Archives
Jun 15, 2008
Lottery Summit: Atlanta Hawks

Jun 13, 2008
Woodson Remains In The Hawks Nest

May 31, 2008
Here Comes The Sund

May 15, 2008
Who Will Be The Hawks New GM?

May 7, 2008
Goodbye B.K.

Full Archive

Marvin Williams: The Forgotten Man
Authored by Zettler Clay IV - November 19, 2006 - 10:21 pm



Current Featured Columns
The First Three Weeks of 2008-09
Now that we’ve had a little time to watch free agency unfold, along with the usual accompaniment of trades, let’s look at some of the key moves and how they impact the teams involved.

Grading The Deal: W's Sign Maggette And Turiaf
The Boom Dizzle era is over, and the Warriors quickly recovered by signing two nice pieces to complement their young core.

Reliving Eight Years Of Jermaine
Regardless of how happy he is to be out of Indiana, there will always be a part of Indiana in Jermaine O'Neal's 6’11” frame.
Iguodala Remains Key To Sixers' Success
When Brand scribbled is name on an $82 million dollar deal Wednesday, that all ended. Iguodala's short reign as "Batman" in Philadelphia was mercifully over.
$10 Million For Five Players?
The Orlando Magic will be limited by the NBA's Luxury Tax in terms of filling the remaining spots on their roster. It is also possible it could cost them Keyon Dooling or Maurice Evans.
More from RealGM's Columnists

RealGM Search
Search:
"My hand is feeling fine. I will be ready to take it off in a couple of weeks."

You cannot find him sitting idly while his hand is in a cast. He cannot even find him just on a treadmill or running around. You see him performing in drills, and constantly doing something. It has been an off-season of achievement, optimism, and agony for Marvin Williams. After finishing his rookie year on the All-Rookie second team, he took off to Chapel Hill, NC. Not to work-out. To to enroll in summer school.

This was a remarkable feat in itself, considering that most rookies in his position would be hellbent on silencing critics, considering that more people see who the Hawks didn't draft than who they did. For a number two overall pick who was only 19 years old, he was already being relegated to the "same breath as Sam Bowie" status. This was something that did not fall on deaf ears.

"Yeah, I hear it. I hear and read everything," Williams said. "I'm not worried about it. I am pretty confident on the reasons that I was drafted."

In talking to this man, one would get every impression that Williams is every bit as calm and collected as any player who is self-affirmed in his place in the NBA. This is probably because he doesn't hold himself to anyone else's standard, but his own. When asked if he has individual goals or feats that he wants to accomplish, he looked, and did not bat an eye.

"My goal is to work and play as hard as I can. I just want to win."

So if you averaged five points a game in your career and won five championships, would you be happy?

"Of course. I would rather average five points a game and win five 'ships because, that is what you play for," Williams said smiling. "How many people do you know who has won 5 rings?"

Does this sound like a much maligned 20 year old, or a 34 year old vet? However way you look at his career in front of him, you would be hard-pressed to find a more impressive physical specimen come out of 2005 NBA draft. He is listed at 6'9, but he could very well pass for 6'10. His jumper is as smooth as they come, and at his height, will be virtually unstoppable if he is on. His ball-handling is superb; he honed his ball-handling skills as an adolescent by being trained as a guard by his father. His 3/4 quarter sprint from the 2005 NBA Draft Combine was faster than Chris Paul, Monta Ellis, Jarrett Jack, Luther Head, and Martell Webster; even though those players are all guards.

Williams played in summer league as if he had a golden nugget on his shoulder. He was set to be the Hawks second play-maker to fill in on some of those 18 points that left with Al. Aside from the first game of the season, the Hawks have had no problem scoring. They haven't had much problem winning either, and Marvin hasn't had any problem showing support. Go to any Hawk game, and one would see that he is the first person off the bench congratulating and praising.

"It is killing me man," Williams commenting on his game-time inactivity. "I will be ready soon though."

Moreover, on the date of his return, the Hawks will be boosted by his draft pick alone. Since 1980, no NBA team has won a championship without a top 3 pick on their roster. According to this "law", the Hawks have a better chance of winning the NBA championship than Dallas and Phoenix. Though this may be out of Williams' control, this is a pick that, regardless of who they selected, should comfort the Hawks.

Perhaps this is the reason why Marvin WIlliams is so calm.