If You Know You Know: Trae Young Will Prove the Doubters Wrong š¤
Thereās a certified buzz around State Farm Arena. Itās the Atlanta Hawksā home opener and radio stations and marching bands are blasting music outside. Inside, things are even crazier with fans and media ogling over a facility thatās unveiling a $200 million makeover, the second-biggest renovation in NBA history.
This rehab called for a full guttingāweāre talking new concourse layouts, new TopGolf suites, a new jumbotron roughly the size of Cobb County, new everything. There are so many changes to the former Philips Arena that, when an usher hands out souvenir programs, everyone excitedly grabs one for the map inside.
The team brought in a bright new face, too, and it belongs to Trae Young. In this rebuilding seasonāliterally and figurativelyāthe super-gifted kid out of Norman, OK, is going to be responsible for some fun times around the gym. But heās 20 and hasnāt met a 30-footer he doesnāt like, so there are destined to be a few frustrating moments as well. The Hawks know this. They only hope that the energy the fans show in the stands after a dope crossover doesnāt completely dissipate after a dumb turnover.
āIām excited,ā Young says of his rookie season during the Hawksā media day Facebook forum with fans. āThereās a little bit of anxiousness, nervousness, a little bit of everything. Iām just ready to play. At this time, youāve been through so much. Youāre just ready to play.ā
The whole organization knows what Trae means. Follow the aroma of grilled chicken and freshly baked brownies down to the sleek, floor-level Chefās Club and youāll run into Joe Schafer, the executive chef for the venueās entire culinary program. This man leads a staff of hundreds for every State Farm Arena event, but even he knows that thereās another person in the building with much more on his plate these days.
ā[Traeās] amazing,ā says Schafer, of the franchise-building point guard whose face is already plastered on billboards across the city and, of course, on the cover of tonightās program. āHeās a little phenom. You never know what to expect in any sport when you draft. You never know what youāre going to get, but Iām excited.ā
Everyoneās pumped. Until they arenāt.
At this point Youngās backstory is old news. Introduced to the masses last year at Oklahoma during a freshman campaign in which he showed the moves of Steph and the range of Sprint, Young literally did things previously unseen in collegeālike being the first player to lead the NCAA in points and assists in the same season. He had offensive outbursts of 43 and 39 before New Yearās Eve, but as defenders wised up, those numbers came down. Kinda hard to do your thing when youāre double- and triple-teamed every possession, right?
But even with the stats tapering off toward the end of the Soonersā season, the Hawks never wavered in their feelings for Young. According to many reports, Trae was the guy that Atlanta wanted from jumpāso, when the Draft came, the franchise had no problem with trading its No. 3 pick to the Dallas Mavericks in exchange for the No. 5 selection and a future first-rounder. The Mavs took Luka Doncic with the third choice.
āTwo of our goals in the next few years is to accumulate as many assets as we can and to get as much talent as we can,ā Hawks GM Travis Schlenk told the Atlanta-Journal Constitution before the season started. āLuka is a heck of a player; we were happy with him. Trae is a heck of a player; we are excited to have him. When the opportunity came to pick up a first-round pick from the Mavericks, it just kind of made sense to accomplish both goals with one move.ā
Most of your favorite hoops bloggers said the Hawks royally effed up with the transaction. Doncic, a EuroLeague sensation, was deemed a once-in-a- generation talent. He was 18 giving 28-year-old vets 20 and 8 every night. How could Atlanta not stick with him?
When the NBA Summer League started, those rumbles only grew louderāeven though Doncic sat out for the action. Young, on the other hand, was out there getting his every move dissected by analysts. He averaged 12.7 points on just 23 percent shooting in Utah. The haters couldnāt get to Twitter quick enough.
When he got to Vegas, however, Youngās game took off. He averaged 17 and nearly 7 assists in four games. The shooting percentage jumped tremendously, too. Things got quiet on the timeline.
By then, though, Young and his many supportersāone of the loudest in the camp was Denver Nuggets rookie Michael Porter Jr., whose friendship with Trae goes back to their AAU daysāwere fed up with the jokes and negative jabs. Porter Jr told us followers to ākeep that same energyā when Young inevitably took off; Trae rocked a hoodie that said āKeep that same energyā not long thereafter.
Everyoneās quiet. Until they arenāt.
It brings us back to the Hawksā home opener. Of course, itās vs. the Mavericks. Trae Young vs. Luka Doncic. The scheduling gods would not have had it any other way. Doris Burke and the ESPN crew are here. The Zac Brown Band is doing the national anthem. Future is performing at the half and postgame. Feels almost playoff-ish.
Trae started a little off. Heās handsy and anxious. Three fouls before the 10:00 mark in the second. He sat down with 5 points. At one point in the first half, the Hawks were down by 26. Doncic, on the other hand, was poised beyond his years. You can already see where this is going.
The Hawksā first-year head coach, Lloyd Pierce, must have given a Rudy-esque halftime speech because his squad came out fired up in the second half. Taurean Prince and Kent Bazemore held things down in the third quarter while Young played with a sense of urgency in the fourth, showing off some zip with his passes and his underrated knack for drawing fouls in the paint. There was even a rewind-worthy moment when Dennis Smith Jr got all discombobulated during one of Youngās silly dribbling exhibitions. Doncic finished with 21 points. Young ended with 17 points and 5 assists and his Hawks got the comeback victory.
āPeople are going to look and say that [Doncic] scored 4 more points than me and that makes him better,ā Young said after the game. āWell, Iām glad my team won. Iām glad our team came out on top. Thatās the main thing for me.ā
We wonāt overly simplify things too much by calling the meeting a metaphor for Traeās young careerāa hype-filled start, shaky moments, strong comeback, eventual triumphābut you canāt help but recognize the resilience.
āThose first three quarters, when youāre in foul trouble, your rhythm isnāt going,ā said Young, surrounded by local reporters. āItās tough. Luckily, I have great teammates and veterans who just told me to stay the course. When the fourth quarter came, I knew I had to show up and play for my teammates.ā
Itās no coincidence that new Hawks forward Vince Carter has a locker next to the celebrated rookie. From in-game inconsistencies to the post-game media smothering, the 21-year vet has seen it all before, so heās taken it upon himself to help Young navigate through the clutter.
āWe sit beside each other in timeouts or whatever,ā said Carter about Young, who sandwiched that nightās performance between a rousing 35-point showing against Cleveland and a rough 3-12 effort versus Chicago. āI make sure we communicate. Itās something I want to do. He asks me questions and I enjoy that. That lets me know that he wants to get better. He doesnāt want the stage to get too big. Heās definitely humbled himself by saying, Hey, teach me the ropes. Heās going to put it together and mold into one great player.ā
But even with the highs and lows that will define Youngās rookie season, the 20-year-old has been exactly what the Hawks organization has asked for thus far. Heās scoring, passing and generally getting folks around Atlanta energized about basketball again. āThis was a big game for me,ā Young said. āI wanted to win for myself, my team and this city.ā
āItās a long season,ā Carter added. āYouāre going to have bad nights. Youāre going to hear people say, Maybe youāre not this type of player. Just stay the course. Just like that, that meter turns the other way and you become the great Trae Young that everybody wants to see.ā
Young will have a few more uneven games, fueling the āDoncic was the better pickā narrative further. But if weāve learned anything from watching this kid over the past year or so, itās that if Trae keeps being Trae, heāll have the final say.
āI always play with that chip on my shoulder, that lilā nastiness,ā he said. āI just play and compete.ā
While always keeping that same energy.
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DeMarco Williams is a SLAM contributor. Follow him on TwitterĀ @demarcowill.
Photos via Getty Images.Ā








