NBA Basketball
Scoreboard|Postseason|Stats|Standings|Teams|Players|Player News|Injuries|Transactions
88
Final 1 2 3 4 Tot
Atlanta 21 25 14 28 88
Golden State 22 32 17 21 92
92
Preview | Box | Play-by-Play | Recap 
Final Boxscore

Hawks-Warriors Preview

According to STATS
According to STATS

Atlanta Hawks at Golden State Warriors

  1. The Hawks have won three of the last four meetings with the Warriors, but Golden State won the last meeting February 29, 2012 in Atlanta, 85-82.
  2. This is the third game of a four-game West-Coast trip for the Hawks. Atlanta lost at the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday afternoon 89-76, but rebounded with a 95-87 win at Portland the next night.
  3. The Warriors lost in double-overtime Saturday versus Denver, 107-101. The quartet of Klay Thompson (23), Carl Landry (22), Stephen Curry (19) and David Lee (18) combined for 82 of the Warriors' 101 points.
  4. Kyle Korver was 4-for-6 from three-point range on Monday night in Portland and has now made at least two three-point baskets in four consecutive games.
  5. Carl Landry's 16.1 points per game off the bench are fifth most in the NBA. Landry is shooting 60.0 percent (45-for-75) from the floor.
  6. Golden State has shot under 40.0 percent in three of its last four games.

By JORDAN GARRETSON

STATS Writer

(AP) -- The Golden State Warriors may be able to learn a thing or two from the Atlanta Hawks.

While the Hawks enter Wednesday night's matchup in Oakland having rid itself of some recent late-game troubles, the Warriors come in still smarting from a double-overtime loss.

The Hawks (3-3) bounced back from consecutive defeats with Monday's 95-87 win at Portland. Josh Smith scored 19 in spite of a stomach illness, but most important was the fashion in which Atlanta won.

The Hawks, who were undone by a 15-1 fourth-quarter run in Sunday's 89-76 loss to the Los Angeles Clippers, scored the final 10 points in Monday's game. Atlanta was 9 of 16 from the foul line Sunday and its bench was outscored for the first time, 35-32, but restored order in both regards Monday, going 18 of 22 on free throws and outscoring Portland's reserves 26-6.

"We knew they were going to go on a run but it just shows you how this is a veteran team," Smith said. "We didn't get rattled. We took our time, even when they took the lead and we figured out a way to score the basketball late down the stretch."

Finishing games is one of the lessons the young Warriors (3-4) still have to learn as they try to avoid losing their third in a row. They squandered multiple opportunities to put away Denver in Saturday's 107-101 double-overtime home loss.

Golden State led by two with 13 seconds left in the first overtime, but Klay Thompson, who scored 23 points, missed two free throws and Danilo Gallinari tied the game with a dunk with 2 seconds remaining. In the second overtime, Golden State went scoreless in the game's final 2:47, allowing the Nuggets to score the game's final 11 points.

"We had the lead a couple times in late-game situations and our inexperience showed," said David Lee, who at 29 years old is the Warriors' second-oldest player.

Golden State's 71.1 free-throw shooting percentage and 16.3 turnovers per game - two keys in avoiding late collapses - both rank near the league's bottom

"If we even play halfway decent it's not a game to begin with," Lee said. "It's very frustrating."

Golden State has also shot less than 40 percent in its last two games, the first time it's done that since February 2011. The return of Andrew Bogut, who has sat out the last two rehabbing an ankle injury, would help provide some easy baskets, but he's already been ruled out for the next four games.

The Warriors won 85-82 at Atlanta in last season's only meeting, snapping a three-game skid in the series. Lee posted 22 points and 12 rebounds, while Smith finished with 14 points and 10 boards.

Atlanta's Al Horford is averaging 18.9 points in seven games against the Warriors, his highest against any opponent and 6.1 better than his career average.

Updated November 13, 2012

w1 © 2013 by STATS LLC and Associated Press.
Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

On-Air: Text to 77530

Mobile Apps

On the go? Not a problem. Now you can listen to 790 The Zone on your iPhone and Android smartphone.

Advertisement