With each team playing for the second straight night, depth was crucial as Atlanta pulled away late and beat the Bucks 96-80 on Wednesday night, including a dominant 43-7 advantage in bench scoring.
"Our bench was great," Hawks coach Mike Woodson said.
The Hawks recovered from a disappointing 90-78 loss at Chicago on Tuesday night in which they were outrebounded 60-37. Atlanta outrebounded Milwaukee 38-34.
"To come out and play the way we did tonight I think is a great sign of maturity," said Joe Johnson, who led Atlanta with 21 points.
"It was good to see everybody get involved and make plays on both ends of the court."
Of Atlanta’s six players to score in double figures, three were backups: Zaza Pachulia, 14; Josh Childress, 12 and Tyronn Lue, 11. The 43 points by the bench set a season high for Atlanta.
Michael Redd had 24 points and Mo Williams added 23, but Andrew Bogut, who had 18 points and 11 rebounds, was Milwaukee’s only other scorer in double figures.
Mario West, a late fill-in starter for injured Marvin Williams, set the high energy pace for Atlanta in the first quarter.
West, an undrafted rookie from Georgia Tech, had not played more than 8 minutes in a game, but he had 4 points, 2 rebounds and a steal in the first 7 minutes.
The Hawks broke open a close game with a 13-2 run midway through the fourth quarter, including six points by Childress.
Atlanta outscored Milwaukee 23-14 in the final quarter.
The Bucks lost for the second straight night following a five-game winning streak.
"Atlanta did a nice job attacking," said Bucks coach Larry Krystkowiak. "We had a hard time keeping the ball in front of us, because they broke us down off the dribble consistently.
It was the type of attack we expected, we just weren’t ready to move our feet."
The Bucks call their top five reserves the Bomb Squad, but against the Hawks the backups fizzled, making only 2 of 18 shots.
Charlie Villanueva, Charlie Bell and former Hawks guard Royal Ivey combined to go 0-for-12.
Atlanta outscored Milwaukee 24-14 in the second period to lead by 16 late in the first half at 50-34, but cold shooting by Josh Smith helped open the way for Redd and Williams to lead Milwaukee’s comeback.
The Hawks’ lead was only 3 points in the final quarter before the 13-2 run.
Smith was only 4-of-14 shooting for 10 points, but Redd said the Bucks couldn’t make up for their sluggish second quarter.
Redd and Williams combined for 16 of Milwaukee’s first 18 points of the third quarter as Atlanta’s 67-54 lead was cut to 67-63. Smith made a long jumper and then stole a pass to set up a layup by Pachulia, and the Hawks led 73-66 entering the final quarter.
A steal and basket by Williams, followed by a 17-foot jumper by Redd, cut Atlanta’s lead to 73-70.
Two free throws by Bobby Simmons again cut the lead to 3 at 75-72 before the Hawks used a 13-2 run that began with a 3-pointer by Lue.
Childress capped the run by grabbing an offensive rebound to set up his own basket with 5:05 left for an 88-74 lead.
Smith, who set a career high with 38 points in a loss at Milwaukee on Nov. 17, had only 4 points on 1-for-6 shooting in the first half. Still, the Hawks led 52-42 at the halftime break as Johnson and Horford combined to make 8 of 12 shots for 22 points.