Millsap, Sefolosha, Horford -- what's going on with Hawks?

041915 ATLANTA: Trainer Wally Blase checks Hawks center Al Horford’s hand after he dislocated his pinky finger against the Nets during an NBA playoff basketball game on Sunday, April 19, 2015, in Atlanta. Curtis Compton / ccompton@ajc.com Hawks center Al Horford is tended to by trainer Wally Blase after suffering a dislocated pinky Sunday night. (Curtis Compton/ccompton@ajc.com)

041915 ATLANTA: Trainer Wally Blase checks Hawks center Al Horford’s hand after he dislocated his pinky finger against the Nets during an NBA playoff basketball game on Sunday, April 19, 2015, in Atlanta. Curtis Compton / ccompton@ajc.com Hawks center Al Horford is tended to by trainer Wally Blase after suffering a dislocated pinky Sunday night. (Curtis Compton/ccompton@ajc.com)

This isn’t meant to come off as a sky-if-falling blog.

OK. Maybe a little.

But the Hawks have had a horrible 16-day stretch, and at the worst possible time of the season.

• April 4: Paul Millsap, the team's leading scorer and its best player for most of this season, suffered a right shoulder contusion and sprain in a collision with Brooklyn's Earl Clark. He sat out five games but still has lingering soreness and is struggling to regain his shooting touch, in part because of the protective compression shirt he wears under his jersey (going only 4-for-20 from the floor in the regular season finale and Sunday's playoff opener against the Nets).

• April 8: Thabo Sefolosha and Pero Antic were arrested after an early morning altercation outside of a New York night club. Sefolosha, one of the Hawks' best defenders and bench players, suffered a broken leg and ligament damage and was lost for the remainder of the season and the playoffs.

• April 19: Al Horford suffered a dislocated right pinky in the playoff series-opening win over the Nets. He returned to play late in the game with his pinky and ring finger taped together. X-rays were negative. Horford told Chris Vivlamore he will play in Game 2 on Wednesday but acknowledged the injury "definitely affected me" in the game. "Having it taped like that around my finger, especially on my shooting hand, was very uncomfortable to shoot the ball."

This is a team that largely went through the season without a major injury to a core player (save Kyle Korver’s broken nose on March 15, forcing him to miss three games and then returning with a protective mask).

Question: Does all this make you wonder what lies ahead? The strength of the Hawks is their balance and the fact they’re not overly reliant on one player. But when a team’s core takes hits like this, it’s going to have a significant effect.

The Hawks are good enough to win a playoff series over Brooklyn, even with the injury issues. But they can't go deep into the NBA playoffs without a healthy Millsap and Horford, and they certainly need Millsap to rediscover his shooting touch.