Hawks zone in from 3-point range to extend Nets' skid

AP photo by Tami Chappell / The Brooklyn Nets' Caris LeVert battles for the ball with the Atlanta Hawks' John Collins in the second half of Friday night's game in Atlanta.
AP photo by Tami Chappell / The Brooklyn Nets' Caris LeVert battles for the ball with the Atlanta Hawks' John Collins in the second half of Friday night's game in Atlanta.

ATLANTA - The Atlanta Hawks have been the NBA's worst 3-point shooters this season, so rookie Cam Reddish was pleased to be a big part of a one-night reprieve.

"We've all been putting in a ton of work in practice, extra work on our jump shots and defense," Reddish said, "but to see our shots go down today was a great feeling."

John Collins had 33 points and 13 rebounds, and Reddish scored 17 of his career-high 26 points in the third quarter as the Hawks handed the Brooklyn Nets their third straight loss with a 141-118 victory Friday night.

Trae Young, second in the NBA in scoring and assists, finished with 22 points and assisted on 14 baskets to help Atlanta, the league's second-worst team, snap a two-game skid. The Hawks hit 19 3-pointers and finished 48.7% from long range on their rare night of fun beyond the arc.

The Nets gave up a season high in points. They pulled within six on Caris LeVert's layup early in the fourth, then got no closer the rest of the way after Jeff Teague and Kevin Huerter answered with baskets that pushed Atlanta's lead back to double digits.

"We are seventh in the league in defense, and tonight we looked like were 800th in defense," Brooklyn coach Kenny Atkinson said. "We lost our defensive identity tonight. It's one game. I'm not going to change things and go crazy."

photo AP photo by Tami Chappell / The Atlanta Hawks' Cam Reddish shoots a 3-pointer over the Brooklyn Nets' Wilson Chandler during the second half of Friday night's game in Atlanta.

Spencer Dinwiddie scored 24 points to lead Brooklyn, which began the game seventh in the Eastern Conference before dropping six games under .500. It had won eight straight over the Hawks and five consecutively in Atlanta.

The game got away from the Nets in the third. Atkinson called timeout after Atlanta hit its 10th trey for a nine-point lead and immediately got a technical foul for arguing Dinwiddie had been fouled on the previous possession.

Dinwiddie and Harris missed shots on the next possessions, and the Hawks soon led by 14 on Reddish's 3.

"Tonight was a real example of all of our guys trending in the right direction," said Atlanta coach Lloyd Pierce, whose young, rebuilding team has won 10 of its past 21 games. "To put together that type of win was really encouraging to see."

Brooklyn's previous season high allowed was 138 points in a loss at Phoenix.

LeVert, coming off a 34-point performance at Washington, had 18. He had an offensive rebound and putback to end the first quarter but was mostly quiet the rest of the way.

Atlanta finished one 3 shy of tying a season high.

The Nets were coming off two tough setbacks in the closing minutes, blowing a 19-point lead to lose at home to the Orlando Magic and rallying briefly after being down 18 at Washington but losing for the 12th time this season when taking a lead into the fourth.

They couldn't stop Atlanta's shooters in the third. Reddish, a 30% 3-point shooter this season, was 6-for-9 in the game after hitting on consecutive possessions to make it 97-86 and followed with an 18-footer to make it a nine-point lead. Huerter and Collins followed with two straight 3s for a 14-point advantage.

Brooklyn's defense was slipshod, and the Nets were outrebounded 52-38, causing Dinwiddie to say he and his teammates "made the game easy" for Atlanta.

"One of our hallmarks even during our bad seasons was our scrappiness, our toughness and playing hard all the time even when we weren't winning games," he said. "You want to have that type of mentality. You want to defend at a high level and that gives you a chance to win every game."

Reddish, the 10th overall draft pick, overcame a concussion earlier this month and has scored in double figures in seven straight games and 13 of his past 14. He played a game-high 34 minutes.

"I feel like he had it tonight, and when he has that confidence you can just see the talent oozing out of him," Collins said. "Hopefully he keeps that confidence and playing that way because the game really opens up when you have a guy like him who can slice, cut, shoot and make plays like he did."

Upcoming Events