Season Recaps
Portland Introduces "Blazermania"
To NBA
The Portland Trail Blazers
entered the NBA in 1970. After a typical period of expansion blues
during which the team languished at the bottom of the standings,
the Blazers turned into one of the league's most solid franchises.
In 1977, after only seven seasons in the league, the Blazers claimed
the NBA Championship. Led by center Bill Walton, the teams of
that era induced "Blazermania" in Portland and introduced the
manic condition to the rest of the league.
The Trail Blazers continued
to be successful in the late 1980s and early 1990s, rarely missing
the playoffs and reaching the NBA Finals twice. Overall, Portland's
first two decades in the league were marked by consistent play,
periodic brilliance, and ardent fan support, and were an admirable
contribution to the annals of basketball.
Portland paid $3.7 million
to join the league, and the NBA Board of Governors granted the
franchise on February 6, 1970. The Buffalo Braves and Cleveland
Cavaliers were also new franchises in 1970, as the league expanded
to 17 teams. The NBA was coming out of a decade dominated by the
Boston Celtics and was responding to the challenge of the American
Basketball Association.
1970-71: Rookie Sensation
Paces Blazers In Scoring
The team was built around
first-round draft pick Geoff Petrie, a 6-4 shooter out of Princeton,
and around rebounding specialist LeRoy Ellis, a 6-10 banger picked
up from the Baltimore Bullets in the expansion draft.
Portland took the floor for
the first time on October 16, 1970, and defeated Cleveland, 115-112,
in a battle of teams with 0-0 franchise records. Guard Jim Barnett
scored the first point in Blazers history by sinking a free throw
at the 9:18 mark of the first quarter.
Coached by Rolland Todd, who
had been plucked from the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, the
original Blazers were more than respectable as an expansion squad.
The dominant NBA team at the time was the Milwaukee Bucks, with
superstars Oscar Robertson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (then known
as Lew Alcindor). Portland rang up a 29-53 record, the best of
the expansion outfits. By comparison, Buffalo was 22-60, and Cleveland
struggled at 15-67. Although the Blazers' .354 winning percentage
may not have looked great, it would be four more seasons before
they'd be as successful as they were during their maiden voyage.
It was hardly surprising that
the fledgling squad recorded five losing months. Still, this was
not entirely discouraging, and the Trail Blazers managed to end
their initial season on a high note with a 6-6 record in March.
There were a few standout
individual performances by that first Blazers group. In an early-season
game at Buffalo, Ellis grabbed 26 rebounds, a team record for
a regulation-length game that still stood two decades later. (It
was matched by Bill Walton and topped only by Sidney Wicks's double-overtime
27-rebound performance in a 1975 contest.) Ellis's effort was
no fluke; a few weeks later he corralled a dozen rebounds in a
single quarter against the New York Knicks. Barnett set another
Portland mark that would stand the test of time, hitting 16 of
16 free throws against the Atlanta Hawks on November 18.
Although there were occasional
triumphs, repeated disappointments put a damper on the team's
inaugural season. On November 24, for example, the young squad
was pummeled by Baltimore for a 52-point loss. Petrie was an immediate
star as a rookie, leading the team in minutes played and in most
other offensive categories. He averaged 24.8 points, seventh in
the league, and set the franchise mark for free throws made in
a game with 18 on March 19 against the Seattle SuperSonics. Petrie's
performance earned him a share of the NBA Rookie of the Year Award
with Dave Cowens of the Boston Celtics.
1971-72: Wicks Named Rookie
Of The Year, But Blazers Stumble As A Team
After an encouraging first
year the novelty and enthusiasm wore off, and the Trail Blazers
stumbled to an 18-64 record in 1971-72. Coach Todd was released
after 56 games, and Stu Inman took the helm for the season's final
26 contests. In a mostly forgettable campaign, there were a few
moments to remember. One came on November 19 when team captain
Rick Adelman dished out 17 assists against Cleveland, a Portland
mark that would last until the late 1980s.
The entire Blazers team lit
up on March 18, 1972, when Portland pounded the New York Knicks
(who were on their way to the NBA Finals), 133-86. The 47-point
margin of victory would hold up for a decade as a team record.
Rookie Sidney Wicks, a fierce
6-9, 225-pound forward out of UCLA, was the second straight sterling
draft pick for the Blazers, and he succeeded teammate Petrie as
NBA Rookie of the Year in 1972. His 24.5 points per game average
was nearly as prolific as Petrie's numbers had been in 1970, and
the duo would continue to power Portland's point production throughout
the early 1970s.
1972-74: The McCloskey Era
Begins
In 1972-73 Jack McCloskey
of Wake Forest was brought in as head coach and coaxed steady,
if slight, improvement out of the team. The Trail Blazers showed
modest progress, finishing three games better than the previous
season at 21-61. Petrie scored a team-record 51 points twice against
the Houston Rockets-in Houston on January 20 and at home on March
16. On February 8 against the Golden State Warriors he poured
in 20 field goals. Wicks was the Trail Blazers' most solid performer,
however, and made his first and only start in four All-Star Game
appearances.
The 1973-74 season was another
struggle, as Portland posted a 27-55 record. The team started
out on a positive note with a 5-4 mark in October, the first winning
month in franchise history. (It would be more than a year before
the Blazers would have another.) Unfortunately, most of the highlights
of Trail Blazers games belonged to the opponents. Teams routinely
beat up on Portland, and a couple of players fattened up their
numbers with especially rude treatment. On October 28 the Lakers'
Elmore Smith blocked 17 shots against Portland to set the all-time
NBA record. And on March 26, Golden State's Rick Barry rang up
a career-high 64 points-including 30 field goals-a record for
opponent productivity against Portland. Coach McCloskey was let
go at season's end.
1974-76: Here Comes "Big
Bill"
In 1974-75, under the tutelage
of new coach Lenny Wilkens and with the addition of center Bill
Walton, the three-time college Player of the Year from UCLA, the
Blazers began to show signs of life, improving by 11 wins to 38-44.
In the season's home opener
Portland defeated Cleveland, 131-129, in four overtime periods
to set a record for the longest game in team history. On November
16 against the Lakers, the aptly named Larry Steele, a slender
6-5 guard, rang up 10 steals, a club record that would last a
dozen years until Clyde Drexler matched it in 1986. In a February
26 double-overtime game at Los Angeles, Sidney Wicks pulled down
a team-record 27 rebounds. The durable power forward played all
82 games and led the squad in scoring (21.7 ppg) and rebounding
(10.7 rpg). Although the Blazers were up and down all year, they
ended strong, with a 9-7 record in March and a 3-0 mark in April.
After the dramatic improvement
shown in the previous season, the 1975-76 Trail Blazers ran in
place, finishing at 37-45. Walton began to cash in some of his
promise. Although hampered by injuries, the 6-11 center had moments
of spectacular greatness. In late January, Walton dominated on
the boards: on January 24 he grabbed a club-record 22 defensive
rebounds at Golden State, and only three days later he hauled
in 20 defensive boards against the Washington Bullets.
Portland had acquired rookie
Lionel Hollins with the team's first-round draft pick in 1975.
Hollins, a heady 6-3 guard, gave the team four solid years of
leadership and clutch scoring before he was traded to the Philadelphia
76ers during the 1979-80 season.
Still, the Blazers were uneven,
and their 1975-76 season bottomed out in February when the Chicago
Bulls handed Portland its worst loss in franchise history, a 56-point
pasting, 130-74. Coach Wilkens departed at season's end and moved
on to Seattle, where he would rebuild another struggling team
and eventually win a championship in 1978-79.
1976-77: From Near-Worst
To First
Portland ruled the basketball
world in 1976-77, displaying an exciting brand of team basketball
and claiming the NBA Championship. After a decent 49-33 regular
season, the team made the most of its first appearance in the
playoffs, running all the way through the postseason.
This was the first year of
Head Coach Jack Ramsay's reign. His decade with Portland would
solidify his reputation as one of the league's most creative skippers.
This was also the season that four former ABA teams-the Denver
Nuggets, the New York Nets, the Indiana Pacers, and the San Antonio
Spurs-were brought into the NBA under a merger agreement. The
merger, in turn, led to a tremendous reshuffling of star players,
and Portland acquired an enforcer, 6-9 Maurice Lucas, with the
second pick in the ABA Dispersal Draft. But Lucas didn't come
without a price. The Blazers had to give up Geoff Petrie and Steve
Hawes to Atlanta for the No. 2 pick. More shuffling went on when
Portland sold Sidney Wicks to Boston.
With a revamped lineup and
a cast of young players who were quickly gaining confidence, the
team was very strong through the first half of the season. Walton
and Lucas represented Portland in the 1977 NBA All-Star Game,
although Walton missed the game with an injury. But the long campaign
eventually took its toll, and the Blazers faltered in February
and March, tottering to a 10-16 record during those two months.
They turned it around at the right time, however, with a 5-0 mark
in April that catapulted them back into the playoff picture.
The fan phenomenon known as
Blazermania was beginning to catch fire, too. On April 5 there
were still a few tickets available in Memorial Coliseum when Portland
played the Detroit Pistons before 12,359 fans. That was the last
day a fan could just walk up and buy a ticket. From that point
on, and continuing into the mid-1990s, every Portland home game
was a sellout. Capacity was 12,666 through 1988, when it was expanded
to 12,854 and then eventually 12,888.
The Trail Blazers' road to
the championship rolled through Chicago, Denver, and Los Angeles.
The team hit its stride in the Western Conference Finals, eliminating
the Pacific Division champion Los Angeles Lakers and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
in four straight games.
Portland entered the NBA Finals
as the underdog to the Philadelphia 76ers, led by Julius Erving,
the spectacular forward who was reinventing the game with his
gravity-defying slam dunks. The Sixers put the Blazers in a hole
by taking Games 1 and 2 in Philadelphia. Back home at Memorial
Coliseum, however, Portland thrashed the 76ers by 22 points in
Game 3 and by 32 points in Game 4. The Trail Blazers then won
a third straight game by beating the Sixers back in Philadelphia.
Game 6 took place on June
5 in Memorial Coliseum. The Sixers got 40 points from Erving,
but the Trail Blazers closed them out, 109-107, to claim the NBA
title. Walton scored 20 points, yanked down 23 rebounds, handed
out 7 assists, and blocked 8 shots in Game 6, and was named the
Most Valuable Player of the Finals.
Walton was the star and the
most recognizable of the Blazers, with his flamboyant personality,
his counterculture leanings (which fit in with the general ambience
of mid-1970s Portland), and his intense, intelligent style of
play. But the Trail Blazers' victory was the triumph of a well-balanced
team over a collection of more brilliant individual talents. This
was in line with the trend of the decade, which had also seen
the Knicks, Lakers, Celtics, and Warriors win titles on the basis
of cohesion rather than individual dominance.
Lucas led the Trail Blazers
in minutes played and scoring, averaging 20.2 points. Dave Twardzik,
a 6-1 guard, set a club record for field-goal percentage, notching
a .612 accuracy mark. Walton set the team record for rebounding,
clearing 14.4 boards per game. He also set a Portland all-time
mark for blocked shots with 3.25 per game. Second-year point guard
Lionel Hollins ran the show, leading the team in both assists
(4.1 apg) and steals (166).
1977-78: Portland's Bid To
Repeat Falls Short
Wearing the NBA crown, the
1977-78 Trail Blazers breezed through the regular season and collected
58 wins against only 24 losses, the best record in the NBA. They
were 50-10 through February, including a team-record 26 consecutive
home victories (34 straight when stretched back into the previous
season). But Portland staggered to an 8-14 finish, then fell in
the playoffs, bowing to Seattle in the Western Conference Semifinals.
Hollins topped the club in
most offensive categories, while Walton led in rebounds and blocked
shots. Reaping the rewards of attention brought on by the previous
year's championship, a number of Blazers earned honors. The biggest
prize went to Walton, who was voted the NBA Most Valuable Player,
the only Portland player ever to garner the top individual award.
Walton was an All-NBA First
Team selection, while Lucas made the All-NBA Second Team. Walton,
Lucas, and Hollins were All-Stars, and all three made the NBA
All-Defensive First Team. The Trail Blazers held opponents to
an NBA-best and club-record 101.5 points per game.
1978-83: Blazers Make Early
Playoff Exits
By the third year of Jack
Ramsay's coaching stint, Portland had established a pattern that
would last through the 1980s: a roster filled with good-if unspectacular-role
players, producing solid seasons with at least 40 victories, followed
by a quiet showing in the playoffs. The 1978-79 squad went 45-37,
a 13-game drop from the previous season.
Coming off his MVP year, Walton
missed the entire 1978-79 campaign with a stress fracture in his
foot, a portent of the physical problems that would plague him
for the rest of his career. He became a free agent after the season
and was signed by the San Diego Clippers.
Tom Owens, a 6-10 center acquired
from Houston, led the team in minutes played, scored 18.5 points
per game, and excelled in most other offensive categories. Rookie
Mychal Thompson, another 6-10 center with both power and finesse,
was a productive force, notching 14.7 points per game. Fellow
rookie Ron Brewer also showed talent, but the Blazers were already
in transition.
Portland continued its downward
spiral in 1979-80, notching only 38 victories, a 20-game descent
from two years earlier. Owens led the team in scoring with an
average of 16.4 points per game, the second-lowest team-leading
mark in the Trail Blazers' history. Solid 6-8 forward Kermit Washington
was the team's force in the middle, pacing the squad in blocked
shots (131) and rebounds (10.5 rpg). The brightest spot was the
play of Calvin Natt, acquired from the New Jersey Nets in a trade
for Maurice Lucas. Natt played the season's final 25 games with
Portland and averaged 20.4 points as a Blazer.
The Blazers entered the 1980s
with a team built around center Mychal Thompson and guard Jim
Paxson, the club's 1979 first-round draft pick. Portland posted
a 45-37 record in 1980-81 and appeared to be headed in the right
direction, but the season had its bumpy patches. The rockiest
night came on February 13 when Denver rang up a 162-143 victory
and set a record for most points ever scored against Portland.
It was a fair payback, since two of the Blazers' highest point
totals had come against the Nuggets.
The 1981-82 Trail Blazers
barely managed a winning campaign, at 42-40, and missed the playoffs
to snap a five-year string of postseason appearances. Thompson
was a workhorse, setting a team record for minutes played with
an average of 39.6 minutes per game. He also led in scoring (20.8
ppg) and rebounding (11.7 rpg). Natt emerged as a solid player,
leading the Blazers in field-goal percentage (.576) for the first
of three consecutive seasons.
The 1982-83 Trail Blazers
fought their way to a 46-36 record and battled into the Western
Conference Semifinals. The season's highlight came early, when
Portland put the collar on Cleveland on November 21, trouncing
the Cavaliers, 129-79. The 50-point margin of victory was Portland's
largest ever.
Captain Jim Paxson led the
team in scoring at 21.7 points per game. Natt chipped in 20.4
points per contest. The multitalented Lafayette "Fat" Lever came
aboard to run the show at point guard.
1983-85: Clyde Glides Into
Town
Portland's 48-34 record in
1983-84 was the team's best in seven seasons. If the Blazers'
progress had typically been measured in fits and starts, they
were hitting on all cylinders on November 22, when they ran up
a team-record 156 points against Denver, beating the Nuggets by
40 points. Later in the year Portland scored 155 points against
Chicago but lost a marathon four-overtime game to the Bulls by
a single point.
The team's greatest achievement
may have come before the season even started, when Portland selected
the University of Houston's Clyde Drexler with the 14th overall
pick in the 1983 NBA Draft. Drexler had a modest rookie season
(7.7 ppg), but he would go on to become a perennial All-Star,
a Dream Teamer, and the driving force behind the Blazers' two
NBA Finals appearances in the early 1990s-not to mention becoming
Portland's all-time leading scorer.
Fan support in Portland remained
consistent. On March 3 the Blazers sold out their 300th consecutive
game. They advanced to the 1984 NBA Playoffs but lost to the Phoenix
Suns in a five-game first-round series.
Portland struggled to keep
its head above water in 1984-85, finally managing a 42-40 record.
Despite its modest performance, the team was beginning to assemble
the pieces that would turn into a monster over the next several
years. Before the season started, the front office worked a trade
with Denver that initially stunned many Blazers fans. Portland
surrendered Calvin Natt, Wayne Cooper, Fat Lever, and a first-round
draft pick (which turned out to be Blair Rasmussen), all for 6-8
marksman Kiki Vandeweghe.
Vandeweghe led the team in
scoring for the first of three consecutive seasons, with 22.4
points per game. He also set a team record for free-throw accuracy
at .896. Also on the roster was Drexler, the smooth second-year
guard who improved to 17.2 points per game and would eventually
succeed Vandeweghe as the Blazers' scoring leader. Far more than
just a scorer, Drexler led the 1984-85 team in offensive rebounding
(217) and steals (177). Rookie center Sam Bowie, whom the Blazers
selected with the second overall pick in the 1984 NBA Draft (one
pick before the Chicago Bulls selected Michael Jordan), also showed
some skills in the middle, although his career, like Bill Walton's,
would be riddled with injuries.
1985-86: Ramsay's Magic Act
Comes To An End
By 1985-86 all the coaching
magic in Jack Ramsay's bag of tricks had worn off, and the team
slumped to 40-42, finishing below .500 for the first time since
1980. After a 10-year reign, Ramsay was replaced at the end of
the season, having won 453 games with the Blazers. He would go
on to coach the next two-plus seasons with the Indiana Pacers
before resigning, and retiring, seven games into the 1988-89 campaign.
Ramsay left the NBA's coaching ranks with 864 career victories
in 21 seasons. He was elected to the Naismith Memorial Basketball
Hall of Fame in 1992.
Ramsay's last year had its
share of highlights. In a January 10 game at Milwaukee, Drexler
nailed the Bucks for 10 steals, matching Larry Steele's club mark
set in 1974. Three weeks later, on February 1, Portland toasted
the Los Angeles Clippers for 156 points, matching the Blazers'
all-time high, set against Denver in 1983. Following that victory,
however, Portland lost 12 straight games.
Drexler made his first All-Star
Game appearance as the league began to recognize a star in ascendancy.
On March 21 Vandeweghe matched Geoff Petrie's 1971 team record
for free throws made in a game, racking up 18 charity tosses against
Seattle. Vandeweghe led Portland in scoring for the year with
24.8 points per game. The club received small contributions from
a rookie named Terry Porter (7.1 ppg), who would become a key
building block to Portland's success in the early 1990s.
1986-88: Schuler Enjoys Immediate
Success
In 1986-87 Mike Schuler took
over the reins as head coach and guided the Trail Blazers to their
best record in a decade, 49-33. At season's end Schuler was named
NBA Coach of the Year.
On January 23 Porter handed
out 18 assists against the Sacramento Kings, breaking the team
mark of 17 set by Rick Adelman against Cleveland in 1971. Adelman
served as a Blazers assistant coach in 1986-87 and would take
over the helm in 1989.
The team was still looking
for help in the middle, and Portland replaced Mychal Thompson
with Steve Johnson, a big body who provided solid, if unspectacular,
offense. Johnson managed to chisel his name into the record books,
however, setting an ignominious club mark by averaging more than
four fouls per night and fouling out of 16 games.
Although Portland was missing
some key ingredients, the team was an offensive juggernaut, averaging
a franchise-best and league-leading 117.9 points per game. Vandeweghe
and Drexler were doing most of the damage, with Vandeweghe leading
the club at 26.9 points per game. The Blazers advanced to the
NBA Playoffs but were upset by Houston, three games to one, in
a first-round series.
In 1987-88 Portland began
to reestablish itself as an NBA contender, running up a 53-29
mark behind emerging stars Drexler and Porter. But for the third
consecutive season the Blazers lost in the first round of the
NBA Playoffs, this time to the Utah Jazz in a four-game series.
On February 21 against San Antonio, Jim Paxson became the first
Trail Blazer to top 10,000 points. On April 14 at Utah, Porter
handed out 19 assists, breaking his own team mark. Drexler set
a club record with 2,185 points for the season, and led the team
in scoring (27.0 ppg) for the first of five consecutive seasons.
Many of his baskets came via passes from Porter, who rewrote the
Portland record book with 831 assists, for an all-time best average
of 10.1 assists per game. Drexler scored 12 points and grabbed
5 rebounds for the West in the 1988 NBA All-Star Game.
1988-89: A New Owner, A New
Coach, But A Losing Record
Near the end of the season
Larry Weinberg announced that he had sold the Trail Blazers to
Seattle computer magnate Paul Allen, a cofounder of Microsoft.
Portland's high expectations
for 1988-89 crumbled into a disappointing 39-43 losing record
that cost Coach Schuler his job in midseason.
Nevertheless, there were some
spectacular moments. In a double-overtime game against Sacramento
on January 6, Drexler threw in 50 points, one shy of Geoff Petrie's
franchise record (Petrie had hit for 51 twice in 1973). Drexler
set a club-record scoring average, pouring in 27.2 points per
game. Drexler also set a team steals mark with 2.73 per contest.
Center Kevin Duckworth, who had been acquired from San Antonio
during the 1986-87 season, proved to be the answer to the Blazers'
quest for a consistent force in the middle. The mammoth 7-foot,
280-pound pivotman had his best season, playing in the 1989 NBA
All-Star Game and averaging 18.1 points.
The whole was far less than
the sum of its parts, however. Things clearly weren't clicking,
and Schuler, two years removed from winning NBA Coach of the Year
honors, was replaced by longtime assistant coach Rick Adelman,
an original Trail Blazers player.
1989-90: "Rip City"
Under Adelman, Portland finally
fulfilled its promise in 1989-90 and became one of the league's
elite teams, reaching the 1990 NBA Finals before losing to the
Detroit Pistons' "Bad Boys," led by Isiah Thomas and Bill Laimbeer.
As the squad's high-powered offense ran to a 59-23 record, Portland
became known nationwide as "Rip City."
The Blazers were consistently
great all year long, posting winning records in each month of
the season, including a 12-2 January and a 13-4 March. On December
26 Clyde Drexler gave himself a late Christmas present by scoring
his 10,000th point, then surpassed Jim Paxson's total of 10,003
to become the Blazers' all-time leading scorer.
In the postseason the Blazers
shredded the Dallas Mavericks, San Antonio, and the Phoenix Suns
on the way to the Finals against Detroit. The series opened in
the Motor City, where the teams split the first two games. But
the Pistons swept the next three in Portland to claim the crown.
Drexler once again led Portland
in scoring for the year, although the offensive load was distributed
more evenly. Buck Williams, a 6-8 rebounding machine, had been
acquired from New Jersey prior to the season for Sam Bowie and
a first-round pick. Brought in to bolster the front line, Williams
fulfilled his role, leading the Blazers in rebounding (9.8 rpg)
and field-goal percentage (.548). Although Terry Porter's assists
average declined for the third consecutive year, he still delivered
9.1 assists per game.
1990-91: Blazers Bomb Away,
But Lakers Get Last Laugh
The Trail Blazers continued
to breathe the rarefied air at the top of the league in 1990-91,
posting a franchise-record 63 victories. They began the year with
11 straight wins, ran out to a 19-1 mark, and never looked back,
winning consistently and closing out the campaign with a 10-1
record in April. They set a team record with a 16-game winning
streak from March 20 through April 19. Portland also broke the
Los Angeles Lakers' nine-year dominance of the Pacific Division.
The Blazers led the division for all but a single day during the
regular season, when a March 19 loss to Golden State knocked them
from the top spot for 24 hours.
As is typical of a great team,
everybody contributed. Drexler led in scoring, but his 21.5 points
per game average was the lowest team-leading mark in seven years.
The tireless Williams made more than 60 percent of his shots to
lead the league in field-goal percentage at .602. The team also
enhanced its shooting prowess and backcourt experience by trading
for veteran Danny Ainge prior to the season. Porter and Ainge
ranked among the league's top 10 in three-point field-goal percentage,
and Jerome Kersey continued to be a durable and formidable performer
at small forward. Drexler, Porter, and Duckworth were All-Star
selections at midseason.
Many figured the Blazers would
return to the NBA Finals and perhaps claim their second league
championship in 1991. But Magic Johnson and the Los Angeles Lakers
derailed Portland's title hopes with a six-game series victory
in the Western Conference Finals.
1991-92: A Return Trip To
The Finals
The following year the road
to the NBA Championship ran through Portland. The Blazers notched
57 regular-season victories during the 1991-92 campaign to lead
the Western Conference for the second straight year. Portland
then clawed its way into the NBA Finals for a battle against Michael
Jordan and the Chicago Bulls.
Once again Drexler shouldered
more of the offensive load, pushing his team-leading scoring average
up nearly 4 points, to 25.0 per game. For the second consecutive
season Williams led the team and the league in field-goal percentage
at .604.
In the playoffs, Portland
trounced the Lakers, Suns, and Jazz. On April 29 at Los Angeles,
Drexler scored a club playoff-high 42 points. In Game 4 of the
Phoenix series on May 11, the team racked up a team playoff-record
153 points in a double-overtime affair. A week after that, in
Game 2 against Utah on May 19, Porter poured in 41 points.
That set up a blockbuster
matchup with defending champion Chicago in the NBA Finals. The
teams split the first two contests in Chicago, with Portland winning
an overtime bout in Game 2. The Bulls then took two of the three
games on the Trail Blazers' home court. One of those games saw
Jordan torch the Blazers for 46 points, which at the time was
the sixth-highest total ever scored in a Finals contest. The Bulls
closed out the Blazers in Game 6 in Chicago.
1992-93: Drexler Shines,
Robinson Stars
After three seasons as one
of the NBA's elite teams, the Trail Blazers slipped in 1992-93.
An aging cast of players made the decline inevitable, and the
Blazers' record dipped to 51-31, trailing Seattle and Phoenix
in the Pacific Division. The team played well through the first
half of the season but hit the wall in late winter. Portland slumped
to a 4-7 mark in February, the team's first losing month in four
years. The Blazers returned to the playoffs but lost to San Antonio
in the first round.
On November 14 at Golden State,
Terry Porter had the most prolific scoring quarter in Portland
history, throwing in 25 points in a single period. He also set
a Trail Blazers record by hitting 7 three-pointers on perfect
7-for-7 shooting. (He would also hit 7 treys just six weeks later,
on January 2 against Utah.) In April, Porter passed the 10,000-point
mark and moved into second place on Portland's all-time scoring
list.
Ten days after Porter's November
binge, Clyde Drexler surpassed the 15,000-point plateau. Drexler
missed 33 games, however, and forward Jerome Kersey missed 17
because of injury. Drexler, limited to 49 games, led the Blazers
in scoring, averaging 19.9 points. The team's brightest spot was
Cliff Robinson, who began to establish himself as a legitimate
NBA player. He scored 19.1 points per game and ranked among the
league leaders in blocked shots. His performance earned him the
NBA Sixth Man Award.
By the end of the season Drexler
had become Portland's all-time leader in nearly every offensive
category, including points, field goals, free throws, offensive
rebounds, and steals. Drexler, Kersey, and Porter topped the all-time
team list in games played. Porter was the team's career leader
in assists and three-point field goals.
The team also started construction
on a new $262-million sports and entertainment complex adjacent
to Memorial Coliseum, set to open in 1995. The arena was designed
to have a basketball capacity of 20,340.
1993-94: A Team In Transition
In 1993-94 the Trail Blazers
continued their slow decline and their rebuilding for the future.
Rod Strickland (17.2 ppg, 9.0 apg) replaced Terry Porter as the
starting point guard, and Jerome Kersey gave way to Harvey Grant,
who came over from the Washington Bullets in an offseason trade
for Kevin Duckworth. Chris Dudley was signed as a free agent to
provide rebounding and defense, but an early ankle injury knocked
him out for most of the year.
A true indication that the
team was in transformation was that Clifford Robinson (20.1 ppg)
replaced Clyde Drexler as the club's scoring leader. Robinson
also earned his first trip to the NBA All-Star Game. However,
a team in transition is rarely a team in ascension, and the Blazers
slipped below 50 wins (47-35) for the first time since the 1988-89
campaign. In the playoffs they managed a single first-round win
against the Houston Rockets, who went on to win the NBA title.
After the playoff loss Rick
Adelman (291-154 with the club) was fired and replaced by P. J.
Carlesimo, who had been coaching at Seton Hall University. The
1993-94 NBA Executive of the Year, Bob Whitsitt, stepped down
as general manager of the Seattle SuperSonics and moved south
to join Portland's front office.
1994-95: The End Of Two Eras
In Portland
The most significant event
of the Portland Trail Blazers' 1994-95 season was the departure
of Clyde Drexler, who was traded on February 14 along with Tracy
Murray to the Houston Rockets for Otis Thorpe. Drexler, who spent
111/2 seasons with the Blazers, left the team in possession of
many of its career records, including points, rebounds, games,
minutes, field goals attempted and made, free throws attempted
and made, and steals.
The Blazers finished the campaign
at 44-38 and were swept by the Phoenix Suns in the first round
of the playoffs. P. J. Carlesimo became the first NBA head coach
in 25 years to move directly from college to the pros and post
a winning season. However, Carlesimo's Blazers lost three more
games than the team did in its last term under Rick Adelman.
The Blazers were the league's
best rebounding team during the 1994-95 season, pacing the NBA
in total rebounding percentage (.553) and defensive rebounding
percentage (.735). Chris Dudley (9.3 rpg), Buck Williams (8.2
rpg), and Thorpe (8.0 rpg) were all in the league's top 25. Clifford
Robinson led the team in scoring with an average of 21.3 points
per contest, and Rod Strickland finished fourth in the NBA in
assists with an average of 8.8 per game.
The 1994-95 season was also
the team's last at Memorial Coliseum. The Blazers had performed
in the building for 25 years, drawing more than 13 million fans
and selling out the final 809 games. The team was scheduled to
move to the new Rose Garden arena for 1995-96.
1995-96: "Rookie" Blazer
Blooms in Rose Garden
The Blazers began the 1995-96
season in new surroundings, the state-of-the-art Rose Garden,
with a capacity of more than 20,000. After years of only accommodating
less than 13,000, suddenly Portland had a facility that ranked
among the best in the NBA.
The Blazers' Rose Garden debut
was less than memorable, as Portland dropped a 92-80 decision
to the Vancouver Grizzlies, playing in their first ever NBA game.
Their fortunes would improve. After struggling to a 26-34 record
through the first three quarters of the season, the Blazers charged
to an 18-4 finish to capture third place in the Pacific Division
with a 44-38 record. That record was good enough to lift the Blazers
to their 14th consecutive playoff appearance and 19th in 20 years.
Their late-season rally was
in large part due to their largest player, 7-2 center Arvydas
Sabonis. Sabonis, originally drafted by the Blazers in 1986, a
Lithuanian superstar who spent six years in the Spanish league,
joined the Blazers in 1995 as a 31-year-old rookie. Despite being
limited to 23.8 minutes per game with sore knees, Sabonis averaged
14.5 points and 8.1 rebounds.
Clifford Robinson again led
the Blazers in scoring (21.1 ppg), while point guard Rod Strickland
averaged 18.7 points and a team-leading 9.6 assists per game,
fourth in the NBA. Strickland's season was scarred by a stormy
relationship with coach P.J. Carlesimo that led to a team-imposed
six-game suspension and ultimately to a postseason trade to the
Washington Bullets.
Sabonis, Robinson and Strickland
provided an intimidating triple threat for the Utah Jazz, their
first round playoff opponent. Down two games to none, the Blazers
bounced back to win Games 3 and 4 at the Rose Garden. Game 5 is
one they would like to forget. In Utah's 102-64 win, Portland
snapped the previous playoff record-low of 68 points, set by the
New York Knicks on May 15, 1994, at Indiana.
1996-97: New Trio Sparks
Improved Blazers
It was a new nucleus, but
the same result for the 1996-97 Trail Blazers. Benefiting from
an influx of new faces, the Blazers closed strongly to finish
at 49-33 and advance to the postseason for a league-best 15th
straight season.
The changes began in July
when, in a nine-day period, the Blazers acquired the three players
who would lead the team to its best finish in four years. On July
15, they obtained young power forward Rasheed Wallace in a trade
that sent Harvey Grant and Rod Strickland to Washington. On July
23, they shored up their backcourt by trading with Minnesota for
shooting guard Isaiah Rider and signing point guard Kenny Anderson
to a free agent contract.
Wallace emerged as a force
at power forward in only his second season, averaging 15.1 ppg
and 6.8 rpg and finishing third in the NBA field goal percentage
(.558). Rider was second on the team in scoring (16.1 ppg) and
was the team's most accurate three-point threat (.385). All Anderson
did was lead the team in scoring (17.5 ppg) and assists (7.1 apg)
and finish among the NBA leaders in steals (1.98 spg).
With holdovers Clifford Robinson
(15.1 ppg), Arvydas Sabonis (13.4 ppg, 7.9 rpg) and young Gary
Trent (10.8 ppg, 5.2 rpg) also contributing, the Blazers began
to jell in midseason, embarking on an 11-game winning streak in
late February that equaled the second-longest in team history.
Portland won 20 of its final 25 games to enter the Western Conference
playoffs as the fifth seed.
In the playoffs, the Blazers
were cooled off by the Los Angeles Lakers, who won the best-of-5
series in four games. It was the fifth straight First Round exit
for Portland, which let Head Coach P.J. Carlesimo go after three
seasons at the helm. New Coach Mike Dunleavy is inheriting a team
that didn't mind getting its hands dirty, allowing the fourth-lowest
field goal percentage and finishing fourth in rebounds.
1997-98: Youngsters Blaze
Winning Trail
There were several high highs
and there were a few low lows for the 1997-98 Portland Trail Blazers,
an exciting young team that won 46 games, finished fourth in the
Pacific Division, and gave the Los Angeles Lakers all they could
handle in the playoffs.
The season marked several
new arrivals in Portland. Among the notables: Head Coach Mike
Dunleavy, who was signed on May 13, 1997; forward Brian Grant,
a free-agent pickup; and guard Damon Stoudamire, one of the NBA's
premier young point guards, acquired by Portland with Carlos Rogers
and Walt Williams just prior to the NBA trading deadline.
For Stoudamire, a Portland
native, the trade was a return home. Though an ankle injury limited
him to only 22 regular-season games with the Blazers, Dunleavy
saw enough of the speedy 5-10 point guard to realize Stoudamire
was right at home on the court as well.
The Blazers were 13-9 with
Stoudamire, but even before his arrival, Portland proved it could
play with anyone. On Dec. 5, Portland destroyed the Utah Jazz,
94-77, then repeated the trick 22 days later at Utah with a 102-91
win.
Oddly enough, the Blazers
seemed to have more trouble with Denver, the league's worst team,
than they did with the NBA's elite. The Nuggets twice beat the
Blazers, and recorded only one other win against a playoff-caliber
team all season. The other oddity in Portland's season was a 124-59
loss to Indiana, the second most-lopsided game in NBA history.
Despite the occasional lapse,
the Blazers were a force in the Western Conference by season's
end. When all was said and done, the Blazers had fashioned their
ninth consecutive winning season and had advanced to the playoffs
for the 16th consecutive season, a streak currently surpassed
only by the St. Louis Blues (22 straight appearances) among professional
teams.
Portland earned a first-round
date with the 61-21 Los Angeles Lakers. The Blazers entered the
series confident but cautious. The matchup, a rematch of the 1997
first-round series, was a close one. The home team held serve
in each of the first three games. In Game 4, however, Shaquille
O'Neal and company quieted the Rose Garden crowd with a 110-99
win that ended Portland's season in the first round for the sixth
straight year.
The game was the 2,522nd game,
and perhaps the last, broadcast by Blazers' 28-year veteran Bill
Schonely. While the Schonely era may be ending, the Stoudamire
era has Dunleavy optimistic about the Blazers' future.
1998-99: The Big Breakthrough
After six consecutive first-round
exits from the playoffs, the Portland Trail Blazers returned to
the ranks of the Western Conference's elite teams.
Mike Dunleavy earned Coach
of the Year honors as the Blazers raced to a 35-15 record in the
regular season. Portland swept Phoenix in the first round and
eliminated Utah, the reigning conference champion, in the semifinals
before losing to San Antonio in the Western finals.
The Blazers were on their
way to tying the San Antonio series 1-1 but were derailed by the
"Memorial Day Miracle." On that play, Sean Elliott tiptoed the
sideline to stay inbounds before hitting a three-pointer with
nine seconds left, lifting the Spurs to an 86-85 win. San Antonio
went on to sweep the series and win the NBA championship.
Portland was a balanced team.
The squad's leading scorer, Isaiah Rider, averaged only 13.9 points
per game, mostly because the players spread the wealth. Rasheed
Wallace (12.8 ppg), Damon Stoudamire (12.6), Arvydas Sabonis (12.1)
and Brian Grant (11.5) also averaged double figures in scoring,
and Walt Williams, Jim Jackson and Greg Anthony were regular contributors.
Nine different players led
the team in nine different statistical categories. Grant was among
the league leaders with 9.8 rebounds per game.
Portland sported an improved
defense which limited opponents to 88.5 points per game, the lowest
total in franchise history. The Blazers also set a team record
by holding the opposition to a .417 field goal percentage.