I've been fairly critical of Hawes from time to time. More so toward the end of this season, which was a disappointment in my opinion where Hawes is concerned. I'm willing to give him next season to elevate his game to a different level. Not that anyone cares what I'm willing to give him.
Hawes has become what I call a center of convenience. By that I mean, he excells at times by accident, and not by hard work. I paid careful attention to the games where he rebounded well and also scored well. And in almost every instance, he had little or no competition in the post. In one game that he grabbed 12 rebounds, I went back and re-watched the game. At least 9 of the 12 rebounds he grabbed either bounced directly to him, or there was no one else under the basket except him. I'm not faulting him for that, but my point is that when he does have competition for rebounds, he suddenly ends up with 3 or 4 boards instead of 12. When Hawes does grab a rebound in traffic, he has the horrible habit of bringing the ball down to waist level and wa la, its gone. This happened time and time again last season. I saw the opposing center take the ball away from Hawes from behind when he still had it above his head.
His high scoring games are similar. If he's hitting his outside shot early on, it ususally leads to a pretty good scoring game. And he'll ride that shot all game. Oh he'll occasionally try a running hook and get a couple of follows, but most of his scoring comes from the outside. And when he's not hitting from the outside, he's pretty much worthless. Say what you want about Thompson, but he grabs plenty of rebounds in traffic. And sometimes he's the only King under the basket surrounded by three or four players from the opposition and he still comes down with the rebound. When have you seen Hawes do that. His reputation for being soft is well earned.
Here's the major difference between Hawes and Thompson. When Hawes game goes south, he just goes south with it. When Thompsons game goes south, he tries to do other things on the court to help the team. Like rebound, set picks and just all around hustle. Hawes just simply disappears. Hawes has a fiery personality, so I just don't get it. He seems to suffer defeat too easily.
I wonder just how much film Hawes watches? There are games where he appears to make no effort to deny the ball to his opponent. He constantly lets them set up way too close to the basket. Once again, say what you want about Thompson, but he works hard to deny the ball, and forces them to move away from the basket in order to get the ball. Now what happens after that still needs a lot of work. But he's at least battling out there. All the great players watch tons of film on their opponent. Larry Bird would hardly be considered a great athlete. He didn't have the greatest lateral movement. But he was smart. He knew where his opponent wanted to go before they made their move. He knew where they wanted to shoot from on the floor, and he denyed them that spot.
You don't have to be a great athlete to be a good defender. It helps, but if your smart and you study film you can still excell on defense. So I don't care if you spend every second of free time in the weight room. If you don't do the rest of the work, your not going to be sucessful. And this is where I think Hawes is failing. How many times does a player have to beat you baseline before you deny him the baseline? Just asking??