Hawks face tough test Friday against Celtics

By Mike Lipka, STATS Writer
Another strong start bodes well for the Atlanta Hawks' continued rise,
but there's one feat they've yet to achieve that would help them
further assert themselves as an Eastern Conference power.
The Hawks will get another chance at their first win in Boston since
the Celtics acquired Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen as the teams meet for
the first time this season Friday night.
The Celtics (8-1) have won all seven regular-season meetings with
Atlanta since the start of the 2007-08 season, and even though the
Hawks pushed top-seeded Boston to seven games in the teams' first-round
playoff series in 2008, their four lopsided road losses in that series
are among their nine straight defeats at the TD Garden.
Atlanta (6-2) nearly won in Boston last season, with the Celtics
needing Paul Pierce's last-second jumper to win 103-102 on Nov. 12,
2008, but Boston earned a more comfortable 104-92 victory in the most
recent meeting April 3.
"We don't play the
same way we do at home," Hawks forward Josh Smith said after that game.
"We get away from the things we do at home and don't do it on the road."
After they went 1-4 on the road in last season's playoffs and got swept
in the second round by Cleveland, the Hawks are hoping things have
changed. They're 3-2 away from Atlanta during their strong start,
including a quality win at Portland.
They won 114-101 at New York on Wednesday night, shooting 54.3 percent from the field to open this brief two-game trip.
"We've grown," coach Mike Woodson said. "The last two years we've been
in some tough games. We've won some tough ones and we've lost. You know
this team hasn't quit these last two years and it's a sign of the guys
in that locker room. We're all fighting for something. We're trying to
be better than a year ago."
Atlanta used a
balanced effort to surge past the Knicks, with six players scoring at
least 11 points and four scoring at least 19, led by Al Horford's 25.
Boston employed a similar formula in its 105-86 home win over Utah on
Wednesday, with seven players scoring in double figures. Garnett led
the way with 18 points, while Rajon Rondo added 14 and 11 assists.
Looking rejuvenated after three days of rest, the Celtics regained the
dominant form from their 6-0 start. Their previous three games, at the
end of a busy stretch of eight games in 12 days to start the season,
had been narrow victories at Minnesota and New Jersey sandwiched around
a home loss to Phoenix.
"You could see the
difference between (Wednesday) and the two games previous. Actually,
three games," Boston coach Doc Rivers said. "So it's really nice to
see. Obviously there's not going to be nights when your top seven
players all have double figures, but when you get those nights, that's
pretty good."
A stifling defense continues to spark Boston, which is allowing a league-best 84.6 points per game.
Atlanta's offense, meanwhile, has been among the NBA's most efficient,
averaging 107.8 points and shooting 48.2 percent from the field. Both
figures rank among the top four in the league.
The Hawks haven't experienced that sort of success against Boston in recent meetings.
In the seven regular-season losses to the Celtics since the start of
2007-08, Atlanta has averaged 90.3 points. Hawks leading scorer and
former Celtics first-round draft pick Joe Johnson has shot 37.3 percent
from the field in those games.
Received 11/12/09 04:57 pm ET