Jalen Johnson was the Hawks‘ lone All-Star and most valuable player during the regular season, but it was guard CJ McCollum who led the team to a Game 2 victory over the Knicks on Monday in New York, writes Michael Cunningham of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (subscription required).

While most of the Hawks’ young players had at least a little postseason experience entering this first-round series, their playoff résumés generally pale in comparison to that of McCollum, who has appeared in the playoffs 11 separate times and logged 69 total postseason outings. That veteran experience was on display on Monday.

As Cunningham details, McCollum scored 32 points, including six in the final two minutes, and assumed the role of Madison Square Garden villain that was once held by Trae Young, the player he was traded for earlier this season. Head coach Quin Snyder was appreciative of both McCollum’s steady leadership and impressive shot-making in the Game 2 victory, per Lauren Williams of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (subscription required).

“I felt like we needed both,” Snyder said. “I’ve been in the West for a while. I’ve watched him do that when he was in Portland. But again, I think you can lead by how you play.”

McCollum is in the final year of his current contract and will become an unrestricted free agent in July if he and the Hawks don’t work out an extension agreement before June 30. The 34-year-old could improve his chances of securing another lucrative multiyear deal with a strong showing this spring.

We have more on the Hawks:

  • Johnson made just 8-of-19 shots from the floor in Game 1 and opened Game 2 by missing all four of his shot attempts in the first half. However, he went 6-for-8 on his field goal attempts in the second half on Monday and appeared to be finding his playoff footing, Williams writes for the Journal-Constitution (subscription required). “The thing about Jalen is he can impact winning in lots of ways, and he’s doing things for other people,” Snyder said. “I think his gravity is real. We want to keep finding ways to get out in transition. Obviously, that’s something he’s elite in those situations and they’ve done a good job trying to take that away. … (But) I think he’s done a really good job, kind of adjusting throughout the games, as far as how they’re guarding him, how they’re taking away certain actions, what he can do to combat that that’s happening, and that’s the nature of a playoff series.”
  • Former No. 1 overall pick Zaccharie Risacher saw his minutes decline near the end of the regular season and hasn’t been part of Atlanta’s rotation during the first round of the playoffs, logging just two total minutes so far in the series. Risacher told the French outlet BeBasket after Game 1 that he’s doing his best to “stay prepared no matter what,” as Johnny Askounis of Eurohoops relays. “You can’t let yourself get down by things you can’t control,” he said. “Of course, you can imagine it’s not an easy situation to manage. But here I am, still here, even more motivated, I’d say. I have to try to turn this to my advantage. Obviously, it’s tough, but I’m trying to make it a strength.”
  • In case you missed it, Hawks guard Nickeil Alexander-Walker is a finalist for the Most Improved Player award. The winner will be announced on Friday during Amazon Prime’s playoff broadcast at 6:30 pm Eastern time, per the NBA (Twitter link).
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