OK, I messed up. I said I would ask Rick Sund about David Andersen, the Australian center who plays for FC Barcelona in Spain and whose NBA rights the Atlanta Hawks continue to hold, and I flat-out forgot. What can I say? We got to gabbing.
The Hawks’ general manager and I talked Wednesday for an hour and 45 minutes, and here, as promised, is a (slightly) truncated version of that extended audience. And you’ll be disappointed because Sund doesn’t volunteer any names of free agents he’d like to sign or details of any trade he’d like to make, but you’re going to have to deal with it. No GM ever talks about such things, at least not on the record, and Sund is more cautious than most.
But he is a winning conversationalist, and I think you’ll find some edification herein. And for all those who submitted questions I wound up using, you have my sincere thanks. For all those whose questions I didn’t pose, you have the same sincere thanks and my heartiest apologies. But I hope this little exercise enables you to feel, in some way, that you were part of this experimental process.
(And one final note: I just sent Sund an e-mail asking about David Andersen.)
MB: If you had to prioritize the offseason with your free agents, who would be the No. 1 target?
RS: We haven’t even put closure to the season. We put closure to it with the players last week, but the coaches have been off – they come back today. We’ll have meetings tomorrow and Friday, and then we’ll start doing the report cards on all the players. We’ll start doing analysis. I have a lot of exercises for our entire basketball staff to go through. And then we’ll look at that and start to prioritize.
MB: I guess what I’m asking is, Is Mike Bibby a greater priority than Marvin Williams?
RS: I don’t know. Is Flip [Murray] a greater priority? Is Zaza [Paculia]? We’ve got to sit down and talk about all of those, and then this year, unlike last year, we’ve got some key free agents at play – four of the players in our rotation are free agents, three of them unrestricted. And then you’ve got the [Josh] Childress chip. We’re not privy to his contract, but what I heard from his people when he left was that he has an out provision each year he can exercise. So does he want to come back, and where does he fit in? And then you throw in the draft pick and trade possibilities …
The one thing we have is a lot of moving parts, but they are moving. And you’ve got to juggle them with the other options that are available. And most of those moving parts can’t be dealt with until free agency starts in July.
MB: Are you confident you’ll have the financial wherewithal to get done what you need to do this offseason?
RS: Yeah, I am.
MB: A theoretical question. If money and free agency were not issues, would you be happy with the makeup of this team?
RS: Yeah, I like our club. The only reason I say that is there’s still growth from within. I think [Al] Horford’s going to continue to get better; I think Marvin’s going to continue to get better. I think Josh [Smith] is going to continue to get better – every year he’s gotten better … I think you still need to tweak it if you can.
MB: You said the season was an evaluation period for you. From what you saw, do you think this team and Mike Woodson fit together well?
RS: From what I saw, this team surprised me. I was not totally impressed with the team made the playoffs last season with 37 wins. I was encouraged by two things: One, their home record of 25 wins, and two, their performance in the playoffs. So this year I said I would like for this team to have a winning record and make the playoffs. Not necessarily in that order. I’d have taken making the playoffs without a winning record.
In my mind I thought, having not known this club, we would probably be fighting for the seventh or eighth spot and hopefully be above .500 for the first time in basically a five-year program. I was surprised and impressed. A playoff-caliber club has to be able to win your 25 games at home and win between 14 and 17 games on the road. That’s playoff-caliber. They won 12 the year before, which is why they were at 37 wins and not 40 or 41. Not only did they maintain that 25 [this season], they went to 31. Elite teams in this league get 30-plus wins at home and 20 wins on the road. Now we’re not elite on the road – we’re playoff-caliber. We had 16, right in the middle. The reason we got the fourth seed was that we were an elite team at home.
That impressed me. And I hated it when it happened, but in retrospect it turned out to be good that we lost at home in the playoffs because we had to win one on the road – and we did. The fourth and fifth seeds are always the toughest [series] because they’re usually pretty good home teams, and we had to win one on the road with our backs against the wall. And even better was that we got that seventh game at home, and that was a decisive win.
Let’s talk a little about [Round 2 against] Cleveland. One of my biggest disappointments was, with our team being hurt – three starters who obviously would have played tons of minutes if they’d have been healthy – we didn’t get the true barometer read with Cleveland. But there was some disappointment in our players, and that’s good. That’s the mark of a good team.
The four teams in the [conference semifinals], we beat them. That’s why we’re a playoff-caliber club. But we didn’t dominate them. We split with L.A., we split with Denver. You asked me if we’d be happy with this club going forward … I don’t know if I answered your question, but that’s the logic going into it.
MB: You had never worked with Woodson on a close basis before. Were you satisfied with what you saw?
RS: Yeah. We’re in a results business. A couple of things should be reviewed. Last year, when I came in – hired June 1 — I got a lot of e-mails on what to do on everything. From players and coaches, trades, staffing, the whole thing. I got a lot of help and suggestions. I said at that time I’m going to spend two weeks and take in as much information as I could, and my recommendation was to keep Mike. And I think he did a good job this year.
MB: This was a big thing with our readers. They see other teams having offensive coordinators or defensive coordinators. Would you be interested in that?
RS: I’ve never really thought about that. You don’t see it very often. It’s up to the coach. It’s really a question for you to ask Mike … It’s not my call.
MB: I know what you said last year about Al Horford being a center. Do you still feel that way, and do you feel like your team is big enough, given that you were outrebounded on the season?
RS: Yeah, I do.
MB: Do you still see upside for Josh?
RS: Yeah. Yeah, I do. Every year he’s gotten better, and I thought he played reasonably well in the playoffs.
MB: Understanding that you’re still in your evaluation process, what do you see as a greater need – more size up front or backcourt help?
RS: I don’t know. I’d have to look at it and talk to my staff a little more. I like Zaza. I think Zaza and Horford did a really good job at the center position. We weren’t beat at the center position very often this year.
MB: Do you talk to Childress?
RS: He’s playing right now in Greece … When their season is over, they’re going to inform us. Evidently he can opt out of his contract. If he opts out, we’d have to tender him a [one-year] qualifying offer. Otherwise he’d be an unrestricted free agent.
MB: So you’ve had no contact with him during the year?
RS: We’ve had scouts go over and watch him. [Assistant GM] Dave Pendergraph has texted him. And I’ve talked to his agents – they represent other players.
MB: And what was your read on Childress?
RS: They played it pretty close to the vest.
MB: This is another issue with our readers. Kenny Smith apparently said on TNT that the Hawks lack an identity. Do you feel your team has an identity?
RS: I don’t pay attention to that. When I watch a game, I turn the sound down so I can draw my own conclusions. I think our identity is that we have the ability – and I think I said this to you last year – to do both [meaning fast-break and play halfcourt ball]. If the game and the tempo and the referees dictated an up-tempo game, we played it – and played it well. Like the first [playoff] game with Miami. But if it was going to be a slowdown type of game – like with Detroit – we won three games against them. I think the good teams have the ability to do both. I think sometimes people see Josh Smith’s athleticism and they think we have to be just a running team. Well, we’re not.
MB: Would you like to see the offense go a little less through Joe?
RS: That’s not for me to say. I don’t tell the coaches how to coach. I want the results, however the results may be.
MB: There was some comment after the Cleveland series that you’d go as far as you can with Joe Johnson. Do you believe that?
RS: I don’t think you can draw any conclusions from anything from the Cleveland series. They’re obviously the best team in the league over 82 games, and we were too injured. Couldn’t draw conclusions from it.
MB: Did Joe’s struggles, even against Miami, make you think he has gone as far as he can go – that this is what he is?
RS: I’m not going to throw anything on one playoff series. Joe had some big assist nights in there. I thought Joe, particularly in Game 7, stepped up. All the defenses were geared to stop him, and Joe was a part of [winning] … I’m a Joe fan, and I thought Joe played reasonably well … No, I don’t put any stock in that [appraisal of Johnson].
MB: Have you targeted any position in the draft?
RS: We’re just getting started into it. We have to zero in on it – what’s the best player and in what area do we need help most – and then you compare the two and you come up with a decision. I pretty much lean, when you’re picking 19th, to take the best player with the most potential. Particularly at 19.
MB: You liked Acie Law …
RS: I liked him. I didn’t draft him – I inherited him – but I thought it was a pretty solid draft pick, and I liked him when I saw him in college. Like most rookies, he didn’t get a lot of playing time. We knew when we brought in Flip that [Law’s] minutes were going to be suspect if Flip was a good fit, which he was. So he ended up being the ninth man, which is typical of a lot of guys in their second year. And I really thought the first half of the season he was contributing in that ninth-man role. Then he got hurt. And then, as the season progressed – and this is typical – [Woodson] tightened the rotation. That’s what you do because you want to get into the playoffs.
MB: Would you like to keep Marvin Williams?
RS: The one thing you have with free agency is that they hold some cards, too. I’ve never been one to predict anything that’s going to happen in free agency because you never know. What I do say is that I like the core of this club and I’d like to keep as much of this core as we can and I’d like to improve our club if we can with trades. If that happens, great. But what I do like about this club is that it’s young enough there can be improvement from within. When you get beyond that, then you’ve got problems. Then you’ve got to start talking about major, major moves.
MB: And you don’t feel you have to make a major move?
RS: I think we’re in a position where we can do both. If some major moves make some sense for us and we can do it, great. If not, we have growth from within. We’re in the best of all worlds at this point. We’re at the point where we are a bona fide playoff club. So we went in the past five years from bad to good. Now we’ve got to go from good to great, and that’s the really hard part in the NBA – going from good to great.
MB: Can you do that without a superstar?
RS: Define “superstar.”
MB: Is Joe?
RS: I didn’t say, “Ask me.” I said, “Define it.” [Laughter all around.] See, I listen to your questions. It gets into my theory …
MB: This is the “top 10 guys in the league” thing.
RS: You got it. Can you win championships and be an elite club with three or four players on your roster who are in the top 10 or 12 at their position? You can. Detroit showed that [in 2004]. Now [Chauncey] Billups today is an All-Pro All-Star, but he wasn’t when Detroit got it, and neither was Rich Hamilton. And neither was Tayshaun Prince. But Ben Wallace was in the top 10 of power forwards, and Rasheed [Wallace] went from a top five player in the league when he was at Portland to a top eight.
If you get enough players collectively who are in the top 12 or 13 at their position, you can win a championship. It’s been proven. And that’s what we have to do … We’ve got to do it collectively if we don’t have an MVP candidate.
Late-breaking addendum! The extremely thoughtful Rick Sund responded to the e-mail about Andersen. Quoth the GM: “We are in the process of evaluating David Andersen via film. He is in our discussions and is another ball we will be juggling. He is another moving part that we will consider.”
And now, I believe, my work here is done.
142 comments Add your comment
Jo Bling
May 20th, 2009
11:11 pm
I thought the most telling thing was when Mark asked him a pretty direct question:
MB: You said the season was an evaluation period for you. From what you saw, do you think this team and Mike Woodson fit together well?
Sund went on and on about this and that, never once mentioning Woodson or getting close to answering the question. And in an attempt to restate the question near the end of his response he actually ended up misstating it. Very direct question. Very indirect response.
Najeh Davenpoop
May 20th, 2009
11:17 pm
The two most important things I got from this interview were that a) Sund feels pretty confident that he won’t be stopped by the DASG’s financial troubles, and b) he also feels like this exact same team can do better next year (the comments about growth from within indicate this). The first point is very encouraging to read as a fan, even if it may be a little unrealistic. The second one I think is a little too optimistic… I do think the team can win 50 games next year if everyone stays healthy, but I don’t think they are going to be as good as Orlando, Cleveland, or Boston the way they are currently constituted.
I would love to see a similar Q & A with Woodson, hopefully one that addresses whether or not he thinks Acie is part of the Hawks’ future, whether he plans to over-rely on Joe again next year, and whether Josh and Al are going to be featured in the post more often next year.
jake
May 20th, 2009
11:18 pm
Good work Mark. Do you think they’ll get David Anderson from what Sund said?
Najeh Davenpoop
May 20th, 2009
11:21 pm
About Lawson… I think in a weak draft like this one, his tournament performance will vault him into the lottery. Rubio, Jennings, Lawson, and Maynor are probably all lottery picks this year. The Hawks are probably going to be picking among the likes of Jeff Teague and Patrick Mills where they pick.
Of course, if it was up to me, they would just play Acie more and use their pick on the best player available regardless of position — hopefully someone like DeJuan Blair.
tyger
May 20th, 2009
11:27 pm
Draft BJ Mullens or Terrence Williams (best player available)
Sund whimped out on the Cleveland question. Nobody is happy with what they saw from the Hawkettes, they bent over. Injuries my arss. Houston lost Yao and McGrady and fought to the end.
Why couldnt the Hawks?
lawton
May 20th, 2009
11:34 pm
sund is a puppet like woodson, which is why he was hired. atlanta sports is ALWAYS gonna be scrubville. all these games they play with the atlanta fans. as long as they make money, they dont care. im really finished with all atlanta teams. losersville u.s.a. is alive and well.
Mike is back
May 20th, 2009
11:37 pm
Big Ray, SHO U RIGHT…that was just a complement to Bradley for getting some of the concerns of fans before the GM…he kept his word…Sund just didn’t take the bite…surely that didn’t come as a surprise to anyone.
As a season ticket holder…I was very interested in what Sund had to say. He just didn’t say much. Plus, talk is cheap…I will wait to see what moves he makes BEFORE I MAKE ANY ASSUMPTIONS.
Save for his comments about Chill…nothing he said surprised, discourage or impressed me…but that just me…what do I know. Heh heh
Mark Bradley
May 20th, 2009
11:48 pm
I think the Hawks would like to have Childress, but at their price, not his. (That’s why he’s in Greece right now. Rick Sund didn’t think Childress was worth much more than the mid-level salary. Childress thought otherwise.)
And I really don’t know about Andersen. I believe he has one more year on his Barcelona contract, but I also believe the Hawks’ rights to him expire after this season.
And I like Terrence Williams a lot. But where does he play? Small forward? Point forward? Shooting guard? Point guard?
Mark Bradley
May 20th, 2009
11:52 pm
And to answer John’s question from a little ways back: I don’t think many NBA clubs will be spending big in this economy. I think a lot of free agents who’ve been waiting for this summer are going to be massively disappointed.
And do I think the economy could benefit the Hawks as it pertains to their free agents? Absolutely.
Bigeasy830
May 20th, 2009
11:59 pm
Najeeh, I disagree, I think the team can win 50, we fell short by only 3 games this year and Al, still have a lot of growth, He will definitely get better. Even if we lose Marvin and Bibby, as long as we get players that can fill their rolls on this team, we will be a much better team. If we lose Marvin we need a 3 that can shoot it from the outside and penetrate, damn it would have been great if we drafted Brandon Roy and couple of years ago, and if we lose Bibby, we must get a PG that can penetrate and hit the open jumper. I disliked Sund when they first hire him because he did not think the Hawks were a good team. I knew they would improve this year and I see a lot of improvement for them next season. I think they will come into the pre-season much more determined. From what I am reading, I think we will try to keep Marvin, but we can only hope for the best.
Shannon
May 21st, 2009
12:03 am
Mark
Thanks for asking the tough questions about Woodson. I have made it clear how I feel as I watched Woody coach night after night. After hearing Sund speak I will now speak with my checkbook……. but it was fun watching the braves play tonight and see a real organization at work. By the way Braves … you are about to get more money next year from me!
cp
May 21st, 2009
12:38 am
Well I can see why Woody will be back after reading that interview.. I like Terrence Williams too. I would play him at the 3. I think he has enough length and strength to pull it off. His jumper needs some work but he improved it as his college career went on. When I read about the rumors of us maybe moving Marvin I thought that Terrance would be a good fit or if we brought Marvin back he could get Evans minutes. This draft is so weak that I have no idea if he will be there or not.
Greek Dawg
May 21st, 2009
1:00 am
Mark,
Next year, try to find out when the coaches reports cards on the players are finished before doing nother interview with Sund.
I agree a lot of teams are not going be spending big this off-season, Take a look at the following off-season and you’ll see the best list of elite players ever available in any free agency period in recent history. Most clubs will be trying to build a bankroll for that. Who knows, we may even know who owns the team by then.
Re-sign Bibby and work the guards we have. We cannot go into another season without help, big help, at center.
Keep up the good reporting.
tony
May 21st, 2009
1:01 am
Rich Sund has his hands full. I see alot of things that are wrong with this team. Josh Smith and Mike Woodson can’t coexist, Joe Johnson is not the enforcer that this team needs, Acie Law is a bust, Marvin Williams is not a starter in my eyes and Mike Bibby is not a true point guard.
If I’m GM, I will be looking for a enforcer who will play good defense for Woodson and has leadership skills.
One player that comes to mind is Ron Artest. He’s an enforcer, good defender and he has good leadership skills. He wouldn’t mind getting in Josh Smith face for shooting unnecessary shots.
Another player that can help our team is Jermaine O’Neal. If we can sign O’Neal, this will enable us to move Al Horford to his natural position.
There is one player in this draft that would have a huge impact on our team; (Stephen Curry). This kid is going to be a enforcer in this league. He can hurt you from the perimeter and inside the lanes. He’s a terrific passer and defender. I would be willing to move up the draft to take him.
Malone
May 21st, 2009
1:11 am
What about Cenk A, the Turkish PG? Do we still have his draft rights?
He’s supposed to be talented. More than ACL4? Who knows…
MyView
May 21st, 2009
1:14 am
MB…I found it funny that when you asked Sund about Marvin, Sund ended by saying [I would like to improve the team with trades if available, and make sense]. Marvin is restricted, and that is what usually happens with restricted players. Your take?
alsim
May 21st, 2009
1:14 am
Sund should be a politician. He says a lot without really saying anything. He danced around so many questions that you didn’t get too many straight answers.
You need to interview him again in a month or so and ask the exact same questions.
Dr. Warren
May 21st, 2009
1:15 am
Doesn’t seem like a ringing endorsement of Marvin. He basically deflected the question.
BA
May 21st, 2009
1:20 am
Superlative work here, Bradley. You and O’Brien might save the AJC yet…
BosnianBaller
May 21st, 2009
1:27 am
I’m glad Sund didn’t say anything (player’s names).Wren did that this past winter and he got burned like 5 times.Glad Sund took the John Sherholtz approach.Also reading the reponse on Marvin question leads me to believe that Sund will trade him b/c he said one of the core players could be moved.Marvin should be moved.
Ariose
May 21st, 2009
1:28 am
It actually may just be smart to draft Tyler Hansbrough at 19…….if Mills is off the board of course. Either him, Ellington, Hrnderson or Chase Budinger. But With Al Horford having that ankle injury,Hansbrough would have filled in nicely during the playoffs.
Ariose
May 21st, 2009
1:38 am
Hmmm…..I wonder if Hansbrough can defend the Small forward position? He’s defenetly mobile enough…..
BosnianBaller
May 21st, 2009
1:44 am
Hansbrough is a Sheldon Williams clone.Hansbrough is late first pick in my mind.NBADraft.net has him at 25.
Ariose
May 21st, 2009
1:44 am
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZGNV8rgAmc
Ariose
May 21st, 2009
1:46 am
Nah, he’s a lot more mobile and athletic than Shellhead….
Ariose
May 21st, 2009
1:53 am
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PyCrrahigMM&feature=related
I think he may seriously be an NBA Small forward. Thoughts?
BosnianBaller
May 21st, 2009
1:55 am
Same crap different package
BosnianBaller
May 21st, 2009
2:00 am
Can’t shoot to outside.Can’t be a three
Crazy Diamond
May 21st, 2009
2:41 am
We are so screwed. Sund, Billy Knight – it does not matter. The ownership mess limits what Atlanta Spirit will spend. We can be an elite team after the ownership clusterbungle is over.
Until then – we are so screwed.
BarkingBulldawg
May 21st, 2009
3:16 am
Fantastic Q & A, Mark and I’m you’re harshest critic. You seemed to defer to questions from us, the knowledgable bloggers, and that was both effective and much appreciated. You were even humble enough to follow up on David Andersen (which was a nice touch) even if Sund did give you an ambiguous answer…are we gonna bring him over or not, dammit??!!!
Thanks. This is a crucial offseason, so I hope you will continue to give the Hawks some attention….
tbhawksfan
May 21st, 2009
3:56 am
Nothing changes. Sund is a yessir man. Wouldn’t have been hired if he wasn’t. Funny how he says everything is in evaluation, but when obvious issues are raised, Sund sees no problems.
When he said that he thought he’d have financial flexibility, I would have asked why noone was brought in at the deadline to help a young PO team.
Also, I think that most of our bloggers could have gotten more out of the interview; forgetting DA, no questions about Speedy, by-passing the fact that one of our most important core players hates the coach and refuses to speak to him….
Why is it that everyone is willing to accept the corporate BS line?
When I see Sund maximizing the potential of this team, he’ll get my respect. until then, I’m of the opinion that these people are inept in their management of the Hawks; from ownership, to GM’ing, to coaching. The results of this were evident in our stagnation this season.
I wish we had an obnoxious reporter that would ask the real questions and expect nothing less than a straight anwser. Even if there was no straight answer, et least we’d be realistically treating the reality.
Even if the Hawks continue to improve through maturation, shouldn’t the GM be doing everything, big moves and tweaks, to move the team to the top of their potential? The Hawks have entered into a new era of competitivity, but as of yet, they are still being managed as an also-ran team.
Sund may have to play politically correct (especially if he knows his hands are tied), but I and we don’t. Demand the best, expect the best and if anything else is given, raise Kane (?). Better to be rebellious in a bad situation than an butt smoucher in any situation.
calico
May 21st, 2009
4:19 am
i would rather draft Earl Clark than T. Williams any day but if Teague is available i think thats who you draft unless we can move up.
Edo River
May 21st, 2009
5:27 am
mark, I am not one of your bigger fans, but I really appreciate this interview with Sund. As a former reporter I understand the revelation of character/personality that this article reveals. I would have been MAJORLY disappointed if the GM revealed some news that I thought later on, should not be tipped to the public on what the GM is tending to do. So this was a reassuring and professional job, You did miss on Speedy and Anderson. I expect you to follow up on Anderson and “J-Chill”. Is he really a good fit? How about other foreign players, how have they progressed? The Turkish kid? etc.
.
Tony
May 21st, 2009
5:49 am
Why not consider a player like Ben Gordon over Mike Bibby?
Steve
May 21st, 2009
7:51 am
Mr Sund just wish you luck building a better team in Atlanta. I just don’t feel Woody is the answer you watch the timeouts and players just don’t seem interested. I don’t feel they respect the guy he is a not a good coach. I feel the Hawks should promote Larry Drew head coach.
J
May 21st, 2009
8:01 am
Good article … wish he had shared just a little more info, but i guess that’s why we wait the summer out …
Funky Bobby J
May 21st, 2009
8:22 am
My worry is that we lose Marvin for nothing. Before he got hurt, he was showing great promise. His outside shot was spot on this year, he goes to the rim, rebounds and plays tough D (really needs to work on ball handling). I feel like he could be a key next year and really mitigate the loss of a Bibby (having a strong outside shooting 3). On the other hand, maybe he is just injury prone. It is really tough to make the call. All of those people calling for the Hawks to sign a superstar need to wake up. It ain’t gonna happen. When the hawks are healthy – they are a match-up nightmare for other teams. 4 or 5 guys 6-7 to 6-10 that can all run jump defend – hard to find mis-matches. I like this team; I just hate their stop and stare half court offense. Good job MB – stay on these guys for us through the off-season.
dap01
May 21st, 2009
8:28 am
Nice try Mark. I look forward to your next article.
Mike
May 21st, 2009
8:38 am
Great interview, Mark!
1. I was surprised that he wasn’t more enthusiastic about Marvin. Remember last year with Smith and Childress, how adamant they were that they would match any offer?
2. You say you think the rights to Andersen expire. Really? Can you double-check that? I’ve never heard of that.
3. I would also like to hear Sund say that they will not just sell their pick for cash.
Thanks!
Paul
May 21st, 2009
8:41 am
Moving parts, moving parts, moving parts. oh brother, can we please dispense with that phrase. all it is is corporate speak. Maybe Sund needs to turn the volume up on his tv. If the whole world is saying that our offense is pathetic in the half-court because we strictly focus on one-on-one basketball and you refuse to hear it, why are you our GM? A GM should be open to listening (not neccessarily do it)to anything and everything as his goal is to improve the team. And the type of problems we have on offense are not just Woodsons business, they are Sunds business too as he has the ability to bring in a facilitating point guard…….anyone who refuses to acknowledge or accept that a team has weaknesses, will never strengthen them.
Daniel
May 21st, 2009
8:48 am
Mark- Great job on the Q&A. It is soooo refreshing to have a GM who is willing to talk about his team and engage the fan base. I know he did not say a whole lot, but in some ways he did. Clearly, Woodson is back next season. That is a big question to answer right out of the gate. I also like the fact that he understands this team is not where it needs to be yet. I would like him to take more personal ownership of his decisions; however, we may see more of that as the summer progresses. Woody has his faults, but I really admire his willingness to state his goals very clearly and then take ownership of accomplishing those goals. I hope Sund is sincere when stating that they will be able to make whatever financial moves needed. This is a BIG off season for the Hawks; the team overachieved this year. Now it is time for the front office to do the same.
Mark Bradley
May 21st, 2009
8:53 am
Thanks for the kind words, folks. Again, I hope this little exercise proved informative, even if Rick didn’t crumble on the witness stand and yell, “All right! I confess! I want to draft the next Shelden Williams!”
Oh, and I’m fairly certain Sund knows his team’s weaknesses. He’s a pragmatist, and by nature — he admits this — he’s more a glass-half-empty guy. But I think he sees a lot of strengths. And I’d concur with that as well.
mountain_jim
May 21st, 2009
8:58 am
Good job Mark. So Sund says its up to Woody what assistants or coordinators are considered, but we know Woody thinks he knows all he needs to. Woody needs OC help, and if he does not figure this out his bottom line record eventually will show it for him next year I suspect.
Westurd
May 21st, 2009
9:07 am
Mark, good questions.
Rick, slight of hand with the answers.
No meat to that interview but the attempt is appreciated.
mark
May 21st, 2009
9:17 am
by them keeping woody tell me all i need to know, this is the best it going to get with the hawk. very dissappointed
ILL-logical
May 21st, 2009
9:28 am
The Cavaliers lost at home to a team that has a strong center and Anthony Johnson at the point.What that tells me is that the Cavs are not unbeatable(Hawks fans already knew that) but to beat them you have to go inside. And go strong-break down the shot clock strong.
New Start
May 21st, 2009
9:35 am
The fact that Sund thinks that Horford is a center scares me. He is a power forward for christ sake. The guy is 6′9″ and struggles against every good big man in the league. I applaud his grit and effort but he is playing out of position. I think the hawks brass insist that Horford is a center so they want have to spend the money to go out and get one. If they admit he is a power forward playing out of position and ZAZA leaves for free agency then they would have no center on the club. Am I the only one who thinks that horford is not a center?
Volman
May 21st, 2009
9:39 am
I think it is funny with all the theatrics from “the king” (give me a break) last night. He dives for a loose ball and gets up like he can’t walk.. He gets fouled but doesn’t make the and-1 and checks for blood from his lip while agonizing in pain. His team loses the game and he acts like he can’t walk and “cramps” up, yet he was perfectly fine for the jump ball.
I love how EVERYBODY is giving excuses for LeBron for “being so tired”. This guy is a BEAST…he is probably pretty well conditioned as well. He didn’t look tired on all of those DUNKS or BLOCKED SHOTS on Howard… He seemed to actually be flexing his muscles on every chance he could.
But then again, he was tired…and hurt…right?
chris
May 21st, 2009
9:40 am
Mark,
A few of the comments have JS by them. Was there a third party present that I missed? I wondered if it was a Freudian slip reference to John Scherholz since you were interviewing the Hawk’s GM. But there could have been a third party that I missed because at one point you reference laughter all around.
I’m not busting your chops, just paying attention.
I enjoy your blogs.
MannyT
May 21st, 2009
9:55 am
MB, thanks for sharing the interview. It was good info…especially considering that hoops news gets real lean around here between the end of the season and November.
I hope folks paid attention to the fact that Sund leaves most of the how to coach and roles of the assistants to Woody. I get the results focus. The tricky part for the GM is when to opt for a commitment to the long term over the short term without blowing up the team. I’d have to imagine that major rebuilding does very bad things to team revenues and profits…including lower ticket prices (remember the $199 season tix) and lower sponsor & local media revenues. (I doubt 790 the Zone broke the bank to get the Hawks radio rights as often as they preempt them for Tech games.)
I am a Childress fan, but I cannot see him coming back to the Hawks. Pro hoops is a business, and all of his leverage is in staying in Europe for another year. If he can tolerate another year there, he’s unrestricted and has a salary floor based on the 3rd year of his Olympiacos contract. Based on the early words about the next collective bargaining agreement, a player may NEVER make up the $$ difference between a restricted and unrestricted free agent deal.
I might even extend that to Marvin Williams. If he can tolerate the risk of significant injury/poor play next season, I’d go for the 1 year tender and be UFA next summer. Get that good contract before the league starts to clamp down on salaries.
Here is a reference article to back up the money thoughts.
http://www.usatoday.com/sports/basketball/nba/2009-04-29-82-games-cover_N.htm
BWAF