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Atlanta Hawks

Sports Illustrated Ranking: 15

By Tim Crothers

 
1999 Leaders
Stat Leader No.
Points
Assists
Steals
Turnovers
Rebounds
Minutes Per Game
Field-Goal %
3-Pt. Field-Goal %
Free-Throw %
Personal Fouls
*Steve Smith
*Mookie Blaylock
*Mookie Blaylock
*Mookie Blaylock
Dikembe Mutombo
*Mookie Blaylock
Dikembe Mutombo
*Steve Smith
*Steve Smith
Dikembe Mutombo
18.7
5.8
2.06
2.8
12.2
36.7
51.2
.338
.849
145
* -- no longer with team
Sports Illustrated The Hawks as we knew them ceased to exist during the playoffs last season, when Atlanta G.M. Pete Babcock spotted a boy at Madison Square Garden holding up a poster of Latrell Sprewell and squealing that notorious name with delight. During their second-round matchup Sprewell and the Knicks ran circles around the dispassionate Hawks as if they were the Washington Generals, limiting Atlanta to the second fewest points (76.5 a game) on the worst shooting (31.6%) in the history of four-game series. Flashbacks to the Hawks' exasperating postseason inspired Babcock as he worked the phones over the summer. "That series painfully drove home what we already suspected," Babcock says. "We needed to reconfigure our team if we were ever going to get over the hump."

Reconfigure? That's putting it mildly. Only six players remain from last season, and just four of those saw action against the Knicks. Babcock began the overhaul by addressing his biggest need: speed. Before the draft he peddled the team's point guard since 1992-93, Mookie Blaylock, whose plodding pace helped yield the NBA's fewest team assists last year and just 86.3 points per game, second-lowest in the league. In exchange Babcock acquired the Warriors' No. 10 pick, which he used to select the anti-Mookie, Jason Terry. At Arizona last season Terry became the first Pac-10 player since Gary Payton to lead the conference in scoring, assists and steals. He'll get meticulous tutoring from Hall of Fame coach Lenny Wilkens, who's also a Hall of Fame point guard. "I can remember some of the stupid things I did as a rookie guard, so hopefully I can save Jason some embarrassment," Wilkens says. "He's the engine that can shift the team from low gear to high gear and give us a chance to score more easy points in transition."

The memory of the kid clutching the Sprewell poster inspired Babcock's second major deal, the acquisition of Blazers shooting guards Isaiah (J.R.) Rider and Jimmy Jackson for shooting guards Steve Smith and Ed Gray. Nowhere is Atlanta's new direction more apparent than in the exchange of Smith for Rider, two players who have absolutely nothing in common beyond career-scoring averages of more than 17 points. Smith, the longtime troop leader of a Hawks team hailed as the boy scouts of the NBA, won the league's Citizen Award in 1997-98, the same season that Rider was suspended three games for spitting on a fan, one of a fistful of suspensions he earned in his three years with Portland.

After vowing to arrive early to Hawks' training camp in Chattanooga, Rider proved that when it comes to disappointing, he rarely disappoints. He missed the opening day, saying first that it was because he refused to fly on a "crop duster plane" and later that he was in no rush to join a team he expected to be mediocre. Babcock believes that because Rider is in the final year of a contract, getting him is only a minor gamble, but his justifications sound a lot like Faust's. "Ultimately, fans care about wins and losses," Babcock says. "We went into this deal with our eyes wide open knowing J.R.'s track record, and we expected there to be some rocky moments. What can I say? It's an interesting phenomenon in our society that if you have success then all is forgiven."

Wilkens says he is operating on a "three strikes and you're out" policy with Rider, who is already down to two. Babcock openly speaks of Jackson, who has been with six organizations in the last three years, as "Rider insurance." But for a team that has reflected the laid-back personality of its coach, some controversy just might provide the kind of spark that Sprewell brought to New York last season. "Before this year the Hawks had a lot of veteran guys who were settled into their lifestyles, and maybe they got complacent and comfortable just making the playoffs," Rider, 28, says. "I plan to jump around and high-five and play college-style ball. Hopefully when my teammates see that, they'll understand that I'm just trying to wake us up."

With the addition of 6'11" shot blocker Lorenzen Wright in an August trade with the Clippers, Atlanta has seven players who are 24 or younger. The few Hawks holdovers reported an increased enthusiasm in training camp, especially an extra spring in the size-22 sneakers of Dikembe Mutombo Mpolondo Mukamba Jean Jacque Wamutombo. "I think everybody's looking forward to this year as a new start," Mutombo says. "We have lots of new players, a new attitude and hopefully some new results in the playoffs."

Atlanta even has a new home, the 20,000-seat Philips Arena, where before each practice the players field trivia questions from the coaches. One day some Hawks were stunned to learn that the franchise has not advanced past the second round of the playoffs since 1960-61. With all the off-season moves designed to generate excitement, sell tickets and fuel a playoff push, team president Stan Kasten bluntly acknowledges, "This is the most important year in the history of the franchise."

Atlanta does appear to have upgraded its roster more successfully than anybody else in the East, and perhaps sensing a potential windfall on his investment, owner Ted Turner recently showed up at a practice for the first time since Wilkens became the coach six years ago. "I have a World Series ring and an America's Cup, but what I'm missing is an NBA title," Turner told the players. "Do that for me, and I'll do something nice for you."

Turner then introduced himself to Rider, Terry and the rest of the newcomers, which served to emphasize that it's largely up to them to determine if these Hawks soar to unprecedented heights or continue to fly low -- like a crop duster plane.

Issue date: November 1, 1999


Fast Breaks   Jump Balls
  • The Hawks defense finished in the league's top four in opponents' scoring, shooting and three-point shooting last year.
  • The Hawks were 10-0 when they scored at least 100 points.
  • Because of the new Philips Arena, Atlanta's 1999-2000 attendance should improve over last year's average of 13,273 - third worst in the NBA.
  •  
  • Isaiah Rider missed the first two days of training camp, indicating that he's the same player he was in Minnesota and Portland.
  • The Hawks finished in the league's bottom three in scoring, shooting and three-point shooting.
  • LaPhonso Ellis is expected to start the season at small forward. He's missed 176 of 378 games over the past five seasons.
  • Personalities and past performance
    GM: Pete Babcock
    Coach: Lenny Wilkens, 7th season (282-178); 27th overall (1151-927)
    Assistants: Stan Albeck and Phil Hubbard
    Last year: 31-19 (tied for 7th overall)
    Playoffs: Defeated Detroit, 3-2; lost to New York, 0-4
    Points Averaged per Game: 86.3
    Points Allowed per Game: 83.4

    Circle the date
    Thu. Nov. 4 vs. Milwaukee: the first regular-season NBA game in Philips Arena
    Sat. Nov. 13 at Portland: Rider makes his return to Portland
    Thu. Dec. 16 vs. L.A. Lakers: A rarity -- a guaranteed Hawks sellout

    Standout stat
    83.4: Points the Hawks allowed per game last season -- the lowest in NBA history

    Quote from the court
    "The fan support hasn't been the best [in Atlanta], but players change that. Winning changes that." -- Isaiah Rider


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