Lauren Betts scored 18 points and had 10 rebounds to help No. 4 UCLA to an 83-61 win over No. 25 Nebraska on Sunday. Betts also added four blocks and five steals for the Bruins (15-1, 5-0 Big Ten). UCLA used an 11-2 first quarter run to take control of the game and stretched its lead to 35-20 on Gianna Kneepkens’ 3-pointer with 2:21 remaining in the first half.
Zoom Diallo, Hannes Steinbach lead Washington to 81-74 victory over Ohio State
Zoom Diallo had 22 points and Hannes Steinbach scored 21 to lead Washington to an 81-74 victory over Ohio State on Sunday. Diallo sank 7 of 14 shots with two 3-pointers and made all six of his free throws for Washington (10-6, 2-3 Big Ten Conference). Steinbach added nine rebounds and his three-point play ignited a 14-0 second-half run that gave the Huskies the lead for good.
Knicks use clutch late buckets to pull out gutsy 123-114 win over Trail Blazers
The Knicks pulled out a 123-114 win over the Portland Trail Blazers on Sunday night at the Moda Center.
Here are some takeaways...
- Josh Hart showed no signs of rust in his return following an eight-game absence due to an ankle injury. The forward drilled a three on the Knicks' second possession of the game, and knocked down three of his first four shots for eight early points. He played the first 4:08 seconds before being subbed out for Miles McBride.
- It wasn't just Hart, though, as New York got off to a strong offensive start as a team. They shot 54 percent from the field in the first but were struggling with Portland's athleticism on the other end, and after leading by as many as seven points, things were knotted up at 34 apiece at the end of the quarter.
The Knicks were a bit sloppy, turning the ball over four times, leading to 12 Blazer fastbreak points.
- Hart added four more points in the second quarter, but it was Karl-Anthony Towns who led the way for the Knicks. The big man had a bit of an injury scare but enjoyed a tremendous first half, producing 15 points on 7-of-10 shooting while reeling in seven boards, dishing three assists, and blocking two shots.
- Jalen Brunson had 11 points of his own, OG Anunoby 10, and Mitchell Robinson chipped in six, while McBride had an uncharacteristically slow start, missing his first six shots (five threes). New York struggled to slow down Shaedon Sharpe (14), Deni Avdija (13), and Caleb Love (11) on the other end, but still held a five-point advantage at the break.
- The Knicks came out of the locker room with energy, going on a 7-2 run thanks to Towns and Brunson. The big man drilled his second three of the night and Brunson put home a pair of lay-ins to help push the lead up to double digits for the first time in the game in the opening minutes of the second half.
Hart made his presence felt again, diving on the floor for one of his signature hustle plays to spark a Brunson fastbreak.
- Poor offense and defense let Portland right back into this one, though. The lead was cut back down to five heading into the fourth quarter, and just minutes into the frame, the Blazers were able to even things up on a Robert Williams III slam, then Avdija's lay-in plus the foul gave them the lead.
- Brunson was forced off the bench earlier than usual and quickly helped regain the lead. The teams traded buckets before the Knicks knocked down four straight clutch buckets to push the lead back to double digits. Anunoby drilled a pair of threes, McBride knocked down his first of the night, and Hart had a fastbreak lay-in.
Portland got the deficit back down to five, but New York was able to hold on for the much-needed victory.
- Hart played 31 minutes in his return from injury. He had 18 points on 7-of-15 shooting from the field, dished six assists, pulled in three boards, had a pair of steals, and one block. New York is now an impressive 20-9 when the 30-year-old forward is in the lineup this season.
Brunson led all scorers with 26 points to go along with six rebounds and eight assists, Anunoby had 24 points, including two of the biggest threes of the game and seven boards, Towns chipped in 20 points and 11 rebounds. Robinson made his presence felt off the bench with 11 rebounds of his own.
New York attempted just eight free throws on the night, to Portland's 25.
Game MVP: OG Anunoby
Anunoby's clutch threes helped put this one away late in a back-and-forth fourth quarter.
Highlights
Welcome back, Josh Hart! 3️⃣ pic.twitter.com/lk0ldGI8Y2
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) January 11, 2026
OG THROWS IT DOWN! pic.twitter.com/2YIiJm0Smi
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) January 11, 2026
Blocked by KAT 🚫 pic.twitter.com/nNmc7MBZjG
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) January 12, 2026
11 first-half points for Jalen Brunson 💪 pic.twitter.com/Ni4soNM1SA
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) January 12, 2026
Josh Hart is SO BACK pic.twitter.com/gbwhNt1kv3
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) January 12, 2026
Jalen Brunson floats it over Donovan Clingan! pic.twitter.com/8xVCnUUniN
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) January 12, 2026
Mikal Bridges for three! 🎯 pic.twitter.com/8pmx4T5puZ
— Knicks Videos (@sny_knicks) January 12, 2026
What's next
The Knicks continue their road trip with a Wednesday night meeting with the Kings.
Tip is scheduled for 10:00 p.m. at the Golden 1 Center.
Keaton Wagler scored 19 points and No. 16 Illinois holds off No. 19 Iowa in 75-69 victory
Keaton Wagler scored 19 points, Andrej Stojakovic and Kylan Boswell each had 17 and No. 16 Illinois continued to win on the road in the Big Ten Conference, holding off No. 19 Iowa 75-69 on Sunday. The Illini (13-3, 4-1) won their fifth consecutive game and stayed tied for third place in the conference. Three of Illinois’ wins in conference play have come on the road — the Illini also won at Ohio State and Penn State.
No. 25 UCF beats Cincinnati 73-72 on Themus Fulks’ jumper in final seconds
Tonie Morgan helps Kentucky rally from 13-point deficit to beat Oklahoma 63-57
Morgan helps Kentucky rally from 13-point deficit to beat Oklahoma 63-57
Nets surrender game's final 13 points in 103-98 loss to Grizzlies
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Cedric Coward hit two late 3-pointers and scored 21 points to help the Memphis Grizzlies hold off the Brooklyn Nets 103-98 on Sunday.
Jock Landale added 16 points and nine rebounds, and Santi Aldama had 15 points and eight rebounds. Cam Spencer had 12 points and 12 assists in the Grizzlies' last game before their two-game series against Orlando in Berlin and London.
Noah Clowney and Tyrese Martin led the Nets with 17 points each, and Danny Wolf and Jalen Wilson scored 11 points each. Wolf also had 10 rebounds. Martin was 6 of 8, going 5 of 7 from 3-point range.
Brooklyn led 98-90 after Clowney split a pair of free throws with three minutes Memphis scored the final 13 points, with Coward's second late 3 giving the Grizzlies a 101-98 lead with just less than a minute left.
Memphis, which squandered a 21-point second-half lead Friday night in a loss to Oklahoma City, watched the Nets open the second half with a 17-6 rally to pull even at 67.
Michael Porter Jr., who had 18 points and six assists in Friday's 121-105 loss to the Clippers, sat for the game due to rest. The Nets are playing 17 games this month, and Sunday was the first night of a road back-to-back.
Memphis led by 16 in the first half and had a 61-50 advantage at the break.
Brooklyn only had five free throws in the half, compared to 14 for Memphis — a point Nets coach Jordi Fernandez made clear to the officiating crew several times.
Up next
Nets: At Dallas on Monday night.
Grizzlies: Play Orlando on Thursday night in Berlin and Sunday in London.
Lakers hopeful Rui Hachimura will return from injury in the days ahead
It's still unclear exactly when Rui Hachimura will return for the Lakers after missing six games because of right calf soreness, but coach JJ Redick said the forward is trending toward playing soon.
That could be as early as Monday night when the Lakers play at the Sacramento Kings or Tuesday night when they play the Atlanta Hawks at Crypto.com Arena.
Hachimura practiced Sunday and took extra shots after the session. “He was able to do everything in practice," Redick said.
Read more:Luka Doncic and LeBron James both falter at finish as Lakers lose to Bucks
Hachimura has been rehabbing for two weeks. He took part in a few practices and is eager to return.
Does he think he will play against the Kings?
“I think so. I think I felt good after [practice], but I got to check with the trainers and everybody and then we’ll see for tomorrow," Hachimura said.
When he does return, Hachimura will be on a minutes restriction and will probably come off the bench, Redick said.
Hachimura said his calf has “healed," giving him a chance to practice with the South Bay Lakers, the Lakers’ G League team.
Hachimura is averaging 12.7 points and 4.3 rebounds in 27 games. He is shooting 52.1% from the field and 44.5% from three-point range,
“I’m fine,” he said. “I feel good about it."
Hachimura is aware how calf injuries have led to more serious ailments for NBA players. Although staying healthy is a priority with free agency looming at the end of the season, Hachimura said his main concern is helping the Lakers win games.
Read more:Luka Doncic has a triple-double, but LeBron-less Lakers lose to Spurs
“I think at the end of the day ... I’m trying to help this team win. That’s the whole purpose of being here,” he said. “I’ve been here for four seasons now. I think I’m one of the guys that has been here the longest too, so I’m happy to be here playing with these guys. The coaches and everybody, I love these guys.
"Of course the contract and stuff is coming up. But at the end of the day I’m just trying to focus on everyday, just in the moment. ... We got a second half that is coming. As a team too, but for me, I got to be ready for the playoffs.”
NBA suspends Kings guard Dennis Schroder
A day after the NBA suspended Sacramento point guard Dennis Schroder three games for confronting and attempting to strike Luka Doncic after a game on Dec. 28, Redick offered little insight into the incident.
“It's a league matter,” Redick said. “So, I don't really have a comment on it, to be honest with you. They made their decision. And it's up to them.”
The league said the incident occurred approximately 40 minutes after the game when Schroder sought out Doncic in a Crypto.com Arena hallway and initiated the confrontation.
The two had been sniping at each other all game, with Doncic at one point taunting Schroder for not signing an $84-million contract with the Lakers in 2021.
After the game, according to people with knowledge of the situation not authorized to speak publicly on the matter, Schroder was hiding and waiting to attack Doncic in the hallway.
Redick was asked if he was aware of what happened.
“There's very few things I'm not aware of,” Redick said.
For his part, Schroder posted on social media, “Attempting,” with several emojis.
Sign up for our weekly newsletter on all things Lakers.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Warriors' kryptonite, dire need for roster changes exposed by the athletic Hawks
Warriors' kryptonite, dire need for roster changes exposed by the athletic Hawks originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
SAN FRANCISCO – The Warriors, on Sunday, walked into Chase Center hoping to extend an encouraging segment of the season and encountered their kryptonite.
They ran into Atlanta, whose roster is built to expose and exploit their most obvious vulnerabilities, and were overrun in a 124-111 loss that served as a harsh reminder of the Warriors’ shortcomings – literally – while sounding yet another alarm for their front office.
The roster is profoundly defective. As good as the Warriors have been of late, rediscovering offense and winning eight of their previous 11 games, their margin for error remains thinner than dollar-store tissue.
The Warriors are short; the Hawks are lengthy. The Warriors are light on elite athleticism; the Hawks could assemble a very good 400-meter relay squad. The Hawks showcased active, disruptive defenders and had enough shooters to take full advantage of the havoc they created against Golden State.
Kryptonite.
“They got a lot of long, lanky dudes, especially with their guard play,” De’Anthony Melton said.
“We struggled to get paint touches tonight,” Stephen Curry said. “The ball was kind of just swinging around the perimeter, and they were able to keep five bodies on bodies. That’s usually what good defenses do. Tonight, we didn’t have that answer.”
After carefully disassembling the Warriors in the first half, taking a 59-53 lead, Atlanta came out in the third quarter and took away their composure, sending them reeling and relapsing into a bad old habit.
Turnovers. Specifically, the live-ball giveaways. Golden State committed five in the pivotal third quarter, giving the Hawks 13 points. The damage at the final buzzer: 16 turnovers, for 28 Atlanta points.
The Warriors, conversely, forced nine turnovers, leading to 11 points.
“They just played a great game,” coach Steve Kerr said of the Hawks. “We couldn’t turn them over. They shot it lights out, had 32 assists, only seven turnovers. I didn’t think we played poorly. I didn’t think we played that well. Obviously, 10-for-42 (from deep), we needed to shoot better. But more than anything, they just played a great game and deserved it.”
The result is another night in which Curry did plenty of scoring – 31 points on 11-of-21 shooting, only 3-of-11 from deep – and it wasn’t enough. Jimmy Butler III put in 30 points on 10-of-19 shooting, including 2-of-6 beyond the arc. Didn’t matter.
Not when the rest of the team managed only 50 points on 42-percent shooting from the field, including 20 percent from distance, while committing 11 of the 16 turnovers.
The Warriors led by as much as 10 in the first half, only to trail by as much as 25 in the second. They were outscored 20-7 over the final 6:07 of the third quarter.
Golden State’s offense seemed strangled in its efforts to penetrate a defense that featured 6-foot-9 Jalen Johnson, 6-foot-9 Onyeka Okongwu and 6-foot-11 Mouhammed Gueye up front, with 6-foot-7 defensive ace Dyson Daniels and 6-foot-5 Nickeil Alexander-Walker in the backcourt.
“Usually, there’s going to be one or two guys that you can kind of go at to create an advantage,” Curry said. “Doesn’t mean they’re just going to do that olé defense and just let you get to the paint. But you can create an advantage and then make them react, get the ball moving side to side. We did that well for short spurts out of the game. You just got to be able to have composure and attack if you have a little bit of an angle just to get downhill.”
Turns out Kerr was prophetic in the comments he made about the Hawks two hours before tipoff.
“We know how good they are defensively, with length everywhere,” Kerr said. “It’s really a game where we have to really keep it simple, make good decisions, and keep control of the game, make them score in the halfcourt.”
Mission not accomplished. And it won’t be the last time with Golden State’s current roster. Upgrades are needed to compete at the highest level of the Western Conference.
The Jonathan Kuminga trade market, which has been cool, opens on Thursday. The NBA trade deadline is on Feb. 5, 25 days away.
To recover from a decisive loss and on Tuesday resume sustaining their recent surge, the Warriors will need to play near-perfect basketball – and hope it is enough.
They won’t have to be so flawless if they’re able to somehow, over the next 25 days, bring in a couple productive players with the goods to counteract kryptonite.
Observations after Sixers fall to Raptors in OT to begin mini-series
Observations after Sixers fall to Raptors in OT to begin mini-series originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
The Sixers wound up with no reward for playing five extra minutes in the first leg of a Toronto back-to-back.
They couldn’t seal the deal in regulation and fell to a 116-115 overtime loss to the Raptors on Sunday night. The teams will meet again on Monday.
Scottie Barnes made the game-winning free throw with 0.8 seconds left in OT. He posted 31 points, eight assists and seven rebounds.
Tyrese Maxey had 38 points and five assists.
The 21-16 Sixers were without Joel Embiid (left knee injury management and left groin soreness). Paul George was a late scratch with left knee soreness.
RJ Barrett, Brandon Ingram and Jakob Poeltl were sidelined for the 24-16 Raptors.
Here are observations on the Sixers’ overtime loss Sunday:
Same first-half shooting story
The Sixers added Kelly Oubre Jr. and Andre Drummond to their starting lineup in place of George and Embiid.
Dominick Barlow scored the team’s first six points on two layups and a pair of free throws. Outside of Barlow, the Sixers began 0 for 8 from the field.
As was the case in their win Friday night over the Magic, the major first-half story for the Sixers was their dreadful jump shooting. The Raptors were in the same boat.
Jared McCain finally broke the three-point ice for both teams when he hit a nice side-step triple with 2.1 seconds left in the first quarter to give the Sixers a 25-22 edge. Overall, the Sixers and Raptors combined to shoot 3 for 26 beyond the arc in the first half. The Sixers and Magic had gone 3 for 33.
Raptors do damage in open floor
Toronto’s offense had much of its success early in the shot clock.
The Raptors created issues for the Sixers when they were backpedaling and failed to stop the ball. Led by Barnes, the Raptors constantly pushed the ball forward through both the pass and dribble. Toronto posted eight of the game’s first nine fast-break points.
Physicality and disputed whistles also emerged as early themes Sunday night.
Sixers head coach Nick Nurse picked up a technical foul less than two minutes into the contest and had many further conversations with the officials. The Sixers ended up shooting 25 for 31 at the foul line and the Raptors went 29 for 39.
Toronto built a 14-point advantage late in the second quarter and held a 58-48 lead at halftime.
Sixers squander chances to seal it
Kelly Oubre Jr.’s third game since returning from a left knee sprain was by far his best.
Oubre provided a serious jolt right after halftime with especially aggressive, athletic basketball on both ends of the floor. He made a personal 7-0 run, converting two layups and a corner three. Oubre also snagged three steals in the third quarter.
While Maxey and Oubre featured in the Sixers’ strong third quarter, Jabari Walker and Adem Bona also chipped in useful frontcourt minutes off the bench. Both Bona and Walker played high-energy, physical games and competed well on the glass. They totaled 16 points, 11 rebounds (six offensive) and two blocks.
The Sixes eventually took a 73-71 lead on a Maxey mid-range jumper. They won the third quarter by 18 points and entered the fourth up by eight.
As Maxey watched the beginning of the fourth quarter, the Raptors surged ahead. No. 9 overall pick Collin Murray-Boyles (17 points, 15 rebounds) threw down a put-back dunk and Toronto took an 88-86 lead.
The Sixers played Maxey off the ball for a stretch late in the fourth quarter and VJ Edgecombe (17 points on 6-for-19 shooting) had a rough time offensively. After Edgecombe missed a step-back three, Barnes drove on Barlow and slammed in a big dunk. Two Barnes free throws evened the game at 99 apiece.
Maxey soon resumed on-ball duties and appeared to have the Sixers on the verge of a victory. He made a difficult turnaround jumper, a driving layup, and a three that gave the Sixers a 107-103 edge with 20.1 seconds left.
From there, the Sixers squandered multiple chances to secure a regulation win.
Immanuel Quickley hit a long two from the left corner and the Sixers turned the ball over on the subsequent inbounds play. Oubre couldn’t complete a clean pass to Edgecombe along the sideline.
Quickley then came up well short on a baseline jumper attempt over Edgecombe, but Toronto retained possession because the rebound last deflected off of Bona.
Barnes threw his baseline out-of-bounds pass to Murray-Boyles. He drove and dished to Jamal Shead (22 points, six assists), who made a short push shot with 2.0 seconds to go. Quentin Grimes missed a half-court heave, sending the game to OT.
Just like the rest of the game, overtime was a back-and-forth affair. Edgecombe sunk a massive shot when Shead denied Maxey the ball late in the shot clock, burying a tightly guarded three with 15.6 seconds on the clock to knot it up at 115-all.
Barnes ultimately had the last word. He drove on Oubre, drew a foul with 0.8 seconds remaining and knocked down his first free throw. Barnes intentionally missed his second, meaning the Sixers had no way to steal the game, and the Raptors celebrated a hard-earned win.
Sarah Strong’s 18 points and 13 rebounds lead No. 1 UConn in 95-54 rout of Creighton
Sarah Strong had 18 points, 13 rebounds, six assists and five steals and Blanca Quiñonez came off the bench to score 15 points as top-ranked UConn routed Creighton 95-54 on Sunday. The Huskies (17-0, 8-0 Big East) handed Creighton (7-9, 3-4) its most lopsided loss since a 44-point defeat to UConn two years ago. Azzi Fudd had 14 points and five assists and Ashlynn Shade made four 3s for all 12 of her points.
Josh Hart officially returning to Knicks' starting lineup Sunday against Trail Blazers
The Knicks are set to receive a big boost on Sunday night, as Josh Hart is officially available for the road meeting with the Portland Trail Blazers.
Hart will slide right back into the starting lineup and won't face a minutes restriction.
His return is certainly a welcomed sight for New York, as the forward has missed the last eight games with an ankle injury suffered in the win over the Cavaliers on Christmas Day.
SNY's Ian Begley said on this week's edition of the Putback that Hart had been "getting close," and he was upgraded to questionable for the first time on Saturday night.
Now, the training staff has deemed he's made enough progress for a full return.
The Knicks remain in second place in the Eastern Conference, but they struggled mightily with Hart sidelined, going 3-5 and dropping five of their last six games.
The 30-year-old had been playing some of his best basketball of the season before going down with the injury, putting together 14.5 points and 9.1 rebounds over his last 15 games.
What we learned as Steph Curry, Jimmy Butler combine for 61 in Warriors' loss
What we learned as Steph Curry, Jimmy Butler combine for 61 in Warriors' loss originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
SAN FRANCISCO – Two teams came to Chase Center on Sunday with two-game win streaks.
The Atlanta Hawks are the ones leaving town with a three-game win streak after the Warriors fell to them 124-111.
The Warriors had a chance to earn their third three-game win streak of the 2025-26 NBA season and second at home. A win also would have put the Warriors four games above .500 for the first time this season, and beating the Portland Trail Blazers next game would have given the Warriors their first four-game win streak of the season. Those chances were wiped away in a 13-point loss.
Steph Curry scored a game-high 31 points but was 3 of 11 on 3-pointers. The Warriors now are 6-7 when he scores 30-plus points this season. Jimmy Butler scored 30 points for the fourth time this season, and also had seven rebounds, six assists and two steals.
Missing shots and taking a step back in the turnover category turned the game into a track meet. That isn’t the kind of game the small, old and slow Warriors are built for playing the long, young and fast Hawks. The Warriors were outscored in fastbreak points 23-17, points off turnovers 28-11 and saw the Hawks have a 15-point advantage from deep.
Here are three takeaways from the Warriors falling to 21-19 on the season.
Playing Through Jimmy
If it weren’t for Moses Moody shooting free throws, the same group that went on a 13-0 run at the end of the third quarter Friday night would have played the final three minutes and 47 seconds of the first quarter on Sunday. That group consists of Butler, Brandin Podziemski, De’Anthony Melton and Al Horford. Those five bring a combination of two-way impact, high IQ and shooting around Butler.
All the ways that Butler stuffs the stat sheet showed up in the first quarter with five points, four assists and three rebounds. His four assists led to 10 points on passes to Horford twice, a cutting Quinten Post and a Curry 3-pointer. In the second quarter, Butler became the Warriors’ go-to scorer.
Butler scored 10 straight points in the second quarter as he dominated around the rim and got to the free-throw line. The scoring barrage brought him to 17 points at halftime.
Though Butler scored another 13 points in the second half, seven fewer than Curry but seven more than anybody else, his effort still came up short in a tough loss.
Disastrous Third Quarter
A Dyson Daniels layup put the Warriors in a 12-point hole at the 8:47 mark of the third quarter, to which they responded admirably and went on an 11-0 run to get within one point of the Hawks. However, the Warriors were then outscored 24-9 the rest of the quarter. Just like that, the Warriors went from trailing by six points at halftime to facing a 16-point deficit.
Curry had one of his third-quarter flurries of 12 points in eight and a half minutes, but the rest of the Warriors scored just 13 points. As a whole, the Warriors went 9 of 21 from the field (42.9 percent) and 3 of 13 on 3-pointers (23.1 percent) in the quarter. The Hawks were much more efficient, going 14 of 25 from the field (56 percent) and made 4 of their 10 threes.
It’s not like the Hawks lit up from long distance in the third quarter – Luke Kennard did. The sharpshooter who is in the game for one reason was a perfect 4 of 4 while the rest of his teammates missed all six of their tries.
But the Hawks also swiped three streaks and scored 13 points off four Warriors turnovers.
New-Look Hawks
Watching Trae Young drop dimes and let it fly from deep in a Hawks jersey is long gone. The Hawks chose a timeline and direction without him and are sticking to it. They’re now a Jalen Johnson-led team, which started well before trading Young to the Washington Wizards.
The Hawks selected Johnson No. 20 overall in the 2021 NBA Draft, the same year the Warriors took Jonathan Kuminga at No. 7 and Moses Moody at No. 14. Johnson gradually was given more opportunities and made the Year 3 leap, a season in which he actually played 60 fewer minutes than Kuminga, clearing the runway for him to take off last season before being injured.
Now, the Hawks have a 24-year-old Johnson who is playing like an NBA All-Star and franchise player. Why they’ve handed him the keys was clear against the Warriors. Johnson in one game against the Warriors last season scored 15 points with 14 rebounds, four assists and two steals. This time around, he was even better and finished at 23 points, 11 rebounds and six assists.
Acquiring Nickeil Alexander-Walker, 27, from the Minnesota Timberwolves over the summer also was one of the more underrated offseason moves around the league. Alexander-Walker has gone from averaging 9.4 points per game last season to 20.5 entering Sunday, which is the biggest improvement in the NBA. He scored 17 points in the first half against the Warriors, and ended leading the Hawks with 24. They are the top of the pyramid for a new wave in Atlanta.