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Wikipedia

Atlanta Hawks

The Atlanta Hawks are an American professional basketball team based in Atlanta. The Hawks compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the league's Eastern Conference Southeast Division. The team plays its home games at State Farm Arena.

Atlanta Hawks
2022–23 Atlanta Hawks season
ConferenceEastern
DivisionSoutheast
Founded1946
HistoryBuffalo Bisons
1946 (NBL)
Tri-Cities Blackhawks
1946–1949 (NBL)
1949–1951 (NBA)
Milwaukee Hawks
1951–1955
St. Louis Hawks
1955–1968
Atlanta Hawks
1968–present[1][2]
ArenaState Farm Arena
LocationAtlanta, Georgia
Team colorsTorch red, legacy yellow, infinity black, granite gray[3][4][5]
       
Main sponsorSharecare[6]
PresidentTravis Schlenk
General managerLandry Fields
Head coachNate McMillan
OwnershipTony Ressler (principal owner)[7]
Affiliation(s)College Park Skyhawks
Championships1 (1958)
Conference titles0
Division titles12 (1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1968, 1970, 1980, 1987, 1994, 2015, 2021)
Retired numbers6 (9, 21, 23, 44, 55, 59)
Websitewww.nba.com/hawks
Association
Icon
Statement

The team's origins can be traced to the establishment of the Buffalo Bisons in 1946 in Buffalo, New York, a member of the National Basketball League (NBL) owned by Ben Kerner and Leo Ferris.[8] After 38 days in Buffalo, the team moved to Moline, Illinois, where they were renamed the Tri-Cities Blackhawks.[9] In 1949, they joined the NBA as part of the merger between the NBL and the Basketball Association of America (BAA), and briefly had Red Auerbach as coach. In 1951, Kerner moved the team to Milwaukee, where they changed their name to the Milwaukee Hawks. Kerner and the team moved again in 1955 to St. Louis, where they won their only NBA Championship in 1958 and qualified to play in the NBA Finals in 1957, 1960 and 1961. The Hawks played the Boston Celtics in all four of their trips to the NBA Finals. The St. Louis Hawks moved to Atlanta in 1968, when Kerner sold the franchise to Thomas Cousins and former Georgia Governor Carl Sanders.[10][11]

The Hawks currently own the second-longest drought (behind the Sacramento Kings) of not winning an NBA championship at 63 seasons. The franchise's lone NBA championship, as well as all four NBA Finals appearances, occurred when the team was based in St. Louis. Meanwhile, they went 48 years without advancing past the second round of the playoffs in any format, until finally breaking through in 2015. However, the Hawks are one of only four NBA teams that have qualified to play in the NBA playoffs in 10 consecutive seasons in the 21st century. They achieved this feat between 2008 and 2017.

Franchise history

1946–1953: Buffalo, Tri-Cities and Milwaukee

 
Wharton Field House in Moline, Illinois

The origins of the Atlanta Hawks can be traced to the Buffalo Bisons franchise, which was founded in 1946. The Bisons were a member of the National Basketball League, and played their games at the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium. The club was organized by Leo Ferris and the Erie County American Legion and was coached by Nat Hickey.[12] Their first game – a 50–39 victory over the Syracuse Nationals – was played on November 8, 1946. On the team was William "Pop" Gates, who, along with William "Dolly" King, was one of the first two African-American players in the NBL.[13] The team, which needed to draw 3,600 fans per game to break even, struggled to draw 1,000 fans per game to the Auditorium. The franchise lasted only 38 days (13 games) in Buffalo when, on December 25, 1946, Leo Ferris, the team's general manager and co-owner, announced that the team would be moving to Moline, Illinois, which at that time was part of an area then known as the "Tri-Cities": Moline, Illinois, Rock Island, Illinois, and Davenport, Iowa.[8]

Upon relocation to Moline, the team was renamed the Tri-Cities Blackhawks, and played their home games at Wharton Field House, a 6,000-seat arena in Moline.[14] The team featured guard/forward and coach Deanglo King, and was owned by Leo Ferris and Ben Kerner.[9] Pop Gates remained on the Blackhawks roster, and finished second on the team in scoring behind future 1949 NBL MVP Don Otten. A Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame member, Gates helped to integrate the league and later became the first African-American coach in a major sports league, coaching Dayton in 1948.[15][16]

In 1949, the Blackhawks became one of the National Basketball Association's 17 original teams after a merger of the 12-year-old NBL and the three-year-old Basketball Association of America (BAA). They reached the playoffs in the NBA's inaugural year under the leadership of coach Red Auerbach. The following season, they drafted three-time All-American Bob Cousy, but they were unable to reach a deal and traded him to the Chicago Stags (who would later surrender him in a dispersal draft to the Boston Celtics when the Stags folded). The Blackhawks finished last in the Western Division and missed the playoffs. By then, it was obvious that the Tri-Cities area was too small to support an NBA team. After the season, the franchise relocated to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and became the Milwaukee Hawks.

1954–1965: St. Louis and The Bob Pettit era

 
Pettit in 1957

In 1954, the Hawks drafted Bob Pettit, a future NBA MVP. Despite this, the Hawks were one of the league's worst teams, and in 1955 the Hawks moved, this time to St. Louis, Missouri, Milwaukee's rival in the beer industry, and became the St. Louis Hawks.

In 1956, Bob Pettit captured the league's first official Most Valuable Player award, and the St. Louis Hawks drafted legendary Bill Russell in the first round (second overall pick). They immediately traded Russell to the Boston Celtics for Cliff Hagan and Ed Macauley, both Hall of Fame members.[17][18][19]

In 1957, the Hawks finished four games under .500. However, the Western Division was extremely weak that year; no team in the division had a winning record. They won the division title and a bye to the division finals after defeating the Minneapolis Lakers and Fort Wayne Pistons in one-game tiebreakers. They then defeated the Lakers in the division finals to advance to the Finals, losing to the Boston Celtics in a double-overtime thriller in game seven. In 1958, after tallying their first winning record, they again advanced to the Finals, where they avenged their defeat against the Celtics from the previous year, winning the series 4–2 and giving the Hawks their first and only NBA Championship. Bob Pettit scored 50 points in the final game of the series. The following season Bob Pettit led the Hawks to a Western Division-best 49–23 record, helping him capture his second MVP award.[20]

The Hawks remained one of the NBA's premier teams for the next decade. In 1960, under coach Ed Macauley, the team advanced to the Finals, but lost to the Celtics in another game seven thriller. The following year, with the acquisition of rookie Lenny Wilkens, the Hawks repeated their success, but met the Celtics in the 1961 NBA Finals again and lost in five games. They would remain contenders for most of the 1960s, advancing deep into the playoffs and also capturing several division titles.

1965–1975: Relocation to Atlanta

Despite the success, Kerner became weary of the Hawks' longtime home, Kiel Auditorium. The 33-year-old arena seated only 10,000 and was starting to show its age. The Hawks occasionally played at the larger St. Louis Arena, mostly against popular opponents, but Kerner was not willing to move the team there full-time because it had not been well-maintained since the 1940s. Even though it was being heavily renovated to accommodate the arrival of the NHL's Blues in 1967, Kerner was still not willing to move to the St. Louis Arena. He wanted a new arena to increase revenue. However, Kerner was rebuffed by the city on several occasions. In early 1967, Kerner briefly put the Hawks up for sale.[21] One of the bidders was a New Orleans group led by future talk show host Morton Downey Jr., but the deal collapsed and Kerner temporarily took his team off the market.[22][23]

Unable to resolve the arena situation, Kerner sold the Hawks to Atlanta real estate developer Tom Cousins and former Georgia governor Carl Sanders, who moved the team to Atlanta in 1968.[24] While a new arena was being constructed, the team spent its first four seasons playing at Alexander Memorial Coliseum on the campus of Georgia Tech, winning their first Division title in the 1969–70 season with a 48–34 (.585) record in the Western Division. Cousins' firm soon developed the Omni Coliseum, a 16,500-seat, state-of-the-art downtown Atlanta arena, for the Hawks and the expansion Atlanta Flames ice hockey franchise, which opened in 1972 as the first phase of a massive sports, office, hotel, and retail complex, most of which is now the CNN Center. Also in 1972, the Hawks debuted a new logo and new colors, trading the green and blue color scheme that the team had used for two years, in favor of white, gold, and red, the same colors the Flames used. The hawk head silhouette inside a circle remained as the team's logo, albeit simplified.

The years after the move showcased a talented Hawks team, including Pete Maravich and Lou Hudson. However, after this period of success, the team experienced some years of rebuilding. Despite appearing to be moving in the right direction when they ended up with the first and third picks overall in the 1975 NBA draft, the players drafted with those two picks, David Thompson of North Carolina State and Marvin Webster of Morgan State, both signed with the Denver Nuggets of the American Basketball Association (ABA) and never played for the Hawks.

Ted Turner's ownership

Cable network entrepreneur and Atlanta Braves owner Ted Turner bought the team in 1977 and hired Hubie Brown to become head coach.[25] The Hawks were the only NBA team in the Deep South, just as the Atlanta Braves were the only Major League Baseball team in the region for many years to come. Turner's ownership was instrumental in keeping both teams in the region. Coach Brown won coach of the year in 1978. In the 1979–80 season, the Hawks finished with a 50–32 record and won the Central Division. It was their first division title in the Central Division and second in the city of Atlanta. The next season, the Hawks got off to a 4–0 start, then lost 13 of the next 14 games and with 3 games left in the season, the Hawks fired head coach Hubie Brown en route to the team's 31–51 record.

1982–1994: The Dominique Wilkins era

In 1982, the franchise acquired superstar Dominique Wilkins (a University of Georgia alumni) and promoted Mike Fratello to head coach a year later.[26] Due to sagging attendance, 12 home games during the 1984–85 season were played at the Lakefront Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana. The New Orleans games were paid for by Barry Mendelson for $1.2 million with the Hawks going 6–6 in Louisiana. Dominique Wilkins won the Slam Dunk Contest in 1985 and 1990, engaging in an iconic rivalry with Michael Jordan. Spud Webb won the Slam Dunk Contest and Fratello won the Coach of the Year Award in 1986.

From 1985 to 1989, the Hawks were among the league's elite, winning 50 games or more each season. They won a division title in 1986–87 going 57–25 which was a franchise record that would last until the 2014–15 season. However, the team could not advance past the semifinals of the Eastern Conference playoffs, losing to the eventual Eastern Conference (and in some years, NBA) champions Boston and Detroit. The Hawks drafted Stacey Augmon with their ninth overall pick in the 1991 NBA draft, who would make the All-Rookie First Team. However, Wilkins had a season-ending injury in the middle of the season, and without him, the Hawks were unable to make it to the playoffs. In 1992, the Hawks acquired guard Mookie Blaylock from the New Jersey Nets; he would spend seven years of his career as a Hawk, leading them in career steals and three-point field goals while earning an All-Star appearance in 1994. After seasons of mediocrity, Lenny Wilkens was hired as head coach in 1993. In 1993–94, the Hawks won 57 games, tying a team record. They also won a fourth division title in Atlanta, and third in the Central Division. Coach Wilkens was named Coach of the Year for his work with the team. However, the team fell short again in the playoffs, losing to the fifth-seeded Indiana Pacers in the Eastern semis in six games. The season was also marred by the trading of Dominique Wilkins, who remains the franchise all-time leading scorer, to the Los Angeles Clippers for Danny Manning, who quickly left via free agency to the Phoenix Suns after the season ended. On March 6, 2015, Dominique Wilkins received a statue in front of Philips Arena.

1994–2005: Fluctuating times

 
Steve Smith was one of the Hawks' cornerstone players during the mid-to-late 1990s, helping lead Atlanta to three Semifinals appearances in the Eastern Conference

At the beginning of the 1994–95 season, the Hawks traded forward Kevin Willis to the Miami Heat for Steve Smith and Grant Long. During the season, coach Wilkens broke the record (previously held by coach Red Auerbach) for most victories by an NBA head coach with victory number 939. They ended up fifth in the Central Division with a 42–40 record, they would be swept by the Indiana Pacers in the first round of the playoffs. The Hawks finished the 1995–96 season with a 46–36 record, fourth in the Central Division. Midway through the season, they acquired Christian Laettner from the Minnesota Timberwolves; Laettner would get an All-Star appearance in 1997. They upset the third-seeded Pacers in the first round in five games, however lost in five games to the Orlando Magic in the semifinals.

Around this time, it was decided that the Omni should be replaced by a new arena. The Omni was designed with weathering steel that was intended to rust into a seal around the arena so it could last for decades. However, the designers and architects did not reckon on Atlanta's humid subtropical climate. As a result, it never stopped rusting, and looked somewhat dated despite being 25 years old. When Turner won an NHL franchise, the Atlanta Thrashers, one condition was that a new arena had to be in place before the new team took the ice for the first time, as The Omni was unusable even for temporary use. Eventually, it was decided that The Omni would be demolished and a new arena for the Hawks and the expansion NHL Thrashers would be built on the same area. Following the 1997 playoffs, the Hawks moved back to Georgia Tech's Alexander Memorial Coliseum, with the Georgia Dome used for larger-capacity games, until Philips Arena opened before the 1999–2000 season.

The Hawks had two 50+ win seasons in 1996–97 (56–26) and 1997–98 (50–32), with center Dikembe Mutombo winning defensive player of the year awards back to back. The Hawks defeated the Detroit Pistons in five games in the first round of the 1997 NBA playoffs, but lost in five games in the second round to the defending champs Chicago Bulls. Game 4, an 89–80 loss, would be the last game at The Omni. In 1997–98, forward Alan Henderson won Most Improved Player award. However, the Hawks would lose in four games in the first round of the playoffs to the Charlotte Hornets. The Hawks would end up with a 31-win campaign in the lockout-shortened 1998–99 season. In the first round they defeated the Pistons in five games again, but they could not advance past the second round of the playoffs, as they were swept by the eighth-seeded New York Knicks.

In the 1999–2000 season, their first season at Philips Arena, the Hawks traded Steve Smith to Portland for Isaiah Rider and Jim Jackson, and sent Mookie Blaylock and a first-round draft pick to the Golden State Warriors for Bimbo Coles and a first-round draft pick. Smith and Blaylock had been two of the Hawks' most popular players during the 1990s, and Smith had recently been awarded the J. Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award for his charitable endeavors, as well as being selected in the 1998 NBA All-Star Game. By contrast, Rider had a history of behavioral problems both on and off the court. Rider's troubled conduct continued after his arrival in Atlanta. Rider missed the first day of training camp and was late for two games. After reports that he smoked marijuana in an Orlando hotel room during a January road trip, the league demanded that he attend drug counseling, and fined him a total of $200,000 until he agreed to go. When he showed up late for a March game, the Hawks released him.[27] The Smith/Rider trade sent the Hawks into a downward spiral. After only missing the playoffs four times since 1977, they fell to seventh place in the Central Division with a 28–54 record; they would not return to the playoffs for eight years.

Point guard Jason Terry became the team's scoring leader during the 2000–01 season, leading them with 19.7 ppg. After the All-Star break, the Hawks traded Mutombo to the Philadelphia 76ers for Theo Ratliff, Toni Kukoč, and Nazr Mohammed. However, Ratliff was injured and did not play with the Hawks until next season. They ended the season with a 25–57 record. In 2001, the Hawks drafted Spanish star Pau Gasol 3rd, but his rights were ceded to the Memphis Grizzlies in a trade involving Shareef Abdur-Rahim. Abdur-Rahim became the team's scoring leader, and made his only All-Star appearance in 2002. The team ended up 33–49 for the 2001–02 season. The Hawks sent Kukoc to the Milwaukee Bucks for All-Star Glenn Robinson in 2002, Robinson lead the team with 20.8 ppg. But the Hawks still failed to make the playoffs for the 2002–03 season, finishing with a 35–47 record.

In February 2004, the Hawks had the distinction of having NBA All-Star Rasheed Wallace play one game for the team. Wallace was traded from Portland to the Hawks along with Wesley Person for Abdur-Rahim, Ratliff, and Dan Dickau.[28] In his lone game for the Hawks, Wallace scored 20 points, had 6 rebounds, 5 blocks, 2 assists and a steal in a loss to the New Jersey Nets.[29] After the game he was dealt to the Detroit Pistons in a three-way trade with the Boston Celtics. In turn, Detroit sent guard Bob Sura, center Željko Rebrača, and a first-round draft pick to the Hawks. The Boston Celtics also sent forward Chris Mills to Atlanta to complete the deal, but Mills never had a chance to play in a Hawks uniform. The Hawks ended their 2003–04 season with a 28–54 record.[30] In 2003, Atlanta hosted the All-Star game, the last an Eastern Conference team would host for nine years.

Atlanta Spirit LLC's ownership

On March 31, 2004, the team was sold to a group of executives by the name of Atlanta Spirit LLC[31] by Time Warner (who inherited the Hawks, Braves and Thrashers upon its merger with Turner Broadcasting in 1996). During the off-season, the Hawks sent Jason Terry, Alan Henderson, and a future first-round draft pick to the Dallas Mavericks for Antoine Walker and Tony Delk. After the change in ownership, the Hawks still struggled. In the 2004–05 season, the Hawks were the league's worst team with a mere 13 victories (five fewer than even the expansion Charlotte Bobcats and the struggling New Orleans Hornets). It was also the year Josh Smith won the 2005 Slam Dunk Contest.

2005–2012: Joe Johnson era

 
In 2005, the Hawks acquired 7x NBA All-Star Joe Johnson

In the summer of 2005, the Hawks completed a sign and trade deal with the Phoenix Suns to acquire Joe Johnson in return for Boris Diaw and two future 1st round picks.[32] They also signed Zaza Pachulia from the Milwaukee Bucks. These changes occurred after an apparent power struggle between the owners for nearly three weeks before the moves were made.[33]

Despite their league-worst record the previous season, the Hawks only landed the number two pick in the 2005 NBA draft lottery (the first pick went to the Milwaukee Bucks). With the second pick, the Hawks selected Marvin Williams of North Carolina. In the 2006 draft, the Hawks selected former Duke star Shelden Williams with the fifth overall pick.

Hope and redemption appeared to be on the horizon for the Hawks beginning in 2007. With the third pick of the NBA draft, they selected Al Horford.[34] Horford nearly averaged a double-double during his rookie season, and was the only unanimous selection to the All-Rookie First Team as well as being runner-up for Rookie of the Year honors. The season started with a victory against the Dallas Mavericks 101–94, sending hope to Hawks fans. The last time they won a season opener was in 1998, also the last time they made the playoffs. For the 2007–08 season, the Atlanta Hawks updated the logos and uniforms that saw navy blue become the primary color, with red relegated to trim color status. This marked the first time in team history that they had used navy blue as one of their colors.

A mid-season trade for point guard Mike Bibby boosted the Hawks' playoff hopes.[35] At the time of the trade the Hawks were 22–28; afterwards, they won 15 of their last 32 games to finish 37–45. Although they finished with a losing record, they managed to make the playoffs for the first time since 1999. In the playoffs the Hawks started to show improvement, pushing the eventual NBA Champions, Boston Celtics, to a Game 7 before losing in a blowout in Boston. The Hawks won all three games at Philips Arena, which hosted its first playoff games and earned its first sellout.

 
Uniforms from 2007 to 2015. In 2014, the shorts logo changed to the team's updated "Pac-Man" logo.

The 2008–09 season saw the Hawks win 47 games, their first winning season since 1999. With almost an intact lineup from the previous year, the Hawks manage to take a step forward in their development. Again they were pushed to a Game 7 in the first round but capitalized on home-court advantage earning their first playoff series win since 1999 against the Miami Heat. The Hawks were swept by the Cleveland Cavaliers 4–0 in the Conference Semifinals.

The 2009–10 season saw the Hawks improve further, winning 53 games, their first 50-win season since 1997–98. Al Horford earned his first All-Star selection, and along with Joe Johnson, this marked the first time since 1998 that the Hawks sent two players to the All-Star Game. The playoffs, however, were a reprise from the previous year. They won a hard-fought seven-game series against the Milwaukee Bucks, but they were swept by the Orlando Magic in the second round, with every game a one-sided contest. After the season, the Hawks dismissed head coach Mike Woodson and was replaced by Larry Drew.[36]

The Hawks took a step back in the 2010–11 season, finishing with 44 wins, even though Horford and Johnson were named to the All-Star team. In mid-season the Hawks traded Mike Bibby to the Washington Wizards for Kirk Hinrich, in hopes of bringing a defensive guard to replace the defensively liable Bibby. The Hawks finished the season losing their final six games. In the playoffs the Hawks beat the Magic in six games; however, they subsequently lost to the Chicago Bulls in the Eastern Conference Semifinals in six games.

In August 2011, it was announced that California-based businessman Alex Meruelo was buying a majority stake of the Hawks,[37][38] but in November he backed out of his intentions.[39]

In December 2011, the Hawks signed Tracy McGrady, Jerry Stackhouse, Jason Collins, Vladimir Radmanovic, Jannero Pargo, and Willie Green. They also picked up rookies Donald Sloan and 27-year-old Ivan Johnson. Sloan was waived a month later.

The Hawks finished the 2011–12 season with the fourth-best record in the Eastern Conference with 40 wins,[40] clinching the playoffs for the fifth straight season. However, the Hawks would be eliminated in the first round by the Boston Celtics in six games, ending the Hawks' three-year streak of advancing to the second round.

2012–2013: Roster turnover

On June 25, 2012, the Hawks hired San Antonio Spurs Vice President of Basketball Operations Danny Ferry as President of Basketball Operations and General Manager. During the 2012 NBA draft, the Hawks chose guard John Jenkins with the 23rd pick and power forward Mike Scott with the 43rd pick. On July 2, 2012, the Hawks traded leading scorer and All-Star Joe Johnson to the Brooklyn Nets for Jordan Farmar, Anthony Morrow, DeShawn Stevenson, Jordan Williams and Johan Petro, as well as a 2013 first-round pick. That same day, the Hawks traded small forward Marvin Williams to the Utah Jazz for point guard Devin Harris.

On July 10, 2012, the Hawks signed guard Lou Williams.

On January 21, 2013, following Lou Williams' season-ending injury in a game against the Brooklyn Nets,[41] the Hawks signed guard Jannero Pargo to a 10-day contract.[42]

On February 21, 2013, the Hawks traded Morrow to the Dallas Mavericks for Dahntay Jones. That same day, the Hawks traded a future 2nd-round pick to the Golden State Warriors in exchange for Jeremy Tyler, who was waived 15 days later.

The Hawks ended the 2012–13 season with a 44–38 record, making a playoff appearance for the sixth straight season. However, they were eliminated by the Indiana Pacers in six games in the first round. By the end of the off-season, every player involved in the Johnson and Williams trades just a year earlier were either waived or not brought back. The 2013 free agency period also marked the end of the Josh Smith era for Atlanta as he signed a contract with the Detroit Pistons. Longtime Hawk Zaza Pachulia moved on as well and signed with the Milwaukee Bucks. With half the roster gone, 2012–13 proved to be a roster turnover year, paving a path to success for Mike Budenholzer.

2013–2018: Mike Budenholzer era

On May 28, 2013, the Hawks hired San Antonio Spurs assistant coach Mike Budenholzer as the new head coach.

The Hawks entered the 2013 NBA draft with four draft picks. They drafted point guards Dennis Schröder (17th pick) and Shane Larkin (18th pick). They also chose point guard Raulzinho Neto with the 47th pick and small forward James Ennis with the 50th pick. However, the Hawks traded Larkin to the Dallas Mavericks for the draft rights of Mike Muscala and Lucas Nogueira (originally drafted by the Boston Celtics), as well as guard Jared Cunningham. They also traded Ennis's draft rights to the Miami Heat and Neto's to the Utah Jazz for a future second-round pick. The Hawks brought back Kyle Korver with a four-year, $24 million deal and signed power forward Paul Millsap to a two-year, $19 million deal.

On December 26, 2013, Horford tore his right pectoral muscle, and on December 30, the Hawks announced that he would undergo surgery the next day and would miss the rest of the season.[43] The Hawks finished 38–44, their first losing season since 2008. However, due to the weakness of the Eastern Conference, they finished as the 8th seed in the playoffs, and just like 2008, the Hawks would not go down easy, as they took the top-seeded Pacers to 7 games in before a 92–80 loss in Game 7.

On May 1, 2014, the Hawks unveiled a new secondary logo, which is a modernized version of the 1972–95 "Pac-Man" logo.[44] On July 15, 2014, they acquired defensive specialist Thabo Sefolosha from the Oklahoma City Thunder. On September 7, 2014, Bruce Levenson announced he would sell his share of the team, after self-reporting an inappropriate email he sent in 2012.[45] Some in the African American sports community have defended Levenson, namely Jason Whitlock[46] and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,[47] commenting that Levenson's email had no racist intent, but was motivated by valid business concerns.

On January 2, 2015, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that the remaining minority owners of Atlanta Hawks, LLC would join Levenson, effectively putting the entire franchise for sale.[48] The sale of the team as well as the operating rights to Philips Arena was handled by Goldman Sachs and Inner Circle Sports LLC. The NBA has stated that the Hawks would remain in Atlanta as a condition of their sale. Additionally, Atlanta mayor Kasim Reed stated that the city might offer incentives for a prospective owner to keep the Hawks in Atlanta for another 30 years.[49] On April 22, 2015, Atlanta Spirit reached a tentative agreement to sell the franchise to a group led by billionaire Tony Ressler (with Grant Hill, Steven Price, Rick Schnall, Sara Blakely, Jesse Itzler and Ressler's wife Jami Gertz holding minority stakes) for $850 million; the sale was approved by the NBA Board of Governors on June 24, 2015.[50][51][52]

On January 31, 2015, the Hawks became the first NBA team to go 17–0 in a calendar month by beating Portland.[53] The 2015 All-Star Game consisted of four Hawks All-Stars including Jeff Teague, Paul Millsap, Kyle Korver and Al Horford. On March 9, 2015, Kyle Korver and DeMarre Carroll each scored 20 points to help the Hawks become the first NBA team to 50 wins in 2014–15, scoring a season-high in routing the Sacramento Kings 130–105. The Hawks also set a franchise record by going 20-of-36 for three-pointers, breaking the mark of 19 set against the Dallas Mavericks on December 17, 1996.[54] On March 20, 2015, the Hawks clinched their first division title in over two decades and became the first team not based in Florida to win the NBA's Southeast Division;[55] one week later, with a win over Miami as well as a Cleveland loss to Brooklyn, the Hawks clinched the top seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs.[56] The team finished a franchise-best 60–22.[57]

In the Eastern Conference first round, the Hawks defeated the Brooklyn Nets in six games. The Hawks then advanced to the Eastern Conference Semifinals to face the Washington Wizards, also defeating them in six games. It was the first time they had advanced past the second round since 1967, their next-to-last year in St. Louis. The Hawks advanced to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in franchise history, when they lost in four games to the Cleveland Cavaliers.

On June 22, 2016, the Hawks traded Jeff Teague to Indiana in a three-team deal, that would give Utah's 12th pick in the 2016 NBA draft to the Hawks.[58] On July 8, 2016, Horford signed a four-year, $113 million contract with the Boston Celtics.[59][60][61] On July 12, 2016, Dwight Howard agreed to return home to Atlanta on a three-year, $70 million contract with the Hawks.[62] The Hawks finished the season with a 43–39 record, good enough for the fifth seed. They lost in the First Round to the Washington Wizards in six games.

On June 20, 2017, Howard was traded, along with the 31st overall pick in the 2017 NBA draft, to the Charlotte Hornets in exchange for Marco Bellinelli, Miles Plumlee, and the 41st overall pick in the same draft. Two days later, the Hawks selected Wake Forest power forward John Collins with the 19th overall pick.[63] On July 13, 2017, Paul Millsap left the Hawks by signing a multi-year deal with the Denver Nuggets.[64]

The loss of Howard and Millsap proved insurmountable for the rebuilding Hawks as they finished with a 24–58 record in the 2017–18 season, last in the Eastern Conference, and missed the playoffs for the first time since the 2006–07 season. On April 25, 2018, the Hawks and head coach Budenholzer had mutually decided to part ways.[65] Budenholzer later signed a deal to coach the Milwaukee Bucks.

2018–present: The Trae Young era

On May 11, 2018, Lloyd Pierce was hired by the Atlanta Hawks as head coach.[66][67] On June 21, the Hawks selected Luka Dončić with the third overall pick in the 2018 NBA draft and immediately traded him to the Dallas Mavericks for a 2019 protected first-round pick and the draft rights to Trae Young.[68] The Atlanta Hawks also selected Kevin Huerter with the 19th pick and Omari Spellman with the 30th pick of the 2018 NBA draft.[69] It was speculated that the Hawks general manager, Travis Schlenk, was following the same plan for a rebuild that he had success with in Golden State.[70]

In July 2018, the Hawks acquired Jeremy Lin,[71] and traded Dennis Schröder, after he demanded to be traded.[72] Carmelo Anthony was acquired in the trade involving Schröder,[73] but was later waived through a buyout.[74] During the off-season, the team signed Vince Carter and Alex Len among other players.[75][76] In February 2019, Lin was bought out, and eventually signed with the Toronto Raptors.[77][78]

In the 2019 NBA Draft, the Atlanta Hawks obtained DeAndre Hunter who was drafted with the 4th pick. They also used the 10th pick, that they acquired when they traded Luka Dončić for Trae Young, to acquire Cam Reddish.[79]

On January 23, 2020, Trae Young was selected to his first All Star Game. He was voted in as a starter and was the first Hawks player to start in an All Star Game since Dikembe Mutombo in 1998.[80] On February 4, 2020, the Hawks were involved in a four team trade in which they acquired Clint Capela and Nenê.[81] Capela was healing from a foot injury at the time and did not play for that entire season, which was cut short due the NBA's COVID-19 protocols.[82] Nenê was waived by the Hawks on February 6, 2020.[83][84] Carter retired after the season after spending a record 22 seasons in the NBA.

Trip to the Conference Finals

For the 2020–21 season, the Atlanta Hawks made a lot of moves to upgrade their roster. They signed two proven veteran players, Bogdan Bogdanovic at the wing position and Danilo Gallinari at the power forward spot. They also signed Rajon Rondo and Kris Dunn to supply added help in the backcourt.[85]

In March 2021, head coach Pierce was fired after the team's 14–20 start to the season and Nate McMillan was named interim head coach.[86] After McMillan took over head coaching duties, the Hawks immediately posted an eight-game win streak, putting them firmly in playoff contention.[87] Under coach McMillan, the Hawks went 27–11 in the regular season, and went on to finish the regular season with a 41–31 record.[88] This was enough for them to earn the fifth best record in the Eastern Conference and the title of Southeast division champions.[89] In the playoffs, they defeated the fourth-seeded Knicks before upsetting the top-seeded 76ers to reach the Eastern Conference Finals, only the second time in 54 years that the franchise has advanced past the second round. They lost to Budenholzer's Bucks in six games. This deep postseason run all but assured that McMillan would have the "interim" tag removed from his title; two days after the Hawks were eliminated, the Hawks announced that McMillan had agreed in principle to a four-year deal as full-time head coach;[90] the deal was finalized on July 7.[91] The 2020–21 Atlanta Hawks have been compared to the 1977–78 Seattle SuperSonics, in that both teams had poor records early on, made a coaching change, surged up the rankings to get better records, and made unexpected deep playoff runs.[92] On December 22, 2021, The Atlanta Hawks signed veteran Lance Stephenson to a 10-day contract.

Season-by-season record

List of the last five seasons completed by the Hawks. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Atlanta Hawks seasons.

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, W–L% = Winning percentage

Season GP W L W–L% Finish Playoffs
2017–18 82 24 58 .293 5th, Southeast Did not qualify
2018–19 82 29 53 .354 5th, Southeast Did not qualify
2019–20 67 20 47 .299 5th, Southeast Did not qualify
2020–21 72 41 31 .569 1st, Southeast Lost in Conference Finals, 2–4 (Bucks)
2021–22 82 43 39 .524 2nd, Southeast Lost in First Round, 1–4 (Heat)

Logos and uniforms

Throughout the club's history, the team has undergone several uniform changes. The Hawks logo has shifted between variations of a full-bodied hawk holding a basketball on its claws and a silhouette of a hawk head (more commonly known as the Pac-Man logo). Red and white have been a part of the team's palette for the most part since the 1950s, but the Hawks also used various accent colors as well. Red, blue and white served as the team's color scheme during the St. Louis and early Atlanta years (1955–70), and they wore red and white uniforms for much of their tenure in St. Louis. The team moved to Atlanta in 1968 and sported baby blue and white uniforms until 1970, when they went with a blue, green and white palette. Starting in 1972, the Hawks wore red and white uniforms with yellow accents, and added black as an accent color in 1992. The color switch coincided with the arrival of the NHL's Atlanta Flames, who wore the same colors and shared the same owner as the Hawks; the now-Calgary Flames even added black a few years after the Hawks made the same tweak. From 2007 to 2015, the Hawks returned to a red, blue and white scheme, adding silver as an accent color.[93]

On May 1, 2014, the club adopted a stylized version of the 'Pac-Man' logo that it used from 1972 to 1995.[44] The 'Pac-Man' logo (placed in a roundel) would become the team's primary logo after the conclusion of the team's 2014–15 season.[94] On June 24, 2015, the team unveiled its new home, road and alternate uniforms, along with its updated logos and colors. The new color scheme consisted of Torch Red, Volt Green and Georgia Granite Gray. The team also unveiled its new socks and shoes, in conjunction with the National Basketball Association (NBA)'s new contract for official game socks with Stance. Previously, official game socks were primarily either white or black, depending on a team's preference. The team wore white for home games, Georgia Granite Gray for road games, and Torch Red as an alternate uniform color.[95][96][97]

As part of the NBA's switch to Nike, the home and road designations were replaced by "Icon", "Association" and "Statement". The Hawks carried over their uniforms that they had worn the previous two seasons. The numbers on the white "Icon" uniform were changed to red with volt green trim; the other two uniforms remained the same.

On July 21, 2020, the Hawks unveiled new uniforms with a look similar to the set they wore in the mid-1970s. They also returned to the red, black and yellow color scheme they wore from 1992 to 2007, while adding gray as an accent color.[4]

City uniform

The Hawks also wore special edition "City" uniforms as part of its uniform deal with Nike. In the 2017–18 season, the Hawks wore black uniforms with volt green accents, featuring asymmetrical striping inspired from the team's early 1970s uniforms and futuristic fonts as a nod to the city's hip-hop music scene.[98] In the 2018–19 season, the Hawks wore white uniforms with black and metallic gold trim as a nod to the team's 50th anniversary in Atlanta.[99] During the 2019–20 season, the Hawks wore black uniforms with peach accents as a tribute to Atlanta's Peachtree Street.[100] For 2020–21, the Hawks' "City" uniform paid tribute to civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr., featuring a black base and gold accents.[101] The 2021–22 "City" uniform featured various elements from previous uniforms, including a yellow base from the 2004–07 alternates, the full-bodied hawk logo from the 1995–99 uniform, the "Hawks" script of the 1980s uniforms, the retro "Atlanta" script from the 1970–72 uniforms, and the block numbers and striping of the 1960s uniforms.[102] The Hawks then revisited the peachtree theme in their 2022–23 "City" uniform, once again wearing black uniforms but with white/peach gradients on the striping and numbers, and a script "Atlanta" in white.[103]

Rivalries

Boston Celtics

The Celtics–Hawks rivalry is a rivalry in the Eastern Conference of the National Basketball Association that has lasted for over five decades, although the two teams have played each other since the 1949–50 season, when the then-Tri-Cities Blackhawks joined the NBA as part of the National Basketball League and the Basketball Association of America merger. However, the Blackhawks could not field a truly competitive team until they moved to St. Louis as the St. Louis Hawks after a four-year stopover at Milwaukee. The two teams have faced each other eleven times in the NBA playoffs, four times in the NBA Finals, with the Celtics winning ten of twelve series against the Hawks, including three out of four NBA Finals.[104] While the Hawks have only defeated the Celtics twice out of eleven series in the NBA Playoffs, they still often managed to make their series with the Celtics memorable. The rivalry intensified in 2016 with Hawks All-Star center Al Horford spurning the team and joining the Celtics.

Orlando Magic

The Hawks and the Orlando Magic have an intense rivalry, mostly stemming from playoff competitions and the rising stardom of Dwight Howard and Josh Smith, both from the 2004 NBA draft and who were both raised in Georgia.

The two teams faced each other three times in the playoffs in 1996, 2010, and 2011 NBA playoffs. The Magic beat the Hawks in the second round of the 1996 playoffs in five games and swept their 2010 playoff matchup. The Hawks eliminated the Magic 4–2 in the first round of the 2011 playoffs.

Home arenas

Players

Current roster

Players Coaches
Pos. No. Name Height Weight DOB (YYYY-MM-DD) From
F 41 Bey, Saddiq 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1999-04-09 Villanova
G 13 Bogdanović, Bogdan 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 225 lb (102 kg) 1992-08-18 Serbia
C 15 Capela, Clint 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 256 lb (116 kg) 1994-05-18 Switzerland
F/C 20 Collins, John 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 226 lb (103 kg) 1997-09-23 Wake Forest
F/C 24 Fernando, Bruno 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 240 lb (109 kg) 1998-08-15 Maryland
G 2 Forrest, Trent (TW) 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 1998-06-12 Florida State
F 14 Griffin, AJ 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 222 lb (101 kg) 2003-08-25 Duke
G 3 Holiday, Aaron 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1996-09-30 UCLA
G/F 12 Hunter, De'Andre 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 221 lb (100 kg) 1997-12-02 Virginia
F 1 Johnson, Jalen 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 219 lb (99 kg) 2001-12-18 Duke
G 27 Krejčí, Vít 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 195 lb (88 kg) 2000-06-19 Czech Republic
G 25 Mathews, Garrison   6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1996-10-24 Lipscomb
G/F 22 Martin, Tyrese 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1999-03-07 Connecticut
G 5 Murray, Dejounte 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 1996-09-19 Washington
F/C 17 Okongwu, Onyeka 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 240 lb (109 kg) 2000-12-11 USC
G 4 Williams, Donovan (TW) 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 2001-09-06 UNLV
G 11 Young, Trae 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 164 lb (74 kg) 1998-09-19 Oklahoma
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • (GL) On assignment to G League affiliate
  • (TW) Two-way affiliate player
  •   Injured

Roster
Last transaction: February 9, 2023

Retained draft rights

The Hawks hold the draft rights to the following unsigned draft picks who have been playing outside the NBA. A drafted player, either an international draftee or a college draftee who is not signed by the team that drafted him, is allowed to sign with any non-NBA teams. In this case, the team retains the player's draft rights in the NBA until one year after the player's contract with the non-NBA team ends.[105] This list also includes draft rights that were acquired from trades with other teams.

Draft Round Pick Player Pos. Nationality Current team Note(s) Ref
2017 2 60 Alpha Kaba F/C   France Budućnost VOLI (Montenegro) [106]
2015 2 50 Marcus Eriksson G/F   Sweden Alba Berlin (Germany) [107]

Retired numbers

 
"Pistol" Pete Maravich played for Atlanta from 1970–74. His uniform No. 44 was retired by the team
Atlanta Hawks retired numbers
No. Player Position Tenure Retired
9 Bob Pettit F 1954–1965
21 Dominique Wilkins F 1982–1994 January 13, 2001
23 Lou Hudson F/G 1966–1977 March 1, 1977
44 Pete Maravich G 1970–1974 March 3, 2017
55 Dikembe Mutombo C 1996–2001 November 24, 2015
59 1 Kasim Reed Mayor of Atlanta 2010–2018 November 3, 2017
Ted Turner Ted Turner Owner 1977–2001 November 30, 2004

Notes:

  • 1 The Hawks retired number 59 jersey in honor of Reed who was the mayor of Atlanta from 2010 to 2018.[108][109]
  • The NBA retired Bill Russell's No. 6 for all its member teams on August 11, 2022.[110][111]

Non-issued numbers

  • 40Jason Collier, C, 2004–2005. Never officially retired, but taken out of circulation.

Basketball Hall of Famers

Atlanta Hawks Hall of Famers
Players
No. Name Position Tenure Inducted No. Name Position Tenure Inducted
20
50
Ed Macauley 1 C/F 1956–1959 1960 9 Bob Pettit[112] F/C 1954–1965 1971
6
16
17
Cliff Hagan F/G 1956–1966 1978 22 Slater Martin 2 G 1956–1960 1982
14 Bob Houbregs C/F 1953 1987 44 Pete Maravich[113] G 1970–1974 1987
Bobby McDermott G 1947–1948 1988 34 Clyde Lovellette C/F 1958–1962 1988
14
15
32
Lenny Wilkens 3 G 1960–1968 1989 42 Connie Hawkins F/C 1975–1976 1992
8 Walt Bellamy 4 C 1970–1974 1993 2 Moses Malone C/F 1988–1991 2001
21 Dominique Wilkins[114] F 1982–1994 2006 15
18
19
Richie Guerin 5 G 1963–1967
1968–1970
2013
55 Dikembe Mutombo[115] C 1996–2001 2015 14
31
Zelmo Beaty C 1962–1969 2016
1 Tracy McGrady G/F 2011–2012 2017[116] 10 Maurice Cheeks G 1991–1992 2018
15
11
Chuck Cooper F 1954–1956 2019 15 Sidney Moncrief G 1990–1991 2019
7 Toni Kukoč F 2001–2002 2021 23 Lou Hudson G/F 1966–1977 2022
Coaches
Name Position Tenure Inducted Name Position Tenure Inducted
Red Auerbach Head coach 1949–1950 1969 10 Red Holzman 6 Head coach 1953–1957 1986
4
6
33
Alex Hannum 7 Head coach 1957–1958 1998 Lenny Wilkens 3 Head coach 1993–2000 1998
Contributors
Name Position Tenure Inducted Name Position Tenure Inducted
Hubie Brown Head coach 1976–1981 2005 22
44
Rod Thorn G 1965–1967 2018
Cotton Fitzsimmons Head coach 1972–1976 2021

Notes:

  • 1 He also coached the team in 1958–1960.
  • 2 He also coached the team in 1957.
  • 3 In total, Wilkens was inducted into the Hall of Fame three times – as player, as coach and as a member of the 1992 Olympic team.
  • 4 In total, Bellamy was inducted into the Hall of Fame twice – as player and as a member of the 1960 Olympic team.
  • 5 He also coached the team in 1964–1972.
  • 6 He also played for the team in 1953–1954.
  • 7 He also played for the team in 1954–1956 and 1956–1957.

FIBA Hall of Famers

Atlanta Hawks Hall of Famers
Players
No. Name Position Tenure Inducted
7 Toni Kukoč F 2001–2002 2017
8 Alexander Volkov F/C 1989–1992 2020

Franchise leaders

Bold denotes still active with team.

Italic denotes still active but not with team.

Points scored (regular season) (as of the end of the 2021–22 season)[117]

Other statistics (regular season) (as of the end of the 2021–22 season)[117]

Most minutes played
Player Minutes
Dominique Wilkins 32,545
Bob Pettit 30,690
Lou Hudson 25,825
Bill Bridges 23,574
Josh Smith 23,078
Kevin Willis 22,588
Cliff Hagan 21,731
Tree Rollins 20,763
Joe Johnson 19,733
Lenny Wilkens 19,552
Most rebounds
Player Rebounds
Bob Pettit 12,849
Bill Bridges 8,656
Kevin Willis 7,332
Dominique Wilkins 6,119
Tree Rollins 5,994
Zelmo Beaty 5,622
Josh Smith 5,407
Al Horford 5,144
Cliff Hagan 5,116
Dan Roundfield 4,658
Most assists
Player Assists
Doc Rivers 3,866
Mookie Blaylock 3,764
Eddie Johnson 3,207
Lenny Wilkens 3,049
Jeff Teague 2,771
Joe Johnson 2,653
Trae Young 2,544
Bob Pettit 2,369
Dominique Wilkins 2,321
Cliff Hagan 2,242
Most steals
Player Steals
Mookie Blaylock 1,321
Dominique Wilkins 1,245
Doc Rivers 1,166
John Drew 859
Josh Smith 857
Eddie Johnson 741
Jeff Teague 632
Jason Terry 588
Kevin Willis 581
Stacey Augmon 570
Most three-pointers made
Player 3-pointers made
Mookie Blaylock 1050
Joe Johnson 908
Kyle Korver 818
Trae Young 730
Jason Terry 648
Steve Smith 549
Dominique Wilkins 500
Mike Bibby 475
Kent Bazemore 453
Jeff Teague 430

Coaches

Awards and accomplishments

Individual awards

All-NBA First Team

All-NBA Second Team

All-NBA Third Team

NBA All-Defensive First Team

NBA All-Defensive Second Team

NBA All-Rookie First Team

NBA All-Rookie Second Team

NBA All-Star Weekend

NBA All-Star Game selections

NBA All-Star Game head coaches

NBA All-Star Game MVP

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  97. ^ Whitaker, Lang (April 28, 2015). "Stance is now the official sock of the NBA". NBA.com. NBA Media Ventures, LLC. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  98. ^ "Nike NBA City Edition Uniform". Nike.com. Nike, Inc. December 27, 2017. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  99. ^ "City Edition uniforms: Eastern Conference teams in 2018-19". NBA.com. NBA Media Ventures, LLC. November 9, 2018. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
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  101. ^ "Atlanta Hawks Honor the Legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. with First-Ever MLK Nike City Edition Uniform". NBA.com. NBA Media Ventures, LLC. October 4, 2020. Retrieved October 8, 2020.
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External links

  • Official website  

atlanta, hawks, american, professional, basketball, team, based, atlanta, hawks, compete, national, basketball, association, member, league, eastern, conference, southeast, division, team, plays, home, games, state, farm, arena, 2022, seasonconferenceeasterndi. The Atlanta Hawks are an American professional basketball team based in Atlanta The Hawks compete in the National Basketball Association NBA as a member of the league s Eastern Conference Southeast Division The team plays its home games at State Farm Arena Atlanta Hawks2022 23 Atlanta Hawks seasonConferenceEasternDivisionSoutheastFounded1946HistoryBuffalo Bisons1946 NBL Tri Cities Blackhawks1946 1949 NBL 1949 1951 NBA Milwaukee Hawks1951 1955St Louis Hawks1955 1968Atlanta Hawks1968 present 1 2 ArenaState Farm ArenaLocationAtlanta GeorgiaTeam colorsTorch red legacy yellow infinity black granite gray 3 4 5 Main sponsorSharecare 6 PresidentTravis SchlenkGeneral managerLandry FieldsHead coachNate McMillanOwnershipTony Ressler principal owner 7 Affiliation s College Park SkyhawksChampionships1 1958 Conference titles0Division titles12 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1968 1970 1980 1987 1994 2015 2021 Retired numbers6 9 21 23 44 55 59 Websitewww wbr nba wbr com wbr hawksAssociationIconStatementThe team s origins can be traced to the establishment of the Buffalo Bisons in 1946 in Buffalo New York a member of the National Basketball League NBL owned by Ben Kerner and Leo Ferris 8 After 38 days in Buffalo the team moved to Moline Illinois where they were renamed the Tri Cities Blackhawks 9 In 1949 they joined the NBA as part of the merger between the NBL and the Basketball Association of America BAA and briefly had Red Auerbach as coach In 1951 Kerner moved the team to Milwaukee where they changed their name to the Milwaukee Hawks Kerner and the team moved again in 1955 to St Louis where they won their only NBA Championship in 1958 and qualified to play in the NBA Finals in 1957 1960 and 1961 The Hawks played the Boston Celtics in all four of their trips to the NBA Finals The St Louis Hawks moved to Atlanta in 1968 when Kerner sold the franchise to Thomas Cousins and former Georgia Governor Carl Sanders 10 11 The Hawks currently own the second longest drought behind the Sacramento Kings of not winning an NBA championship at 63 seasons The franchise s lone NBA championship as well as all four NBA Finals appearances occurred when the team was based in St Louis Meanwhile they went 48 years without advancing past the second round of the playoffs in any format until finally breaking through in 2015 However the Hawks are one of only four NBA teams that have qualified to play in the NBA playoffs in 10 consecutive seasons in the 21st century They achieved this feat between 2008 and 2017 Contents 1 Franchise history 1 1 1946 1953 Buffalo Tri Cities and Milwaukee 1 2 1954 1965 St Louis and The Bob Pettit era 1 3 1965 1975 Relocation to Atlanta 1 3 1 Ted Turner s ownership 1 4 1982 1994 The Dominique Wilkins era 1 5 1994 2005 Fluctuating times 1 5 1 Atlanta Spirit LLC s ownership 1 6 2005 2012 Joe Johnson era 1 7 2012 2013 Roster turnover 1 8 2013 2018 Mike Budenholzer era 1 9 2018 present The Trae Young era 1 9 1 Trip to the Conference Finals 2 Season by season record 3 Logos and uniforms 3 1 City uniform 4 Rivalries 4 1 Boston Celtics 4 2 Orlando Magic 5 Home arenas 6 Players 6 1 Current roster 6 2 Retained draft rights 6 3 Retired numbers 6 4 Non issued numbers 6 5 Basketball Hall of Famers 6 6 FIBA Hall of Famers 6 7 Franchise leaders 7 Coaches 8 Awards and accomplishments 8 1 Individual awards 8 2 NBA All Star Weekend 9 References 10 External linksFranchise history Edit1946 1953 Buffalo Tri Cities and Milwaukee Edit Wharton Field House in Moline Illinois The origins of the Atlanta Hawks can be traced to the Buffalo Bisons franchise which was founded in 1946 The Bisons were a member of the National Basketball League and played their games at the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium The club was organized by Leo Ferris and the Erie County American Legion and was coached by Nat Hickey 12 Their first game a 50 39 victory over the Syracuse Nationals was played on November 8 1946 On the team was William Pop Gates who along with William Dolly King was one of the first two African American players in the NBL 13 The team which needed to draw 3 600 fans per game to break even struggled to draw 1 000 fans per game to the Auditorium The franchise lasted only 38 days 13 games in Buffalo when on December 25 1946 Leo Ferris the team s general manager and co owner announced that the team would be moving to Moline Illinois which at that time was part of an area then known as the Tri Cities Moline Illinois Rock Island Illinois and Davenport Iowa 8 Upon relocation to Moline the team was renamed the Tri Cities Blackhawks and played their home games at Wharton Field House a 6 000 seat arena in Moline 14 The team featured guard forward and coach Deanglo King and was owned by Leo Ferris and Ben Kerner 9 Pop Gates remained on the Blackhawks roster and finished second on the team in scoring behind future 1949 NBL MVP Don Otten A Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame member Gates helped to integrate the league and later became the first African American coach in a major sports league coaching Dayton in 1948 15 16 In 1949 the Blackhawks became one of the National Basketball Association s 17 original teams after a merger of the 12 year old NBL and the three year old Basketball Association of America BAA They reached the playoffs in the NBA s inaugural year under the leadership of coach Red Auerbach The following season they drafted three time All American Bob Cousy but they were unable to reach a deal and traded him to the Chicago Stags who would later surrender him in a dispersal draft to the Boston Celtics when the Stags folded The Blackhawks finished last in the Western Division and missed the playoffs By then it was obvious that the Tri Cities area was too small to support an NBA team After the season the franchise relocated to Milwaukee Wisconsin and became the Milwaukee Hawks 1954 1965 St Louis and The Bob Pettit era Edit Pettit in 1957 In 1954 the Hawks drafted Bob Pettit a future NBA MVP Despite this the Hawks were one of the league s worst teams and in 1955 the Hawks moved this time to St Louis Missouri Milwaukee s rival in the beer industry and became the St Louis Hawks In 1956 Bob Pettit captured the league s first official Most Valuable Player award and the St Louis Hawks drafted legendary Bill Russell in the first round second overall pick They immediately traded Russell to the Boston Celtics for Cliff Hagan and Ed Macauley both Hall of Fame members 17 18 19 In 1957 the Hawks finished four games under 500 However the Western Division was extremely weak that year no team in the division had a winning record They won the division title and a bye to the division finals after defeating the Minneapolis Lakers and Fort Wayne Pistons in one game tiebreakers They then defeated the Lakers in the division finals to advance to the Finals losing to the Boston Celtics in a double overtime thriller in game seven In 1958 after tallying their first winning record they again advanced to the Finals where they avenged their defeat against the Celtics from the previous year winning the series 4 2 and giving the Hawks their first and only NBA Championship Bob Pettit scored 50 points in the final game of the series The following season Bob Pettit led the Hawks to a Western Division best 49 23 record helping him capture his second MVP award 20 The Hawks remained one of the NBA s premier teams for the next decade In 1960 under coach Ed Macauley the team advanced to the Finals but lost to the Celtics in another game seven thriller The following year with the acquisition of rookie Lenny Wilkens the Hawks repeated their success but met the Celtics in the 1961 NBA Finals again and lost in five games They would remain contenders for most of the 1960s advancing deep into the playoffs and also capturing several division titles 1965 1975 Relocation to Atlanta Edit Despite the success Kerner became weary of the Hawks longtime home Kiel Auditorium The 33 year old arena seated only 10 000 and was starting to show its age The Hawks occasionally played at the larger St Louis Arena mostly against popular opponents but Kerner was not willing to move the team there full time because it had not been well maintained since the 1940s Even though it was being heavily renovated to accommodate the arrival of the NHL s Blues in 1967 Kerner was still not willing to move to the St Louis Arena He wanted a new arena to increase revenue However Kerner was rebuffed by the city on several occasions In early 1967 Kerner briefly put the Hawks up for sale 21 One of the bidders was a New Orleans group led by future talk show host Morton Downey Jr but the deal collapsed and Kerner temporarily took his team off the market 22 23 Unable to resolve the arena situation Kerner sold the Hawks to Atlanta real estate developer Tom Cousins and former Georgia governor Carl Sanders who moved the team to Atlanta in 1968 24 While a new arena was being constructed the team spent its first four seasons playing at Alexander Memorial Coliseum on the campus of Georgia Tech winning their first Division title in the 1969 70 season with a 48 34 585 record in the Western Division Cousins firm soon developed the Omni Coliseum a 16 500 seat state of the art downtown Atlanta arena for the Hawks and the expansion Atlanta Flames ice hockey franchise which opened in 1972 as the first phase of a massive sports office hotel and retail complex most of which is now the CNN Center Also in 1972 the Hawks debuted a new logo and new colors trading the green and blue color scheme that the team had used for two years in favor of white gold and red the same colors the Flames used The hawk head silhouette inside a circle remained as the team s logo albeit simplified The years after the move showcased a talented Hawks team including Pete Maravich and Lou Hudson However after this period of success the team experienced some years of rebuilding Despite appearing to be moving in the right direction when they ended up with the first and third picks overall in the 1975 NBA draft the players drafted with those two picks David Thompson of North Carolina State and Marvin Webster of Morgan State both signed with the Denver Nuggets of the American Basketball Association ABA and never played for the Hawks Ted Turner s ownership Edit Cable network entrepreneur and Atlanta Braves owner Ted Turner bought the team in 1977 and hired Hubie Brown to become head coach 25 The Hawks were the only NBA team in the Deep South just as the Atlanta Braves were the only Major League Baseball team in the region for many years to come Turner s ownership was instrumental in keeping both teams in the region Coach Brown won coach of the year in 1978 In the 1979 80 season the Hawks finished with a 50 32 record and won the Central Division It was their first division title in the Central Division and second in the city of Atlanta The next season the Hawks got off to a 4 0 start then lost 13 of the next 14 games and with 3 games left in the season the Hawks fired head coach Hubie Brown en route to the team s 31 51 record 1982 1994 The Dominique Wilkins era Edit Dominique Wilkins In 1982 the franchise acquired superstar Dominique Wilkins a University of Georgia alumni and promoted Mike Fratello to head coach a year later 26 Due to sagging attendance 12 home games during the 1984 85 season were played at the Lakefront Arena in New Orleans Louisiana The New Orleans games were paid for by Barry Mendelson for 1 2 million with the Hawks going 6 6 in Louisiana Dominique Wilkins won the Slam Dunk Contest in 1985 and 1990 engaging in an iconic rivalry with Michael Jordan Spud Webb won the Slam Dunk Contest and Fratello won the Coach of the Year Award in 1986 From 1985 to 1989 the Hawks were among the league s elite winning 50 games or more each season They won a division title in 1986 87 going 57 25 which was a franchise record that would last until the 2014 15 season However the team could not advance past the semifinals of the Eastern Conference playoffs losing to the eventual Eastern Conference and in some years NBA champions Boston and Detroit The Hawks drafted Stacey Augmon with their ninth overall pick in the 1991 NBA draft who would make the All Rookie First Team However Wilkins had a season ending injury in the middle of the season and without him the Hawks were unable to make it to the playoffs In 1992 the Hawks acquired guard Mookie Blaylock from the New Jersey Nets he would spend seven years of his career as a Hawk leading them in career steals and three point field goals while earning an All Star appearance in 1994 After seasons of mediocrity Lenny Wilkens was hired as head coach in 1993 In 1993 94 the Hawks won 57 games tying a team record They also won a fourth division title in Atlanta and third in the Central Division Coach Wilkens was named Coach of the Year for his work with the team However the team fell short again in the playoffs losing to the fifth seeded Indiana Pacers in the Eastern semis in six games The season was also marred by the trading of Dominique Wilkins who remains the franchise all time leading scorer to the Los Angeles Clippers for Danny Manning who quickly left via free agency to the Phoenix Suns after the season ended On March 6 2015 Dominique Wilkins received a statue in front of Philips Arena 1994 2005 Fluctuating times Edit Steve Smith was one of the Hawks cornerstone players during the mid to late 1990s helping lead Atlanta to three Semifinals appearances in the Eastern Conference At the beginning of the 1994 95 season the Hawks traded forward Kevin Willis to the Miami Heat for Steve Smith and Grant Long During the season coach Wilkens broke the record previously held by coach Red Auerbach for most victories by an NBA head coach with victory number 939 They ended up fifth in the Central Division with a 42 40 record they would be swept by the Indiana Pacers in the first round of the playoffs The Hawks finished the 1995 96 season with a 46 36 record fourth in the Central Division Midway through the season they acquired Christian Laettner from the Minnesota Timberwolves Laettner would get an All Star appearance in 1997 They upset the third seeded Pacers in the first round in five games however lost in five games to the Orlando Magic in the semifinals Around this time it was decided that the Omni should be replaced by a new arena The Omni was designed with weathering steel that was intended to rust into a seal around the arena so it could last for decades However the designers and architects did not reckon on Atlanta s humid subtropical climate As a result it never stopped rusting and looked somewhat dated despite being 25 years old When Turner won an NHL franchise the Atlanta Thrashers one condition was that a new arena had to be in place before the new team took the ice for the first time as The Omni was unusable even for temporary use Eventually it was decided that The Omni would be demolished and a new arena for the Hawks and the expansion NHL Thrashers would be built on the same area Following the 1997 playoffs the Hawks moved back to Georgia Tech s Alexander Memorial Coliseum with the Georgia Dome used for larger capacity games until Philips Arena opened before the 1999 2000 season The Hawks had two 50 win seasons in 1996 97 56 26 and 1997 98 50 32 with center Dikembe Mutombo winning defensive player of the year awards back to back The Hawks defeated the Detroit Pistons in five games in the first round of the 1997 NBA playoffs but lost in five games in the second round to the defending champs Chicago Bulls Game 4 an 89 80 loss would be the last game at The Omni In 1997 98 forward Alan Henderson won Most Improved Player award However the Hawks would lose in four games in the first round of the playoffs to the Charlotte Hornets The Hawks would end up with a 31 win campaign in the lockout shortened 1998 99 season In the first round they defeated the Pistons in five games again but they could not advance past the second round of the playoffs as they were swept by the eighth seeded New York Knicks In the 1999 2000 season their first season at Philips Arena the Hawks traded Steve Smith to Portland for Isaiah Rider and Jim Jackson and sent Mookie Blaylock and a first round draft pick to the Golden State Warriors for Bimbo Coles and a first round draft pick Smith and Blaylock had been two of the Hawks most popular players during the 1990s and Smith had recently been awarded the J Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award for his charitable endeavors as well as being selected in the 1998 NBA All Star Game By contrast Rider had a history of behavioral problems both on and off the court Rider s troubled conduct continued after his arrival in Atlanta Rider missed the first day of training camp and was late for two games After reports that he smoked marijuana in an Orlando hotel room during a January road trip the league demanded that he attend drug counseling and fined him a total of 200 000 until he agreed to go When he showed up late for a March game the Hawks released him 27 The Smith Rider trade sent the Hawks into a downward spiral After only missing the playoffs four times since 1977 they fell to seventh place in the Central Division with a 28 54 record they would not return to the playoffs for eight years Point guard Jason Terry became the team s scoring leader during the 2000 01 season leading them with 19 7 ppg After the All Star break the Hawks traded Mutombo to the Philadelphia 76ers for Theo Ratliff Toni Kukoc and Nazr Mohammed However Ratliff was injured and did not play with the Hawks until next season They ended the season with a 25 57 record In 2001 the Hawks drafted Spanish star Pau Gasol 3rd but his rights were ceded to the Memphis Grizzlies in a trade involving Shareef Abdur Rahim Abdur Rahim became the team s scoring leader and made his only All Star appearance in 2002 The team ended up 33 49 for the 2001 02 season The Hawks sent Kukoc to the Milwaukee Bucks for All Star Glenn Robinson in 2002 Robinson lead the team with 20 8 ppg But the Hawks still failed to make the playoffs for the 2002 03 season finishing with a 35 47 record In February 2004 the Hawks had the distinction of having NBA All Star Rasheed Wallace play one game for the team Wallace was traded from Portland to the Hawks along with Wesley Person for Abdur Rahim Ratliff and Dan Dickau 28 In his lone game for the Hawks Wallace scored 20 points had 6 rebounds 5 blocks 2 assists and a steal in a loss to the New Jersey Nets 29 After the game he was dealt to the Detroit Pistons in a three way trade with the Boston Celtics In turn Detroit sent guard Bob Sura center Zeljko Rebraca and a first round draft pick to the Hawks The Boston Celtics also sent forward Chris Mills to Atlanta to complete the deal but Mills never had a chance to play in a Hawks uniform The Hawks ended their 2003 04 season with a 28 54 record 30 In 2003 Atlanta hosted the All Star game the last an Eastern Conference team would host for nine years Atlanta Spirit LLC s ownership Edit On March 31 2004 the team was sold to a group of executives by the name of Atlanta Spirit LLC 31 by Time Warner who inherited the Hawks Braves and Thrashers upon its merger with Turner Broadcasting in 1996 During the off season the Hawks sent Jason Terry Alan Henderson and a future first round draft pick to the Dallas Mavericks for Antoine Walker and Tony Delk After the change in ownership the Hawks still struggled In the 2004 05 season the Hawks were the league s worst team with a mere 13 victories five fewer than even the expansion Charlotte Bobcats and the struggling New Orleans Hornets It was also the year Josh Smith won the 2005 Slam Dunk Contest 2005 2012 Joe Johnson era Edit In 2005 the Hawks acquired 7x NBA All Star Joe Johnson In the summer of 2005 the Hawks completed a sign and trade deal with the Phoenix Suns to acquire Joe Johnson in return for Boris Diaw and two future 1st round picks 32 They also signed Zaza Pachulia from the Milwaukee Bucks These changes occurred after an apparent power struggle between the owners for nearly three weeks before the moves were made 33 Despite their league worst record the previous season the Hawks only landed the number two pick in the 2005 NBA draft lottery the first pick went to the Milwaukee Bucks With the second pick the Hawks selected Marvin Williams of North Carolina In the 2006 draft the Hawks selected former Duke star Shelden Williams with the fifth overall pick Hope and redemption appeared to be on the horizon for the Hawks beginning in 2007 With the third pick of the NBA draft they selected Al Horford 34 Horford nearly averaged a double double during his rookie season and was the only unanimous selection to the All Rookie First Team as well as being runner up for Rookie of the Year honors The season started with a victory against the Dallas Mavericks 101 94 sending hope to Hawks fans The last time they won a season opener was in 1998 also the last time they made the playoffs For the 2007 08 season the Atlanta Hawks updated the logos and uniforms that saw navy blue become the primary color with red relegated to trim color status This marked the first time in team history that they had used navy blue as one of their colors A mid season trade for point guard Mike Bibby boosted the Hawks playoff hopes 35 At the time of the trade the Hawks were 22 28 afterwards they won 15 of their last 32 games to finish 37 45 Although they finished with a losing record they managed to make the playoffs for the first time since 1999 In the playoffs the Hawks started to show improvement pushing the eventual NBA Champions Boston Celtics to a Game 7 before losing in a blowout in Boston The Hawks won all three games at Philips Arena which hosted its first playoff games and earned its first sellout Uniforms from 2007 to 2015 In 2014 the shorts logo changed to the team s updated Pac Man logo The 2008 09 season saw the Hawks win 47 games their first winning season since 1999 With almost an intact lineup from the previous year the Hawks manage to take a step forward in their development Again they were pushed to a Game 7 in the first round but capitalized on home court advantage earning their first playoff series win since 1999 against the Miami Heat The Hawks were swept by the Cleveland Cavaliers 4 0 in the Conference Semifinals The 2009 10 season saw the Hawks improve further winning 53 games their first 50 win season since 1997 98 Al Horford earned his first All Star selection and along with Joe Johnson this marked the first time since 1998 that the Hawks sent two players to the All Star Game The playoffs however were a reprise from the previous year They won a hard fought seven game series against the Milwaukee Bucks but they were swept by the Orlando Magic in the second round with every game a one sided contest After the season the Hawks dismissed head coach Mike Woodson and was replaced by Larry Drew 36 The Hawks took a step back in the 2010 11 season finishing with 44 wins even though Horford and Johnson were named to the All Star team In mid season the Hawks traded Mike Bibby to the Washington Wizards for Kirk Hinrich in hopes of bringing a defensive guard to replace the defensively liable Bibby The Hawks finished the season losing their final six games In the playoffs the Hawks beat the Magic in six games however they subsequently lost to the Chicago Bulls in the Eastern Conference Semifinals in six games In August 2011 it was announced that California based businessman Alex Meruelo was buying a majority stake of the Hawks 37 38 but in November he backed out of his intentions 39 In December 2011 the Hawks signed Tracy McGrady Jerry Stackhouse Jason Collins Vladimir Radmanovic Jannero Pargo and Willie Green They also picked up rookies Donald Sloan and 27 year old Ivan Johnson Sloan was waived a month later The Hawks finished the 2011 12 season with the fourth best record in the Eastern Conference with 40 wins 40 clinching the playoffs for the fifth straight season However the Hawks would be eliminated in the first round by the Boston Celtics in six games ending the Hawks three year streak of advancing to the second round 2012 2013 Roster turnover Edit On June 25 2012 the Hawks hired San Antonio Spurs Vice President of Basketball Operations Danny Ferry as President of Basketball Operations and General Manager During the 2012 NBA draft the Hawks chose guard John Jenkins with the 23rd pick and power forward Mike Scott with the 43rd pick On July 2 2012 the Hawks traded leading scorer and All Star Joe Johnson to the Brooklyn Nets for Jordan Farmar Anthony Morrow DeShawn Stevenson Jordan Williams and Johan Petro as well as a 2013 first round pick That same day the Hawks traded small forward Marvin Williams to the Utah Jazz for point guard Devin Harris On July 10 2012 the Hawks signed guard Lou Williams On January 21 2013 following Lou Williams season ending injury in a game against the Brooklyn Nets 41 the Hawks signed guard Jannero Pargo to a 10 day contract 42 On February 21 2013 the Hawks traded Morrow to the Dallas Mavericks for Dahntay Jones That same day the Hawks traded a future 2nd round pick to the Golden State Warriors in exchange for Jeremy Tyler who was waived 15 days later The Hawks ended the 2012 13 season with a 44 38 record making a playoff appearance for the sixth straight season However they were eliminated by the Indiana Pacers in six games in the first round By the end of the off season every player involved in the Johnson and Williams trades just a year earlier were either waived or not brought back The 2013 free agency period also marked the end of the Josh Smith era for Atlanta as he signed a contract with the Detroit Pistons Longtime Hawk Zaza Pachulia moved on as well and signed with the Milwaukee Bucks With half the roster gone 2012 13 proved to be a roster turnover year paving a path to success for Mike Budenholzer 2013 2018 Mike Budenholzer era Edit On May 28 2013 the Hawks hired San Antonio Spurs assistant coach Mike Budenholzer as the new head coach The Hawks entered the 2013 NBA draft with four draft picks They drafted point guards Dennis Schroder 17th pick and Shane Larkin 18th pick They also chose point guard Raulzinho Neto with the 47th pick and small forward James Ennis with the 50th pick However the Hawks traded Larkin to the Dallas Mavericks for the draft rights of Mike Muscala and Lucas Nogueira originally drafted by the Boston Celtics as well as guard Jared Cunningham They also traded Ennis s draft rights to the Miami Heat and Neto s to the Utah Jazz for a future second round pick The Hawks brought back Kyle Korver with a four year 24 million deal and signed power forward Paul Millsap to a two year 19 million deal On December 26 2013 Horford tore his right pectoral muscle and on December 30 the Hawks announced that he would undergo surgery the next day and would miss the rest of the season 43 The Hawks finished 38 44 their first losing season since 2008 However due to the weakness of the Eastern Conference they finished as the 8th seed in the playoffs and just like 2008 the Hawks would not go down easy as they took the top seeded Pacers to 7 games in before a 92 80 loss in Game 7 On May 1 2014 the Hawks unveiled a new secondary logo which is a modernized version of the 1972 95 Pac Man logo 44 On July 15 2014 they acquired defensive specialist Thabo Sefolosha from the Oklahoma City Thunder On September 7 2014 Bruce Levenson announced he would sell his share of the team after self reporting an inappropriate email he sent in 2012 45 Some in the African American sports community have defended Levenson namely Jason Whitlock 46 and Kareem Abdul Jabbar 47 commenting that Levenson s email had no racist intent but was motivated by valid business concerns On January 2 2015 The Atlanta Journal Constitution reported that the remaining minority owners of Atlanta Hawks LLC would join Levenson effectively putting the entire franchise for sale 48 The sale of the team as well as the operating rights to Philips Arena was handled by Goldman Sachs and Inner Circle Sports LLC The NBA has stated that the Hawks would remain in Atlanta as a condition of their sale Additionally Atlanta mayor Kasim Reed stated that the city might offer incentives for a prospective owner to keep the Hawks in Atlanta for another 30 years 49 On April 22 2015 Atlanta Spirit reached a tentative agreement to sell the franchise to a group led by billionaire Tony Ressler with Grant Hill Steven Price Rick Schnall Sara Blakely Jesse Itzler and Ressler s wife Jami Gertz holding minority stakes for 850 million the sale was approved by the NBA Board of Governors on June 24 2015 50 51 52 On January 31 2015 the Hawks became the first NBA team to go 17 0 in a calendar month by beating Portland 53 The 2015 All Star Game consisted of four Hawks All Stars including Jeff Teague Paul Millsap Kyle Korver and Al Horford On March 9 2015 Kyle Korver and DeMarre Carroll each scored 20 points to help the Hawks become the first NBA team to 50 wins in 2014 15 scoring a season high in routing the Sacramento Kings 130 105 The Hawks also set a franchise record by going 20 of 36 for three pointers breaking the mark of 19 set against the Dallas Mavericks on December 17 1996 54 On March 20 2015 the Hawks clinched their first division title in over two decades and became the first team not based in Florida to win the NBA s Southeast Division 55 one week later with a win over Miami as well as a Cleveland loss to Brooklyn the Hawks clinched the top seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs 56 The team finished a franchise best 60 22 57 In the Eastern Conference first round the Hawks defeated the Brooklyn Nets in six games The Hawks then advanced to the Eastern Conference Semifinals to face the Washington Wizards also defeating them in six games It was the first time they had advanced past the second round since 1967 their next to last year in St Louis The Hawks advanced to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in franchise history when they lost in four games to the Cleveland Cavaliers On June 22 2016 the Hawks traded Jeff Teague to Indiana in a three team deal that would give Utah s 12th pick in the 2016 NBA draft to the Hawks 58 On July 8 2016 Horford signed a four year 113 million contract with the Boston Celtics 59 60 61 On July 12 2016 Dwight Howard agreed to return home to Atlanta on a three year 70 million contract with the Hawks 62 The Hawks finished the season with a 43 39 record good enough for the fifth seed They lost in the First Round to the Washington Wizards in six games On June 20 2017 Howard was traded along with the 31st overall pick in the 2017 NBA draft to the Charlotte Hornets in exchange for Marco Bellinelli Miles Plumlee and the 41st overall pick in the same draft Two days later the Hawks selected Wake Forest power forward John Collins with the 19th overall pick 63 On July 13 2017 Paul Millsap left the Hawks by signing a multi year deal with the Denver Nuggets 64 The loss of Howard and Millsap proved insurmountable for the rebuilding Hawks as they finished with a 24 58 record in the 2017 18 season last in the Eastern Conference and missed the playoffs for the first time since the 2006 07 season On April 25 2018 the Hawks and head coach Budenholzer had mutually decided to part ways 65 Budenholzer later signed a deal to coach the Milwaukee Bucks 2018 present The Trae Young era Edit Trae Young On May 11 2018 Lloyd Pierce was hired by the Atlanta Hawks as head coach 66 67 On June 21 the Hawks selected Luka Doncic with the third overall pick in the 2018 NBA draft and immediately traded him to the Dallas Mavericks for a 2019 protected first round pick and the draft rights to Trae Young 68 The Atlanta Hawks also selected Kevin Huerter with the 19th pick and Omari Spellman with the 30th pick of the 2018 NBA draft 69 It was speculated that the Hawks general manager Travis Schlenk was following the same plan for a rebuild that he had success with in Golden State 70 In July 2018 the Hawks acquired Jeremy Lin 71 and traded Dennis Schroder after he demanded to be traded 72 Carmelo Anthony was acquired in the trade involving Schroder 73 but was later waived through a buyout 74 During the off season the team signed Vince Carter and Alex Len among other players 75 76 In February 2019 Lin was bought out and eventually signed with the Toronto Raptors 77 78 In the 2019 NBA Draft the Atlanta Hawks obtained DeAndre Hunter who was drafted with the 4th pick They also used the 10th pick that they acquired when they traded Luka Doncic for Trae Young to acquire Cam Reddish 79 On January 23 2020 Trae Young was selected to his first All Star Game He was voted in as a starter and was the first Hawks player to start in an All Star Game since Dikembe Mutombo in 1998 80 On February 4 2020 the Hawks were involved in a four team trade in which they acquired Clint Capela and Nene 81 Capela was healing from a foot injury at the time and did not play for that entire season which was cut short due the NBA s COVID 19 protocols 82 Nene was waived by the Hawks on February 6 2020 83 84 Carter retired after the season after spending a record 22 seasons in the NBA Trip to the Conference Finals Edit For the 2020 21 season the Atlanta Hawks made a lot of moves to upgrade their roster They signed two proven veteran players Bogdan Bogdanovic at the wing position and Danilo Gallinari at the power forward spot They also signed Rajon Rondo and Kris Dunn to supply added help in the backcourt 85 In March 2021 head coach Pierce was fired after the team s 14 20 start to the season and Nate McMillan was named interim head coach 86 After McMillan took over head coaching duties the Hawks immediately posted an eight game win streak putting them firmly in playoff contention 87 Under coach McMillan the Hawks went 27 11 in the regular season and went on to finish the regular season with a 41 31 record 88 This was enough for them to earn the fifth best record in the Eastern Conference and the title of Southeast division champions 89 In the playoffs they defeated the fourth seeded Knicks before upsetting the top seeded 76ers to reach the Eastern Conference Finals only the second time in 54 years that the franchise has advanced past the second round They lost to Budenholzer s Bucks in six games This deep postseason run all but assured that McMillan would have the interim tag removed from his title two days after the Hawks were eliminated the Hawks announced that McMillan had agreed in principle to a four year deal as full time head coach 90 the deal was finalized on July 7 91 The 2020 21 Atlanta Hawks have been compared to the 1977 78 Seattle SuperSonics in that both teams had poor records early on made a coaching change surged up the rankings to get better records and made unexpected deep playoff runs 92 On December 22 2021 The Atlanta Hawks signed veteran Lance Stephenson to a 10 day contract Season by season record EditList of the last five seasons completed by the Hawks For the full season by season history see List of Atlanta Hawks seasons Note GP Games played W Wins L Losses W L Winning percentage Season GP W L W L Finish Playoffs2017 18 82 24 58 293 5th Southeast Did not qualify2018 19 82 29 53 354 5th Southeast Did not qualify2019 20 67 20 47 299 5th Southeast Did not qualify2020 21 72 41 31 569 1st Southeast Lost in Conference Finals 2 4 Bucks 2021 22 82 43 39 524 2nd Southeast Lost in First Round 1 4 Heat Logos and uniforms EditThroughout the club s history the team has undergone several uniform changes The Hawks logo has shifted between variations of a full bodied hawk holding a basketball on its claws and a silhouette of a hawk head more commonly known as the Pac Man logo Red and white have been a part of the team s palette for the most part since the 1950s but the Hawks also used various accent colors as well Red blue and white served as the team s color scheme during the St Louis and early Atlanta years 1955 70 and they wore red and white uniforms for much of their tenure in St Louis The team moved to Atlanta in 1968 and sported baby blue and white uniforms until 1970 when they went with a blue green and white palette Starting in 1972 the Hawks wore red and white uniforms with yellow accents and added black as an accent color in 1992 The color switch coincided with the arrival of the NHL s Atlanta Flames who wore the same colors and shared the same owner as the Hawks the now Calgary Flames even added black a few years after the Hawks made the same tweak From 2007 to 2015 the Hawks returned to a red blue and white scheme adding silver as an accent color 93 On May 1 2014 the club adopted a stylized version of the Pac Man logo that it used from 1972 to 1995 44 The Pac Man logo placed in a roundel would become the team s primary logo after the conclusion of the team s 2014 15 season 94 On June 24 2015 the team unveiled its new home road and alternate uniforms along with its updated logos and colors The new color scheme consisted of Torch Red Volt Green and Georgia Granite Gray The team also unveiled its new socks and shoes in conjunction with the National Basketball Association NBA s new contract for official game socks with Stance Previously official game socks were primarily either white or black depending on a team s preference The team wore white for home games Georgia Granite Gray for road games and Torch Red as an alternate uniform color 95 96 97 As part of the NBA s switch to Nike the home and road designations were replaced by Icon Association and Statement The Hawks carried over their uniforms that they had worn the previous two seasons The numbers on the white Icon uniform were changed to red with volt green trim the other two uniforms remained the same On July 21 2020 the Hawks unveiled new uniforms with a look similar to the set they wore in the mid 1970s They also returned to the red black and yellow color scheme they wore from 1992 to 2007 while adding gray as an accent color 4 City uniform Edit The Hawks also wore special edition City uniforms as part of its uniform deal with Nike In the 2017 18 season the Hawks wore black uniforms with volt green accents featuring asymmetrical striping inspired from the team s early 1970s uniforms and futuristic fonts as a nod to the city s hip hop music scene 98 In the 2018 19 season the Hawks wore white uniforms with black and metallic gold trim as a nod to the team s 50th anniversary in Atlanta 99 During the 2019 20 season the Hawks wore black uniforms with peach accents as a tribute to Atlanta s Peachtree Street 100 For 2020 21 the Hawks City uniform paid tribute to civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr featuring a black base and gold accents 101 The 2021 22 City uniform featured various elements from previous uniforms including a yellow base from the 2004 07 alternates the full bodied hawk logo from the 1995 99 uniform the Hawks script of the 1980s uniforms the retro Atlanta script from the 1970 72 uniforms and the block numbers and striping of the 1960s uniforms 102 The Hawks then revisited the peachtree theme in their 2022 23 City uniform once again wearing black uniforms but with white peach gradients on the striping and numbers and a script Atlanta in white 103 Rivalries EditBoston Celtics Edit The Celtics Hawks rivalry is a rivalry in the Eastern Conference of the National Basketball Association that has lasted for over five decades although the two teams have played each other since the 1949 50 season when the then Tri Cities Blackhawks joined the NBA as part of the National Basketball League and the Basketball Association of America merger However the Blackhawks could not field a truly competitive team until they moved to St Louis as the St Louis Hawks after a four year stopover at Milwaukee The two teams have faced each other eleven times in the NBA playoffs four times in the NBA Finals with the Celtics winning ten of twelve series against the Hawks including three out of four NBA Finals 104 While the Hawks have only defeated the Celtics twice out of eleven series in the NBA Playoffs they still often managed to make their series with the Celtics memorable The rivalry intensified in 2016 with Hawks All Star center Al Horford spurning the team and joining the Celtics Orlando Magic Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Hawks and the Orlando Magic have an intense rivalry mostly stemming from playoff competitions and the rising stardom of Dwight Howard and Josh Smith both from the 2004 NBA draft and who were both raised in Georgia The two teams faced each other three times in the playoffs in 1996 2010 and 2011 NBA playoffs The Magic beat the Hawks in the second round of the 1996 playoffs in five games and swept their 2010 playoff matchup The Hawks eliminated the Magic 4 2 in the first round of the 2011 playoffs Home arenas EditBuffalo Memorial Auditorium 1946 Wharton Field House 1946 1951 Milwaukee Arena 1951 1955 Kiel Auditorium and St Louis Arena 1955 1968 Alexander Memorial Coliseum 1968 1972 1997 1999 Omni Coliseum 1972 1997 Lakefront Arena 1984 1985 12 games in New Orleans with Hawks serving as home team Georgia Dome 1997 1999 State Farm Arena 1999 present known as Philips Arena until 2018 Players EditMain article Atlanta Hawks all time roster Current roster Edit Atlanta Hawks rostervte Players CoachesPos No Name Height Weight DOB YYYY MM DD FromF 41 Bey Saddiq 6 ft 7 in 2 01 m 215 lb 98 kg 1999 04 09 VillanovaG 13 Bogdanovic Bogdan 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 225 lb 102 kg 1992 08 18 SerbiaC 15 Capela Clint 6 ft 10 in 2 08 m 256 lb 116 kg 1994 05 18 SwitzerlandF C 20 Collins John 6 ft 9 in 2 06 m 226 lb 103 kg 1997 09 23 Wake ForestF C 24 Fernando Bruno 6 ft 10 in 2 08 m 240 lb 109 kg 1998 08 15 MarylandG 2 Forrest Trent TW 6 ft 4 in 1 93 m 210 lb 95 kg 1998 06 12 Florida StateF 14 Griffin AJ 6 ft 6 in 1 98 m 222 lb 101 kg 2003 08 25 DukeG 3 Holiday Aaron 6 ft 0 in 1 83 m 185 lb 84 kg 1996 09 30 UCLAG F 12 Hunter De Andre 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 221 lb 100 kg 1997 12 02 VirginiaF 1 Johnson Jalen 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 219 lb 99 kg 2001 12 18 DukeG 27 Krejci Vit 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 195 lb 88 kg 2000 06 19 Czech RepublicG 25 Mathews Garrison 6 ft 6 in 1 98 m 215 lb 98 kg 1996 10 24 LipscombG F 22 Martin Tyrese 6 ft 6 in 1 98 m 215 lb 98 kg 1999 03 07 ConnecticutG 5 Murray Dejounte 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 180 lb 82 kg 1996 09 19 WashingtonF C 17 Okongwu Onyeka 6 ft 9 in 2 06 m 240 lb 109 kg 2000 12 11 USCG 4 Williams Donovan TW 6 ft 6 in 1 98 m 190 lb 86 kg 2001 09 06 UNLVG 11 Young Trae 6 ft 1 in 1 85 m 164 lb 74 kg 1998 09 19 Oklahoma Head coachNate McMillanAssistant coach es Matt Hill Mike Longabardi Jamelle McMillan Dipesh Mistry Joe Prunty Nick Van ExelLegend C Team captain DP Unsigned draft pick FA Free agent S Suspended GL On assignment to G League affiliate TW Two way affiliate player Injured Roster Last transaction February 9 2023Retained draft rights Edit The Hawks hold the draft rights to the following unsigned draft picks who have been playing outside the NBA A drafted player either an international draftee or a college draftee who is not signed by the team that drafted him is allowed to sign with any non NBA teams In this case the team retains the player s draft rights in the NBA until one year after the player s contract with the non NBA team ends 105 This list also includes draft rights that were acquired from trades with other teams Draft Round Pick Player Pos Nationality Current team Note s Ref2017 2 60 Alpha Kaba F C France Buducnost VOLI Montenegro 106 2015 2 50 Marcus Eriksson G F Sweden Alba Berlin Germany 107 Retired numbers Edit Pistol Pete Maravich played for Atlanta from 1970 74 His uniform No 44 was retired by the team Atlanta Hawks retired numbersNo Player Position Tenure Retired9 Bob Pettit F 1954 196521 Dominique Wilkins F 1982 1994 January 13 200123 Lou Hudson F G 1966 1977 March 1 197744 Pete Maravich G 1970 1974 March 3 201755 Dikembe Mutombo C 1996 2001 November 24 201559 1 Kasim Reed Mayor of Atlanta 2010 2018 November 3 2017Ted Turner Ted Turner Owner 1977 2001 November 30 2004Notes 1 The Hawks retired number 59 jersey in honor of Reed who was the mayor of Atlanta from 2010 to 2018 108 109 The NBA retired Bill Russell s No 6 for all its member teams on August 11 2022 110 111 Non issued numbers Edit 40 Jason Collier C 2004 2005 Never officially retired but taken out of circulation Basketball Hall of Famers Edit Atlanta Hawks Hall of FamersPlayersNo Name Position Tenure Inducted No Name Position Tenure Inducted2050 Ed Macauley 1 C F 1956 1959 1960 9 Bob Pettit 112 F C 1954 1965 197161617 Cliff Hagan F G 1956 1966 1978 22 Slater Martin 2 G 1956 1960 198214 Bob Houbregs C F 1953 1987 44 Pete Maravich 113 G 1970 1974 1987Bobby McDermott G 1947 1948 1988 34 Clyde Lovellette C F 1958 1962 1988141532 Lenny Wilkens 3 G 1960 1968 1989 42 Connie Hawkins F C 1975 1976 19928 Walt Bellamy 4 C 1970 1974 1993 2 Moses Malone C F 1988 1991 200121 Dominique Wilkins 114 F 1982 1994 2006 151819 Richie Guerin 5 G 1963 19671968 1970 201355 Dikembe Mutombo 115 C 1996 2001 2015 1431 Zelmo Beaty C 1962 1969 20161 Tracy McGrady G F 2011 2012 2017 116 10 Maurice Cheeks G 1991 1992 20181511 Chuck Cooper F 1954 1956 2019 15 Sidney Moncrief G 1990 1991 20197 Toni Kukoc F 2001 2002 2021 23 Lou Hudson G F 1966 1977 2022CoachesName Position Tenure Inducted Name Position Tenure InductedRed Auerbach Head coach 1949 1950 1969 10 Red Holzman 6 Head coach 1953 1957 19864633 Alex Hannum 7 Head coach 1957 1958 1998 Lenny Wilkens 3 Head coach 1993 2000 1998ContributorsName Position Tenure Inducted Name Position Tenure InductedHubie Brown Head coach 1976 1981 2005 2244 Rod Thorn G 1965 1967 2018Cotton Fitzsimmons Head coach 1972 1976 2021Notes 1 He also coached the team in 1958 1960 2 He also coached the team in 1957 3 In total Wilkens was inducted into the Hall of Fame three times as player as coach and as a member of the 1992 Olympic team 4 In total Bellamy was inducted into the Hall of Fame twice as player and as a member of the 1960 Olympic team 5 He also coached the team in 1964 1972 6 He also played for the team in 1953 1954 7 He also played for the team in 1954 1956 and 1956 1957 FIBA Hall of Famers Edit Atlanta Hawks Hall of FamersPlayersNo Name Position Tenure Inducted7 Toni Kukoc F 2001 2002 20178 Alexander Volkov F C 1989 1992 2020Franchise leaders Edit Bold denotes still active with team Italic denotes still active but not with team Points scored regular season as of the end of the 2021 22 season 117 1 Dominique Wilkins 23 292 2 Bob Pettit 20 880 3 Lou Hudson 16 049 4 Cliff Hagan 13 447 5 John Drew 12 621 6 Joe Johnson 10 606 7 Kevin Willis 10 582 8 Josh Smith 10 371 9 Eddie Johnson 9 631 10 Zelmo Beaty 8 727 11 Bill Bridges 8 685 12 Lenny Wilkens 8 591 13 Al Horford 8 288 14 Mookie Blaylock 7 743 15 Dan Roundfield 7 644 16 Doc Rivers 7 357 17 Pete Maravich 7 325 18 Trae Young 7 076 19 Jason Terry 6 534 20 Jeff Teague 6 484 21 Steve Smith 6 291 22 Joe Caldwell 6 072 23 Tree Rollins 5 666 24 Marvin Williams 5 616 25 Stacey Augmon 5 356 26 Walt Bellamy 5 289 27 Paul Millsap 5 177 28 John Collins 4 837 29 Clyde Lovellette 4 733 30 Alan Henderson 4 575 31 Dennis Schroder 4 545 32 Steve Hawes 4 498 33 Shareef Abdur Rahim 4 309 34 Richie Guerin 4 284 35 Cliff Levingston 4 205 36 Chuck Share 4 119 37 Dikembe Mutombo 4 095 38 Moses Malone 4 034 39 Zaza Pachulia 4 032 40 John Battle 3 882 41 Spud Webb 3 702 42 Kent Bazemore 3 678 43 Kyle Korver 3 615 44 Tom McMillen 3 523 45 Randy Wittman 3 522 46 Walt Hazzard 3 500 47 Herm Gilliam 3 496 48 Jon Koncak 3 317 49 John Brown 3 222 50 Josh Childress 3 162 Other statistics regular season as of the end of the 2021 22 season 117 Most minutes playedPlayer MinutesDominique Wilkins 32 545Bob Pettit 30 690Lou Hudson 25 825Bill Bridges 23 574Josh Smith 23 078Kevin Willis 22 588Cliff Hagan 21 731Tree Rollins 20 763Joe Johnson 19 733Lenny Wilkens 19 552Most reboundsPlayer ReboundsBob Pettit 12 849Bill Bridges 8 656Kevin Willis 7 332Dominique Wilkins 6 119Tree Rollins 5 994Zelmo Beaty 5 622Josh Smith 5 407Al Horford 5 144Cliff Hagan 5 116Dan Roundfield 4 658Most assistsPlayer AssistsDoc Rivers 3 866Mookie Blaylock 3 764Eddie Johnson 3 207Lenny Wilkens 3 049Jeff Teague 2 771Joe Johnson 2 653Trae Young 2 544Bob Pettit 2 369Dominique Wilkins 2 321Cliff Hagan 2 242 Most stealsPlayer StealsMookie Blaylock 1 321Dominique Wilkins 1 245Doc Rivers 1 166John Drew 859Josh Smith 857Eddie Johnson 741Jeff Teague 632Jason Terry 588Kevin Willis 581Stacey Augmon 570Most blocksPlayer BlocksTree Rollins 2 283Josh Smith 1 440Dikembe Mutombo 1 094Jon Koncak 747Dan Roundfield 716Al Horford 697Dominique Wilkins 588Theo Ratliff 436Kevin Willis 425Cliff Levingston 371Most three pointers madePlayer 3 pointers madeMookie Blaylock 1050Joe Johnson 908Kyle Korver 818Trae Young 730Jason Terry 648Steve Smith 549Dominique Wilkins 500Mike Bibby 475Kent Bazemore 453Jeff Teague 430Coaches EditMain article List of Atlanta Hawks head coachesAwards and accomplishments EditIndividual awards Edit NBA MVP Bob Pettit 1956 1959 St Louis Hawks NBA Defensive Player of the Year Dikembe Mutombo 1997 1998NBA Rookie of the Year Bob Pettit 1955 St Louis Hawks NBA Most Improved Player of the Year Alan Henderson 1998NBA Sixth Man of the Year Jamal Crawford 2010NBA Coach of the Year Harry Gallatin 1963 St Louis Hawks Richie Guerin 1968 St Louis Hawks Hubie Brown 1978 Mike Fratello 1986 Lenny Wilkens 1994 Mike Budenholzer 2015NBA Executive of the Year Stan Kasten 1986 1987NBA Sportsmanship Award Kyle Korver 2015 Vince Carter 2020J Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award Doc Rivers 1990 Joe O Toole 1995 Steve Smith 1998All NBA First Team Bob Pettit 1955 1964 Milwaukee St Louis Hawks Dominique Wilkins 1986All NBA Second Team Frank Brian 1951 Tri Cities Blackhawks Slater Martin 1957 1958 1959 St Louis Hawks Cliff Hagan 1958 1959 St Louis Hawks Bob Pettit 1965 St Louis Hawks Lou Hudson 1970 Pete Maravich 1973 Dan Roundfield 1980 Dominique Wilkins 1987 1988 1991 1993 Dikembe Mutombo 2001All NBA Third Team Dominique Wilkins 1989 Kevin Willis 1992 Dikembe Mutombo 1998 Joe Johnson 2010 Al Horford 2011 Trae Young 2022NBA All Defensive First Team Dan Roundfield 1980 1982 1983 Wayne Rollins 1984 Mookie Blaylock 1994 1995 Dikembe Mutombo 1997 1998NBA All Defensive Second Team Bill Bridges 1969 1970 Joe Caldwell 1970 Fast Eddie Johnson 1979 1980 Dan Roundfield 1981 1984 Wayne Rollins 1983 Mookie Blaylock 1996 1999 Dikembe Mutombo 1999 Josh Smith 2010 Paul Millsap 2016NBA All Rookie First Team Zelmo Beaty 1963 St Louis Hawks Lou Hudson 1967 St Louis Hawks Pete Maravich 1971 John Brown 1974 John Drew 1975 Dominique Wilkins 1983 Stacey Augmon 1992 Al Horford 2008 Trae Young 2019NBA All Rookie Second Team Jason Terry 2000 Josh Childress 2005 Josh Smith 2005 Marvin Williams 2006 John Collins 2018 Kevin Huerter 2019 NBA All Star Weekend Edit NBA All Star Game selections Frankie Brian 1951 Dike Eddleman 1951 1952 Mel Hutchins 1953 Don Sunderlage 1954 Frank Selvy 1955 Bob Pettit 1955 1965 Bob Harrison 1956 Ed Macauley 1957 Slater Martin 1957 1959 Cliff Hagan 1958 1962 Clyde Lovellette 1960 1961 Lenny Wilkens 1963 1965 1967 1968 Zelmo Beaty 1966 1968 Bill Bridges 1967 1968 1970 Joe Caldwell 1969 1970 Lou Hudson 1969 1974 Pete Maravich 1973 1974 John Drew 1976 1980 Eddie Johnson 1980 1981 Dan Roundfield 1980 1982 Dominique Wilkins 1986 1994 Doc Rivers 1988 Moses Malone 1989 Kevin Willis 1992 Mookie Blaylock 1994 Christian Laettner 1997 Dikembe Mutombo 1997 1998 2000 2001 Steve Smith 1998 Shareef Abdur Rahim 2002 Joe Johnson 2007 2012 Al Horford 2010 2011 2015 2016 Paul Millsap 2014 2017 Kyle Korver 2015 Jeff Teague 2015 Trae Young 2020 2022NBA All Star Game head coaches Alex Hannum 1958 Ed Macauley 1959 1960 Paul Seymour 1961 Richie Guerin 1969 1970 Mike Fratello 1988 Lenny Wilkens 1994 Mike Budenholzer 2015NBA All Star Game MVP Bob Pettit 1956 1958 1959 1962References Edit NBA com Stats Atlanta Hawks Stats NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC Retrieved December 2 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link History Team by Team PDF 2019 20 Official NBA Guide PDF NBA Properties Inc October 17 2019 Retrieved August 2 2020 Forever True to Atlanta Hawks com NBA Media Ventures LLC Archived from the original on July 21 2020 Retrieved November 26 2022 a b Hawks look to past with new uniform set NBA com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC July 21 2020 Retrieved July 21 2020 Atlanta Hawks Reproduction and Usage Guideline Sheet NBA Properties Inc Retrieved August 2 2020 Sharecare and Hawks Launch Jersey Patch Partnership And Innovative Health Movement Hawks com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC August 17 2017 Retrieved December 17 2017 Group Led By Tony Ressler Completes Purchase of Atlanta Hawks Hawks com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC June 25 2015 Retrieved August 2 2020 a b Kirst Sean December 29 2016 Team that s now Atlanta Hawks bailed on Buffalo 70 years ago The Buffalo News Retrieved December 30 2016 a b Markazi Arash October 3 2015 Long forgotten Leo Ferris helped devise NBA s 24 second clock first used 61 years ago today ESPN Retrieved May 5 2016 1966 68 Sweet Lou Makes His Debut Franchise History Hawks com NBA Media Ventures LLC Retrieved May 5 2016 On May 3 1968 owner Ben Kerner shocked residents of both St Louis and Atlanta when he announced that the Hawks had been sold to Georgia real estate developer Thomas Cousins and former Georgia Governor Carl Sanders Kerner believed that a St Louis franchise could no longer compete financially in the NBA the league now consisted of 14 teams and had to compete with the ABA for supremacy St Louis Hawks 1955 1968 SportsECyclopedia com March 11 2003 Retrieved May 5 2016 Buffalo Joins the Major Leagues Buffalo Courier Express November 10 1946 Retrieved December 29 2016 Pop Gates Naismith Hall of Fame entry Retrieved January 25 2017 Franchise History Hawks com NBA Media Ventures LLC Archived from the original on October 23 2013 Retrieved November 26 2022 The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Hall of Famers Archived from the original on September 12 2012 Retrieved February 4 2016 Kelly Scaletta Have You Ever Heard of William Pop Gates TFB Today s FastBreak Retrieved February 4 2016 NBA com Bill Russell Bio NBA com Retrieved February 4 2016 Ben Kerner Basketball Reference com Retrieved February 4 2016 Bill Russell Basketball Reference com Retrieved February 4 2016 Basketball Reference 1959 NBA Season Hawk quint is for sale Spokane Daily Chronicle Washington Associated Press January 3 1967 p 14 Beck Bill February 1 1967 Kerner Takes Hawks Off Market After 29 Day Period St Louis Post Dispatch Hawk team off market Spokane Daily Chronicle Washington Associated Press February 1 1967 p 31 Aiello Thomas 2014 You re in the South Now Brother The Atlanta Hawks and Race 1968 1970 Georgia Historical Quarterly 98 3 Retrieved November 2 2016 Turner buys the Hawks Day After Baseball Ban The New York Times January 4 1977 Retrieved March 6 2020 Legends profile Dominique Wilkins NBA com Retrieved March 6 2020 Archive for August 4 2000Las Vegas Sun Archived September 30 2007 at the Wayback Machine Blazers trade Wallace to Hawks Canada CBC February 11 2004 Retrieved February 21 2008 Atlanta at New Jersey NBA com February 18 2004 Archived from the original on May 25 2009 Retrieved February 21 2008 Wallace lands in Detroit in three team deal ESPN February 20 2004 Retrieved February 21 2008 Atlanta Spirit LLC Announces Close of Sale for Teams Arena Hawks com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC March 31 2004 Retrieved June 22 2015 Hawks Announce Sign And Trade For Joe Johnson Hawks com NBA Media Ventures LLC August 19 2005 Retrieved August 19 2005 Hawks Ownership Dispute Resolved NBA com Retrieved June 30 2015 Al Horford Bio Hawks com NBA Media Ventures LLC March 2 2013 Retrieved March 2 2013 Hawks Acquire Mike Bibby from Sacramento Hawks com NBA Media Ventures LLC February 16 2008 Retrieved February 16 2008 Drew lands first head coaching gig ESPN com ESPN June 13 2010 Retrieved June 13 2010 Mathis George August 2 2011 Report Atlanta Hawks Philips Arena sold The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved August 11 2011 Alex Meruelo has agreement to purchase Atlanta Hawks USA Today Associated Press August 8 2011 Retrieved August 11 2011 Hawks and Meruelo Terminate Agreement THE OFFICIAL SITE OF THE ATLANTA HAWKS NBA com Retrieved June 30 2015 NBA com 2011 2012 Division Standings NBA com Retrieved February 4 2016 Hawks Lose Lou Williams For The Season NBA com Hang Time Blog Hangtime blogs nba com January 19 2013 Retrieved January 27 2013 Transactions 2012 13 season NBA com Archived from the original on July 23 2012 Retrieved January 27 2013 Hawks Horford to have season ending surgery NBA com December 31 2013 Retrieved June 30 2015 a b Wilson Jaryd May 1 2014 Hawks Reveal New Secondary Logo NBA Media Ventures LLC Archived from the original on August 11 2015 Retrieved May 28 2015 McLaughlin Eliott C September 7 2014 Atlanta Hawks owner Bruce Levenson to sell team after racist email CNN Retrieved September 8 2014 Whitlock Jason September 9 2014 Levenson is anything but racist ESPN com Retrieved October 2 2014 Abdul Jabbar Kareem September 8 2014 Kareem Abdul Jabbar Bruce Levenson Isn t a Racist He s a Businessman Time Retrieved October 2 2014 Vivlamore Chris Breaking News 100 percent of Hawks up for sale updated The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved January 9 2015 Hawks owners unanimously approve plan to sell team Fox Sports January 8 2015 Retrieved January 9 2015 NBA unanimously approves sale of Atlanta Hawks NBA com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC June 24 2015 Archived from the original on June 27 2015 Retrieved June 24 2015 Hawks finalizing sale with billionaire Antony Ressler The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved April 23 2015 NBA Group Led By Tony Ressler Completes Purchase of Atlanta Hawks June 25 2015 Other investors include seven time NBA All Star Grant Hill who will serve as Vice Chair of the Board Townsquare Media Chair and CEO Steven Price Clayton Dubilier amp Rice partner Rick Schnall and Spanx founder Sara Blakely and Marquis Jet co founder Jesse Itzler who are married Atlanta Hawks on Twitter Twitter Retrieved June 30 2015 Kings at Hawks NBA com Retrieved June 30 2015 Vivlamore Chris Hawks claim Southeast Division title The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved March 21 2015 Schultz Jeff Hawks win and clinch East then act like it s no big deal which is good The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on March 28 2015 Retrieved March 28 2015 Atlanta Hawks 2014 15 Season Summary Basketball Reference Com Retrieved August 15 2015 Jeff Teague traded to Pacers in 3 team deal sbnation com June 22 2016 Retrieved June 22 2016 Snow Taylor C July 8 2016 Celtics Welcome Al Horford to Boston NBA com Retrieved July 8 2016 Boston Celtics Sign Al Horford NBA com July 8 2016 Retrieved July 8 2016 Snow Taylor C July 8 2016 Al Horford Celtics agree on deal agent says 4 years 113 million ESPN com Retrieved October 28 2016 Dwight Howard Hawks reach deal Al Horford status in question ESPN com ESPN July 12 2016 Retrieved July 12 2016 Hawks pick at No 19 John Collins Wake Forest forward ESPN com ESPN June 22 2017 Retrieved June 23 2017 Denver Nuggets sign free agent Paul Millsap NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC July 13 2017 Retrieved July 22 2017 Hawks Part Ways With Head Coach Mike Budenholzer NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC April 25 2018 Retrieved April 25 2018 Hawks Reach Agreement in Principle With Lloyd Pierce To Become Team s Head Coach NBA com May 16 2018 Retrieved May 11 2018 Pompey Keith May 11 2018 Sixers assistant Lloyd Pierce gets Atlanta Hawks head coaching job The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved May 14 2018 Cunningham Michael June 21 2018 Hawks acquire Trae Young in NBA draft trade The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved June 21 2018 2018 NBA Draft May Jake November 12 2019 How the Atlanta Hawks are Trying to Rebuild in the Image of the Warriors Sports Illustrated Retrieved March 2 2021 Brooklyn Nets Complete Trade With Atlanta Hawks NBA com July 13 2018 Retrieved March 2 2021 Taylor Cody January 15 2019 Schroder wanted a trade from the Hawks because he can t try to lose OKC Thunder Wire Retrieved March 2 2021 Young Royce July 25 2018 Three team trade sending Carmelo Anthony to Atlanta now official ESPN com Retrieved March 2 2021 Wojnarowski Adrian July 30 2018 Carmelo Anthony finalizes Hawks buyout clearing waivers next step ESPN com Retrieved March 2 2021 Siegel Jeff July 26 2018 Atlanta Hawks fill out roster with additions of Vince Carter and Daniel Hamilton Peachtree Hoops Retrieved March 2 2021 Atlanta Hawks Sign Alex Len NBA com August 3 2018 Retrieved March 2 2021 Wojnarowski Adrian February 11 2019 Jeremy Lin finalizing buyout with Hawks to sign with Raptors ESPN com Retrieved March 2 2021 Mathur Ashish February 13 2019 Jeremy Lin Reveals The Reason He Chose To Join The Raptors ClutchPoints Retrieved March 2 2021 2019 NBA Draft Atlanta Hawks Go All In Complete Young Core Soaringdownsouth com June 22 2010 Retrieved March 3 2021 Trae Young announced as starter for 2020 NBA All Star Game Peachtrehoops com January 23 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 Report Clint Capela Traded to Hawks in 4 Team Blockbuster BleacherReport com February 4 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 Clint Capela feeling way way way better as offseason arrives Peachtreehoops com June 12 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 Hawks Waive Recently Acquired Nene Slamonline com February 6 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 Hawks Request Waivers On Nene NBA com February 6 2020 Report Hawks officially sign Bogdan Bogdanovic after landing Gallinari Rondo Dunn sleeper for James Harden cbssports com November 25 2020 Retrieved March 26 2021 Atlanta Hawks fire coach Lloyd Pierce ESPN com March 1 2021 Retrieved March 2 2021 Spencer Sarah March 23 2021 Clippers halt Hawks win streak at 8 ajc com Retrieved March 26 2021 Waters Andres May 21 2021 The Atlanta Hawks Were Going Nowhere Until Nate McMillan Became Their Coach fivethirtyeight com Retrieved June 6 2021 Spencer Sarah May 16 2021 No 5 seed Hawks will face No 4 seed Knicks in first round of playoffs ajc com Retrieved June 6 2021 Tim Bontemps July 5 2021 Atlanta Hawks reach deal to remove interim tag from coach Nate McMillan s title ESPN Atlanta Hawks Name Nate McMillan Head Coach NBA com July 7 2021 Retrieved July 8 2021 Former Sonics coach Nate McMillan had great success in Seattle What he s doing now with Atlanta might be his finest work yet seattletimes com June 21 2021 Retrieved September 4 2021 Infographic History of the Hawks Logo and Jersey Hawks com NBA Media Ventures LLC June 24 2015 Retrieved August 11 2015 Welcome To The Club Hawks com NBA Media Ventures LLC June 1 2015 Retrieved August 11 2015 The Atlanta Hawks Basketball Club Unveils The Most Cutting Edge Uniform In Pro Sports Hawks com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC June 24 2015 Retrieved July 8 2016 Hawks Next Generation Uniforms Hawks com NBA Media Ventures LLC June 24 2015 Retrieved August 11 2015 Whitaker Lang April 28 2015 Stance is now the official sock of the NBA NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC Retrieved August 11 2015 Nike NBA City Edition Uniform Nike com Nike Inc December 27 2017 Retrieved July 21 2020 City Edition uniforms Eastern Conference teams in 2018 19 NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC November 9 2018 Retrieved July 21 2020 Hawks unveil new Peachtree Nike City Edition uniforms NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC November 4 2019 Retrieved July 21 2020 Atlanta Hawks Honor the Legacy of Dr Martin Luther King Jr with First Ever MLK Nike City Edition Uniform NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC October 4 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 Atlanta Hawks NIKE 2021 22 NBA City Edition Moments Mixtape NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC November 1 2021 Retrieved November 3 2021 Atlanta Hawks 22 23 City Edition Uniform Peachtree Street NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC November 10 2022 Retrieved November 10 2022 Boston Celtics Franchise History nba com celtics Retrieved November 8 2012 Coon Larry NBA Salary Cap FAQ 2011 Collective Bargaining Agreement Retrieved April 13 2014 If the player is already under contract to or signs a contract with a non NBA team the team retains the player s draft rights for one year after the player s obligation to the non NBA team ends Essentially the clock stops as long as the player plays pro ball outside the NBA Hawks Select John Collins Tyler Dorsey and Alpha Kaba In 2017 Draft NBA com June 22 2017 Retrieved April 21 2018 Hawks Select Jeff Teague in First Round of 2009 NBA Draft NBA com June 25 2009 Archived from the original on January 20 2010 Retrieved April 14 2014 Hawks To Honor Mayor Kasim Reed With Ceremonial Jersey Retirement Hawks com NBA Media Ventures LLC October 26 2017 Retrieved February 28 2018 Harden Rockets scorch Hawks in first half of 119 104 win USA Today November 3 2017 Retrieved February 28 2018 Bill Russell s No 6 jersey to be retired throughout NBA NBA com August 11 2022 Retrieved August 24 2022 Golliver Ben August 11 2022 NBA permanently retires Bill Russell s No 6 Washington Post Retrieved August 24 2022 Robert L Bob Pettit Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Retrieved May 1 2022 Peter P Pete Maravich Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Retrieved May 1 2022 Jacques Dominique Wilkins Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Retrieved May 1 2022 Dikembe Mutombo Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Retrieved May 1 2022 Tracy McGrady Bill Self Rebecca Lobo and Muffet McGraw Headline Class Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Official Website Retrieved April 29 2017 a b Atlanta Hawks Players Basketball Reference April 18 2017 Retrieved April 18 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Atlanta Hawks Official website Portals Basketball Georgia U S state Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Atlanta Hawks amp oldid 1139060599, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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