CHICAGO โ The Atlanta Hawks came in facing slim odds. They walked away with their biggest victory in years.
The Hawks won the NBA draft lottery on Sunday, landing the No. 1 pick and a potential cornerstone player in a year where thereโs no clear-cut choice.
โAt least I can go home and tell my wife on Motherโs Day, โHey, at least we won the lottery,โโ general manager Landry Fields said. โThatโs her present. Yeah, there we go.โ
Winning the lottery for the first time in franchise history ๐ > pic.twitter.com/r8r6gpZrZ9
โ Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) May 12, 2024
The Hawks hit the jackpot despite just 3% odds after finishing 10th in the Eastern Conference at 36-46. They dropped their final six regular-season games and lost to the Chicago Bulls in the first round of the play-in tournament.
โIt was a shock,โ said Fields, who grinned ear to ear when deputy commissioner Mark Tatum announced the Hawks as the winners. โWhen I first saw that it wasnโt us between 10 and 12, that launched us into the top four. I was like, all right, weโve got a real shot at this thing. A bit of surprise, but a lot of excitement.โ
The Hawks havenโt won a postseason series since a surprising run to the Eastern Conference finals in 2021. They got knocked out in the first round in 2022 and 2023.
Atlanta has some big decisions to make this offseason, including whether to break up its backcourt of Trae Young and Dejounte Murray. Fields can build with the No. 1 pick โ assuming he keeps it โ though itโs not clear who will be taken first after Victor Wembanyama was the obvious choice for San Antonio last year.
READ: NBA: Hawks hold onto Dejounte Murray as trade deadline ends
โOur group has been fantastic,โ Fields said. โThereโs a whole lot of trust. Theyโve put in the work. Weโll kind of lean into our process and take it from there.โ
Washington, Houston, San Antonio and Detroit rounded out the top five. The draft is June 26-27 in Brooklyn.
Houston coach Ime Udoka was thrilled to get the third pick after the Rockets went 41-41 and missed the playoffs for the fourth straight year.
โPleasant surprise when you move up the way that we did,โ he said. โI feel like thereโs a lot of qualified candidates out there.โ
Washington and Detroit had the best chances to land the top pick at 14%. Only four teams have won the lottery with slimmer odds than Atlanta, with the biggest longshot being Orlando at 1.52% in 1993. The Magic orchestrated a blockbuster draft night trade with Golden State, sending the rights to Chris Webber to the Warriors for the rights to Penny Hardaway along with three future first-round picks.
San Antonio landed a generational player last year in Wembanyama. The franchise that previously took David Robinson and Tim Duncan with the No. 1 overall pick got its next great big man, and all the Frenchman did was turn in one of the best rookie seasons in NBA history.
Fields disputed the idea that this yearโs class is a weak one, saying there are future All-Stars.
โEvery draft class has great players in it,โ he said.
The No. 1 pick could once again come from France, whether itโs center Alex Sarr or sharp-shooting forward Zaccharie Risacher, but thatโs far from a certainty. UConn guard Stephon Castle and Kentuckyโs Reed Sheppard and Rob Dillingham are both expected to be off the board within the first few selections.
The 7-foot-1, 224-pound Sarr has the size and mobility that teams crave and can defend the perimeter when heโs not blocking shots down low. The 19-year-old from Toulouse is known for his explosiveness around the rim, though he could use some more muscle. It would help, too, if he developed into a more reliable 3-point shooter.
Sarr, whose brother Olivier plays for the Oklahoma City, spent this past season in Australiaโs National Basketball League.
Risacher, who was born in Spain and grew up in France, is known as a dynamic, albeit streaky shooter for JL Bourg, whether heโs popping off screens or pulling up for 3-pointers. He often guards the other teamโs best player.
Castle joined Andre Drummond in 2012 as UConnโs only one-and-done players when he declared for the draft in April after the Huskiesโ latest NCAA championship run. The 6-foot-6 guard averaged 11.1 points, 4.7 rebounds and 2.9 assists while often drawing the defensive assignment to shut down the oppositionโs top perimeter player.
Sheppard and Dillingham both came off the bench in their lone college seasons.
Sheppard, who was voted the Southeastern Conferenceโs top freshman by coaches, was one of the leagueโs best playmakers and perimeter shooters. He was Kentuckyโs No. 3 scorer at 12.5 points per contest and averaged an SEC-best 2.5 steals that ranked eighth nationally, despite starting just five of 33 games.
Dillingham was voted the SECโs top sixth man after averaging 15.2 and 3.9 assists. Kentucky tied for second in the conference and earned a No. 3 seed in the NCAA Tournament, only to get knocked out by Oakland in the round of 64. Coach John Calipari then left after 15 years for Arkansas.