Finally caught up with Rick Sund today. Here’s the transcript of the interview. . . .
Q. I haven’t talked to you since the end of the regular season. You did better in the playoffs but you did worst during the regular season . . .
I pretty much predicted that. I did a radio show and they brought that up that you pretty much said the team wouldn’t be as good during the regular season but better in the playoffs and that’s pretty much what we were.
Q. But do you look at regular season, where you had some blowout home losses and the offense and defense regressed and . . . .
I think other than–Oklahoma City and Chicago were the only two teams that didn’t have a lot of highs and lows during the season. Certainly LA did and Dallas did and Miami did. Your [media] colleagues had Spoelstra fired three times. So it’s been up and down and we fell right into that. We’ve been up and down. I’d like to think that helped us. I’m hoping that was one reason we were stoic during the playoffs.
Q. Do you think this core group has peaked?
No.
Q. How can it be better?
In some ways it might be a little bit like Dallas, although we were younger than Dallas. Dallas went three straight years with disappointing playoffs and eliminated in the first round and I think that prompted Cuban the other day to grab the mic and say, ‘For all you people that didn’t believe in us . . . ‘ Because they kept their core group together including Kidd and Nowitzki and Marion and they got criticized for that quite a bit. And they got beat pretty much embarrassingly, by their standards, in the last three years. I think we have learned along the way. We will look at the possibility of making our team better. We do every year. We’ve made two major trades the last two years and we will continue to look and see if there is something that makes us better.
Q. You look at Dallas, they did make a trade that helped them so . . .
Yeah, well, you asked me about the core group and that’s what I’m responding to. The core group of our players have, I think, improved every single year. I’ve had that question every year, even the year I got here: Can this core group get even better? And they have, I think, in terms of ultimately the playoffs.
Q. So you are not inclined to break it up?
I didn’t say that. I said we will continue to look. Your question was, ‘Can this core be competitive again?’ I think we were pretty competitive in the playoffs. I think we can continue to do it but I think we will look, like we do every year, to see if we can do something to make our club better.
Q. Maybe that was the wrong question, then. Do you think this group is good enough to reach your goals?
Hopefully. Hopefully.
Q. The CBA is up in the air. As it looks now you don’t have a lot of flexibility so how can you improve the team considering those constraints?
I can’t even answer that until we know what the rules are.
Q. Are you hoping to end up with more flexibility in the new CBA?
We can’t even comment on the CBA and I won’t. I think, for good reason, we have one voice, that’s David Stern. Until we get what the new collective bargaining is, it’s very, very hard to assess.
Q. Listening to Al and his comments, it’s clear he prefers to play the four and thinks he’s more effective there. Would you look to get a full-time center to accommodate him?
I don’t know. So many of the players that are really, really good, and Al is one of those, they have the ability to play dual positions. I think he’s established himself he can play five; he’s established he can play four. That’s a good combo for us.
Q. You are just back from Chicago and Minneapolis. You don’t have the No. 18 pick that you traded, but you do have the second-round pick. Any hope of getting help from the draft?
We look at the last 10 years who has been drafted between 45 and 50, because that’s kind of a grouping. It’s too early. The Chicago combine is over, the group workout in Minnesota is over. We have got some group workouts we are doing here in June and you are always hoping you can get someone who has an upside of some sort. It’s difficult to find someone to come in and find someone who can play right away. When you have a good team, it’s difficult to get someone who is drafted [even] in the first round to come in and play right away.
Q. You said after last year you are of the mind that you don’t need an MVP candidate to be a championship contender but when you look at it historically, almost every single champion has had that first team All-NBA guy so how . . .
It is going to be very hard for us to get that MVP candidate unless you pick one or two [in the draft]. And we are not picking one or two. Or unless you happen to have–a few years back when they had free-agent money, to get one in free agency. It’s going to be tough, so we are going to have to do it the hard way. We are going to have to do it similar to what Detroit did in their day, when they had the Eastern Conference finals five straight times, went to Finals and one won, where it is a collective effort. Unless we get an MVP or unless someone emerges as that kind of guy.
Q. Do you have that kind of guy?
I don’t think we have an MVP candidate.
Q. What I mean is, do you have that guy on your team who can emerge into that kind of player?
Time will tell on that. It depends on what happens in the next year or any kind of player transaction or in the future. But basically we have pretty much built it around get as much talent as we possibly can, blend it around and have a team effort. Now we’ve got two players on this roster who have made All-Pro, we have got two players made All-Star and another one knocking on the door. We’ve got a player in Hinrich who has been kind of that gritty, tough complimentary player and has made All-Defense. So it is going to have to be a collective effort.
Q. How is Teague’s health?
He is coming along fine. No surgeries.
Q. After what Teague did against Chicago, do you feel good about point guard with him and Hinrich?
I felt good about it before Chicago with Hinrich and Jeff. He should be a senior in college, graduating this year. He’s just a young guy. He’s always had some real great physical tools. He just had an opportunity where he got an opportunity for consecutive playing time and he responded well. And that’s what you have to do in this league, when your opportunity comes, take advantage of it. And to his credit, I think most of the time he has had an opportunity. . . . . Even a year ago, when we said, ‘We are going to let you play, don’t worry about it win lose or draw,’ and he had a nice game against Cleveland. This year against Boston and it was a situation where Jamal missed four or five games, Joe didn’t play, and Jeff played real good in that game. We did the trade where Mike left and he got significant minutes and in that time. To his credit he has done a really good job for a young player and only getting spot play, role playing, that when he got an opportunity to get consistent minutes he responded pretty well.
Q. Do you see that continuing going forward as far as him getting consistent minutes?
I think so. For him, it was a real confidence booster. Because it’s hard when you are a role player and waiting for your opportunity and your turn as a young player, you need to take advantage of that. And he did and that’s good for him and good for us.
Q. When there was trade speculation last fall about Josh, you talked to him and reassured him. Now that there is more speculation, and he seemed frustrated with a lot of the criticism he got during the playoffs, do you talk to him again?
No, I’ve talked to him a number of times—collectively, our team—and the age of the Internet, bloggers make trades and then media feel compelled to write, and don’t worry about that. If an opportunity presents itself to improve our club, they know we would do it. Bibby got traded, Mo got traded, we traded for Jamal, we traded our draft pick—they know we will pull the trigger. But one thing I’m not into is addition by subtraction or shopping one guy or two guys. We are looking to see what makes us better as we go forward.
Q. But I think the difference this time with Josh is the frustration is coming from him as far as saying ‘I’m taking too much of the heat.’
He hasn’t expressed that to me.
Q. Is there any chance Pape Sy will be in the plans next season?
Too early to tell. He’s under contract so he will be here unless he is involved in a trade or something. We will go forward to see how his improvement is. He didn’t get a chance for much playing time, although with Chicago I think it was good that he was on the roster because with Hinrich being hurt and a few games at the end he got to get out there and play a little bit. But he’s a a young player, too.
Q. Larry was in his first year as a head coach. How did he do?
I make comparisons to Larry with Nate McMillan. I was with Nate his first full-time year, first training camp. One time I had a kind of a real nice talk with Nate, I said, ‘You will be better in year two than you were in year one, you will be better in year three than year two, you will be better in year four than year three. Because even tough you were an assistant coach and you were a player it’s completely different position when you move over 25 inches.’ I think Larry got better. I think he was very good in the playoffs. I think his confidence level and his belief in the players and the players’ belief in him improved and that’s just the maturation process that coaches go through.
Q. Why was the team so much worse at home this season?
I don’t know. I didn’t think we would get 34 wins again at home. I felt one thing is for sure, we are a more comfortable team on the road today than the year before.
Q. I only keep bringing up the blowout home losses because you don’t usually see that with winning teams.
Every team has clunkers. We had more than you normally do. The big thing is, Can you bounce back from the clunkers? Do the clunkers affect you going into the playoffs? And they didn’t. Our team seemed to show some resiliency to those. Hopefully you don’t have them again. But we had more than you would expect.
Q. Who do you see as the teams you are chasing? Obviously there is Miami now, is it still Boston, Chicago . . .
We said last year before the season started, we wanted to keep the teams behind us, behind us and make strides in front of us. And Cleveland became Miami with LeBron. I think we made strides on Orlando and we didn’t keep Chicago behind us, they leapfrogged everybody. We did keep everybody else behind us. Again, we need to do that. It’s the same goal as Orlando, Miami, Boston. I think it is pretty much going to be the same. The league gets better. There is no question the Eastern Conference was better this year. That’s another reason I didn’t think our record would be as good but by the time the playoffs came around I thought we would be better.
Q. Larry’s offense didn’t go the way he planned as far as getting team to play that style all the time. Do you still think this . . .
I don’t know. You have got to ask that question to Larry.
Q. Joe got the contract and he had his worst year since he’s been here. He’s getting older, he had the injury, so are you concerned . . .
Well, I don’t worry about the old. When I am seeing Jason Kidd and Nowitzki and the Wades and all these people in their 30s, that doesn’t bother me. Joe has got a durable, strong . . . and he did have a lot of injuries and he had an elbow situation and pre- and post-surgery he is such a tough guy he played with that. Not really [concerned]. I was really happy with Joe’s playoffs. I thought he played really well, particuarly the games that we won, he stepped up big time, particularly in the fourth quarter. I think that’s part of the experience, being into it and the pressure. There are only three teams that have made it to the conference semifinals three consecutive years: L.A., Boston and us. Two of those teams have won the championship. Another thing with Joe, if it is correct I didn’t verify it, Joe has been to the second round a number of times and three with the Hawks. Carmelo Anthony, who was probably one of the most sought after players during the trade deal, he’s only made it to the second round once. [Note: That's correct.] Chris Paul has only made it to the second round once. Deron Williams has only made it to the second round once. All the years Kevin Garnett was with [Minnesota], he only made it once. Joe has made it three times. So he’s done a pretty good job of being the best player on your club in terms of getting there. Now his challenge and opportunity is getting to that next round. I think he gave a pretty good effort in the Chicago series.
Q. During the playoffs Joe expressed frustration with whether it was best share the ball or for him to try to do more. It seems like he never really . . .
I don’t know. That’s between him and Larrry. But from my perspective I thought he did a pretty good job. When the game was on the line, those close games. . . . You take any team. Oklahoma City. Some games Durant was really good in the fourth quarter, some games it was Westbrook; other games [Durant] was terrible in the fourth quarter. Take Miami. There were people that were criticizing Bosh in the first round. Somebody has got to do it. Most of the time, a lot of the time, it’s your best player. Other times it’s not. When Boozer did it for Chicago they were really good in those games. I try not to get too high on the highs or too low on the lows. The playoffs can really cause that. The highs and the lows of the playoffs are unbelievable from a fan and media perspective. Miami loses to Chicago in a fashion where Chicago pretty much dominated and dictated that game, and everyone wrote Miami off and said that’s it. There is no way that Miami is good enough, blah, blah, blah, blah. Dallas wins the first game, loses the second game, and [they said] ‘There is no way Dallas is going to be able to go into Oklahoma City as loud as that is and the enthusiasm.’ You don’t get too high on it. It’s a progress or it’s a leapfrog. Chicago leapfrogged. Ours is more of a progression and I think Joe did a pretty good job.
Q. When you say ‘progression’ it sounds like you think you are close to breaking through to that next level?
I thought we were pretty close this year, yeah. I really do. I think a good thing is, last year they were embarrassed in the second round. They didn’t play very good. Orlando manhandled them and they didn’t handle it very well. So they were disappointed by the embarrassment. This year they were disappointed that the opportunity was there, they were close, and they didn’t get there. There’s a big difference in the two. Big difference. I think that’s a progression. I heard Nowitzki say that the other day, ‘Hey we weren’t very happy with the last three years.’ They were concerned because they lost their last nine games to playoff teams in the Western Conference. Then they played New Orleans the last game of the season, it was meaningless, and they won. It’s all, What is your mindset? How does it go in the first playoff game, how does your momentum go? For us, they were focused in the Orlando series. They were focused in the Chicago series; Chicago beat them. But they were focused. It wasn’t a situation of them not competing or giving up. I think they thought it was going to be easier last year in the Orlando series and it wasn’t.
Q. What does the team need, in your opinion?
They need to continue to get the maturity. They need to continue to become the physical team they were in the playoffs. I think they need to deal better with the 82 games when adversity comes. This was a strange year because the whole league was like that with the exception of those two teams [Chicago and Oklahoma City]. Erik Spoelstra was fired three times by the media. You had a situation where the Lakers, three or four games before the All-Star game, ‘They’ve got to break it up. They’ve got to make a trade.’ And then they came out of the All-Star break and they win 17 of 18 games. You’ve got a situation in Dallas where Nowitzki gets hurt they lose six or seven in a row, he comes back they lose two or three more. Nobody picked Dallas. I’ve never seen a season—and maybe it’s because the league has gotten better—that was so up and down and all over the board with the playoff clubs. I think we as a team, to answer your question, we have got to stay more focused during the 82 games. We haven’t proved we are championship-caliber. We knocked on the door; we want to get there. Sometimes you will see really good championship teams coast through the year and say, ‘We are waiting for the second season.’ We can’t do that, even though we are one of the teams that the last three years made it to the second round. I think we have got to focus on that a little more during the season. I think that’s got to be one of our priorities because it helps with with positioning. I think we got a little lax on that because we have gone three straight years. Certainly we got lax at it when we got locked up the last couple weeks. Some of that, though, may have helped us because it got Teague more minutes.
Q. Those are mostly intangibles you are talking about. From a personnel standpoint, what do you think the team needs?
I don’t know. We are still in the process of evaluating that.
Q. Are you talking to Jamal about a contract extension?
I’m not going to discuss contract stuff. Jamal knows that we want to do everything in our power to bring him back but we don’t know what the [CBA] rules are yet.
Michael Cunningham, Hawks beat
445 comments Add your comment
brigadierjerry
May 27th, 2011
10:46 pm
Doesnt suprise me about Sund. Sounds like minimal moves will be made and he will remain status quo.
Anyone suprised by Scottie Pippen’s comment saying James may be better than Jordan?In a lot of ways James reminds me of a bigger better offensive version of Pippen
JohnGTFan
May 27th, 2011
10:47 pm
Yes, Al Jefferson is better than Al Horford. And all the players I mentioned…other than Garnett, are beasts on the offensive and defensive boards. Horford has yet to do that. Again, I’m a big Horford fan…but he isn’t at that level yet. Granted, he hasn’t played PF enough…but when he did….YUCK. But I have faith he’ll get it figured out in the off-season. And when did Atlanta become one of the best teams in the NBA…damn I missed that season!!! Oh, and thinking that Aldridge and Horford are even….hahahaha…sorry brother, but you’re delusional on that one. Aldridge is a beast.
JohnGTFan
May 27th, 2011
10:48 pm
Jerry…yea, but I loved what Brent Musberger said…when he wins multiple championships…heck, at least one…and becomes a true “leader”, then ask about it. He was taking nothing away from James, but the comparison is just silly. Jordan was the best “all-around” player of all-time…not the best “scorer”…that belongs to Kareem and Wilt. But Jordan was a menace on defense, he did share the ball (years later..lol), rebounded well for a guard, and was a true leader…he got EVERYTHING out of his teammates…without all the annoying whining like James does. Noone questioned his toughness, doubted his passion, ALWAYS wanted the ball when it counted, and wasn’t afraid to trust his teammates. That’s why most people don’t like James…it’s still a man’s game…and he whines like a little girl with a skinned knee.
Benny
May 27th, 2011
10:49 pm
Great job MC. However, I just wish you had asked specifically how someone like Marvin Williams has improved year by year. It would have been great to hear him try and rationalize that one.
superiorblogman
May 27th, 2011
10:49 pm
brigadierjerry
May 27th, 2011
10:46 pm
Doesnt suprise me about Sund. Sounds like minimal moves will be made and he will remain status quo.
Anyone suprised by Scottie Pippen’s comment saying James may be better than Jordan?In a lot of ways James reminds me of a bigger better offensive version of Pippen
I’m not surprised but I think it is slightly disrespectful because Pippen probably would not have a single championship nor be in the top 50 of all time without Jordan.
Hawk n the Ham
May 27th, 2011
10:51 pm
Seriously. How is this man even employed? All he has done is handcuff an under the luxury tax spending front office, by handing out the most overpaid contracts per player performance across the board.
Marvin Williams and Joe Johnson is laughing all the way to the bank.
PaulieOldschool
May 27th, 2011
10:51 pm
The man is officially certifiable if he doesn’t think the team needs a real, make that real good, center. Horford is a PF, no BS about that. Out of position and still pretty good. But we need a real, make that real good, big in the paint. Otherwise, get used to being, well, not close to top tier.
Hawk n the Ham
May 27th, 2011
11:02 pm
Does Thomas Dimitroff have a twin brother that likes basketball? Please? I hope so……
KevinM
May 27th, 2011
11:03 pm
Reading that only ticked me off more about the smug attitude of Rick Sund. He has spent 2 weeks since Chicago kicked us around making a list of how to spin and justify the moves you made. So we are in a group with Boston and LA? Rick forgot to mention that of he 3, we were the only one to go home each time…..what an arrogant GM we have in this city!
His comment about getting better every year? Uh, what part of a .500 record after 6-0 did he misunderstand.
My congrats to Joe on a great playoff series. He really stepped up and was the difference huh?
Btw, Jamal, we want you back….we just can’t pay you anything near what you made. The weak playoff performance? Forget about it….you were still learning what it was like to play in the 2nd round. You’ll be a difference maker next time.
As I said in an earlier blog, he has to be the worse interview out there. He would spin a 40 point loss into a great rebounding game.
Just leave Rick; your career has been just short of great! Bibby is his prime huh?
O'Brien
May 27th, 2011
11:12 pm
From the point forward on si.com;
Atlanta fans might rejoice at the notion of the team amnesty-ing its way out of the $107 million it will owe Joe Johnson over the next five seasons. But that’s unrealistic because the amnesty proposal would still require teams to pay the waived player.
Johnson might be overpaid, but he’s still productive, and a team with a recent history of dodging the luxury tax is not going to shell out $107 million just to get Johnson off its cap figure. That leaves Marvin Williams, who is set to make about $25 million over the next three seasons..
Clearly, they have not been talking to “it was not a bad pick” or “Marvin will be a 20 ppg scorer” (or are they the same person?).
Reddjonn68
May 27th, 2011
11:27 pm
I have heard everything now, Rick Sund actually showing his ignorance about the reality of this league….the Bulls weaknesses were shown in the ECFs with an MVP so WTF makes Sund think this team is a step away when your star player got worse this year!!!!! This organization is like a cartoon or slapstick comedy where is the seriousness or urgency. Larry Drew ran the same offense that Woodson ran & Johnson did not get better in it, he also was bailed out by some excellent play when called upon….finally… by Teague.
Everything from ownership, to coaching ignorance, to player accountability is a farce. Way to go Hawks just lace em up, fill the stands, & go home in the 2nd round every season. Why is Marvin Williams even in a Hawk uniform at all, Luol Deng has had major knee surgery, yet still gives more effort & results on the floor. I love Josh Smith, but he is a cancer to his own team 97% of the time & clearly uncoachable…Sund is clueless or high.
drmaryb (*_-)
May 28th, 2011
12:12 am
“Sund is clueless or high.”
_____________
I wish I was clueless or high.
Simjr
May 28th, 2011
12:16 am
drmaryb
This link is for you..Enjoy..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N63lhtx2q8o&feature=related
Grandad
May 28th, 2011
12:21 am
Insipid is to vibrant as Sund is to Dimitroff
Sund is to Dimitroff as Job 6:6 is to Thai red curry with frog-legs
Job 6:6 is to Thai red curry as Perry Como would have been to Lady Gaga
Perry Como is to Lady Gaga as insipid is to vibrant
Insipid is to vibrant as Sund is to Lady Gaga
Grandad
May 28th, 2011
12:35 am
For northcyde !
I had a reponse to your dissertation *[from the last blog]*
However, it was somewhat lengthy as well,
but the ” blog-munchkin ” munched it !
When I remember all that I said, then I shall rehash.
STRETCH
May 28th, 2011
12:36 am
Q. Listening to Al and his comments, it’s clear he prefers to play the four and thinks he’s more effective there. Would you look to get a full-time center to accommodate him?
“I don’t know. So many of the players that are really, really good, and Al is one of those, they have the ability to play dual positions. I think he’s established himself he can play five; he’s established he can play four. That’s a good combo for us.”
Im sorry man but Al is pleading for a true center and Sund makes that statement? Are you kidding me?!!!!!
Simjr
May 28th, 2011
12:41 am
“I don’t know. So many of the players that are really, really good, and Al is one of those, they have the ability to play dual positions. I think he’s established himself he can play five; he’s established he can play four. That’s a good combo for us.”
Hey Sund are you from planet Earth??????
Simjr
May 28th, 2011
12:45 am
Or are you from GMTFOH????
Reddjonn68
May 28th, 2011
1:28 am
Sund should be beamed up to the USS Enterprise or whatever. I do not see a bright future for us to retify the future at GM or Ownership, with this lockout around the corner. I see a lot of teams taking the Cincinnati Bengals path…bringing back the same old coaches & management to save as much money as possible. Sorry Hawks fans, looks we are married to an average organization for the next 4 to 5 years until a messy divorce ensues, then we become cellar dwellers for awhile. Good nite!!!
Grandad
May 28th, 2011
3:02 am
doc
Your absotively right !
Constipation provides a more rectified corollary than diarrhea.
Ra'mon
May 28th, 2011
3:02 am
If Utah would be interested, the deal I would consider offering is Horford and Kirk to them for Al Jefferson, CJ Mile and their Nets draft pick.
vava74
May 28th, 2011
4:42 am
Diaper Al should get his *ss in the paint and play where he can maximize his skills.
Diaper Al at the PF was exposed as a bad option. He was completely shut down offensively with single coverage by Bass (who is 6′7”) and by Boozer (who is a terrible defensive player).
Diaper Al’s game is too weak and robotic to face elite defenses at the PF slot. Only at the C position he can be productive using his superior speed and agility and taking advantage of the fact that most C’s don’t venture away from the paint to close out shooters whilst most PFs do.
Stop sponsoring Diaper Al’s softness.
He has come up short in 2 playoffs in a row. A guy who is 6′10” and 250lbs cannot shy away from contact like he did against Kurt Thomas and Howard last year and this year away from Bass and Boozer.
How could JJ and Jamal have any space against CHI swarming D with Al never establishing himself in the paint and being mostly a non-factor????
Diaper Al has progressively gone from being a blue collar player (first 2 seasons) into becoming a damn accountant.
Productive and steady BUT when the heavy lifting is needed he simply checks out.
Within a year or two – now that his objective is to expand his range – we will have in our hands a Channing Frye 2.0
Puff Forward
kjb
May 28th, 2011
6:02 am
Just A Few Suggestions: Bring back the old colors for the Hawks (red yellow & white) change the atmosphere in the stadium….dim the lights a lil bit in the crown, trim the court in black or red…..we need a fresh new look, highlight the court & bring in some shooters, lowpost players, defensive players & players not afraid to draw a foul. Larry Drew’s second year, he has to make better decisions or this will be his last year!!! Get rid of Dominique as an analyst!!! Please look into this!!!
Buddy Grizzard
May 28th, 2011
6:32 am
“One thing I’m not into is addition by subtraction.” – Rick Sund
LOL… good to know the Old Horse reads this blog.
Rick, I know you’re not into it, but you did such a masterful job with Bibby…
Please subtract:
1. Jamal Crawford
2. Josh Powell
Add to this team by subtracting defensively indifferent players. You like the Detroit model so much… make toughness and defensive accountability the hallmark of every player you sign this off season… not matador defense.
JoJo the Godfather
May 28th, 2011
6:33 am
Buy or trade for an early 2nd rd pick and draft PG Shumpert from GT, then grab SF Richmond at #48. Shumpert, Sy, Richmond & Rolle as quick, athletic defenders at the end of the bench (roster spots 10-13). Grab a couple free agent bigs for the 8th & 9th spots (Jeff Foster & Joel Pryzbilla). Preach conditioning, strength & defense.
Teague/Hinrich/Shumpert
Johnson/Sy
Smith/Williams/Richmond
Horford/Rolle
Pryzbilla/Pachulia/Foster
Willy
May 28th, 2011
6:34 am
Great ATTEMPT at an interview, Sund is a tap dancer!
JoJo the Godfather
May 28th, 2011
6:39 am
Pryzbilla, Pachulia & Foster could hold down the center spot on this team. Those are some tough SOB’s that aren’t afraid to hammer somebody in the paint. Ask Rose how those flagrants Foster dropped on him in the 1st round felt.
Marcus
May 28th, 2011
6:42 am
Grandad and others ……….. one thing I learned (out of frustration) from other message boards ……… if you have a particular lengthy but salient blog response, one even that might get re-posted in multiple forums on the same topic, write it out on Notepad or Wordpad 1st, save it, then post it. Even if it is a response to someone else, it gives you time to get thoughts together and hopefully avoids any technical difficulties.
2 cents ..
Buddy Grizzard
May 28th, 2011
7:09 am
Jojo nbadraft.net doesn’t have Shumpert getting drafted in either round, but I actually think he’s a sleeper to be a modestly impactful NBA player. I think the Hawks have actually been averse to drafting local products who could have helped them (Lou Williams, Thaddeus Young) out of fear of appearing to try to placate the locals fanbase. Better talent evaluation could have landed either of those players on our roster.
Slimjr
May 28th, 2011
7:10 am
“I don’t know.”
Sund why do you continue to start off a reply to a legit question with “I don’t know”? How do guys like you continue to get paid millions of dollars for producing garbage?
Reading your quotes from the interview just reinforces how more and more fans are starting to view you and it’s not a pretty sight!!!
You should write a book called “31 years I’ve said I don’t know”. How to fool people and make millions doing it…………………………………….Geez……..
Buddy Grizzard
May 28th, 2011
7:18 am
JoJo good call on Foster! Rick Sund make yourself useful and go get that dude.
Slimjr
May 28th, 2011
7:20 am
News Flash Al, you stink playing the 4..Sorry to burst your bubble….You don’t have the skills or athleticism at the 4..Sorry dude..Stick to the 5..You’ll keep getting invited back to the Allstar game that way…Looks good on your resume…
dap01
May 28th, 2011
7:21 am
Other than the small forward position, the center position, a tough rebounder, bench players, a coach, a gm and good ownership, I believe that we are very close to a championship.
Sund has no credibility. The team regressed this year. He compares us to Dallas about keeping everyone together. Dallas added pieces every trade deadline and every offseason. Atlanta added minimum players who had been picked over and over.
It is horrible being a Hawks fan. We really have no hope.
Slimjr
May 28th, 2011
7:22 am
38-39 wins….sigh…….
dap01
May 28th, 2011
7:25 am
By the way, thank MC for the attempt at getting info in the interview.
Al Hortford is a better center than powerforward. The best that the Hawks can hope for is a very good defensive center to share the center position with Al (and let Al share the powerforward position with Josh. We do need a shooting SF who can play defense.
Defense and rebounding is our teams needs. Get one defensive center and one shooting wing and we have a team.
mountain_jim
May 28th, 2011
8:14 am
Thanks MC for this interview, which in my opinion shows Sund to be a defensive, dim bulb.
Section 303
May 28th, 2011
8:49 am
Michael, nice job on this interview. You asked some good questions.
It’s too hard to tell where the Hawks are going right now. Until we know the new CBA rules, how can anyone even speculate?
I find Sund to be boring. He rarely says anything interesting to the media. But, he has proven to be unafraid of making trades. I think they will make some more this summer, or whenever the CBA is negotiated. And, I still stand by my predictions of no Marvin or Josh when the next season tips.
But….I don’t think the next season is tipping until October/Novemeber of 2012. This lockout is going to last a long, long, long time.
Not buying it
May 28th, 2011
8:52 am
Sund sounds like he is borderline dillusional. How can a GM not come out and be pissed about the most home losses by 20 or more. He should say it is unacceptable and put everyone on notice. Instead he tries to say this team is getting better because they beat a Orlando team that regressed after their trade and got 2 wins against Chicago. Big deal. Get real Sund. Dont spin it. Tell it like it is. Get pissed like us fans and then do something about it.
JoJo the Godfather
May 28th, 2011
9:04 am
Shumpert measured 6′5.5″ in shoes, 221 lbs, 6.5% body fat, and a wingspan of 6′9.5″. He had the best max vertical in the combine at 42″. He also knocked out 18 reps on the benchpress, which was 3rd and only 1 rep behind Derrick Williams & Justin Harper. He’s proven he can play defense in college. The Hawks could benefit greatly from getting 5-10 minutes a night of lock-down defense from this guy. Who knows? He may even develop a jumpshot.
Richmond is just the fastest straight-line player in the draft. He ranked faster than Derrick Rose. He’s a project as he just turned 19 in March. Extremely athletic. 6′7.25″ in shoes, 207 lbs, with only 5.5% body fat. Has d-league written all over him, but could develop in to a special player.
JoJo the Godfather
May 28th, 2011
9:18 am
IF WE GET LUCKY – Shumpert at 6′6″ 220 & Pape Sy at 6′7″ 225 will develop in to a guard combo off the bench where both guys can play the point, both will provide solid man-to-man defense and are capable of handling switches because of their size, and both will relentlessly drive the lane on offense to finish and/or draw fouls. OK, I JUST WOKE UP FROM THAT DREAM. Reality is, at least one of them would have to develop the ability to hit an open shot.
JoJo the Godfather
May 28th, 2011
9:22 am
I would not object to this 5-guard backcourt for a year:
Teague/Hinrich/Shumpert
Johnson/Hinrich/Sy
If Teague/Hinrich/Johnson each avg 30 minutes per game at one of the guard spots, that only leaves 6 minutes per game for Shumpert/Sy. It’s not like we’re going to cripple the team by having a couple inexperienced backups. The upside is huge though if those 2 can develop and contribute.
It was not a bad pick
May 28th, 2011
9:41 am
@Obrien and JohnGTFan
I only post facts and here is a couple
1.Marvin averaged 14 or better for 3 straight years while taking only 11 shots a game 45% from the floor..THOSE ARE SOLID NUMBERS…throw in solid d and 5 or 6 boards a game
2. The last 2 years, Marvin shot attempts went down to 8pg…so that explains his scoring drop..Jamal , Joe and Josh took a lot of shots and Marvin,unlike Josh, plays within the team and does not jack up bad shots like Josh…Thibadeau called Marvin the most underated player in the NBA..teams understand that since Joe Max has the ball all game , he is not being used!
3.JohnGTFan, you never answered my ?..Could Randolph, Bosh, Gasol, or Aldridge, who has not been out of the first round, played CENTER in the NBA for 3 seasons on a winning team? Al averaged 15 and 9 while shooting 55% from the field this year, PLAYING CENTER!…
4. your boy Aldridge is not a beast on the boards, he only averaged 7 a game..And he is 6ft10 legit, not 6ft8 like Al…Al also out rebounded Jefferson, who Al is clearly better than…
5.Yes the HAWKS have been one of the best teams in the NBA the last 3 years..just look up our record and the fact that we made it to the second round 3 years in a row..If we had a legit big man we would have beat the bulls this year..They pounded us on the boards..If Woody played Collins last year we beat the Magic…
hosemaze
May 28th, 2011
10:58 am
Teague/ Hinrich/Johnson
Hinrich/Shannon Brown/Williams
Johnson/Williams/Wilkins
Horford/Kirlenko(FA)
Bynum/ZaZa/Horford/Twin
Smith and Crawford traded to LA for Bynum and Brown, Kirlenko signed as free agent value off bench with scoring and weakside defensive help stay under cap solid line up improves core while keeping team together albeit Josh had togo because he has more value than Marvin at this time.Look at the various line ups awesome damn Atlanta Spirit I need a job as an consultant call me 555-555-5ATL find weakness in that team i put together remember Kirlenko was a 3 time allstar in the West enough said coming off our bench sweet.
cdog
May 28th, 2011
11:06 am
just show you the stupid mentality of rick sund and the owners who brought him back for another season of dissapointments.until sund is no longer with the hawks, they will always fail.you can’t measure your self against the orlando majic. they were a team in transition.after trading away key players such as rashard lewis, they were not the same team that beat the hawks the last few years.anytime you get blown out on your home floor by 30 points are more on several occassions such the hawks did,how many times did the heat, lakers, celtics, mavs and bulls get blown out by 30 on their home floor? not many as the hawks did, how can you say you’re close? thats the mentality of rick sund. all he wants is to be close with being mediocre.as long as he’s the general manager, this is going to happen. when he did do something, he brought in a mediocre bench player in kirk hinrich then gave up valuable draft picks.he is terrible as a GM.well, hawks fans, get ready for another year of mediocrity and being only “close” with rick sund
ryan
May 28th, 2011
11:12 am
I hear Brandon Roy could on his way out of Portland why not take a chance i know he kind over the hill but maybe a change of scenery will do him good Josh Smith and Marvin Williams in a package deal .
Dr. Warren
May 28th, 2011
11:14 am
Sund should write a book called “Loser Talk.”
O'Brien
May 28th, 2011
11:14 am
It was not a bad pick,
CP3 has not won anything…in the PLAYOFFS….end of discussion!.
Neither has Dwight Howard. So if you have the chance to trade for Howard, would you do it?
Kevin Durant or LeBron James has never won anything in the playoffs either. So if you have the chance to trade for them, would you do it?
Are you a football fan? Dan Marino never won a championship. So if you had the chance to trade for Marino in his prime, would you have passed on him because he hadn’t won anything in the playoffs?
Sutton's Fro
May 28th, 2011
11:18 am
All this chatter about personnel problems really amount to one thing: no matter who the coach has been, the Hawks have continued to make a system that tries to get the most out of a roster composed of 2 different kinds of players — guys that do better banging in the halfcourt, and guys that want to run and gun, and shoot 3’s.
To make the next level, they need to coach a single system, and dump all the players that don’t/can’t work in it. Since JJ Maxx isn’t going anywhere, they’ll have to stick with a grind-it-out half-court system, and stop trying to run all the time. He and JT can play pick and roll with Al. Get Marvin and/or Smoove off the 3-pt line, and inside of 18 feet; bang away on the glass and take the high percentage shot. Since Josh has the trade value, you could use him to get a big center (Bogut, maybe). Let Jamal go, and put Hinrich on the bench as the 6th man.
PG – Teague, SG – JJ Maxx, SF – Marvin, PF – Al, C – New guy
Bench — Hinrich, Zaza, Powell, Wilkins
It was not a bad pick
May 28th, 2011
11:26 am
@O’brien
Howard went to the finals…Durant has been to a conference finals…Counting this year LBJ has now been twice..Paul has never led a team anywhere..Yeah he’s good, but I think that Marvin gets a unfair rap. only due to us passing on a PG who has no rings and has not been to a conference final….Marvin has not been a bust considering that he was not drafted to be the man..the man on the Hawks is Joe Max..He has the ball most of the game..If we let Marvin put up at least 12-15 shot pg he will get around 15-18 ppg…He has already proven that for 3 years….which is solid..Now, with that being said, if the Hawks would let him put up 15-18 shots ppg he would easily be 20PPG SCORER!
Najeh Davenpoop
May 28th, 2011
11:28 am
“nbadraft.net doesn’t have Shumpert getting drafted in either round, but I actually think he’s a sleeper to be a modestly impactful NBA player.”
I haven’t seen Shumpert play in a couple of years, but generally Paul Hewitt’s players tend to play better in the NBA than they did in college (see Chris Bosh, Thaddeus Young, Anthony Morrow for example), so Shumpert may be a good gamble at #48.