I know that it is only the first week of the 2009-2010 season and the Hawks still have 80 games to go.
But, with the best free agent pool of this century only one year away it is just way too hard not to talk about it.
Dwayne Wade, Chris Bosh, LeBron James, and Dirk Nowitzki are just the tip the free-agent iceberg. Another player that is on this list and perhaps just as valuable, the Atlanta Hawks Joe Johnson.
Johnson and the Atlanta Hawks are entering their fifth season together having made huge strides in the first four. It began after a blockbuster trade in 2005 sent Johnson from the Phoenix Suns to the Hawks.
Johnson got to work right away and quickly asserted himself as a premiere player in the league. He recorded four 40+ point games while leading the team in multiple offensive categories including scoring with 20.2 points a game, and 6.5 assists. He also set a franchise record for minutes played with 3,340.
However, in the 2005-06 the Hawks finished 26-56 to finish fourth in the Southeast Division, giving up the fourth most per game at 102, and were ranked 29th out of 30 teams in attendance. But, with a new head coach in Mike Woodson and a new franchise player in Johnson, this season was a rebuilding one with the hope of a bright future.
In 2006-07 the Hawks were the youngest team in the NBA, but did have a young core that was beginning to gain experience together. Unfortunately, this season was all about injuries. Seven of Atlanta’s top players missed at least 20 or more games. For the first time in Johnson’s six-year career he was placed on the injured list where he missed 25 games.
He still had a special season. His 25 points per game put Johnson among the top-ten scoring leaders for the season, and he earned a spot on the NBA All-Star Team; the first Hawk to do so since 2002.
The injuries though were too much for the Hawks to overcome and they finished the season at 30-52. But, there was some good news. For the third straight season Atlanta saw their win total increase and all of their top players (Johnson, Josh Smith, Josh Childress, Marvin Williams, and Zaza Pachulia) reached career-highs in scoring average.
In the past two seasons, with Woodson still guiding the ship, Johnson and the Hawks continued making positive strides. In 2007-2008 the Hawks had a 37-45 record as the eighth seed in the Eastern Conference, returning to the playoffs for the first time since the 1998-99 season.
The Hawks got eliminated in the first round, but it was one of the best first round series in NBA history. Atlanta put that year’s NBA Champion the Boston Celtics, through a seven-game war. No team could win on the other one’s floor. But, the 2006-07 clock for the Hawks would strike midnight and the Celtics won the final battle in blowout fashion 99-65.
Last season was the best season under the Mike Woodson tenure. A 47-35 record was the first time the team finished the season above .500 in a decade. As fate would have it, it would also bring an end to the franchise’s 10-year drought from the second round of the NBA playoffs. The 47 wins were the most for the Hawks since 1997 when they went 50-32.
During his four years with the Hawks, Johnson has averaged 21.9 points per game, 5.6 assists per game, and 4.9 rebounds per game. He has also shot .448 from the field, .369 from 3-point range, and has played in at least 79 games a season except for his injury-season in ’06-’07.
Before the season started the Atlanta Hawks offered Johnson, 28, a four-year, $60-plus million offer. However, Johnson turned it down this summer, setting himself up to be a part of an elite free-agent pool at the end of this season.
Johnson did say that it was not because he wants to leave Atlanta at the end of the season, but that his sole focus was on the team and this season at training camp. He also added that he liked that the Hawks resigned Marvin Williams, Mike Bibby, and Pachulia in the offseason.
The Hawks do have a great young nucleus that includes Johnson, Smith, Al Horford, Williams, and veteran Bibby directing the show. Every year since Johnson arrived the Hawks continued to improve.
Because Johnson didn’t resign with the team over the summer, the Hawks will also have a chance to test out next year’s first agent pool.
The biggest one is obviously “King” James, and I think it is safe to say that becoming an Atlanta Hawk is not on the King’s future throne list. I am not concerned with James anyways; there is a much better player that would fit nicely with Atlanta’s young core, Dwayne Wade.
With the help of Shaquille O’Neal in his third season, Wade brought the first NBA Championship to the city of Miami in 2006. However, O’Neal would go to the Suns the following season and the Heat were getting ready for rebuilding. They did return to the playoffs next year, but were ousted in the first round. In 2007-08 the Heat only won 15 games and then lost to Atlanta in the first round last year.
Despite the Heat moving backwards, Wade has personally continued taking his game to the next level.
Much like Atlanta, Miami has also invested in trying to rebuild with a young core around a star player. Wade, who turns 28 next January, has seen team president Pat Riley do everything he can to acquire young talent while clearing up cap space to add more elite players to make the Heat a contender to convince his All-Star to stay.
With point guard Mario Chalmers, 3-point shootout champion Daequan Cook, and power forward Michael Beasley, the Heat hope this is the start of helping Wade get them back to the promised land.
In the Heat’s game at New York during the NBA’s first week of the regular season, reporters couldn’t help remind Wade of his soon to be expired contract. He quickly switched the focus to this season, but did give reporters a nice bit of information. He doesn’t want to play where there is cold weather.
That is great news to here down in Hotlanta. Imagine, Wade joining up with Horford, Williams, Smith, and another veteran in Bibby. Wade has already proven, with a little bit of help, he can put a team on his back and carry it all the way to the title.
Don’t get me wrong, I absolutely love Joe Johnson. He has made the Hawks relevant in Atlanta and in the NBA after some dreadful years. But, he is not Dwayne Wade.
After Johnson, Wade is a perfect match for the Atlanta Hawks. Although they are very good and based on the current roster and people the Hawks have, future free agents like Chris Bosh and Dirk Nowitzki would not make sense for the Hawks.
But, D-Wade on the other hand, would make sense, especially if Johnson did decide to leave.