The Hawks picked up two wins on their second West Coast road trip, ending their 12th week of the season on the right foot. The same cannot be said for the Hawks’ 13th week of the season.

Over their last five games, the Hawks went 2-3 and have returned to the 10th spot in the Eastern Conference standings. They have not played their best basketball, including falling apart against the Trail Blazers on Thursday and a blowout loss to the Celtics on Saturday night.

Against the Celtics, who rank second in the East despite low preseason expectations, the Hawks trailed by as many as 43 points. They gave up 22 3-pointers, just two shy of the Celtics’ season high.

This season, the Hawks have trailed by double digits but have often found ways to combat that. As of late, though, they just have not displayed the resilience that allowed them to get out to a 12-8 record in the first 20 games. Since then, the Hawks are 8-16 over their last 24 games.

“I think there’s a number of factors,” Hawks coach Quin Snyder said of Saturday’s loss. “We’re coming back from a pretty good stretch of games where I thought we didn’t have, talked about before the game, finding some juice. We didn’t have that. And I think when we talk about that, it manifests itself, just the competitiveness or urgency — whether it be up at the point of a screen, execution or someone makes the 3, not running hard enough, where we get spacing and we can get to the rim. We didn’t run at all offensively.

“The beginning of the game, we didn’t have good possessions and took contested, midrange shots without moving the ball. That’s not who we are, that’s not how we play. So I think our commitment to some of those things offensively was lacking, especially early.”

Some of the Hawks’ struggles have come as the team tries to integrate newcomers CJ McCollum and Corey Kispert into the rotation. But many of their struggles began at least a month before the Hawks made the trade to acquire them.

Since Dec. 1, the Hawks have ranked among the worst 10 teams in defensive rating. The Hawks began the season among the best in the league, which allowed them to run their offense. In the past week the Hawks ranked 25th in defensive rating (121.3).

Though they have played with the league’s best pace, it has not resulted in shot-making. This past week, the Hawks had the fourth-worst field goal percentage, making just 43.5% of their overall attempts.

Up ahead

This week, the Hawks have games scheduled against the Bucks, Grizzlies and Suns. Just one of those teams has a record above .500, with none ranked among the top six teams in their respective conferences.

Monday vs. Bucks

The Bucks rank 11th in the Eastern Conference and sit just 1½ games behind the Hawks for 10th place. Like the Hawks, the Bucks have lost three straight games and four of their last six. They’ve had the league’s sixth-worst offense over the last two weeks, according to Cleaning the Glass.

Even though Giannis Antetokounmpo returned to the rotation at the end of last month, the Bucks still average just 111.4 points per game.

On paper, the Hawks have an opportunity to get back onto the right side of the win/loss column.

Wednesday at Grizzlies

Wednesday’s meeting against the Grizzlies will be the first between the teams this season. The matchup will be the Grizzlies’ first since returning to the U.S. after their European series against the Magic in Berlin and London.

The Grizzlies are one of the league’s better rebounding teams, ranking among the top five teams since Jan. 1. The Hawks, by comparison, have struggled on the glass.

The Grizzlies have won three of their last 10 games, including a win over the Magic on Sunday.

Friday vs. Suns

The Hawks won the first meeting against the Suns in November, after completing a 22-point fourth-quarter comeback. But the Suns are just a few wins away from jumping into the top six in the Western Conference. The Suns have won six of their last 10 games and have the NBA’s third-best defense over the last two weeks and rank fifth overall this season.

The Suns don’t have the strongest offense, but their stifling defense has been enough to power them through.

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Atlanta Hawks forward/center Onyeka Okongwu, center, comes down with a rebound during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Portland Trail Blazers on Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026, in Portland, Ore. (Molly J. Smith/AP)

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