Trae Young’s future in Atlanta now hinges on how the Hawks deploy AJ Dybantsa after drafting the 20-year-old guard in June. On 1 July 2026, ESPN’s Tim MacMahon questioned whether the rookie’s skill set matches the role the Hawks seem set to give him.
What did MacMahon say?
MacMahon argued that the Hawks didn’t draft Dybantsa to “spot up on the weak side.” In a clip shared on X, he stated that Atlanta’s offense needs creators who can generate their own shot, not players who primarily fill corners. The critique landed just days after the Hawks took Dybantsa with the No. 26 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft.
Why it matters for Trae Young
The debate spotlights Trae Young’s role as the Hawks’ primary playmaker. If Dybantsa thrives only in catch-and-shoot roles, Atlanta risks sidelining a player who could add playmaking upside. MacMahon’s take implies the Hawks may need to rethink their developmental plan for Dybantsa—or adjust how they deploy Young to keep both guards effective.
What comes next?
Summer League begins in Las Vegas on 5 July 2026, giving Dybantsa his first chance to prove he belongs in a rotation that already features Trae Young. Hawks coach Quin Snyder will watch closely to see if Dybantsa can handle secondary playmaking duties or if he’s better suited for a specialist role. The franchise’s success in 2026-27 may hinge on that answer.
