The Atlanta Hawks kept rolling in Summer League on Wednesday, putting together another double-digit win, this time over the San Antonio Spurs. Atlanta seized control in the first quarter and never gave it back, turning what could have been a back-and-forth showcase into a one-sided night.
What stood out most was how complete the Hawks looked. They were sharp on both ends, moved like a group that had spent real time together, and played with the kind of connected feel that usually separates the better Summer League teams from the pack. It was one of Atlanta’s most convincing performances of the summer.
The bench did a lot of the heavy lifting early. Atlanta finished the first half with 23 bench points, and that second unit kept the pressure on while the starters rested. By the time the final buzzer sounded, the Hawks had piled up 47 bench points, with four reserves scoring in double figures and four finishing with positive double-digit plus-minus marks.
Defensively, Atlanta set the tone right away. The Hawks forced the Spurs into double-digit turnovers by halftime and made them work for everything, which showed up in the shooting numbers. San Antonio shot 33% from the field in the first half, went 6% from three, and missed all nine of its three-point attempts in the first quarter.
The Spurs also struggled to generate clean looks or any real rhythm. The ball movement and spacing never really came together, and the lack of chemistry was easy to see from the opening minutes.
Atlanta, meanwhile, came out firing. The Hawks put up 15 bench points in the first quarter, handed out 10 assists, shot 56% from the field, and hit 36% from three-point range in the opening period. The shooting cooled some as the game went on, but Atlanta still finished with 26 assists and plenty of control.
Kingston Flemings had a steady all-around showing, finishing with five points, eight assists, one steal, and one block. It wasn’t a flashy line, but it reflected the kind of two-way impact Atlanta has been getting from him.
The biggest production came from Asa Newell and Henri Veesaar. Newell posted 15 points, five rebounds, two assists, one steal, and one block while shooting 45% from the field. Veesaar added 14 points, six rebounds, one steal, and one block off the bench, shooting 62% from the field and 40% from three.
In Other News...
Hawks Summer League Puts Atlantas Young Core Under Real Pressure
The Hawks are heading into Las Vegas Summer League with a roster that looks a lot more like a proving ground than a tune-up. Atlanta will get a run of games against the Spurs, Nets, Celtics and Grizzlies, and the spotlight will fall quickly on Kingston Flemings, Zuby Ejiofor and Asa Newell as the organization tries to see how its young talent handles real NBA pace, spacing and pressure.
Flemings will be one of the names to watch most closely, especially in a matchup that should draw attention for more than one reason. The Hawks are also set to see other notable prospects across the week, and the trip ends with a Memphis game that could still carry some uncertainty, leaving Atlanta with a chance to learn plenty before the summer slate is finished. [Read more 🡒]
Former Hawks GM Landry Fields Lands Surprising New Basketball Power Role
Landry Fields has already resurfaced in basketball in a different lane after his run as Hawks general manager, moving into a leadership role with Project B, the startup league trying to carve out space in the global hoops market. The venture is still in its early stages, but it is clearly aiming high as it prepares for a launch next winter and looks to build a roster of recognizable names and rising international talent.
For Atlanta, Fields next move is another reminder of how quickly the NBA front-office carousel can turn into something else entirely. Elsewhere in the wider basketball world, Jared Butler has settled in with Crvena Zvezda by agreeing to a two-year extension after a strong first season, while the legal picture around Terry Rozier remains unsettled after a U.S. district judge declined to alter his bail conditions in the sports gambling case. [Read more 🡒]
Gabe Vincents Hawks Chapter Looks All But Over Now
Gabe Vincents run through Atlanta may have been brief, but his name is still hanging around the Hawks conversation as the free-agent market settles. After being traded from the Los Angeles Lakers to Atlanta last season, Vincent is still available now that the moratorium has ended, and the Hawks do not appear to be building toward another deal for him.
Even so, Vincent is not short on attention. He is being viewed around the league as a useful veteran rotation guard, and there is enough interest that a minimum contract looks like the likely framework for his next stop. Miami has also surfaced as a team to watch, which keeps a familiar storyline alive while Atlanta seems ready to move on. [Read more 🡒]
