Atlanta, GA
Atlanta’s Fourth Quarter Comeback Falls Short vs Houston Sending Atlanta to Its Sixth Straight Loss
It was another tough situation for the Hawks tonight vs the team with the third-best record in the NBA, the Houston Rockets. They were missing Jalen Johnson, Zaccharie Risacher, Bogdan Bogdanovic, and Clint Capela tonight vs Houston and their absences were felt tonight in what ended up being a four-point loss. It was almost a miracle 4th quarter comeback that saw Atlanta erase a 16-point lead and have an open look to win the game, but De’Andre Hunter’s go-ahead three-pointer went down and out, sealing Atlanta’s fate and extending their losing streak.
There were no new reasons as to why the Hawks lost this game. The offense, particularly the three-point shooting, continues to be dismal (putting it nicely) and is not giving the Hawks much of a chance, despite the defense playing a good game. Injuries to four different impact players did not help either, though Capela was not on the injury report yesterday or today and was ruled out after the game began.
Only four Hawks scored in double-digits tonight, led by Trae Young, who had 21 points to go along with nine assists. Hunter came off the bench to score 16, Krejci had 13, and Dyson Daniels had 12 points, 10 rebounds, and four steals. Atlanta shot 40% from the field and 23% from three. The Hawks have had one of the worst offenses in the NBA over the past two weeks and that continued tonight. Mouhamed Gueye got his first career NBA start tonight and scored 11 points and pulled in seven rebounds. Gueye has received significant rotation minutes for the first time in his young career due to injuries to the rest of the roster and has shown his talent, while also showing that he is still a raw player with an intriguing skill set.
Atlanta is now 22-25 and at risk of slipping further in the Eastern Conference. A season that looked filled with so much promise just a few weeks ago looks to be teetering due to the injuries to key players and poor play. The Hawks will travel to Cleveland on Thursday to try and snap this losing streak.
The Hawks defense had a good night tonight vs the Rockets, finishing with a 97.3 defensive rating. Houston shot 47% from thre field and 23% from three. Jalen Green led all scorers with 25 points, Alperen Sengun had 18 points, Jae’Sean Tate had 16 points off the bench, and both Amen Thompson and Dillon Brooks had 11. Atlanta forced 21 turnovers on defense, which kept them in the game despite the struggles on the offensive end of the floor.
It was the first career NBA start for Mo Gueye tonight. He started alongside Trae Young, Dyson Daniels, Vit Krejci, and Onyeka Okongwu. The Rockets kept their usual starting five of Fred Van Vleet, Jalen Green, Dillon Brooks, Amen Thompson, and Alperen Sengun.
After the Rockets leaped out to a 7-2 lead, the Hawks responded in a big way with a 14-0 run and causing Ime Udoka to call a timeout. The Hawks started to dip into their rotation after the timeout, bringing in De’Andre Hunter, Keaton Wallace, and Larry Nance. Hunter scored a career high 35 points last night vs Minnesota and this was the third straight game for Wallace, having played a G-League game on Sunday and the game last night.
After going up 16-7, the Rockets went on an 11-5 run to cut the lead to 21-18. The Hawks defense was doing a good job of defending the three point line, limiting the Rockets to 2-10 from deep and taking a 27-22 lead into the second quarter. The Hawks were shooting 42% from the field and 31% from three. Young and Hunter had six points each.
The Rockets did not want the Hawks to get any momentum and after the Hawks scored four quick points and led 31-24.
Keaton steal and BOOM pic.twitter.com/EbijcaIb0q
— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) January 29, 2025
The timeout did stop the momentum though and Houston responded with a 12-2 run to take their first lead since early in the game. Talented guard Jalen Green had a big second quarter, scoring 11 points and being the most consistent source of offense for the Rockets early in the game.
The Hawks were not playing well on offense but were being very disruptive on the defensive end and causing chaos. In the second quarter alone, the Hawks forced 10 turnovers and scored eight points off of them. The Rockets turnovers led to the Hawks climbing back in the game and taking a 50-49 lead into the half.
Atlanta shot 41% from the field in the first half and 24% from three. Young led the way with 11 points and five assists. The Rockets shot 54% from the field and 31% from three.
The offenses did not start off much better in the second half. During the first three minutes, the teams combined to shoot 1-10 from the field and the Hawks led 52-51 with nine minutes remaining in the quarter. The Hawks offense was not able to find its footing in the quarter either.
The Hawks’ defense was keeping them in the game from the start, but as has been the case for the past two weeks, the offense and shooting were putrid. Atlanta shot 37% from the field and 25% from three and no player had more than five points. It has been quite the struggle for the Hawks on that end of the floor recently and is one of the main catalysts behind their recent losing streak.
The Rockets offense was not much better, but Jalen Green and Jae’Sean Tate combined for 20 points, nearly outscoring the Hawks themselves in the third. Houston went 13-14 at the free throw line Houston led 82-73 going into the fourth quarter and the Hawks were going to need their offense to find a way to get going if they were going to have a shot.
For much of the fourth, it did not look like that was going to be a reality. Houston led 96-80 with under five minutes left, but the Hawks had one more comeback attempt left in them. They scored nine straight to cut the lead to 96-89 and then Udoka called a timeout to try and slow the Hawk’s sudden momentum.
It didn’t work.
Dyson Daniels got a steal after the timeout then Young and Brooks both exchanged missed baskets. On their next possession, Young drew a foul and hit two free throws to make it 96-91. Atlanta forced another turnover and Krejci got a wide-open look for three but missed it. Thompson drew a foul on the other end and hit both free throws to extend the lead to 98-91. Young led the Hawks down and got another shot to fall to make it a five-point game.
After another Houston turnover, Daniels hit a shot and drew the foul. There was a dust-up between Dillon Brooks and Trae Young that ended with a double technical being assessed, though that did seem like the wrong call. Daniels hit the free throw and the lead was 98-96.
After a Jalen Green miss, the Hawks got a great look for De’Andre Hunter to potentially win the game, but it went in and out. The Rockets avoided being fouled and scored, and the game was over. Houston won 100-96 and extended Atlanta’s losing streak to six games.
How A De’Aaron Fox Trade Would Affect The Atlanta Hawks
Atlanta Hawks Viewed As A Top Trade Fit For Portland Trail Blazers Center
Atlanta, GA
Sean Garrett, Zaytoven, ATL Jacob celebrated with Black Music Month in Atlanta
Music producers are often called the architects of sound. They build harmonies, arrange vocals, and bend instrumentation and beats in a way that elicits emotion and transforms the tracks we hear today. Without them, our feet wouldn’t tap, our heads wouldn’t bob, and our waists wouldn’t whine. In Atlanta, where Black music thrives, the most impactful producers have been born, bred, and celebrated.
Black Music Month in June celebrates the cultural contributions of Black musicians in every genre, from rock and pop to blues and hip-hop. Atlanta-born and based producers Sean Garrett, Zaytoven, and ATL Jacob were honored in Atlanta with a dinner celebrating their contributions to the music industry.
The table was set, with a family-style dinner menu and dim lighting at the Asian-fusion restaurant LoKee. Jacob Canady, known as ATL Jacob, was the first to arrive at the honoree dinner in June. Canady has been called the leader of the next generation and is known for his Grammy-nominated work with Atlanta rapper Future, most notably the song “Wait for U.” Jacob told The Atlanta Voice that culture is key to preserving elements of hip-hop while elevating it.
“Everything starts from the culture and goes into the music. It might be the people, the places you go,” Canady said.
Xavier Dotson, known professionally as Zaytoven, has been pivotal to the sounds of modern hip-hop, ushering in an era where Gucci Mane’s “Icy” Migos’ “Versace,”, and Future’s “Beast Mode” mixtape have become the blueprint of Atlanta trap.
Canady was later joined by Grammy-nominated and veteran producer Garrett Hamler, known professionally as Sean Garrett. Dubbed “the pen,” Garrett is a songwriting and producing wizard, with over 50 number-one records and 100 million copies sold globally, shaping the sounds of genres like crunk music and artists such as Beyoncé, Ciara, Usher, and Chris Brown, to name a few.

Together, the three of them paint a historic picture of R&B and hip-hop music throughout the years, showcasing how the creativity of producers keeps the soul of music fresh and alive.
“I want to be remembered for my innovation. Like, ‘Oh yeah, he always had an open mind, he was innovative, he did different stuff with different genres and tried new things,” Canady said.
Related
Atlanta, GA
The World Cup is coming to Atlanta. Small businesses hope it pays off.
Cyrei Daniel had been trying to get the city’s attention for months — not just for her bakery, Sweet Me Good, but for the entire block.
When the city announced Atlanta would host eight FIFA World Cup matches, Daniel was ready to capture the economic bump from the extra visitors this summer. She applied for grants to make improvements to her storefront and marketing ahead of the tournament and received two. She also showed up to city council meetings to push for how the city planned to support small businesses during the games.
Piera Moore for BI
Daniel’s bakery sits on Edgewood Avenue in Atlanta’s Sweet Auburn corridor, one block from the King Center, on the streetcar line that runs straight to downtown. A million people visit the King Center every year. Two weeks before the World Cup, there were no banners, no flags, nothing on the street to signal the tournament was weeks away.
Economists and city officials have pointed to the tournament as a once-in-a-generation economic opportunity for the entire country. But for the small business owners who make up the backbone of Atlanta’s neighborhoods, the question isn’t whether money is coming — it’s whether any of it will reach the ground where they’re standing.
Piera Moore for BI
The World Cup is a great economic opportunity for local businesses
Atlanta is one of 16 host cities for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, with eight matches running from June 15 through July 15. The Metro Atlanta Chamber estimates 65,000 spectators per match, with at least 520,000 people expected across all eight games.
Ona Utuama started planning a year ago. Her eyewear brand, Tribal Eyes, is carried in Nordstrom and Bloomingdale’s, and she’s designed flag-printed sunglasses representing each country competing in the tournament, planning to vend at a brand activation near Mercedes-Benz Stadium during the first qualifier round, June 15 through June 27.
Piera Moore for BI
She’s also a physician. She built CollabMD Direct Primary Care specifically for international visitors who won’t carry American insurance — a cash-pay clinic with QR codes distributed through hotels, Airbnbs, taxi drivers, and Uber hosts, directing visitors to same-day appointments and telemedicine options in multiple languages.
Between the eyewear and the clinic, Utuama is projecting $50,000 to $90,000 in revenue from the tournament — and she’s built two separate businesses specifically designed to capture it.
Piera Moore for BI
The clinic’s World Cup page will offer language selection, IV hydration services, and same-day appointment availability throughout the summer. The clinic is designed to serve as an on-call doctor for hotel guests who have forgotten their medications or need care for minor medical issues, without having to navigate the American healthcare system. She approached the Marriott Marquis, which told her they love the idea and will follow up, and submitted a capability statement to Hartsfield-Jackson airport, which has been exploring a potential on-site clinic.
Between the eyewear and the clinic, Utuama is projecting $50,000 to $90,000 in revenue from the tournament.
Local businesses are going after tourists
Piera Moore for BI
Brian Lee started planning in late 2024. His company, Scratch Food Group, makes plant-based food products sold at Walmart, and he saw the World Cup as an opportunity to introduce his brand to a global audience — and hit a revenue goal of $30,000 during the tournament.
He attended the city meetings, then built his own strategy rather than wait for the city to hand him one. By spring, he had secured a spot at a corporate FIFA partner’s watch party, lined up pop-ups with Atlanta Breakfast Club and the Belt Hub at Ponce City Market, and won a Beltline Business Ventures grant to launch a mobile Scratch Cafe cart. He invested $15,000 in preparation — mobile carts, a commercial doughnut machine, mobile proofers, smallwares, and access to a new commercial kitchen — and brought on additional staff.
Piera Moore for BI
For Lee, the World Cup is as much about the long game as it is about the summer bump. The Scratch Cafe cart concept he’s launching through the Beltline Business Ventures grant isn’t just a World Cup play. He’s building it to operate at Atlanta Breakfast Club, the Belt Hub, and other venues in the city long after the tournament ends.
“I wish someone had told me to stop waiting on the city to figure out the World Cup plan for small businesses,” Lee told Business Insider. “I should have just plowed ahead.”
He’s honest about the risk. When asked if zero benefit from the whole thing would surprise him, he didn’t hesitate. “It wouldn’t surprise me,” he said. “There are so many unknown variables.”
Some businesses have been struggling to stay open
Piera Moore for BI
Seven minutes from the airport, Vanetta Roy has been doing it herself. The owner of Eat My Biscuits in East Point launched World Cup merchandise, redesigned her staff uniforms — clean white shirts, bow ties, everyone crisp — and added a limited-edition lobster biscuit called the “Gold Getter” to the menu for the summer. She’s not thinking about whether East Point foot traffic will find her. She’s thinking about what she wants the world to know about her brand when it walks through the door.
Piera Moore for BI
If the World Cup doesn’t deliver the boost she’s hoping for, Roy isn’t panicking. “Business as usual,” she said. In the meantime, she’s focused on making sure international visitors can find her — optimizing her Google Business Profile so Eat My Biscuits shows up when tourists search for food near the airport corridor.
Small businesses in Atlanta were struggling even before World Cup planning began, and that’s why so many are hoping for a bump in revenue during the monthlong tournament.
Piera Moore for BI
According to a September 2025 CBS News Atlanta report, Roy lost approximately $200,000 compared to the prior year after East Point began a beautification project in February that placed a fence directly in front of her restaurant, cutting off street visibility. She laid off staff and took on multiple roles herself to keep the business open, and her rent is behind.
Atlanta last hosted an event of this scale in 1996. Lee, who has closely tracked World Cup preparations, noted that small businesses largely missed the financial wave from the Olympics — and said Mayor Dickens has publicly vowed that the World Cup will be different.
Atlanta, GA
Federal task force grounds unauthorized drones over Atlanta World Cup crowds
Federal agents arrested repeat deportee Lorenzo Rojas-Martinez near Centennial Olympic Park in Downtown Atlanta for unlawfully operating a drone over restricted airspace during the FIFA Fan Festival on June 12, 2026. (FBI)
ATLANTA – A Mexican national faces federal charges after authorities caught him flying an unauthorized drone over Centennial Olympic Park during the FIFA Fan Festival in Atlanta, according to a federal criminal complaint.
Federal agents took 37-year-old Lorenzo Rojas-Martinez into custody on Friday after discovering he was unlawfully present in the United States following two prior deportations.
What we know:
Federal agents standing near Centennial Olympic Park on Friday spotted Rojas-Martinez operating a drone in a temporary flight restricted zone, according to the criminal complaint. Rojas-Martinez was standing in a nearby parking area recording video of the FIFA Fan Festival when agents approached him and requested his identification.
A review of his driver’s license confirmed his identity and led agents to discover his status as a repeat deportee who also holds a prior conviction for cocaine distribution, federal officials said. Rojas-Martinez was formally charged on Monday with operating a drone in a temporary flight restricted zone and illegal reentry by a removed alien.
What we don’t know:
Officials have not yet confirmed the exact type of drone Rojas-Martinez was operating or what he planned to do with the recorded video footage. It remains unclear how long he had been back in the country following his second deportation or where he obtained the aircraft.
Authorities have not disclosed whether Rojas-Martinez has retained an attorney to speak on his behalf. A trial date has not been set, and the government maintains the burden of proving his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
By the numbers:
The FBI Atlanta Counter UAV Task Force has seized 21 drones, including the aircraft used by Rojas-Martinez, as part of ongoing airspace protection measures around World Cup events. The enforcement action is tied to Operation Take Back America, a nationwide Department of Justice initiative targeting illegal immigration, cartels, transnational criminal organizations and violent crime.
U.S. Attorney Theodore S. Hertzberg and Special Agent in Charge Marlo Graham of FBI Atlanta noted that Ground Intercept Teams will continue monitoring restricted areas. Assistant U.S. Attorney Dash A. Cooper is prosecuting the case, which is being jointly investigated by the FBI and Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The Source: The information in this story was gathered from U.S. Attorney Theodore S. Hertzberg and the FBI Atlanta Public Affairs Office, who explained how agents detected the illegal drone operation via a federal criminal complaint.
-
Boston, MA2 minutes agoTwo Things People Are Getting Wrong About Giannis Antetokounmpo’s Fit In Boston
-
Denver, CO9 minutes agoOld Denver Post building to lose signage as part of settlement with city
-
Seattle, WA12 minutes agoSeattle student wins Doodle for Google, redirects $50K prize
-
San Diego, CA17 minutes agoGame Discussion for St. Louis Cardinals vs San Diego Padres Tuesday Night
-
Milwaukee, WI24 minutes ago5 Teams That Could Trade for Tyler Herro to Help Facilitate Giannis to Heat Deal
-
Atlanta, GA27 minutes agoSean Garrett, Zaytoven, ATL Jacob celebrated with Black Music Month in Atlanta
-
Minneapolis, MN32 minutes agoMinnesota vehicles and E15: What you need to know
-
Indianapolis, IN39 minutes agoSevere storm watch issued for much of Indiana, including Indianapolis area