready for more of the craziness that is the NBA season and the Hawks’ role in it?

Are you ready for the season you love to hate, the team you love to hate and the game you just love to love?

Of course, you are.

You’ve been waiting what seems like forever, just like me and everyone else around here.

You couldn’t wait until the Hawks’ opener against the Pacers tonight at Philips Arena, could you? 

We understand. Cleveland and Boston was a fine way to open the season, what with Rasheed Wallace posing a most frightening sight out there stroking shots from deep with the for flowing and sporting that classic Celtics uniform (and yes, that was Shelden Williams logging quality minutes for the Celtics early on, so maybe we were all wrong about the man some of you affectionately refer to as Mr. Parker?).

Not much else has changed for the last two teams to dispatch the Hawks in the playoffs. Kevin Garnett is still a monster. Same goes for Paul Pierce and Ray Allen, when the Celtics knock the dust off those old legs and get up and down the floor. The supporting cast looks rejuvenated and hungry.

LeBron James is already in MVP form. But the Cavaliers remain the flawed team we witnessed in that conference finals series against Orlando last year. They can bust out of the gate and build a double digit lead faster than any other team in the league. But they’re almost guaranteed to lose it just as fast when they’re dealing with another one of the league’s elite (and this is my formal challenge to Shaq and Zydrunas Ilgauskas to a foot race. Give me a month and I’m doing my Usain Bolt on those cats).

Seriously, the stuff we saw from Orlando in that preseason game last Friday reminds me of the same things we’ll see from the Magic and Celtics all season. They have the kind of talent across the frontline that will give everyone else in the East, the Hawks included, fits on most every night. They’re just too good, too deep and too versatile for most teams to handle when all things are equal.

Before the Hawks can worry about any of those teams they have to deal with the Los Angeles Lakers at Staples Center Sunday (at least they weren’t invited for Tuesday’s ring and banner raising ceremony). And that’s after they tussle with the Pacers and Washington Wizards (Friday at Philips) first.

Are the Hawks ready?

Are they ready for the season that seems like it never ends; the roller coaster that always seems to be their season?

Jamal Crawford (back), Kasim Reed (in the tie) and Ludacris (right) get it in during a recent fundraiser for Reed, the Atlanta mayoral candidate.

Jamal Crawford (back), Kasim Reed (middle) and Ludacris (right) get it in during a recent fundraiser for Reed, the Atlanta mayoral candidate.

 

We’ll get our first real glimpse soon enough.

POLITICALLY CORRECT

Jamal Crawford political activist has a different ring to it.

It may be a bit of a stretch for the Hawks’ guard with the rapid-fire handle and endless bag of offensive tricks.

But Crawford showed off a different side earlier this week when he helped host celebrity fundraiser for Atlanta mayoral candidate Kasim Reed. Crawford joined Grammy award winning artist, actor and philanthropist Ludacris, music mogul and philanthropist Chaka Zulu and several others in throwing their public support behind Reed.

“Hey man, I’m all over, man,” a smiling Crawford joked when asked about his political activity. “A lot of people in his position talk the talk and promise a lot of stuff. I just like that he’s doing it. He cares about people. And I know how important some of the stuff he’s talking about doing is for the kids in this city, especially the recreational activities for young people. That’s where I lived when I was growing up. Things like late night [basketball] programs, that’s what kept me out of trouble when I was growing up. I was always in the gym. He wants to take it a step further with technology and education along with the sports programs and I think that could literally save a lot of kids’ lives.”

We’ve always stayed away from politics in this space and I’d suggest we continue that practice (Blog-Z does not endorse any of the candidates since he can’t vote in that election anyway and plans on running in the next Smyrna mayoral election). But I have to admit to being pleasantly surprised that a player is plugged into the local political scene, particularly one that has only been in town for a few months.

“The thing about it is, you can’t please everybody,” Crawford said. “You just have to do what you think is right. And I think he’s the best candidate.” 

VICTORY

Count Hawks coach Mike Woodson among the growing legion of fans of veteran power forward Joe Smith’s lyrical alter ego, Joe Beast.

Woodson got his first listen to Smith’s Hawks’ anthem (”Victory”) after Tuesday’s practice and offered to sign Smith to his record label, which we all know doesn’t exist.

“Did you really make this?” Woodson, doing the worst impersonation of a hip-hop impresario ever witnessed, asked Smith. “That’s unbelievable that you could come up with that stuff. Unbelievable.”

Smith said he planned on doing something along the lines of the playoff anthem he did for Cleveland last season anyway, but he sped up his process at the behest of an unlikely source.

“That intro music would come on at the start of our preseason games and Jeff Teague would look at me every time we played and say, ‘come on Joe, what you gonna do?’”  Smith said. “So you know I had to go into my lab and come up with something.”

Smith has been dabbling in music for more than a decade, since the early days of his career. It’s only recently, he said, that the finished product has caught up with his ambitions.

“When I first started I really wasn’t that confident in what I was doing,” he said. “But lately, I’ve been getting better and better and more and more confident in what I’m doing. I’m getting close to being ready to putting something out there. I’ve got my own equipment. And the technology is so good now that I’m able to tote some of it on the road with me and I write [lyrics] on the plane on road trips and other times when I have a little solitude and time to myself.”

Woodson was genuinely impressed.

“He’s got a talent that not everybody has,” Woodson said. “He’s worked at it, too. That’s not amateurish stuff right there. That’s impressive stuff.”

If you’re at Philips 90 minutes before the tip of the Pacers game, you might want to listen for the song. It’s full of interesting stuff about Smith and his teammates, including a shout out to Teague.

“I’ll take that,” Teague said before breaking into a dance move in front of his locker as Smith recited lyrics. “I’ll take that”

306 comments Add your comment

Jody

October 29th, 2009
12:19 am

Big Ray,

I know where you’re coming from, but I just look at this way, if ya got game, ya got game. Lol. Basketball ain’t brain surgery (thank goodness). If guys like Pierce, Allen and Garnett can play together, then I know Granger and Joe could play together.

Big Ray

October 29th, 2009
1:05 am

Jody ,

True. Two quick caveats:

1) It takes a certain kind of coach to deal with more than one ego, especially if those egos collide. Is that Woody?

2)It also takes certain kinds of personalities to exist, as well as certain conditions. Pierce/Allen/Garnett all had one thing in common: all three had spent the bulk of their careers being the featured guy, trying to get to the promised land. All three had failed to do it on their own. All three were only too glad to have each other as teammates, as they could help each other to that common goal.

Granger is quite young, and is only in his second year of being “the man” on his team. Is he ready to give that up or share it? How about Joe? He’s been “the man” for several years now, but does this relationship work, and does this work better for the team than the role Marvin plays? Consider that with Granger on board, Josh and Al suddenly get fewer touches…don’t they? Granger is a scorer, not a role player. So somebody would have to take on a role like Marvin’s. Horford is more mentally ready to do that than Josh is, yet we need a low post presence. Hmmmm…

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying I wouldn’t go for that trade. Good is good, and Granger is damn good. All I’m saying is I don’t know how well it would work, and fit accounts for a lot in this league.

But yeah…Granger is Granger. Marvin is Marvin. One guy averages 25 a game, the other doesn’t. One guy is the focal point of his team’s offense, the other isn’t.

More than anything, Marvin-for-Granger makes NO sense for Indiana.

JoeH

October 29th, 2009
10:12 am

I was there last night…This is a much improved team over last year..

Truth-Serum

October 29th, 2009
12:53 pm

Good insights Ray!

Ken Strickland

October 28th, 2009
11:57 am

I’M DEFINITELY BOTH READY AND EXCITED ABOUT TONIGHTS OPENING GM!!! Starting tonight, all of the things that’s been said about the Hawks and MWoodson, both good and bad, will playout. I JUST WANT TO SAY GOOD LUCK TO BOTH HC MIKE WOODSON AND ALL OF THE HAWKS THIS SEASON. I hope you and the Hawks make liers out of all that have voiced doubts about you and the team, including me. GO HAWKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
NOT THAT IT’S HARD TO CONFIRM THAT YOU ARE A LIAR, KEN, WITH MALICE INTENT.WE ALREADY KNOW THAT. IT IS NICE TO HEAR ANYTHING POSITIVE COME OUT OF YOUR MOUTH! FOR THAT I APPLAUD YOU, IM SURE THAT WAS QUITE CHALLENGING FOR YOU. GOOD JOB!
I EXTEND MY HAND IN A OFFER OF TRUCE, LET’S AGREE TO LET THE SEASON PLAY OUT BEFORE FINALIZE OUR CRITIQUES. LET’S LET THE SEASON PLAY OUT AND SHARE COMMENTS POSTFACTIOUSLY.

Just a reminder…..

Monitoring the voice of ignorance

October 27th, 2009
8:39 pm

“When you have no inside game you have no choice by to try an score outside. One thing is for sure….You aint getting Sh!t out of Horford and Zaza. Hamburger and his helper.”

OOPS! :-)

Horford: 24 and 16 with 4 ast and 2 blocked shots!

And that, my friends, was against 7′ 2″, 278 pound Roy Hibbert.

Actually I’m SURE that truth-serum is pleased to be wrong, at least for tonight.

And IF (and that’s a HUGE if) Al can do this consistently; I’ll wager that he’ll win truth-serum over. How could he not?

BIG UP’S TO SAUTEE AND HIS ALI SIS- LOL

YOU ARE RIGHT MY VERBAL CHALLENGE TO THE HAWKS ORGANIZATION TO ADDRESS OUR LOW POST WEAKNESS IS WROUGHT IN GOOD WILL AND HOPE FOR A HAWKS CHAMPIONSHIP. TO BE A CHAMPION YOU HAVE TO THINK LIKE ONE. I HAVE NIGHT CLASSES SO I MISSED THE FIRST HALF BUT THE BOX SCORE SHOWED GOOD NUMBERS FROM HORFORD. MY INSISTENCE IS THAT THE POINTS NOT COME FROM GARBAGE PUT BACK, FOLLOWING SOMEONE ELSES MISS, BUT FROM CREATING HIS OWN SHOTS AND OFFENSE. THE REASONING IS THAT DEFENSES HAVE TO PAY PARTICULAR ATTENTION TO OFFENSIVE THREATS AND OPENS THE DOOR FOR AN IN AND OUT GAME.. GARBAGE BASKETS ARE NEUTRALIZED BY BOXING OUT AND FLOOR SPACING. THE HAWKS AND WOODSONS NEEDS HORFORD TO COMMAND AT LEAST ONE MAN BE ON HIM AT ALL TIMES IN ORDER FOR THE OFFENSE TO FLOW. THAT WASNT THE CASE LAST YEAR OR THE YEAR BEFORE. WHEN I DID GET TO THE GAME I SAW A LOT OF FOLLOWS AND PUT BACKS, TRUE, BUT IT DID LOOK LIKE HE WAS THE BEAST IN THE POST AND THAT HE WOULD MAKE THEM PAY FOR LEAVING HIM UNATTENDED. HAVING SAID THAT, LETS BE REAL, WERE TALKING ABOUT THE PACERS HERE. I BELIEVE ‘YOU’ MAY HAVE LOOKED GOOD AGAINST THEM, SAUTEE.
ON THE FLIP SIDE, SAUTEE, IT SEEMED THAT DURING THE THIRD QUARTER WHEN THE PACERS WERE STILL IN THE HUNT, WHEN EVER THEY NEEDED A BASKET THEY TOOK THE BALL IN THE PAINT, TO THE POST, AND SCORED. NOT GOOD@! WE NEED TO DEFEND THE POST LIKE IT’S OUR HOMES. TEAMS NEED TO FEAR GOING IN OUR POST AND CHOOSE TO SETTLE FOR OUTSIDE SHOOTING. EVEN IF THEY GET LUCKY AND HIT THOSE OUTSIDE SHOTS, I WILL BE HAPPY THE GAME IS BEING PLAYED THE RIGHT WAY.

A WIN IS A WIN! TO THE WHINERS WHO ARE SAYING ITS ABOUT TIME WOODSON WENT 10 DEEP…. WELL YOU HAVE TO HAVE TEN DEEP TO PLAY TEN DEEP. THIS ISNT THE BOYS CLUB OF AMERICA WHERE YOU PAY AND THEREFORE SHOULD PLAY. THIS IS HIGH STAKES BASKETBALL. WERE TRYING TO WIN HERE.IF YOU WANT TO SEE JOHNNY RUN JOIN THEY “Y” LEAGUE.

IT’S NICE TO SEE WOODSON HAVE 10 DEEP TO RUN WITH. ACTUALLY THE TWO DNP’S ARE DECENT PLAYERS TOO.

TWO WORDS: SHELDON WILLIAMS…GO FIGURE! DID SOMEBODY LIGHT A FIRE UNDER HIS BUTT?

SAUTEE, ITS JUST ONE GAME. YOU ARE RIGHT. I WANT CONSISTENCY. I WANT HORFORD TO BE ABLE TO CREATE HIS OWN SHOT AGAINST ANYBODY OUT THERE. THAT’S HIS RESPONSIBILITY TO UP HIS GAME, NOT WOODSONS. WOODSON WILL CALL ON HIM. IT’S UP TO HORFORD TO RESPOND WITH RESULTS

DID JJ PLAY 39? WHOSE TEAM IS THIS? I THINK THIS IS STILL JJ’S TEAM! IF YOU WANT TO KEEP HIM YOUD BETTER RESIGN WOODSON. JJ IS THE THREAD THAT KEEPS THIS FABRIC TOGETHER. HE IS SWEET IN THE PAINT.

BY THE WAY, SAUTEE, IF HORFORD DID LOOK GOOD, LETS ACKNOWLEDGE WOODSON, AS YOU REMINDED ME ITS WAS HIS COMMENT THAT HE WOULD WORK WITH HORFORDS TO DEVELOP A GAME. BY THE WAY I GO TO SCHOOL AT NIGHT BECAUSE I WANT TO ELEVATE MY GAME. MY BOSS DOESNT TEACH MY CLASSES, SET MY CURRICULUM OR DO MY HOME WORK. I GROW AND LEARN BECAUSE I HAVE A DESIRE TOO. I HAVE THE FIRE AND WILL WITHIN ME. YOU CAN’T STOP ME! THAT’S THE ATTITUDE I LOOK FOR IN A CHAMPION. NOT EXCUSES. QUIT WHINING, PLAY BALL! IT’S A PLAYERS GAME

Ariose

October 29th, 2009
2:41 pm

WOW! READ IT!!! READ IT NOW!!!!

http://dimemag.com/2009/10/tim-donaghys-book-excerpts-are-crazy/#more-23063

I dont care what I have to do, I WILL get my hands on this Book.

reedeak

October 29th, 2009
3:22 pm

Any news on Joe Smiths song????