Aug 022012
 

For years, starting with the purge that saw ex-San Antonio Spurs employees Danny Ferry, Avery Johnson, and Mike Brown all take on significant gigs with other teams in 2005, it’s been more or less established that Gregg Popovich is acting as a Dean Smith-type in the pro ranks. Sprinkling the landscape with ex-players, coaches, and front offices executives on teams hoping to emulate San Antonio’s success. The motives have always been clear, if not remarked upon, but now teams are just outright copping to it.
Witness Orlando Magic CEO Alex Martins, as quoted by Josh Robbins of the Orlando Sentinel , in the wake of his team’s hiring of former Spurs front office helper and scout Rob Hennigan, and former Spurs player and assistant coach Jacque Vaughn:
“Obviously,” Magic CEO Alex Martins said, “when you talk about the San Antonio Spurs, there are not many better in terms of the number of championships that they’ve won.”

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Jul 272012
 


Kevin C. Cox/NBAE/Getty Images
After five seasons in Atlanta, the band broke up.
Some people back home in Atlanta want to know what this upheaval with the Hawks is all about. They’re not angry or suspicious or euphoric or charged — just ambivalent about what they’ve witnessed since the arrival of Danny Ferry as the Hawks’ new general manager. There’s a collective awareness that Ferry’s aggressiveness is regarded as positive by those who follow this stuff closely, but the implications of these big decisions are still cloudy.

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Jul 122012
 

Believing in the Danny Ferry movement in Atlanta requires faith that Hawks fans haven’t had in the past. It requires suspending all knowledge of the franchise’s recent history where free agency and team building is concerned and taking a ride on the unpredictable side of things with their new general manager.

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Jul 112012
 

ATLANTA Metro Atlanta native Lou Williams, who spent his first seven seasons with Philadelphia, broke the news himself on Tuesday evening, even if some red tape was holding up the Hawks from officially announcing the guard’s signing on Wednesday.

At 5:22 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday, Williams tweeted from his verified account, “ATL… LOUWILLVILLE.. happy to be apart of a team thats similar to the Sixers.. Young, athletic, and hardworking.. highlightfactory” the last a reference to the team’s marketing slogan for Philips Arena.

The deal had not become official by the time Hawks coach Larry Drew addressed the media on Wednesday afternoon at the second day of rookie camp. A team media relations employee instructed Drew not to comment on pending roster moves but Drew did offer his views on the possibility that the Hawks will get smaller at the shooting guard position, where size had previously been an advantage. (Six-time All-Star Joe Johnson, who reportedly has been traded to the Brooklyn Nets, pending league approval, is 6-foot-7 while Williams, if he ends up filling that slot, stands but 6-1.)

“I will say, when you look at your team, you have to analyze what you have,” Drew said. “You have to look at what you feel your strengths are, what you feel your weaknesses are. I’ve always said we certainly look at positions and we try to take advantage of certain match-ups that are to our advantage. Sometimes it’s size, sometimes it’s speed and sometimes it’s quickness. We have to look at every position and we have to exploit what we perceive to be the advantage and moving forward that won’t change, as far as what we do.”

He continued that in the future “speed and quickness may be the advantage.”

“We’ll try to put those guys in a position to really utilize their speed and quickness,” he said.

As new general manager Danny Ferry continues to make over the roster, the picture remains somewhat fuzzy as to how all of the pieces ultimately will fit together. There’s still a ton of time, in that sense, between the present and when the season starts more than three months from now.

The picture at guard might be one of the biggest works in progress. Last season’s starting point guard Jeff Teague is 6-2. Devin Harris, reportedly acquired from Utah for Marvin Williams in a trade that also has yet to be formally approved by the league, is 6-3. Throw in Williams, the NBA’s runner-up for its Sixth Man Award last season after coming off a career-high 14.9 points per game, and first-round draft pick John Jenkins (6-4) with Anthony Morrow (6-5), a player said to be in the Nets deal for Johnson, and the Hawks will be decidedly smaller, especially as Marvin Williams, who is 6-9, started in the small forward spot. (Guard Jordan Farmar, who is 6-2, is another who is expected to come from the Nets, but the Hawks reportedly will buy out Farmar’s contract.)

One potential option for the Hawks is emerging at rookie camp. Pape Sy, the team’s 2010 second-round pick who was cut before last season, could give them size at the shooting guard spot off the bench. Sy, 24, whom the team formerly tried to get to play the point, has turned himself into a muscled 6-7, 210 pounds and the Hawks now are looking at him to play off guard.

“He’ll probably play more ‘two’ than ‘one,’ but he will be put in situations where he’ll handle the basketball,” Drew said on Tuesday of Sy, “but I see him more as a ‘two.’ I think he does have the ability to play some ‘one,’ but I think his strength is to score the basketball. He has the versatility. In a smaller lineup he may play ‘three.’”

Sy said he likes the idea of shooting guard.

“Yeah, I feel good as a two-guard,” he said. “I mean, trying to get to the hoop and I work on my shot. I feel better now. Players at two, maybe more easier for me.”

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Jul 112012
 

 

For a moment there, it looked as though the Atlanta Hawks were on the fast track to a massive overhaul.

Sending Joe Johnson to the Brooklyn Nets certainly wasn’t a bad decision, but it suggested that new general manager Danny Ferry preferred cap room to the kind of win-now zeal that can get teams’ finances in trouble.

Apparently, he’s not so committed to that cap room that he’d pass up an opportunity to significantly upgrade Atlanta’s rotation.

According to ESPN’s Brian Windhorst, he Hawks have reached an agreement with former Philadelphia 76er Lou Williams.

The importance of Williams’ acquisition shouldn’t be overstated.

He’s not big enough to be a full-time shooting guard, and he doesn’t defend or pass well enough to demand a starting position. Jeff Teague will almost certainly remain the starting point guard, and Joe Johnson’s replacement in the starting lineup remains uncertain.

That said, he’s an exceptional sixth man.

He averaged 14.9 points in just over 26 minutes per game, and he’s capable of scoring from virtually anywhere on the floor—even if not very efficiently.

Williams isn’t the purest of shooters, but he’s crafty with his pump-faking ability and excels at getting into the paint and drawing fouls.

At this point, the Hawks will need points any way they can get them and can’t afford to be too choosy.

Whatever difference Williams ultimately makes, there’s no question he puts Atlanta in a much better position to win.

Ferry came to the front office with a mandate to put the team in a position to make some moves down the road, but that’s clearly not his only priority.

He also has to ease the anxiety of guys like Josh Smith, who becomes a free agent after the upcoming season. The 26-year-old forward is a key piece to the Hawks’ future, but he needs to be reassured that there will in fact be a future for which he should hang around.

Adding Lou Williams alone don’t guarantee that, but it’s a sign of what this organization is willing to do. That’s good enough for now. 

Read more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

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Jul 102012
 

ESPN’s Brian Windhorst announced on Twitter today that the Atlanta Hawks had agreed to terms for signing free agent Lou Williams. According to SI.com, Williams signed a multi-year contract, but details have yet to be disclosed at this time.

Williams was a prized commodity in the free-agent market this summer. He finished last season leading the Philadelphia 76ers in scoring despite never starting a game and finished second in the NBA Sixth Man of the Year Award (per ESPN.com).

Williams’ career got off to a disappointing start when poor pre-draft workouts dropped him into the second round of the 2005 NBA draft. After being sent to the D-League, Williams was called back up to the 76ers to replace Allen Iverson. He soon became a consistent and occasionally explosive scorer (that could also run the point) for Philadelphia.

It’s unclear at this time if the Hawks plan on having Williams and Teague share the point guard position or if Teague has just been converted into trade bait.

One thing that is certain, however, is that the Hawks’ decision to hire Danny Ferry as their GM continues to look like it may be one of the best moves in the franchise’s history. It also seems that Ferry has no intentions of simply “punting” the 2012-2013 season while waiting for next summer’s free-agent market to open.

 

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Read more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

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Jul 102012
 

Recently hired general manager Danny Ferry has quickly left his mark on the Atlanta Hawks roster.

By agreeing to trade one of the team’s leading scorers from last season in Joe Johnson to the Brooklyn Nets, and former second overall draft choice Marvin Williams to the Utah Jazz, Ferry was able to shed approximately $90 million for the Hawks.

These moves mean that the team will now have money to spend going forward, but roster spots are available for emerging players in the meantime.

And with the team’s Summer League schedule set to begin this week, a number of young players will soon have the opportunity to earn their spot on the Hawks roster for the upcoming season.

This year’s draft picks, John Jenkins and Mike Scott, lead a group of 15 rookie and second-year players looking to prove themselves in Las Vegas, Nevada this summer.

Here is the Hawks Summer League roster and key storylines as the build up to the 2012-2013 season continues.

Begin Slideshow

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