At Summer League, the Atlanta Hawks coaching staff was trying to pump Jeff Teague full of confidence — he could be the starting point guard for the Hawks if he would just take the job away from Mike Bibby. He needed to find his dog.
The job is available because the Hawks have a problem when Bibby is on the floor, as coach Larry Drew explained to the Atlanta Journal Constitution.
Teams are exposing Bibby defensively, an issue Mike Woodson had to deal with last year. An issue that will cost the Hawks in the playoffs. Again. Teague is the better defender but Bibby takes charge of the offense in a way Teague does not — Bibby has always had his dog. Also Bibby shoots better — he is shooting 49 percent from three — and turns the ball over a little less. Because of that it seems Drew just does not trust the young Teague the way he does the veteran Bibby.
There is no easy answer. Look at the best five-man lineups for the Hawks and Bibby is in almost every unit, not Teague. But is Teague getting enough of a chance with the front line players — he sets teammates up better (higher assist percentage) and isn’t a bad shooter. He is just not as aggressive as Bibby.
And that’s what the Hawks coaches were telling Teague at Summer League — be aggressive and take the job away from Bibby. This year’s Teague is better than the rookie version across the board — shooting better, higher percentage of assists, generally looking more comfortable. But it has not been enough to earn the trust of Larry Drew. Yet.