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Nets beat Hawks in first game of back-to-back set

The Nets are making their last stand.

Perhaps they should start treating every game as such.

They finally played like a team with its season rapidly spiraling away.

A team that knew it likely needs to win both of its consecutive games against the Hawks to keep its faint play-in tournament hopes alive. A team whose new interim coach had been publicly chastising his players.

Dennis Schroder looks to drive past Dejounte Murray in the second quarter of the Nets’ 124-97 blowout win over the Hawks. Wendell Cruz-USA TODAY Sports

And Cam Johnson played like someone who was cognizant of his previously diminishing minutes, determined to reclaim a role he had just lost.

The Nets ripped the red–hot Hawks from the opening tip and never relented, cruising to a 124-97 rout Thursday night at Barclays Center before the teams clash again on Saturday.

It was everything coach Kevin Ollie has pleaded with his team to demonstrate, and it was unrecognizable to what the Nets have produced in recent weeks.

Their ambition to sneak into the final play-in spot, which would have been hard to take seriously with a loss, remained on life support as a result.

The Nets entered Thursday four games behind the Hawks for the No. 10 seed in the East, but now will enter Saturday’s rematch three games back of that last play-in spot with a chance to cut it to two games.

Johnson, returning to the starting lineup for the second consecutive game due to Cam Thomas and Ben Simmons’ injuries, paced the Nets all night, erupting for a season-high 29 points on a blistering 10-for-15 shooting from the field and 7 of 11 from 3-point range.

The Nets badly needed it — another scoring punch around Mikal Bridges — and Johnson needed it himself as well.

Cameron Johnson looks to make a move around Bogdan Bogdanovic during the Nets’ win. USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con

He was tenacious, playing as if he had a chip on his shoulder after being relegated to a bench role the first three games of Ollie’s tenure.

He brought the 17,284 fans in attendance to their feet in the closing seconds of the first quarter, splitting two defenders before a vicious dunk to extend the Nets’ lead to 34-16.

The Nets had spent all morning and pregame talking about Ollie’s nonnegotiables — effort and turnovers — and their need to improve in both.

They certainly delivered on that challenge, looking like they were in a different gear than the Hawks and committing just nine turnovers.

Bogdan Bogdanovic drives past Nic Claxton during the Nets’ win. AP

The Hawks, who played their third game without Trae Young after he underwent hand surgery to treat a torn ligament in his left pinky, had not felt their superstar’s absence until Thursday.

They won their first two games without Young, crushing the Magic and Jazz by 17 and 27 points respectively. Going back further, the Hawks had won eight of 13 games entering Thursday.

The win marked Ollie’s first at home since he took over, and the Nets improved to 2-3 overall under his tutelage.

The Hawks chipped into the Nets’ lead during the second quarter, cutting their deficit to just six at halftime. But Johnson hit a layup and drilled a pull-up 3-pointer within the first three minutes of the second half, helping extend the Nets’ lead back to 13.

Jalen Wilson (22) huddles with teammates Lonnie Walker IV (8), Dennis Smith Jr. (4), Nic Claxton (33) and Mikal Bridges during the Nets’ win. AP

Johnson scored six more points in the third quarter, and the Nets carried the 19-point lead into the fourth quarter before subsequently ripping off a 5-0 run to start the final frame.

Though it was another mostly quiet night for Bridges, he finished with 15 points on 5-for-14 shooting from the field. His efficiency was a step in the right direction after his brutal shooting woes during the Nets’ road trip, and he was a team-best plus-30 on the court.

Dennis Schroder chipped in 23 points, eight rebounds and seven assists. He hit 5 of 7 from 3-point range, tied for the most he’d made this season.

Things were going so well for the Nets that Day’Ron Sharpe, who entered the game having made just two 3-pointers the whole season, drilled back-to-back 3s in the fourth quarter to extend the lead to 115-84.

For the first time in too long, there were different emotions being expressed by Nets players. Different sounds emanating from the Barclays Center crowd. Different questions posed to Ollie.

As Captain Picard famously expressed while battling the Borg, the line had to be drawn here for the Nets’ season. Can they draw it again on Saturday?

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