Hawks Notes: Howard, Calderon, GM Search

It has been a tough few weeks for Hawks center Dwight Howard and the morning of the Hawks‘ Game 6 loss Wizards on April 28 may have been his lowest point. Howard, 31, was pulled over at 2:06am for speeding, going 95 mph in a 65 mph zone, according to a police report obtained by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. 

After running a check, the police report adds that Howard was driving with a suspended registration and without insurance. The eight-time All-Star received a ticket for driving without insurance, a verbal warning for speeding, and his car was towed. Things did not improve in Game 6, where Howard totaled just nine points and seven rebounds in 22 minutes as Atlanta was eliminated from the postseason.

The Atlanta native recently expressed frustration with his lessened playing time during his exit interview, as Jeff Schultz of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution wrote. “It was very difficult,” Howard told reporters. “I want to play. I want to be out on the floor. I want to make a difference. I want to make an impact, and I can’t do that on the bench.” With Atlanta searching for a new general manager, it will be interesting to see where Howard fits in with the Atlanta for the remaining two years of his contract.

Here are some additional tidbits of Hawks news:

  • With Mike Budenholzer no longer the president of basketball operations, the Hawks are searching for a viable replacement but the process is currently in its “infancy stage,” relays Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (via Twitter). Wes Wilcox was recently removed from the GM role with Budenholzer stepping down as president but remaining as head coach. As Vivlamore adds, the Hawks are “trying to determine the attributes” of their desired candidate.
  • Veteran point guard Jose Calderon had a well-traveled 2016/17 campaign, starting as a reserve with the Lakers; being signed and released by the Warriors before suiting up; and playing an important role off the bench for the Hawks. The 35-year-old may not be a starter at this point in his career he still believes he can be effective, NBA.com’s KL Chouinard writes. Budenholzer continuously used the word “spirit” to describe Calderon’s impact and it’s that same spirit that believes he wants to continue in the NBA. I want to just concentrate and play here two or three more years or whatever I can.”
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