Basketball Hawks Emerge As East Leaders

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Bench Warmer
The best record in the East does not belong to Cleveland, Boston or Orlando. Nor does an undefeated home record, nor the conference's highest scoring average, nor the coveted top spot in Marc Stein's Power Rankings this week.

All of those things belong to the Atlanta Hawks, who continued their surprising start by outlasting Portland in overtime, 99-95, on a night when it seemed little was going their way. The Hawks' offense was far short of its usual standard, the home crowd was AWOL, the team fell behind by a dozen in the second half, and a late gaffe nearly gave the game away after they had it won.

Atlanta prevailed anyway, in a contest that may have set a new league record for use of the word "grind" afterward.

"What a game, huh?" said Hawks coach Mike Woodson. "It says a whole lot about the guys in the locker room. We just held in there, kept grinding."

Befuddled by Portland's zone defense for most of the first three quarters, Atlanta fired blanks and struggled to get shots near the basket. In a 24-minute stretch from the late first quarter to the late third quarter, Atlanta mustered only 35 points and fell behind by a dozen before rallying behind their defense and the play of Joe Johnson.

"Normally, I'm happy when teams play zone because we have enough shooters," Mike Woodson said. "We had good looks but we couldn't knock them down."

Locked in a battle of low-key star guards, Johnson get the better of Brandon Roy, and 18 of those points came in the fourth quarter and overtime. Johnson appeared to ice the game with two free throws at the end of regulation that put the Hawks up by three with 4.1 seconds left, but the Hawks failed to foul twice -- first when Greg Oden caught the inbounds pass and again when Rudy Fernandez took two dribbles before launching a game-tying 3 over Al Horford to send the game to overtime.

Fortunately for Atlanta, Johnson took over in overtime, taking advantage of two factors that weighed heavily against Portland -- first, that it was their fifth road game in seven nights, and second, that he is bigger than Roy, Rudy Fernandez and Steve Blake, and one of those three had to defend him. Johnson shot over his defender for three jump-shot buckets in overtime to put the Hawks up by six with 1:42 left and all but seal the game.

"This road trip was very long," said Fernandez. "Our legs got tired tonight."

The Blazers were upset that three suspicious calls went Atlanta's way in the final minute of overtime to help seal the deal: a debatable out-of-bounds call on Blake, a mystery foul against Greg Oden on an offensive rebound, and an uncalled goaltend on a late Rudy Fernandez shot. That might have helped make the ending more interesting, especially if Atlanta's brain-lock on fouling when up by three stretched into overtime; nonetheless, the Hawks had established a big advantage by that point.

Instead, the Blazers should lament two other failings -- the inability to control their defensive board, and an offensive tailspin at the start of the fourth quarter. Normally one of the league's best rebounding teams, Portland allowed 15 offensive boards that led to 22 second-chance points for Atlanta. My score sheet had another three offensive boards that weren't credited to a Hawk but instead were swept under the rug in the team-rebound category, making for 18 misses regained by the Hawks.

"Second-chance points at the end [was] one of the key things that caused us to lose the game," said Blazers coach Nate McMillan. "We didn't finish plays by rebounding the ball."

The zone was partly to blame, as it's always harder to box out in that alignment, but weary legs may have been a bigger factor. Greg Oden in particular seemed slow to the ball, pulling down only seven boards in 34 minutes despite the torrent of missed shots coming from both sides.

The Blazers would have won anyway if the offense hadn't melted down late. Portland scored only 18 points in the fourth quarter, including three on the heave by Fernandez, and had only four in the first 4:45 of overtime until two more bombs by Fernandez made the final score closer. That's 22 points in 17 minutes, and one particular stretch will gall them: the first six minutes of the fourth.

Sporting a nine-point lead, the Blazers scored only one field goal in the first 6:12 of the quarter -- a dunk by Juwan Howard, believe it or not -- while committing three turnovers and missing eight other shots. Oden missed three close-range shots, but otherwise Portland struggled to get clean looks and settled for contested jumpers or, in one case, a rare three-point attempt by Andre Miller. By the time the run was over, the Hawks had tied the game at 72.

This was one spot where the Blazers really could have used Hawk-killer Travis Outlaw, who is out indefinitely with a broken bone in his foot. With Roy resting to start the fourth, Portland found itself short on shot-creators, and the Hawks took advantage. The Blazers will have to cope with this situation by using small lineups, as they did on Monday night, for the foreseeable future: With Nicolas Batum also injured for the next several weeks, Martell Webster is the only true small forward left on the roster.

For the home side, the one disappointment was how few people were there to see the dramatic win. Atlantans who stayed home to see Pau Gasol's "CSI: Miami" debut made a horrible mistake, as the few who showed up were treated to one of the most thrilling games of the season. One hopes more of them will show up on Wednesday, when Dwyane Wade and the Heat show up -- the announced crowd of 12,977 was pathetic enough for a game of this magnitude, but for much of the first half the arena appeared to have fewer than half that many people.

"We need the support," said Woodson. "Amazing things can happen when the house is filled."

And as for that top spot in the Power Rankings?

"Somebody mentioned that to me, in the pregame," said Woodson. "I don't even know what the Power Rankings are. We're just trying to stay at the top."

With more "grinds" like this one, they just might stick there for a while.
 
A lot of folks don't realize it, but night in night out Joe Johnson is one of the top 8 players in the NBA...Just my .02 cents worth.
 
This team as well as the Nuggets never get any credit, Pre season polls said Atl would be 5th and Nuggets 6th. Nuggets will be 2nd no lower than 3rd and I wouldnt be suprised if Hawks were 2nd but I can see them dropping as low as 4th but who knows if they keep this up there gunna be tough!
 
Atlanta is a good team, they've acquired some good players over the years. They're finally starting to get that chemistry going
 
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