Pac's Resurrection: The Official 2014-15 Atlanta Hawks Season Thread

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Most people doubt our playoff chances but I think we're actually better prepared for playoff basketball than most other teams.

Thing is, most teams don't really run great sets / create high percentage shots when their primary option is shut down.

In our offense there is always an alternative, its like it is created with the possibility that options are shut down in mind.

We will not stop running the offense until the shot is attempted, we will throw screens, pnr and dribble penetrations at you until we get an opening.

When the opening appears, we have enough finishers to make a play or we pass the ball until it finds the open shooter.

Just two years ago Joe Johnson had me falling asleep posting up and dribbling the ball for 20 seconds just to take a contested shot or pass it to wide open Josh

The transformation this team has made is just incredible, fukk Duke (and I don't mean that in a bad way :troll:) and I hated him as a player too but Ferry made all this possible

He deserves to be Executive of the year solely for signing Joshs replacement to a bargain deal, then said dude makes the All-Star team twice in his first two seasons with the team. Every move he has made did benefit us in the long run. Smart drafting. Salary situation is exceptionally great. If Kyle makes the ASG, he might be the lowest paid all-star not on a rookie contract in a long time. 5th lowest team salary in the NBA.

On top of that getting Coach Bud, who's slowly exorcising ISO basketball from NBA playbooks
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Never felt this proud of a team in my lifetime. To be honest, I shed a tear :mjcryatl: when Jeff made that dunk against OKC. Still can't handle the fact that we're invincible now but I'll get over it...

I'ma tell my grandchildren about this squad when I'm old brehs :pachaha:
 

Rekkapryde

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I agree. I just lol to myself when someone says we'll see if the Hawks can play like that in the playoffs.

you just don't magically stop running a system you've run all year long. When the ball moves and doesn't stick along with the fact that Teague and French Kwame can penetrate the lane, you gotta be on your toes.
 

Codeine Bryant

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Just needed to come in here and pay my respects.

I've clowned on you guys for the better part of a decade. Always seemingly floating to a 4-5 seed and bouncing out in the 2nd round.

This is a different team. You guys got some silent killers on that squad. Glad to see my boy Horford lowkey beasting.

fukk a CP3-Dwight PnR :salute:
 

FreshFromATL

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Reasons behind Hawks' success?

http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/page/5-on-5-150128-Hawks/why-atlanta-hawks-good


How do you explain the success of the East-leading Atlanta Hawks? The 5-on-5 panel weighs in.

1. What's the biggest reason for the Hawks' success this season?


Kevin Arnovitz, ESPN.com: Unselfishness. If that seems a bit precious, it's because virtually every Hawks offensive possession looks like a clinic and every defensive stand is an exercise in timing. You know those four-minute stretches when your favorite team is playing with flawless energy (see Golden State Warriors)? The Hawks play like that for halves at a time. That energy is more or less fueled by the involvement of all five guys.
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Bo Churney, HawksHoop: Everything fits together. The Hawks may not have that recognizable superstar, but they have a bunch of great starters and good bench players who complement each other and a system that accentuates the strengths of the five guys on the floor.
Kevin Pelton, ESPN.com: Depth. That's true of the starting lineup, which is incredibly balanced and loaded with above-average players, and then with a bench that has been nearly as good as the starters. Atlanta shows the value in simply never playing a bad player.
Marc Stein, ESPN.com: Defense and continuity. I know that's two reasons, but you can't pick just one with an ensemble cast like the Hawks. Don't underestimate the continuity thing. The fact these guys have played together for a while now, compared to teams like Cleveland (and even Chicago) working in key new pieces, is a big edge. But let's face it: Atlanta was a bottom-five team defensively at Thanksgiving and is a top-five team defensively now. Al Horford has gradually played his way back to top form and has sparked that turnaround on D.
Michael Wallace, ESPN.com: Balance. The Hawks essentially have five players on the court at any given time who can all pass, drive and shoot from distance. Defensively, they switch and defend on pick-and-rolls as well as any team in the league. When you're as good and connected defensively as you are offensively, there are very few weak links to expose. It's that level of balance that has Atlanta ranked in the top five on both ends of the court.

2. How many Hawks should make the All-Star team this year?


Arnovitz: Four, and with the disclaimer that DeMarre Carroll is one of the three or four best perimeter defenders in basketball. This question really boils down to, "Is Kyle Korver an All-Star?" because Paul Millsap, Jeff Teague and Al Horford each seem like a no-brainer. Korver is posting a true shooting percentage of 73.8 percent -- 73.8 percent true shooting isn't a stat; it's a typo. He's second among shooting guards in WAR and Real Plus-Minus. How do you not reward that?
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Churney: Four. Consider this: despite not having that "one guy," four of the Hawks' starters are in the top 20 of Basketball Reference's win shares statistic. Jeff Teague and Paul Millsap have the counting stats to get there, Kyle Korver is potentially in the middle of the best shooting season of all time, and Al Horford is the team's backbone. With a weak East, it is not too hard to justify four Hawks making the trip to New York.
Pelton: Four, as I indicated in making my All-Star reserve picks on Monday. Kyle Korver's role in the Hawks' offensive efficiency makes him a deserving choice along with easier picks Jeff Teague, Al Horford and Paul Millsap.
Stein: Three. I really want to say four, but wedging Kyle Korver onto the East roster means you have to leave off either Chris Bosh, Dwyane Wade or Kyrie Irving. I, as a lifelong Korver fan, am prepared to do that. But I don't think the East coaches will and I realize that Korver, statistically, doesn't quite look like an All-Star to a lot of people. Truth is, though, he's right there with Horford when it comes to the Most Influential Hawk list.
Wallace: Three. Atlanta should be well represented in New York next month. Coach Mike Budenholzer will lead the East team and Kyle Korver will participate in the 3-point competition. Beyond that, there better be a place on the East roster for Jeff Teague, Al Horford and Paul Millsap. If the Cavs, Celtics, Heat, Bulls, Knicks or Nets had the same record as the Hawks, there would be no debate here. Atlanta deserves three.

3. What's one thing every team should learn from Mike Budenholzer?


Arnovitz: That really cool things can happen when a coach conveys sincere confidence in his players. Everyone loves playing for this coach. Elton Brand says he's never seen a locker room that's been instilled with more professionalism. Building trust is a skill just like play design. Budenholzer has both in spades.
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Churney: The importance of in-game minutes management. The Hawks often remove Korver and Horford about midway through the first quarter and often keep the lineups staggered based on that substitution. While some teams have their stars running on fumes by the end of the game, the Hawks are bringing in a freshly rested Korver and Horford with four minutes to go. Checkmate.
Pelton: That it's OK not to have a "go-to scorer." Twenty-one other teams have at least one player (and some two) with a higher usage rate in clutch situations than the Hawks' leader, Jeff Teague (30.5 percent, per NBA.com/Stats). Yet Atlanta has the league's third-best offensive rating in those situations at 122.2 points per 100 possessions.
Stein: The sad reality is that I'm not so sure what Budenholzer has achieved with the Hawks is easily replicated. He stayed with Gregg Popovich way longer than most top assistants would given the success they enjoyed in San Antonio. Then, did amazingly well in picking the right situation to finally jump to and then, in conjunction with the since-exiled Danny Ferry, expertly assembled a roster filled with pieces (shooters, especially) that snap together uncommonly well. We could certainly use more teams that play the way Atlanta plays. But history tells us that you're much more apt to find success in the NBA when you can put two or three franchise players together first. Which tells me more teams are going to keep trying to follow that blueprint rather than trying to copy Atlanta.
Wallace: Humility. This hasn't been an easy run for the Hawks, although they've made success look quite simple at times. There have been plenty of bumps and distractions along the way, including Budenholzer's tenure getting off to a rocky start with a DUI arrest weeks after he was hired last season. Then the turmoil hit from the racially-charged emails and comments from the front office and ownership. Through it all, Budenholzer has kept the focus on basketball and bonding within that locker room.

4. When will the Hawks' streak end?


Arnovitz: Feb. 8 at Memphis. Let's assume that the Hawks will lose a basketball game at some point, and that's likely to happen on the road. Feb. 2 at New Orleans and Feb. 6 vs. Golden State at Philips Arena won't be picnics, but Memphis has good size and is playing well. They seem like as good a bet as any to snap a 22-game winning streak.
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Churney: While it would be really fun for the Hawks and Warriors to meet up on Feb. 6 with Atlanta riding a 21-game win streak, I think the streak will end earlier that week at New Orleans. The Pelicans gave the Hawks a good run earlier in the season in one of Anthony Davis' worst games of the year. I'll take New Orleans in a game where Davis redeems himself.
Pelton: Odds are the streak will be snapped unexpectedly before then, but Atlanta won't be an underdog until at least the showdown of the top two teams in their respective conferences against the Golden State Warriors on Feb. 6 at Philips Arena. The streak probably won't survive that game followed by a trip to Memphis.
Stein: Before the All-Star break. They've got three tough games next week -- home dates with Washington and Golden State after a quick trip to New Orleans -- and then a three-game swing through Memphis/Minnesota/Boston leading into the break. I see them handling Brooklyn, Portland and Philly this week. Then they're vulnerable.
Wallace: Feb. 4. Although many might circle the Feb. 6 visit from the Warriors as the game when the Hawks might finally lose, I think it'll be the trap game before the league's two best teams face off. Two days earlier, the Wizards come to town, still smarting from that 30-point beatdown from the Hawks earlier this month. If healthy, Washington has the frontcourt size and muscle with Nene and Marcin Gortat that could potentially give Atlanta problems.

5. How far will the Hawks go this season?


Arnovitz: The NBA Finals. Until the Chicago Bulls can demonstrate sustained consistency, there isn't a two-way team that looks like it can outwit the Hawks.
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Churney: Pundits have expressed concern with how the Hawks' offense will perform in the playoffs, but that should not matter; defense is what wins in the playoffs and the Hawks are owners of a top-five defense. This team seems like a lock for the Eastern Conference finals for the first time in Atlanta Hawks history and they have a great chance at being the team that is sacrificed to Golden State in the Finals.
Pelton: NBA Finals. I wouldn't favor Atlanta over the Western Conference champion, particularly if that's the Warriors, but until the Chicago Bulls or Cleveland Cavaliers demonstrate that they can reach this level over an extended period, the Hawks have to be considered the favorites to win the East.
Stein: They can really get to The Finals. I'm a firm believer in that after what we've seen since Thanksgiving. Could they use a real rim protector and more bulk in the frontcourt? Sure. But the Hawks have to feel better about their chances to do something truly meaningful than most of their West counterparts just by virtue of their favorable conference. It didn't play out this way last season, because San Antonio was just so ruthlessly efficient against Miami in the best series we've ever seen from the Tim Duncan Era Spurs, but I continue to believe that the top East contenders have the great luxury of knowing that the West champion is going to take a lot of punches on the way to the big stage. Cleveland and Chicago still have higher ceilings than the Hawks if they can finally find a level of consistency come May, but you have to regard Atlanta as the favorite in the East -- as we speak -- based on the available evidence.
Wallace: Anything short of the conference finals would be considered a major letdown at this point for the Hawks, considering the way they started the season. Folks forget, but the Hawks have the current longest consecutive streak of playoff appearances in the Eastern Conference. Their problem has been an inability to take the next step beyond the first round. This is the year they'll do at least that much. Until I see otherwise, there's no reason to believe they can't make the East finals.
 

010101

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Breh I think you may see nikkas having nervous breakdowns if the Hawks fukk around and get bounced in the 1st or 2nd round this year. The city done finally bought in to the team and for that to happen would be just :wow:

that's the shyt that got me on edge
I hope that pressure ain't just sittin in they subconscious waiting to spill out in the crunch:lupe:

nikkas finally putting on
if they can put in work in the post season maybe ya town might really invest in the hawks forreal
but you can be sure if they fold those seats finna go back to tumbleweeds 2 quick:damn:*
 
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