The Hawks are winning games but passing less than any team in a decade. Will a lack of offensive dynamism hurt them as the season goes along?
The Atlanta Hawks made one of the biggest moves of the offseason, trading Danilo Gallinari, three future first-round picks and a pick swap to the San Antonio Spurs for All-Star guard Dejounte Murray. The move was an obvious defensive upgrade at a real position of need but it also raised questions about how the offense would function with two ball-dominant creators when Murray was a 33.0 percent 3-point shooter and Trae Young had shown no real aptitude or interest in playing off the ball.
So far, the experiment appears to be working. Murray is averaging 22.6 points, 8.1 assists, 6.5 rebounds and 2.3 steals per game. The teamās defense has been better by about 3.0 points per 100 possessions and the Hawks are off to a 7-4 start (roughly a 52-win pace).
However, the teamās offense has been worse by about the same margin (2.6 points per 100) as the defense has improved and, stylistically, they have morphed into a fairly bizarre outlier. So far this season, the Hawks are averaging just 240.3 passes per game, lowest in the league by an enormous margin and the lowest total since player tracking statistics became available in the 2013-14 season.

Does it matter that the Atlanta Hawks donāt pass like everyone else?
As you can see the teamās passes per game have dropped steadily over the past two seasons and this year theyāre averaging about 30 fewer passes per game than they did two years ago. It hasnāt depressed their assist totals which have climbed incrementally over the same span. But the product is a somewhat warped approach that relies a lot on the ability of Murray and Young to create advantages off the dribble.
This is just one possession, and a fairly quick one, but look how little movement there is. Young brings the ball up the court and runs a high pick-and-roll while three of his teammates stand and watch without moving at all.
NBA CourtOptixĀ tracks the percentage of a teamās offensive possessions that include at least four frontcourt passes. At 9.1 percent, the Hawks arenāt just last in the league, theyāre last in the league by a mile. The Los Angeles Lakers, at 12.6 percent, have the next lowest percentage and are the only other team in the league below 13 percent. Eleven teams have a percentage that is more than double that of the Hawks.
The Hawks rank in the top half of the league in assists per game but so many of them are coming after a single action and a single pass from either Young or Murray.
That is, to be fair, an absurdly difficult pass and a jaw-dropping highlight on itās own. But itās indicative of how much the Hawks offense is relying on Young and Murray to make things easier for everyone else with their outlier individual abilities. And this isnāt just manifesting in their assists, we see a similar pattern and high level of difficulty in their scoring opportunities as well.
Young is currently third in the league in shot attempts after a touch length of six seconds or more, Murray is ninth. At 190 such shots combined, they have more than 25 entire teams. And itās not as though those shots have been particularly efficient. They rank 25th (Murray) and 27th (Young) in effective field goal percentage among the 27 players who have attempted at least 50 such shots this season. Combined, theyāre posting an effective field goal percentage of 36.2 on shots theyāre taking, on average, 18.3 times per game.
I donāt want to be too hard on the Hawks at this point because what theyāre doing is working to some degree. They are above average on offense, their defense is much improved and their record is strong to this point. But itās also very early in the season, only two of their seven wins have come against teams with a winning record and their offense seems to be lacking the dynamism and versatility they made need for a deep playoff run.

Subscribe to The Whiteboard, FanSidedās daily email newsletter on everything basketball.
Content from around the FanSided network
- Austin Carroll thinks Billy Donovan is ruining fourth quarters for the Bulls.
- Mike Luciano grades the Raptors starting five through the season start.
- Here are studs and duds for the Bucks through the first 10 games from Tyler Schickert.
Dwight Howard suggests Lakers could have signed him
Dwight Howard, on Shannon Sharpeās podcast, said he wanted to return to the Lakers.
- What Howard said: Dwight said the Lakers were unwilling to sign a player, āover 30ā to a multi-year contract that Howard was seeking.
- More to the story?: Howard appeared to be talking about multiple offseason negotiations but referenced the season directly after the team won a title in the Orlando Bubble. Then, the team was aggressive on getting the entire roster vaccinated. Howard has been outspokenly anti-vaccination.
- Is Howard still available?: Dwight Howard just signed with a team in Taiwan. Their season ends in April before the last day players can sign to be eligible for the playoffs.
- Anthony Davis tie-in: Davis made some comments recently indicating he feels his role would function better if someone like Howard were on the team.
Weird moments in basketball last night
There were two weird moments that happened in-game last night that you should know about.
- Nikola Vucevic appeared to flip the middle finger toward a referee or fan. A suspension has to be incoming.
- DāAngelo Russell didnāt realize he was officially subbed in and stood by the scorer table, leaving his team shorthanded, 5-4. The Suns got an easy offensive rebound and scored a 3-pointer on the play. Looks like a hockey power play!
- Kevin Durant boos young Knicks fans, all in good fun. Itās nice to see him connect with the trolls he debates with on Twitter IRL for once.