1997–98 Atlanta Hawks season

1997–98 Atlanta Hawks season
Head coachLenny Wilkens
ArenaGeorgia Dome, Alexander Memorial Coliseum
Results
Record50–32 (.610)
PlaceDivision: 4th (Central)
Conference: 5th (Eastern)
Playoff finishEast First Round
(lost to Hornets 1–3)

Stats at Basketball Reference
Local media
TelevisionWATL
Fox Sports South
RadioWCNN

The 1997–98 Atlanta Hawks season was the 49th season for the Atlanta Hawks in the National Basketball Association, and their 30th season in Atlanta, Georgia. Due to the demolition of the Omni Coliseum during the off-season, the Hawks played their home games between the Georgia Dome, home of the NFL's Atlanta Falcons, and the Alexander Memorial Coliseum, home of the NCAA's Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets basketball team; the Alexander Memorial Coliseum (known as "Alexander Memorial Coliseum at McDonald's Center" at the time) was also the Hawks' original home from 1968 to 1972, after the team relocated to Atlanta from St. Louis, Missouri. During the off-season, the team signed free agent Chucky Brown, and re-signed Greg Anderson, who previously played for the Hawks during the 1994–95 season.

The Hawks got off to a fast start by winning their first eleven games of the regular season. However, after a 19–5 start to the season, the team struggled posting a seven-game losing streak between December and January, but then posted a six-game winning streak afterwards, and later on held a 29–20 record at the All-Star break. The Hawks won eight of their final eleven games of the season, and finished in fourth place in the Central Division with a solid 50–32 record, earning the fifth seed in the Eastern Conference; the team also qualified for the NBA playoffs for the sixth consecutive year.

Dikembe Mutombo averaged 13.4 points, 11.4 rebounds and 3.4 blocks per game, and was named the NBA Defensive Player of the Year for the second consecutive year, and was also named to the All-NBA Third Team, and to the NBA All-Defensive First Team, while Steve Smith led the Hawks in scoring averaging 20.1 points per game. In addition, Alan Henderson averaged 14.3 points and 6.4 rebounds per game, after replacing Christian Laettner as the team's starting power forward at mid-season, and was named the NBA Most Improved Player of the Year, while Laettner provided the team with 13.8 points and 6.6 rebounds per game, and Mookie Blaylock contributed 13.2 points, 6.7 assists and 2.6 steals per game, but struggled shooting .269 in three-point field goal percentage, and was named to the NBA All-Defensive Second Team. Meanwhile, Tyrone Corbin provided with 10.2 points and 1.3 steals per game, while off the bench, Eldridge Recasner contributed 9.3 points per game, and Brown averaged 5.0 points per game.

During the NBA All-Star weekend at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York, Mutombo and Smith were both selected for the 1998 NBA All-Star Game, as members of the Eastern Conference All-Star team; it was Smith's first and only All-Star appearance. Blaylock finished tied in fifth place in Defensive Player of the Year voting.

In the Eastern Conference First Round of the 1998 NBA playoffs, the Hawks faced off against the 4th–seeded Charlotte Hornets, a team that featured All-Star forward Glen Rice, Anthony Mason and Vlade Divac; Rice was Smith's former teammate on the Miami Heat. The Hawks lost the first two games to the Hornets on the road at the Charlotte Coliseum, but managed to win Game 3 at home by a 32-point margin, 96–64 at the Georgia Dome. However, the Hawks lost Game 4 to the Hornets at home, 91–82, thus losing the series in four games.

The Hawks finished 24th in the NBA in home-game attendance, with an attendance of 610,615 at the Georgia Dome, and the Alexander Memorial Coliseum during the regular season. Following the season, Laettner was traded to the Detroit Pistons, while Recasner and Brown both signed as free agents with the Charlotte Hornets, and Anderson was released to free agency.

On March 27, 1998, the Hawks set a single-game regular season attendance record of 62,046 fans at the Georgia Dome in a game against All-Star guard Michael Jordan, and the 2-time defending NBA champion Chicago Bulls, who defeated the Hawks, 89–74. The Bulls would go on to defeat the Utah Jazz in six games in the 1998 NBA Finals for their third consecutive NBA championship, and sixth overall in eight years.