[外電] Williams ready for second season
Williams ready for second season
By SEKOU SMITH
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 07/16/06
Salt Lake City — By simply peeling his battered body off the
floor at Salt Lake Community College time after time Friday night,
Marvin Williams proved he has cleared one of the mental hurdles
that plagued him as a Hawks rookie.
The tentative teen from last season has given way to a more
aggressive, mature second-year forward who won't let a few hard
fouls deter him, as he showed in a Rocky Mountain Revue rumble
with Utah.
"Their coach [Jerry Sloan] was talking about how he wanted his
guys to be tougher," Williams said Saturday morning from the
lobby of the Hawks' hotel. "They came out and were physical, and
I think we handled that."
He took licks all night in the Hawks' summer league opener
against the Jazz, but Williams didn't back down. And when
bruising Jazz center Rafael Araujo sent him to the floor for the
second time with 6:14 to go in the third quarter, Williams had
finally had enough.
He had to be restrained by members of both teams as he tried to
go after the 6-foot-11, 295-pound Araujo, who was ejected after
his second flagrant foul, both on Williams.
"I came in here last year at this time and my head was spinning,"
said Williams, who scored a game-high 22 points, including a
14-for-18 showing from the line, courtesy of his repeated trips
to the floor, in the Hawks' 98-76 loss. "I didn't know what to
expect.
"But I felt totally different [Friday] as opposed to last year.
If somebody knocks you down, you have to get up to get better.
And there wasn't a time out there when I got knocked down that
I couldn't get up on my own. This is a man's game, and I'm willing
to take a man's lumps to be here. ... I'm not backing down from
anyone or any challenge."
Williams has been the star of the summer league so far, coming
through with a 30-point, 10-rebound effort in Saturday night's
94-93 overtime loss to Dallas.
That's what Hawks coaches hoped to see. After bringing Williams
along slowly as a rookie, they expect him to grow up quickly this
season.
"I told Marvin he has really grown in the area of how to respond
to certain situations," said Hawks assistant Larry Drew, who is
serving as the head coach of the summer squad. "Last year this
time, had he been knocked down to the floor the number of times
he was knocked down, he would have stopped taking the ball to
the basket.
"This year, he used that a motivational factor. He got knocked
down a couple of times, they took a couple of cheap shots at
him, and he kept going right at them. He's really grown in that
area. I think now he understands that if he attacks, teams are
going to do one of two things. They're going to give you baskets
or they're going to send you to the free throw line, and he's
willing to take that chance now."
Williams realizes the pressure the Hawks' young nucleus will have
to deal with as they try to move from postseason afterthought to
contender. That's why his first offseason has included as many
workouts and late-night shooting sessions as it has time
analyzing his solid but hardly spectacular rookie season.
There's been no shortage of outside analysis — from coaches,
family, friends. Williams has soaked it all in while reminding
himself to stay true to what has led him this far.
But he knows his success this season is primarily in his hands.
That's why he's undergone the mental makeover.
"I've been working on my post game and everything else, but it
all starts right here," he said, pointing to his head.
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http://www.ajc.com/hawks/content/sports/hawks/stories/0716hawks.html
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