Atlanta Hawks: Michael Gearon Jr. Q-and-A

Hawks co-owner Michael Gearon Jr. sat down Friday for a long interview with myself and fellow AJC scribe Tim Tucker. Here are some excerpts from the wide-ranging discussion, edited for clarity and flow. It includes my interrogatives and/or explanations of what Gearon was talking about:

Gearon started out by explaining his reasoning on bringing back most of the same players for what he says is a “make or break” year for the Hawks.

I look at us, and you measure a team on its results: How are we doing vs. the league? There are three teams the last three years that have advanced past the first round. The Lakers—who everybody loves the Lakers—the Celtics and the Atlanta Hawks. It’s not the Dallas Mavericks, it’s not the Miami Heat, it’s not the New York Knicks, it’s not the Oklahoma City Thunder, it’s not the Orlando Magic. It’s just those three. Have we been able to win a championship? No. But our goal is to be as competitive and entertaining as possible and it’s unrealistic to every year have the only measure of your success as winning a championship because one in 30 do it. So you keep getting better and competing each year in order to try to complete for that championship.

Now last year if, we had lost in the first round or gotten blown out in the second round, our roster would look like a lot different because we would say, ‘You know what? Time to make a change, let’s blow this up.’ Instead, we’ve got a core group that each year keeps chipping away and getting better. They are still pretty darn young when you look at that core. . . .

One thing nobody has really given us credit for is last year the Atlanta Hawks had the most competitive [second-round] series than they’ve had in 18 years. Our big trade in February that got us past the first round—I would say [Kirk Hinrich's] defense on Jameer Nelson was a difference-maker and also the way we played [Dwight] Howard. Hinrich was out that second round [and], on the positive, we got to see Jeff Teague go against the best point guard in the NBA. And he played at an elite level against that player. He shot just as well from the field. Averaged–before that last game where he hurt his wrist–averaged 17 points per game he was controlling the ball, he was protecting the ball, and as a result were able to compete with Chicago where most people thought we would be swept.

So going into this season, we still keep getting better because of the playoff success we had last year.
What’s frustrating, from a fan perspective, is that you would look at Atlanta in this market. . . . Tim, you understand the risk we took to get Joe and the reward we got. Unfortunately I think some of that message got lost publicly and how we’ve been viewed [negatively] regardless of the success we had. And I look at things where people say, ‘Oh, well, the Hawks owners are cheap.’ That’s something I hear constantly whether it’s written or radio guys. Yet when you look at the facts . . . This year we will probably have one of the top 5 payrolls in the NBA. It will be right around $70 [million], I will tell you if we are at the trade deadline and we feel like we are missing that piece, that we will think will take us over the top, [we will pay the tax]. . . .

You look at the Hawks, if you look at our payroll vs. the Falcons—I don’t want to crap on the Falcons in the paper but everybody acts like Falcons do whatever it takes to win—their payroll the last three, four years as been in the lower third in the league. They were 25th in 08-09, 26th in 09-10, 26th in 2010-11. Now let’s contrast that with us. 2010-11 we were ninth; 2009-10 we were 21st. This year we will probably be fifth. What I struggle with is when the facts don’t support the [negative] view. . . . You and I, we need the Hawks to have the same energy and perception in the public the Falcons do in order to have more bloggers, more viewers. I look at the Falcons, they’ve got 1,500 people [commenting on AJC blogs]. The image of that team has been shaped as, they will do whatever it takes to be successful. Now contrast their success to ours. The last playoff game they won was in’04. That’s just a fact. Michael Vick was still on the team then. We’ve won in the playoffs three years in a row. I hope the Falcons make the playoffs this year and I hope they win the Super Bowl because I’m in Atlantan and I’m a huge fan of every team here. They’ve never made the playoffs three years in a row. You would think every decision they make is just a bright decision based on how it’s portrayed. We get criticized because the bar is the tax instead of the cap. I don’t think our fans understand, we do spend money and we are one of the highest payrolls.

I told Gearon I think sophisticated fans know that the owners spend money but they take issue with how those resources are allocated.

And I can handle that. I love that. I want a buzz. I want a pulse. And I’m thick-skinned enough . . . come at me. I’m not a person that has a problem accepting criticism. The issues for me is being sure the reader or the fan knows both sides. The passionate [basketball] fan, we have. It’s trying to get the interest of the casual fan that doesn’t know us and believes, ‘They really don’t spend money and they are not successful.’ The problem is I have with that, those two statements, compared to the other teams in the city, are factually incorrect. The last six or seven years, by our record, we are the most successful team in Atlanta. I used to tell people, with the Thrashers, bring [the criticism] on. The Thrashers have sucked. I’m not here to defend that. I am a basketball guy. I will tell you as an investor I loved the Atlanta Thrashers, I busted my tail to do what I could to try to keep them here, I was disappointed they left. I think Tim saw some of the emotions that I lived through, the pain in my own household. . . . As a man, I was the one guy that said I will step up in front of everyone and make whatever statement is necessary even though I’ve never been perceived as the hockey guy.

One of the challenges you have, and I have, we need this team to have a pulse if we are going to grow the fanbase, which hopefully grows your bloggers and your readers and grows our season-ticket holders. The passionate fan is fantastic because they come. What we are trying to do is attract the casual fan who thinks the Braves are more successful, or that their owner cares more. I can tell you with absolute certainty that there is not an owner in professional sports who has been to as many games of the team that they own than I have. Because I’ve been doing it since I was 5, and there is nothing that would bring me greater joy than winning a championship. But what I don’t want to do is blow up the roster and have seven years of failure as you try to get there.

When we bought the team, we were the first NBA team to say we are going to scrap it and build through the draft. We are going to be patient about it and we are going to try to build assets and then trade selectively when we felt like the right piece was there. Ironically, when you look around the league, that’s the Oklahoma City model. That was the Portland model. That was the L.A. Clippers’ model until they did the Chris Paul deal. A lot of teams adopted that thinking that’s the right strategy. Around the league our peers look at us and say, ‘You guys have done a hell of a job running that franchise because you are in a market that’s not a large revenue market, you’ve been competitive, you’ve kept your base players, you’ve been willing to pay Josh Smith 50-something million, Al Horford his $60 million, Joe Johnson his $100 million, Marvin his $40 million and so forth.

With Jamal, I love Jamal, that was one of toughest decisions we faced as an organization. I think if it were the old CBA, we might have looked at it differently. But the biggest challenge we face from a pragmatic standpoint is there are three guys who get the minutes [at guard], and what happens when you have four and how does that work? I hope Jamal kills it in Portland because he’s a great person. We’ve tried over the years . . . with Joe Johnson we could have lost Joe. We could have said, ‘You know what, the other teams that were after him, Chicago, Miami, New York, we will let him go.’ But where would we be? We wouldn’t have gotten anything.

You could have signed-and-traded him and got something in return.

You are right, if you get something of value coming back. A lot of times you get a marginal player. With Joe, I did this last night—it caused me to be up until 2 in the morning, but it was a helpful exercise—Joe Johnson is one of only 10 guys that has made the All-Star game five years in a row. And yet he gets all this huge criticism. And he really does care. You see his conditioning. So many guys get their contracts and they come in [out of shape]. There are a handful of guys in the league who you know no matter what they are making they are going to come nad play as hard as possible. Kobe is that way, LeBron is that way, Wade is that way, Jordan was that way. Joe is that way conditioning-wise [but] Joe’s personality isn’t that way. He’s so quiet. In the seven years I’ve known him I think he has said 50 words to me. And I’ve reached out to him like I have all these guys and said, ‘If there is anything I can help you on, any business advice, let me know.’ But if you look at that collection of guys, the All-Stars over [five] years it’s LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Kobe Bryant, Kobe Bryant, Dirk Nowitxzki, Amare Stoudemire, Chris Bosh. It’s not Chris Bosh, it’s not Carmelo Anthony, who are great players, but you hear this buzz with those two guys like they are the second coming. But you go back and say what did Denver do with Carmelo Anthony? They made it past the first round once. What did New Orleans do with Chris Paul? Go past the first round once. What did the Hawks do with Joe Johnson? They’ve gotten past the first round three years in a row. Joe deserves some credit for that. Does he a have a big contract? Absolutely. But I think for a fanbase, they should say, ‘I’m glad those owners stepped up to pay him instead of let him go for nothing.’

Joe had what he admits was his worst season after getting that contract. Does he have to play better to justify that contract?

I think what justifies that contract is the success of the team. We had the best playoff success we’ve had in our tenure as owners last year. So I don’t judge Joe Johnson on the regular season. We took away the home-court advantage from the team with the best record during the regular season. I think the way we beat them up caused them to lose to Miami. I really do. For us as an organization we are going to judge our success by how we do in the playoffs. Are we going to be competitive and show up? Fortunately we’ve got all of our core players, and you’ve written some of this, they’ve come in to camp in shape. And I appreciate, as a fan and as an owner, the piece you did on Teague. That was a great piece. It’s right on that if we are going to play well this year, it’s going to be more up-tempo offensively and more lock-down defensively and we are going to look different. And I think that for fans it is going to be more exciting because it’s not going to be pounding the ball.

Are you concerned about what happened during the regular season, when you had a lot of blowout losses? That doesn’t usually happen to good teams.

I think we played well against competitive teams. We played well against Miami. We played well against Orlando. We struggled against Boston. We played well against Chicago. We had a point where we were on pace for the same record 9as 2009-10]. Then once we locked into, the last 10 games, into that fifth seed and it didn’t matter what we did, we went from being from 44-32 to 44-38 because I think we lost our last five or six and that’s what stuck with the team. I think what hurt us with our blowouts was our inability to play defense consistently and we are hoping we can do that this year.

As you can see, if you look at the culture of the team we have right now we are bringing veterans in. When Al Horford is on the court, he sees Tracy McGrady out there ans there is that respect as a veteran. Those pieces that aren’t necessarily the superstars–the DeShawn Stevensons, the Robert Horrys–those sometimes are the ones that make the difference and hit the shot. But they are veterans that are used to that moment and that’s how we try to build our roster this year.

Over the last four years we’ve had no problem with the assets. We moved Shelden Williams and Acie Law for Mike Bibby and got a pretty good point guard. Then we moved Mike Bibby and got Kirk Hinrich, and we moved Acie Law and got Jamal. There are pieces that we’ve been able to move but we’ve done it selectively. Unfortunately Kirk was hurt and we didn’t get to see him for a full season and we won’t get to see him for a full season this year. Our hope is by the time we reach the playoffs he is healthy and our team is clicking.

Gearon on what he says is an unfair perception, fueled by local media, that the Hawks are not successful and the owners don’t spend money.

It’s more of [an AJC] columnist issue. The way it is written is we are cheap, we are bad owners, we do a horrible job and we don’t care. [Tucker] did a piece five or six years ago, he did a father-son piece and he picked my father and I about the bond we had going to [Hawks] games as a kid. Back in the late 70s, 60s they had Picture Day. There I am with Pistol Pete Maravich and Lou Hudson. I think what is tough is, the perception we don’t care is grossly accurate for myself. Because I do care and there is not a day or night that goes by that I’m not miserable when we lose and not high when we win. I’ve also tried not to lose perspective and blow up a roster just for the sake of blowing it up.

For example, last year Orlando had a 10-game stretch where they struggled and blew up their roster. Greatest thing that ever happened to us because they got rid of Gortat, got rid of Pietrus. If you look at the team that blew us out [in the 2010 playoffs], Pietrus was a great defender that can spread the floor, Barnes is a great defender who can spread the floor, Gortat. And they get rid of these guys and you look at what they got back and you kind of scratch their head. . . . We haven’t seen enough to say this team is not capable of competing [for a title]. I say that because there are only three teams out of 30 that have gotten out of that first round three years [in a row]. And they are young. Josh Smith and Marvin are 26-years old, and Teague is 22 and Joe is 30, and Joe plays like Paul Pierce. He’ll play until he’s 36 because Joe is not dependent on his athleticism like a Kobe, like a Dominique, like a Jordan. He’s got a cagey game, he’s got size. I think he’s going to be a good player in his mid-30s. When you blow something up, you want to do it [only] if you can get something better.

So are you willing trade one of your core pieces now to get a superstar?

I am very careful of saying that [publicly] because it does no good. We have a core group that is very competitive. I think they are always trying to get better and there is nothing we’ve seen there that would allow us to get better, and I’m comfortable saying that. You’ve got to be careful. You see the comments coming out of the Lakers [after the Paul-Lamar Odom trade nixed by the league]. It’s a hornets nest right now.

You’ve said in the past there are only a handful of players who are worth paying luxury tax to acquire. Do you still have that view?

I think we would go into it if we felt like it was that one piece that would make a difference. But with the new CBA it makes that extremely challenging, which is why you see some teams like Dallas willing to lose a player to maintain flexibility.

Do you think that’s because of the more punitive tax that takes effect in 2013 or because of the so-called apron of $74 million [after which teams can't use the full mid-level or do sign-and-trades].

I don’t think it’s the tax, because Mark [Cuban] has never had a problem writing a big check. I think it is [the apron]. I think it’s wanting the space so guys will be here. I know some players in the league and I think Atlanta—forget what Kenny Smith or Barkley says on TV—Atlanta is one of the more desirable [cities] for athletes to live. Guys like living here. If you look at so many players who live here, they love the city.

Then why do you think it is that the Hawks don’t make the cut when superstars list the franchises they’d like to join?

I think it’s more the players on those teams being very outspoken and going after it. Stoudemire is an outspoken guy in New York. The Lakers are the Lakers they don’t have to [recruit]. They’ve got the legacy. When you hear players looking at franchises, it’s more players listening to other players.

Former Hawks player Steve Smith says he thinks ownership instability plays a role.

My view—and this gets back to what’s perception vs. reality—you look at stability, there is a lot of stuff written and it’s not supported by fact. We’ve kept all of our core players. We’ve invested in the team, we are willing to have one of the higher payrolls and we are competitive. Steve Smith thinks that because he picks up Jeff Schultz and reads him. What I see in the Internet world, when you look at the last eight or nine years, you will have columnists who write certain things, then it gets picked up nationally, and then all of a sudden that’s just the view.

I think there is a perception among fans that the owners tried to sell the team and now they aren’t committed. What do you say to those fans?

We’ve got our players, and look at our payroll. Going through seven-year legal battle where somebody sues you and it’s over a player that makes your team better. You win. It’s not your fault. Everybody says we sue each other—we got sued. The facts of the matter are, our GM wanted Joe Johnson, we supported that. Our partner didn’t. He didn’t want to spend money, we did, we win. The combination of that and living through [the Thrashers sale] was draining. I think we left three or four days after the press conference and I didn’t come back until mid-August. I think I was in Atlanta for maybe two days. I actually thought that maybe somebody, a new face [as Hawks owner], maybe would be better. I’m very pleased with where things ended up [with the sale].

Are you still trying to sale the team?

No.

Not at all?

No. But who knows whatever happens in any situation. If somebody comes and offers you something you never know but that’s not what my goal is. [Gearon says he no longer has the investment bank that handled that sale on retainer.]

Tucker told Gearon he still seems to be passionate about the Hawks.

I can’t wait until we play. I hope you can tell by the way I’m acting. It’s real hard to build a competitive team. It’s real easy when you are lucky enough to have the draft pick and get one of [top] five guys in the NBA right now. You can surround those five guys with just about anybody and still compete. Case in point is Cleveland. With LeBron they went to the Eastern Conference finals at least two times, never lost in the first round. He’s a difference-maker with the team. . . .

It is tough. [People say] the ownership is messy and this or that and there are so many misperceptions, even looking at how many investors we have. We have fewer investors than most NBA teams in the league. And reality is Bruce [Levenson] and I have managed it the last seven or eight years. That’s exactly what it is in Boston with Steve Pagliuca and Grousbeck . Yet there is nothing negative that is written about that. The way I look at it if we are just starting out and you want to critique that and it doesn’t work, but when you have a body of work that’s been successful or more successful than any team in Atlanta, yet you critique it? Is that fair?

Rick Sund is in the final year of his contract. How do you evaluate his performance? Are you discussing a contract extension with him?

To take a page out of Rick’s book, we won’t discuss extensions with guys until the end of the year. I like the job Rick has done. I like the job Larry [Drew] has done. Larry got us past Orlando. I thought he outcoached [Stan] Van Gundy. I thought he outcoached [Tom] Thibodeau but they had a hell of a team. What people don’t even realize, I don’t think the oddsmakers had us winning one playoff game out of 12 and we beat Orlando and took Chicago to six. I don’t think [the oddsmakers] were right and the record shows they are wrong but that was the perception. That playoff series, and knowing what Teague can do and putting Hinrich in there, I think we win one of those games and the defensive energy overall would be better. That’s not Jamal’s strength.

You said Teague is a key for this team. What else has to go right?

You have to see the continued growth of our young core. Josh has got to continue to improve, Marvin has got to improve, Al has got to improve. Joe is pretty reliable. I respect and like the fact Joe looks at last year and challenges himself. Joe always comes in in great shape. It’s hard to find guys like that. The guy always stays in shape and he’s a pro. That’s why I look at him because this poor kid gets criticized as if he is a failure when you look at it and say, ‘Wait a minute, let’s judge how he’s done.’ Dwyane Wade could not get past the first round without LeBron or Shaq. Joe has done it. And I think Dwyane is an unbelievable player, so I’m not trying to say Joe is better than Wade. But you judge somebody by their success and Joe came here, we were really young and each year we got better in the regular season until last year and we took a step back, but we were better in the playoffs. I would trade the regular season five extra wins for better success in the playoffs. I do feel like we as a franchise will judge ourselves by how we do in the playoffs. And I want more consistency. When you are talking about [blowout] losses, we want to be a more consistent team in the playoffs.

Tucker asked Gearon why he changed his mind about selling the team.

New CBA. Having one less team to deal with. We resolved the [Steve] Belkin thing last year. Then we had the issue with our lawyers, got that behind us. It is emotionally draining and challenging to own and operate two teams. Very few teams in sports do it and it’s usually a corporation. [Stan] Kroenke is only one I can think of off the top of my head as an individual.

Tucker asked Gearon how season-ticket sells are going for the Hawks.

We are doing good. I think where we are struggling, and this is what the whole league, there is a chunk of revenue that comes from group and corporate sells. You usually sell those in the summer where you go to Home Depot and say, ‘We have a game on Saturday night in January, bring your company.’ But without knowing the schedule, we couldn’t sell that. I think the league as a whole is struggling with that. Tracy [White, senior VP of sales and marketing], two days ago said we are doing better at this point than we were last year.

Tucker asked Gearon how many season tickets the Hawks have sold.

I don’t spend a lot of time looking at the numbers except at the beginning of the year and the end of the year because you focus on basketball.

Do you have a special challenge in this market because so much of the population lives in the suburbs?

I think it’s a struggle for all sports teams in Atlanta. The league judges us on this massive demographics that go all the way out to Buford. That’s not a market.


Tucker asked Gearon what specifically about the new CBA makes him more optimitisc.

At the beginning of the summer, you saw the condition I was in, I’m crying on the TV and radio and I was just drained and exhausted. . . . I was emotionally spent. I thought maybe a new face [as owner] might make a difference. Being able to step back over the summer, [I was able to] get recharged,, get energized again. Looking at the new CBA, it is better for us. Long term I think there will be fewer teams to spend—I think the disparity between payrolls is going to be less. Last year you had the highest payroll in the league was $100 million and the lowest was $40 million. I think you are going to see that gap narrow. That’s a plus for us. We’ve been willing to be one of the bigger spenders but we have not been the biggest spender. Revenue assistance is a big question mark for us right now. I can’t tell at this point. We will receive revenue assistance and we did not under the old CBA.

What will it take to increase revenues for the Hawks?

One is being sure our fan base, that the perception of the team is accurate with the success and the commitment we have made to the team. We are a group that cares as much as anybody. I love the Atlanta Hawks. I was the biggest fan before I invested in the team and consider myself one of the biggest fans now. And I don’t think the fan base understands how much we really care. Part of it is changing the perception of us. Are we willing to spend money? We’ve done that. The knowledgeable fan gets it, but the one you are trying to lure in, they don’t get it. The young kids get it. My son’s friends, they don’t read the paper. They go watch a playoff team.

But I will tell you I think, when you are building a team long-term . . . take the kids who were in high school four years ago and now are juniors and seniors in college and they are still following us. I was out in Colorado last year or the summer before and I was wearing a Hawks shirt, which I don’t do a lot of in front of people because I think it’s kind of a gimmick. I pass this guy he says, ‘You are a Hawks fan?’ He says, ‘Oh I love that team.’ He was watching us in the playoffs. I didn’t tell him I was part of the team but I was very curious to hear what he had to say as a fan. He said, ‘God, man, this team has been so exciting the last couple of years.’

The one thing that is incredible—you have only been here a couple years, Mike—the Hawks were not known to be, and frankly no teams in Atlanta were known to be a team that can win a seven-game series. The Hawks struggled with that forever. Then we took Boston to seven games and lose [in 2008], which that was fun because we weren’t expected to win a game, we were 36-45, they had the best record in the league. We beat them every game here, we got blown out there, but we had some great games here. Then the next year we take Miami seven games and Joe, in that seventh game, he won the game for us. Next year we play Miklwaukee–seven games. As a fan I’d rather play seven games and come out on top than win four to nothing. Because that’s not a fun series. You want enough of a rivalry. it gets back to parity. Showing up in Boston for Game 7 was a lot different than showing up for Game 1 and 2 because their fanbase realized, ‘Damn, this is a real team.’ And it made for a great seventh game—well, not saying great, we got blown out, but the anticipation was great. Two out of three years we’ve won seven-game series.

How do you grow [revenue]? By getting to the fai-rweather fan and [make him] realize, one, we care, two we are willing to spend money and three look at our success.

Tucker asks Gearon why he and his partners dropped the Atlanta Spirit name.

I’ve never liked that name. It wasn’t my idea in the first place.

Tucker asks if Bruce Levenson is still engaged with the Hawks.

He is very much re-energized. He was heavily involved in the CBA, I was not. He’s the governor [the team's representative on the NBA Board of Governors].

Did Levenson vote against the CBA?

I don’t want to answer for it. You can ask Bruce Levenson.

Michael Cunningham, Hawks beat

291 comments Add your comment

Chad

December 18th, 2011
6:22 pm

.563, .523, .444, .435. Can you pick the Hawks winning % over the past 7 season? .435. Others, Falcons, Braves,& Thrashers

Grandmaster JeJe

December 18th, 2011
6:23 pm

Northcyde, as the interview stated, our goal is to be competitive and entertaining. Expecting a championship is unrealistic.

That’s what our owner said

Grandmaster JeJe

December 18th, 2011
6:25 pm

It pains me to say this, but MJ MAY be a worse owner than ASG. He traded Captain Jack, is not signing anyone, and let Kwame- someone who wanted to stay- go. Looks like the 2004 Hawks.

I won’t say MJ is worse though, because he is MJ and ASG ISN’t

Ken Strickland

December 18th, 2011
7:39 pm

DRMARYB-We actually got exactly what we wanted for Jamal, and that was to clear his $10.8M off the books without taking back a penny. His salary was used to cover AHorford’s new contract.

Ken Strickland

December 18th, 2011
7:50 pm

I can’t wait until tomorrows gm against the Bobcats. It will give us a much better idea of what we can respect from players battling for a roster spot like Sloan, Wanamaker, Pape Sy, ARolle, Stackhouse, and Benson. Seeing them go against players and OFF/DEF systems they’re unfamiliar with will be a major test.

Sillent

December 18th, 2011
10:46 pm

Wow!! Read some of the beginning blogs and they seemed very ignorant to the game of basketball and running a team. A “Real Team” with real human’s, human emotions and real life happenings on and off the court. The ASG has put together a great young team with good human beings that are still learning how to put it all together. They have been great with bringing good character guys on the team and have taken action yearly at improving needs to fit the teams character. They passed up on guys that in the short run have made them look incompetent but they’ve continued to follow their vision. This year they put together a team to correct what we were missing last year. Now from top to bottom we have a full defense team from guards, forwards to centers. We’ve eliminated all of our weak points on defense while giving our core and bench an opportunity to get the points on offense that will be missed without Crawford. Defense and Chemistry wins champions and we have a strong core that has been with us for awhile. We added key pieces (like Tracy McGrady and hopefully Jerry Stackhouse) that bring us leadership from players who know what it’s like to play at an elite caliber and are therefore highly respected. We also added Radmanovic as a three point threat which will help us on our spacing as well as giving us an opportunity to play bigger. These moves definitely put us in a caliber with the elite!! We also managed to keep young players, like Pape Sy who is a great talent & Magnum Rolle who is a 6′11 athletic and talented big. Don’t forget about our rook Keith Benson!! He can rebound, defend and score & will get bigger & better over time. Remember the all 6′9 team that most of us felt Billy Knight was obsessed with, well guess what we have now? The vision and it seems to look pretty good we you can boast a lineup of Teague /T Mac, Joe/Stackhouse, Marvin/Smoove, Rad, Al and more !! Seriously though If you can not understand where Gearon is coming from, you are not a Hawks fan and you need to find your team!! Just be honest with yourself. How many teams are improving better and consistently as the Hawks in the last couple of years?

Proud-Dawg

December 19th, 2011
12:00 am

‘Hawks Fan’ is Gearon trying to save face

Carrlos Lyles

December 19th, 2011
12:11 am

i agree with Sillent.. the hawks are in good position for the future..

ScottBravesFan

December 19th, 2011
12:48 am

The Falcons don’t get 1500 blog comments. That’s the Braves and UGA. As for the Hawks most people just don’t really care about the NBA in the south. I think more people think of it like a musician or the circus coming to town when a big team like the Lakers comes to Philips Arena. Some people get excited to see them play but most people don’t really care enough to become fans like they do the Braves or the Falcons. I just think it’s more of a cultural of professional basketball. How many people do you know that follow the NBA? If you know them they probably liked the Lakers in the 80s, Bulls in the 90s, Lakers again in the 00’s and now they like the Heat. That’s how a lot of NBA fans are. You just don’t see the die hard’s like you do in the other sports.

northcyde

December 19th, 2011
10:34 am

@ Sillent

Oklahoma City
Memphis
Chicago
possibly the Clippers, since they weren’t afraid to trade very good talent for a superstar

And that’s just the young teams.

Honestly, we’re lucky to be in the Eastern Conference.

Realist

December 19th, 2011
11:26 am

Sports are a business. A special one for sure, but in the end a business. Nobody on this site knows the first thing about the business of sports. The owners have done a good job of putting a very competitive and exciting team on the floor (including during the Belkin litigation when they weren’t even sure they would own the team), got rid of the money-draining Thrashers, and are poised to get better. None of you has spent hundredes of millions of your own money that you will never get back (Gearon and Levenson both started with nothing to build their businesses) on what is essentially a public property for your benefit. Most of you haven’t spent a penny of your own money even going to a game. The whiners outnumber the doers, which is why our country is in the crapper. I am a doer, and I just renewed my tickets. Whiners please stay home. Thanks.

Craig Speedy Ehlo

December 19th, 2011
11:44 am

The following is a google chat I had with a friend about Gearon and the owners – I said I could name 5 reasons why I hate them off the top of my head to refute his Q&A. I came up with 31 in 10 minutes:

me:  ‪I can think of about 5 reasons off the top of my head‬
1. You make poor decisions in your front office
2. You are not classy (like Arthur Blank)
3. Your players aren’t hard workers.
4. I can’t watch your games on network TV 
Adam:  ‪not his fault about network‬
 me:  ‪5. Getting into traffic on a tuesday night to sit in an arena for 2 hours is not desirable‬
6. There’s nothing else to do near Philips
7. There’s a chance your team loses by 30 to the Timberwolves
8. I’ve seen these players for 4 years, generally just tired of them
9. There are so many guys out there and I never hear a single rumor involving interest on your part
10. Could you imagine trading a bunch of picks for a top-10 draft pick (a la Julio Jones)
11. I get that Joe Johnson is a 3 time all-star or whatever, but he’d be the 2nd best player on 7/8 of the playoff teams
‪12. Half the teams in the NBA make the playoffs‬
 Adam:  ‪ha‬
 me:  ‪13. You have 82 regular season games.  Why the f would I go to 41 games when half the teams make the playoffs?‬
14. I don’t care what you say, you were involved in a 4 year lawsuit with one of your partners – the fact that you couldn’t resolve it for the best interests of the team boggles my mind
15. You completely neglected the Thrashers, so much so that they left town for the coldest city in the northern hemisphere.  F you.
16. You told us you weren’t selling the team, then you found a buyer, then the deal fell through – way to toy with our emotions
 Adam:  ‪haha‬
geezus
 me:  ‪17. There’s hope that the Falcons will get to a superbowl soon‬
(there’s no hope of an NBA championship appearance with the hawks)
18. Every year you tell us that this group hasn’t hit their stride. Hey, look, this year they went to 6 games in the second round instead of being swept!  And you use that as a way of saying that there is potential for more.  Are you serious?
 Adam:  ‪dude‬
put this all in writing
send to him
 me:  ‪19. We have needed a center and a pg for about 8 years, you have failed to bring us either‬
20. half the arena is overpriced club level.  HALF
 Sent at 11:27 AM on Monday
 me:  ‪21. You’ve made the second round 3 years in a row.  The other two teams who have done that (Lakers and Celtics) have won championships‬ yet you haven’t made it to the conference finals. Don’t insult me with those comparisons.
22. You say you spend more than the falcons.  I’d argue that some people spend more on Pepsi than Coke.  Like you, those people are idiots.
23. We were tired of Mike Woodson, and you hired his assistant
‪24. Article after article talks about Atlanta being the premier city for african-americans in America.  Many specifically mention the number of athletes that live here. Even someone with the dimmest imagination believes that NBA players would want to play in ATL.  You thwart them.‬
25. You drafted marvin williams.
26. You resigned marvin williams
27. you drafted sheldon williams
28. Who is Pape Sy?
‪29. Your own players leave the team citing ownership issues‬
‪30. Your beer is too damn expensive (as are your tickets)‬
Last reason I dislike them:
31. They are a failure.

tmc

December 19th, 2011
1:02 pm

What i took from reading all this:

Here is an owner who just doesn’t get it.
He may know basketball, he may be a fan…

But that doesn’t mean he can run a team well.
Just because you spend money doesn’t mean it money well spent.

How can you not understand your fan base, including writers and radio hosts, that look negatively about your stewardship when:
-ownership has been in court suing each other for years.
-you overpay one player to the point of hurting your team, twice.
-you give 2nd contracts to players who do not deserve the money offered.
-you self admittedly hire a coach because it’s on the cheap.
-continuously make moves that do not improve the club (j. crawford being the latest)
-call out the local media for bad PR
-and to do what they did with the Thrashers and not expect a carry-over to the Hawks… is just retarded.

MG- you may be a smart businessman, but you haven’t a clue how to run a sports team. Unfortunately for you, your fan base knows how to react to someone like you.

good riddance.

ryan

December 19th, 2011
2:39 pm

I can’t believe anyone would defend ASG the same owners who passed on Chris Paul yes granted the are some good pieces to this team its not the players we are mad at its the ASG the are afraid to take chances and improve the team to make it better .

Real Talk

December 19th, 2011
3:08 pm

Worst Ownership in Sports. Don’t even try and deny it. I would take Rankin Smith over these rejects 7 Days a week. . Please sell the Hawks fast.

Wabe

December 19th, 2011
7:23 pm

Already calling it…

Sloan won’t cut it.

Reggie

December 20th, 2011
9:49 am

The Hawks should sign Joel Przybilla. Based on what I saw last night, this guy could help the Hawks.

get lost

December 20th, 2011
10:26 am

This guy is a clown. I refuse to every spend another penny on the Hawks or anything going on at Philips until these bozos no longer own ANY percentage of the Hawks and the Philips Arena operating rights.

PaulieOldschool

December 20th, 2011
10:34 am

Real Talk, I agree with you re Mr. Smith. At least he seemed genuine in his love of the team. He and his son were just clueless, not cheap and avaricious like this group.

Iceman

December 20th, 2011
11:02 am

So many lies he spews in this chat.

Section 117

December 20th, 2011
11:07 am

How do you allow Jamal Crawford to just walk ???? Just doesn’t make any sense..Especially when you’re paying Marvin $40 Mio, his productivity was far less than Jamal’s.

tc

December 20th, 2011
11:17 am

Most of what Micheal said is accurate. My guess is that most of the negative posts on here came from people that did not even read the entire interview. Go Hawks!

tc

December 20th, 2011
11:18 am

Jamal does not play defense. Defensive play is way underestimated in basketball. When Jamal was on the court he was a liability defensively. Much like bibby.

tc

December 20th, 2011
11:19 am

Iceman: Name one?

HOBBS

December 20th, 2011
11:35 am

Okay, this guy proved he’s an idiot by attempting to justify the Joe Johnson contract! Here are the facts: Joe doesn’t make his teammates better on the floor, Joe doesn’t fill the stands, Joe doesn’t sell merchandising! All the people he compared him to do and that’s how a Max Contract should be justified! And for the record NO ONE IN HAWKS MANAGEMENT SHOULD EVER MENTION CHRIS PAUL’S NAME! BESIDES SIGNING JOE TO HIS ABSURD CONTRACT, PASSING ON PAUL IS THE 2ND WORST DECISION IN FRANCHISE HISTORY!!!!

Neki

December 20th, 2011
11:45 am

I think the reason why people is pissed because getting to the second round is fine and good but at some point you want to get passed that point. Like one poster says, “There is no second round banners” , the East is getting better with Miami Trio, Crafty “C”, Bulls with Rose, Youngsters from Indiana and Philly, and Melo/Amare in NY. Let be honest, do anybody think we can win three series in a row to get to the finals against teams like this and you still have Orlando and Bucks as well. The core has been outstanding for us, but stand still will do more harm than good.

jarvis

December 20th, 2011
11:46 am

Liar!
We lost a hockey team because of this a-hole.

Neki

December 20th, 2011
11:49 am

To contiune, Believe me, I dont hold any ill will against DASG, from 16 win team to a playoff shoe-in isnt a feat that is hard for any team that have to start from nothing but at some point, a decision has to be made, to get to the Finals or just stay as so, but you will lose alot more fans.

Dave

December 20th, 2011
11:53 am

Hockey is dead in Atlanta and while these morons didn’t kill it, they certainly made sure there were enough idiots in place to do it for them.

jarvis

December 20th, 2011
11:57 am

He is so full of excuses….most have no merit.

I love that the reason no players want to come to Atlanta is because Stoudemire “outspoken” and the “Lakers are the Lakers”.

The NETS and CLIPPERS are more desireable to players than the Hawks are. They are second-fiddle teams that garner no attention in their own cities.

Nancy

December 20th, 2011
12:26 pm

Gearon just does not get it and it looks like he never will. Fans need to believe in the “Face” of the ownership, not how much money they spend or don’t spend. When fans believe the ownership is making the right decisions, spending money wisely and can be trusted they will stand behind them. Gearon and company have been cited as the worse, least trustworthy ownership in the NHL and NBA. Fans are not stupid Michael Gearon, we have your number and we want you and your partners in crime gone. Your ownership will never have a “Face” that the fans believe in or trust.

i loathe thee

December 20th, 2011
2:52 pm

I would throw my own fecal matter at Gearon or any other member of the ASG. That is how much I hate them.

hawksfancents95

December 20th, 2011
4:56 pm

jannero pargo to the hawks, good pickup to give teague a few mins here and there.

jarvis

December 20th, 2011
7:45 pm

@hawksfancents95, that sound you heard was my jaw dropping to the floor. They might as well get sized for the rings now.

Don!

December 20th, 2011
10:27 pm

The reason they dumped the Atlanta Spirit name was because their ineptitude made it a PR liability. The name has changed, but the owners are the same. This is the worst ownership group in pro sports. I used to think it was Donald Sterling and the Clippers — but even they found a way to get Chris Paul.

And it’s not just the Hawks. I will never forgive this ownership group for losing the Thrashers. The way this team drove that franchise into the ground and out of town is unforgivable. I’d almost rather see the Hawks leave town than to have this group owning them. Almost. If it weren’t for the history of the franchise, and the hope that someday they will sell the team … to local owners … then I would have quit caring about the Hawks altogether.

All I want for Christmas is a new ownership group for the Hawks. And our Thrashers back. At least there’s a small sliver of hope for the Hawks.

Later,

Don!

ryan

December 20th, 2011
10:55 pm

Bad news just saw ESPN rumor that Dwight Howard to the Nets could still very well happen he seems intent with playing with Derron Williams i agree the Hawks maybe a good team but Hawks fans are tired seeing superstars going to other teams ASG wont even try .

realtalk

December 21st, 2011
12:24 am

Gearon please go jump off a bridge

UGAJD

December 21st, 2011
11:38 am

The Hawks pay Joe Johnson more than the Bulls will pay Derrick Rose under his new deal. That’s really all we need to know about the competence of Hawk’s management.

Hawks Writer

December 21st, 2011
5:10 pm

It’s time for Atlanta Hawks fans to take some ownership here. The team has been to the playoffs for four years straight. Yet, when you read these blogs you would think the Hawks were Golden State, Toronto, Minnesota, Clippers (pre-CP3) or the dang Charlotte Bobcats.

Wake up people and enjoy the winning. Yes I want to find the missing piece and ultimately win a championship too, but I also enjoy having a winning product on the floor to watch each year.

Joe Johnson is not an elite superstar, I get that, but the guy leads teams to the postseason. Carmelo, Bosh, Yao Ming and CP3 have all had trouble doing so.

Just ask yourself Hawks fans … who would you rather be right now? A Bobcats fan (who just gave up their two best players for garbage) or a Hawks fan? A Toronto Raptors fan (team isn’t going anywhere until at least 2017) or a Hawks fan?

It is cool to be frustrated. .. but lets keep perspective here folks.

NBA Wish Lists | Hickory-High

December 22nd, 2011
1:02 pm

[...] sense to let basketball people make basketball decisions, and the necessary sense of shame not to give interviews bragging about being in the top 10 in payroll in order to field a 44-win team that g….Jason Walker – @THHB – Peachtree Hoops - We would like a return to the Pac-Man unis of [...]

Horse Hockey

December 23rd, 2011
8:39 pm

I still hate you ASG. You tell lies and i don’t believe anything you say. When you’re gone, that will be reason to celebrate. Nothing personal though.