logo
Hawks rookie Asa Newell attends Phillies-Braves MLB game on Sunday

Hawks rookie Asa Newell attends Phillies-Braves MLB game on Sunday

USA Today10 hours ago

Atlanta Hawks rookie Asa Newell was among those in attendance on Sunday to watch the Atlanta Braves host the Philadelphia Phillies in a division matchup at Truist Park.
Newell, who was born in Atlanta and played at Georgia, was the 23rd overall pick in the 2025 NBA draft. The team acquired his draft rights, along with an unprotected 2026 first-round pick, from the New Orleans Pelicans in exchange for the 13th pick.
The 19-year-old arrived in Atlanta over the weekend and was introduced at a press conference on Friday. He stopped by to watch the Braves on Sunday, though the Georgia native wasn't treated to a win after the Phillies walked away with the 2-1 win to take the series.
Newell was named to the SEC All-Freshman Team, averaging 15.4 points, 6.9 rebounds, one steal and one block on 54.3% shooting from the field in 33 games. He ranked 14th in the country in offensive box plus-minus (plus-7.6) and 20th in offensive rebounds (110).
The 6-foot-10 forward became the first freshman to lead the Bulldogs in scoring and rebounding since Jumaine Jones during the 1997-98 season. He recorded six 20-point performances, en route to the fourth-most points in a single season among freshmen in program history (509).
Newell is expected to suit up with the Hawks in the NBA Summer League in Las Vegas, Nevada, beginning on July 11 against the Miami Heat (4:30 p.m. EDT, ESPN2).

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Jalen Green and Devin Booker can co-exist in a Suns backcourt and reversal
How Jalen Green and Devin Booker can co-exist in a Suns backcourt and reversal

New York Times

time25 minutes ago

  • New York Times

How Jalen Green and Devin Booker can co-exist in a Suns backcourt and reversal

PHOENIX — As the Phoenix Suns rebuild their roster, adding size, length and toughness, their success next season likely will come down to a key question: How will players wired to score like Devin Booker and Jalen Green co-exist in the same backcourt? Booker, 28, is an organizational pillar, eligible this summer for a two-year extension worth $150 million that will keep him in place through the 2030-31 season. He is Phoenix's career scoring leader and arguably a top-15 player in the league. Problem is, Booker last season was not at his best. Although he put up strong numbers, his shooting percentages were among the worst of his career. He needs to rebound. Advertisement Green, 23, is the centerpiece of a recent trade that sent superstar Kevin Durant to the Houston Rockets. Once one of America's top high school prospects, the athletic 6-foot-4 guard skipped college and played a season for the G League Ignite before the Rockets selected him with the No. 2 pick of the 2021 draft. Green played in Houston for four seasons, averaging 20.1 points and 3.4 assists. To help better understand how this might work, The Athletic talked with four coaches who have worked with Green at the pro level, and a 10-year NBA veteran who works as a television analyst for the Rockets. Their experiences with Green reveal his path to this point, and it might provide a glimpse of his future. Rasheed Hazzard was an assistant coach with the Ignite. In Walnut Creek, Calif., he lived in the same apartment complex as Green during their season together in the G League. When Hazzard opened his door, Green lived to his left and Jonathan Kuminga, a forward the Golden State Warriors would select seventh in the 2021 draft, lived diagonally to his right. Hazzard often made the two future NBA players breakfast — eggs with olive oil, avocado and crushed red pepper. The first thing that jumped out to Hazzard was Green's athletic ability. The guard would throw down dunks in practice that would leave coaches shaking their heads. The second thing Hazzard noticed: Green's competitive drive. Hazzard said that, during an early Ignite workout, the coaching staff matched Green with a veteran and told them to play 1-on-1. Green made a move, drove baseline and dunked on the vet, wanting to prove a point. For the entire season, Hazzard doesn't even recall Green losing a team sprint. The jump shot needed work, but the right attitude was there. 'Had he gone to college, he would've gotten in those shooting drills that college coaches put you through, so he would've gotten his reps in,' Hazzard said. 'It would've really helped him. We didn't get to make the tweaks and changes we probably would've made had the circumstances been a little different. We spent more time just trying to make as many corrections as we could within the framework of what he was doing.' Will Weaver and John Lucas were assistant coaches with the Rockets. Weaver coached Green in the NBA Summer League not long after the 2021 draft. In their second game, the Rockets played the Detroit Pistons, which featured the draft's first overall pick in Cade Cunningham. Weaver noticed a rivalry between Green and Cunningham. Advertisement 'First play, we ran it for Jalen,' Weaver said. 'They trapped his pick-and-roll and instinctively he made a perfect pocket pass to the big, which is a very sophisticated, unselfish, veteran-type play to make in a vacuum, much less your (second) Summer League game against the guy that you're trying to prove yourself against. You would've forgiven him for just trying to split it and go dunk on somebody, which he surely has the capacity to do, but I thought that was a really salient indication of who he is at his core.' A 14-year NBA veteran and longtime coach, Lucas recalled thinking of Green as just a really talented AAU player. But the rookie proved to be a quick study. Whatever Lucas asked, Green did. Meet in the gym for extra work at 6 a.m.? Green was there. Lucas worked with Green on his jumper. He worked with him on his defense. 'We still got some work to do,' Lucas said of Green's defense. 'That's the last piece that comes for an NBA player because everybody wants to score. They don't realize until they've won a little how important the defensive side of the ball is.' Stephen Silas was Houston's head coach for Green's first NBA two seasons. These were difficult, rebuilding years for the Rockets. They won 20 games in Green's first season, 22 in his second. Green, a starter from his first game, had to grow under fire. 'The way we were constructed wasn't necessarily to win, but it was for development for those guys,' Silas said. 'Jalen understood the big picture, but it didn't make it any less rough. He learned how to deal with adversity, learned how to be the leading scorer on the team and have a lot of responsibility that comes along with that. As a young kid, he was really just trying to figure it out.' The Rockets fired Silas after the 2022-23 season and hired Ime Udoka. They also added experience, trading for defensive ace Dillon Brooks (who will also come to Phoenix as part of the Durant deal) and signing veteran point guard Fred VanVleet. Over the next two seasons, as Houston turned into a Western Conference contender, Silas noticed Green's growth. Advertisement 'He is playing winning basketball, which is understanding you have to play hard on both ends,' he said. 'Every shot isn't your shot — he's grown to be a good shot taker. With experience and having the vets around him, showing him the right way to do things, it's really helped him grow. He's much more efficient. He's much more sure of what he wants to do.' Ryan Hollins is a 10-year NBA vet and the Rockets' television analyst. He watched Green struggle this spring in his first postseason action, a first-round series Houston lost in seven games to the Golden State Warriors. The Rockets' leading scorer during the regular season, Green averaged 8 points and shot 31 percent in their four losses. Much of the public blame for the series loss fell on his shoulders. Hollins doesn't think the criticism is fair. After Green scored 38 points in Houston's Game 2 win, the analyst said the Warriors adjusted. They trapped him. They picked him up sooner. They were determined to shut Green down. Hollins saw it more as the next step in the guard's development. 'He's going to have to add more strength because in the playoffs it was a different whistle,' he said. 'They put their hands on him. And for him, someone wanting to play in space, if someone who's stronger can grab and hold, it's going to be hard for him to get loose. He's still going to learn those tricks of how to draw those fouls or how to loosen up pressure. But, yeah, he was a focal point.' Hollins said if Green shows no improvement the rest of his career, he's at worst a great sixth man, a strong scorer off the bench. But if he stays on this path, learning how to win, feeding his competitive drive, he can boost his game to a higher level. 'Superstar,' Hollins said. Phoenix has an overflow of guards and wings, a group that includes three-time All-Star Bradley Beal. While the Suns are expected to keep Green, other moves are sure to follow. To start, Green's former coaches like the potential of a Green-Booker backcourt, no matter how it unfolds. 'First off, they're really good guys,' Silas said of Green and Booker. 'They're both selfless. They both want to win. They both have seen the goods and the bads and have a really good feel for team basketball and what it takes to help you get over the top and win. It remains to be seen, but I think when you start with the base that those two guys have, it could work.' Advertisement Weaver pointed out that it's 2025. The idea that a team needs to slot players into set positions is antiquated. Look at the Indiana Pacers and their run to the NBA Finals, he said. No one was concerned about redundancy with Andrew Nembhard, Tyrese Haliburton and T.J. McConnell. It will be the same with Phoenix, he said. Plus, Weaver has great respect for new Phoenix head coach Jordan Ott. 'It might surprise people how different the Phoenix Suns look next year,' Weaver said. Hollins said Green will learn from Booker. How to be efficient. How to deal with chippiness. How to perfect a one-dribble pull-up. A two-dribble pull-up. If Green can approach matching Booker in those areas, 'now we're jumping to a whole other hemisphere,' with his game, Hollins said. Hazzard didn't appreciate the question. He said it was disrespectful to Booker, who has molded his game around different teammates throughout his career. First Chris Paul. Then Durant and Beal. He said it also ignores the progress Green made in Houston, and the motivation he'll have upon arriving in the desert. 'Jalen Green, you put a chip on his shoulder,' Hazzard said of the Rockets trading him. 'You essentially said, 'We don't think you're good enough to take us to the mountaintop.' I have all the faith in the world as to how Jalen Green will respond. I can't say it because you can't write it. But you can imagine what I'm about to say. That's what (the Suns) are going to get from Jalen.' (Top photo of Devin Booker and Jalen Green during a Suns-Rockets game last March: Kenneth Richmond / Getty Images)

Why This 2024 Play-In Team Could Win The Eastern Conference In 2025
Why This 2024 Play-In Team Could Win The Eastern Conference In 2025

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

Why This 2024 Play-In Team Could Win The Eastern Conference In 2025

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - DECEMBER 11: Trae Young #11 of the Atlanta Hawks celebrates late in the fourth ... More quarter of the quarterfinal game of the Emirates NBA Cup at Madison Square Garden on December 11, 2024 in New York City. The Atlanta Hawks defeated the New York Knicks 108-100 to advance to the semifinal round. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo) Getty Images While the Indiana Pacers were the most entertaining storyline of the 2025 playoffs, the Eastern Conference proved to be more competitive than most analysts had assumed it would be. With the Cleveland Cavaliers and Boston Celtics seemingly entering the postseason on a tier above the rest of the field, it was difficult to assume the Easter Conference Finals would be anything other than chalk. Instead, the Pacers and New York Knicks ended their Finals aspirations. For Cleveland, their second-round exit in just five games left them questioning a roster that won 64 games in the regular season. For Boston, who even if the season still ended at the hands of New York, would have likely brought back Kristaps Porzingis, Jrue Holiday and other names now rumored in trade packages if it was not for the torn Achilles suffered by Jayson Tatum. Even New York, who had as deep of a playoff run as they have had in the past 25 years , are still looking for a new head coach after firing Tom Thibodeau. And, as the world saw in Game 7 of the NBA Finals, the storybook run for the Pacers ended in a non-storybook finale, with Tyrese Haliburton's torn Achilles costing him all of next season. Whether injury-based or self-inflicted, the top four seeds in this past year's playoffs may have drastic changes to their roster and results next year, opening the door for any team in the East. For the Milwaukee Bucks, this could be even more reason to not trade Giannis Antetokounmpo. For the Orlando Magic and Detroit Pistons, two young teams led by up-and-coming stars, it may be more reason to invest in their current roster and become a threat this year. But up to this point of the offseason, no team has benefited more and improved their roster for next year than the Atlanta Hawks. The Hawks have been trapped in .500 purgatory since 2021 when they fell in the Conference Finals to the Bucks. Since then, they have failed to win a playoff round, and have yet to reach the postseason since 2023. Outside of their defensive woes, which would have plagued them if they had made another deep playoff run in this span, the Hawks have struggled to find a secondary scorer to assist Trae Young. The attempts of John Collins, Dejounte Murray, Bogdan Bogdanovic, or De'Andre Hunter were never enough to turn Atlanta into a 50-win team. Even though Hunter may not deserve to be looped into this group, as he only experienced half a season receiving the second-most touches on the team, former General Manager Landry Fields saw Jalen Johnson as a better fit for this role than Hunter. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 18: Jalen Johnson #1 of the Atlanta Hawks makes the slam dunk and ... More fouled by Austin Reaves #15 of the Los Angeles Lakers in the first half at Arena on March 18, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by) Getty Images After averaging a double-double in just year two as a starter, Johnson has already begun justifying his five-year, $150 million extension signed in October. Alongside the addition of Johnson's efficient scoring was Dyson Daniels's unexpected debut with the Hawks. After two years in New Orleans, the 21-year-old jumped his per-game numbers in just about every category . At 14.1 points, 5.9 rebounds, and a league-leading 3.0 steals per game, Daniels won the Most Improved Player of the Year Award alongside his 1st Team All-NBA honor. Trae Young had a season we have come to expect from the Oklahoma alum, averaging 24.2 points on 34% shooting and 11.6 assists a game. However, these numbers were not enough to lead the team in Win Shares, as that honor went to none other than Onyeka Okongwu, who made the most of his career-high season total of games started and minutes per game. Averaging 13.4 points, 8.9 rebounds, and almost block and steal per game, Head Coach Quin Snyder seemed to begin the passing of the torch process from Clint Capela, who is set to become a free agent after the 2025-26 season. Whether Capela will remain in Atlanta for his final season is yet to be decided, as their first offseason move included bringing in a big man making $30 million on an expiring contract. In the pre-draft fire sale for the Celtics, the Hawks capitalized on their available cap space by bringing in Kristaps Porzingis on a three-team deal. As it stands today , the Hawks still reside under the 1st and 2nd apron thresholds, so there is not a contractual need to trade Capela. However, with him now falling to third on the center's depth chart, there may no longer be a role for the former first-round pick. NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MARCH 15: Kristaps Porzingis #8 of the Boston Celtics celebrates during the ... More second half against the Brooklyn Nets at Barclays Center on March 15, 2025 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. The Boston Celtics defeated the Brooklyn Nets TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo) Getty Images Especially considering the brand of basketball Atlanta plays when at their best, which capitalizes on faster tempo at the potential expense of more defensive breakdowns. With this young core developing in Atlanta, which this article has yet to mention both forwards Zaccharie Risacher (who started 73 games his rookie year), and their most recent draft selection Asa Newell will both be utilized in their high-paced offense. While these moves may not even allow the Hawks to crack the top-15 in terms of defensive efficiency, the addition of these forwards to add rim protectors to Daniels and Johnson's perimeter abilities could show drastic improvements for the Hawks in 2025. So, do not be surprised if the Hawks finish the offseason as one of the most active teams, especially in an Eastern Conference that will likely be without its typical playoff competition.

Phillies host the Padres to open 3-game series
Phillies host the Padres to open 3-game series

Fox Sports

time6 hours ago

  • Fox Sports

Phillies host the Padres to open 3-game series

Associated Press San Diego Padres (45-38, second in the NL West) vs. Philadelphia Phillies (49-35, first in the NL East) Philadelphia; Monday, 6:30 p.m. EDT PITCHING PROBABLES: Padres: Matt Waldron (0-0); Phillies: Zack Wheeler (7-3, 2.45 ERA, 0.92 WHIP, 126 strikeouts) BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Phillies -222, Padres +182; over/under is 9 runs BOTTOM LINE: The Philadelphia Phillies host the San Diego Padres to begin a three-game series. Philadelphia is 49-35 overall and 26-14 in home games. Phillies hitters are batting a collective .255, which ranks third in the NL. San Diego has a 20-24 record in road games and a 45-38 record overall. Padres hitters are batting a collective .247, which ranks seventh in the NL. Monday's game is the first meeting between these teams this season. TOP PERFORMERS: Kyle Schwarber has 10 doubles, a triple, 25 home runs and 57 RBIs for the Phillies. Nick Castellanos is 11 for 38 with four doubles, two home runs and eight RBIs over the last 10 games. Manny Machado has a .293 batting average to lead the Padres, and has 20 doubles and 13 home runs. Xander Bogaerts is 15 for 36 with two home runs and four RBIs over the past 10 games. LAST 10 GAMES: Phillies: 5-5, .240 batting average, 2.72 ERA, outscored opponents by 13 runs Padres: 6-4, .241 batting average, 3.78 ERA, outscored by two runs INJURIES: Phillies: Aaron Nola: 60-Day IL (ankle), Bryce Harper: 10-Day IL (wrist) Padres: Ryan Bergert: 15-Day IL (forearm), Yu Darvish: 60-Day IL (elbow), Michael King: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Logan Gillaspie: 15-Day IL (oblique ), Jhony Brito: 60-Day IL (forearm), Joe Musgrove: 60-Day IL (elbow) ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar. recommended

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store