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1995–96 Seattle SuperSonics season

NBA basketball team season


NBA basketball team season

Prime Sports Northwest (lost to Bulls 2–4)

The 1995–96 Seattle SuperSonics season was the 28th season for the Seattle SuperSonics in the National Basketball Association. During the off-season, the SuperSonics acquired Hersey Hawkins and David Wingate from the Charlotte Hornets, and re-acquired Frank Brickowski from the Sacramento Kings. The team returned to what had now become the KeyArena at Seattle Center, after spending the previous season in the Tacoma Dome, while the KeyArena was being renovated.

After two consecutive NBA playoff appearances losing in the first round, the SuperSonics got off to a 9–6 start to the regular season in November, but later on posted a 14-game winning streak between February and March, then won nine straight games between March and April. The team held a 34–12 record at the All-Star break, then won 30 of their final 36 games of the season, winning the Pacific Division title with a franchise-best 64–18 record, surpassing the record from the 1993–94 season, and earning the first seed in the Western Conference; The team also posted a 38–3 record at home, which was the second-best in the league, and qualified for the NBA playoffs for the sixth consecutive year.

Shawn Kemp averaged 19.6 points, 11.4 rebounds and 1.6 blocks per game, while Gary Payton averaged 19.3 points, 7.5 assists and 2.9 steals per game, and was named to the NBA All-Defensive First Team, and was also named the NBA Defensive Player of the Year, becoming the first and only point guard ever to win the award; Kemp and Payton were both named to the All-NBA Second Team. In addition, Detlef Schrempf provided the team with 17.1 points, 5.2 rebounds and 4.4 assists per game, but only played 63 games due to a knee injury, while Hawkins contributed 15.6 points and 1.8 steals per game, and led the SuperSonics with 146 three-point field goals, sixth man Sam Perkins provided with 11.8 points and 4.5 rebounds per game, along with 129 three-point field goals, and starting center Ervin Johnson contributed 5.5 points, 5.3 rebounds and 1.6 blocks per game. Off the bench, Vincent Askew averaged 8.4 points per game, and defensive guard Nate McMillan contributed 5.0 points, 3.6 assists and 1.7 steals per game.

During the NBA All-Star weekend at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, Kemp and Payton were both selected for the 1996 NBA All-Star Game, as members of the Western Conference All-Star team, while head coach George Karl was selected to coach the Western Conference; Payton also finished in sixth place in Most Valuable Player voting, while Kemp finished in eighth place. This Sonics team is regarded as one of the best defensive teams in the late 1990s; led by Kemp and Payton, the two formed "Sonic Boom", one of the most electrifying tandems in NBA history.

In the Western Conference First Round of the 1996 NBA playoffs, the SuperSonics faced off against the 8th–seeded Sacramento Kings, a team that featured All-Star guard Mitch Richmond, Brian Grant and Olden Polynice. Despite losing Game 2 at home, 90–81 at the KeyArena at Seattle Center, the SuperSonics won the next two games over the Kings on the road, including a Game 4 win at the ARCO Arena II, 101–87 to win the series in four games, and advance to the second round for the first time in three years.

In the Western Conference Semi-finals, the team faced off against the 5th–seeded, and 2-time defending NBA champion Houston Rockets, a team that featured All-Star center Hakeem Olajuwon, All-Star guard Clyde Drexler, and Robert Horry. The SuperSonics won the first two games over the Rockets at home, and then won the next two games on the road, defeating the Rockets in Game 4 at The Summit in overtime, 114–107 to win the series in a four-game sweep, and advance to the Western Conference Finals.

In the Conference Finals, the SuperSonics then faced off against the 3rd–seeded Utah Jazz, who were led by the trio of All-Star forward Karl Malone, All-Star guard John Stockton, and Jeff Hornacek. The SuperSonics won the first two games at the KeyArena at Seattle Center, then lost Game 3 to the Jazz on the road, 96–76, before winning Game 4 on the road, 88–86 to take a 3–1 series lead. However, the Jazz managed to win the next two games to even the series; the SuperSonics then won Game 7 over the Jazz at home, 90–86 to win in a hard-fought seven-game series, and reach the NBA Finals for the first time since 1979.

In the 1996 NBA Finals, the SuperSonics faced off against the top–seeded Chicago Bulls, who were led by the trio of All-Star guard, and Most Valuable Player of the Year, Michael Jordan, All-Star forward Scottie Pippen, and rebound-specialist Dennis Rodman, and also finished with a league-best 72–10 record. The SuperSonics lost the first two games to the Bulls on the road at the United Center, and then lost Game 3 at home, 108–86 at the KeyArena at Seattle Center, as the Bulls took a 3–0 series lead. However, the SuperSonics managed to win their next two home games, but then lost Game 6 to the Bulls at the United Center, 87–75, thus losing the series in six games.

The SuperSonics finished 14th in the NBA in home-game attendance, with an attendance of 697,301 at the KeyArena at Seattle Center during the regular season. Following the season, Johnson signed as a free agent with the Denver Nuggets, while Askew was traded to the New Jersey Nets, and Brickowski signed with the Boston Celtics. This Sonics team has been featured in the video game series NBA 2K.

For the season, the SuperSonics featured a new primary logo of a dark green oval with the Space Needle forming the letter "I" in Sonics, plus adding new uniforms, and added dark green and red to their color scheme. The team's primary logo and uniforms would both remain in use until 2001.

Draft picks

Main article: 1995 NBA draft

RoundPickPlayerPositionNationalityCollege
126Sherell FordSFUnited StatesIllinois–Chicago
254Eurelijus ŽukauskasCNeptūnas Klaipėda

Roster

  • George Karl
  • Dwane Casey
  • Tim Grgurich
  • Terry Stotts
  • Bob Weiss

Regular season

Season standings

Game log

Season Synopsis

November

The SuperSonics started their season on November 3 on the road wherein they faced the Utah Jazz in Salt Lake City. They started the game well after leading the Jazz in the 1st Quarter, but the Jazz fought back and never looked back as they defeated the Sonics, 112–94. The Sonics now went back home to play the two Los Angeles teams, the Los Angeles Lakers and the L.A. Clippers. The SuperSonics won both of their home games, as they were now up 2-1 for the season. On November 26, the SuperSonics hosted the Michael Jordan-led Chicago Bulls. The visiting Bulls hold a double-digit lead at halftime but the Sonics fought back and only allowed 28 2nd half PTS for the Bulls as they won the game, 97–92. The month of November for the Sonics ended in a disappointing way because they were defeated by a point by the visiting Indiana Pacers led by Reggie Miller. Overall, the Sonics posted a record of 9–6 in 15 games played during that month.

Playoffs

|- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 1 | April 26 | Sacramento | W 97–85 | Gary Payton (29) | Ervin Johnson (10) | Gary Payton (9) | KeyArena 17,072 | 1–0 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc" | 2 | April 28 | Sacramento | L 81–90 | Shawn Kemp (21) | Shawn Kemp (8) | Gary Payton (7) | KeyArena 17,072 | 1–1 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 3 | April 30 | @ Sacramento | W 96–89 | Sam Perkins (17) | Shawn Kemp (9) | Gary Payton (7) | ARCO Arena 17,317 | 2–1 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 4 | May 2 | @ Sacramento | W 101–87 | Gary Payton (29) | Detlef Schrempf (10) | Detlef Schrempf (9) | ARCO Arena 17,317

3–1
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
1
May 4
Houston
W 108–75
Gary Payton (28)
Shawn Kemp (12)
Gary Payton (7)
KeyArena
17,072
1–0
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
2
May 6
Houston
W 105–101
Detlef Schrempf (21)
Schrempf, Kemp (10)
Schrempf, Payton (5)
KeyArena
17,072
2–0
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
3
May 10
@ Houston
W 115–112
Gary Payton (28)
Shawn Kemp (18)
Gary Payton (8)
The Summit
16,285
3–0
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
4
May 12
@ Houston
W 114–107 (OT)
Shawn Kemp (32)
Shawn Kemp (15)
Gary Payton (11)
The Summit
16,611
4–0
-
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
1
May 18
Utah
W 102–72
Payton, Kemp (21)
Shawn Kemp (11)
Gary Payton (7)
KeyArena
17,072
1–0
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
2
May 20
Utah
W 91–87
Gary Payton (18)
Nate McMillan (5)
Gary Payton (8)
KeyArena
17,072
2–0
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
3
May 24
@ Utah
L 76–96
Gary Payton (25)
Payton, Hawkins (6)
Gary Payton (3)
Delta Center
19,911
2–1
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
4
May 26
@ Utah
W 88–86
Gary Payton (19)
Shawn Kemp (8)
Gary Payton (6)
Delta Center
19,911
3–1
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
5
May 28
Utah
L 95–98 (OT)
Gary Payton (31)
Shawn Kemp (13)
Gary Payton (6)
KeyArena
17,072
3–2
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
6
May 30
@ Utah
L 83–118
Shawn Kemp (26)
Shawn Kemp (14)
Gary Payton (7)
Delta Center
19,911
3–3
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
7
June 2
Utah
W 90–86
Shawn Kemp (26)
Shawn Kemp (14)
Gary Payton (5)
KeyArena
17,072
4–3
-
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
1
June 5
@ Chicago
L 90–107
Shawn Kemp (32)
Gary Payton (10)
Gary Payton (6)
United Center
24,544
0–1
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
2
June 7
@ Chicago
L 88–92
Shawn Kemp (29)
Shawn Kemp (13)
Payton, Schrempf (3)
United Center
24,544
0–2
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
3
June 9
Chicago
L 86–108
Detlef Schrempf (20)
Payton, Brickowski (7)
Gary Payton (9)
KeyArena
17,072
0–3
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
4
June 12
Chicago
W 107–86
Shawn Kemp (25)
Shawn Kemp (11)
Gary Payton (11)
KeyArena
17,072
1–3
- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc"
5
June 14
Chicago
W 89–78
Gary Payton (23)
Shawn Kemp (10)
Gary Payton (6)
KeyArena
17,072
2–3
- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc"
6
June 16
@ Chicago
L 75–87
Detlef Schrempf (23)
Shawn Kemp (14)
Gary Payton (7)
United Center
24,544
2–4
-

Player statistics

Season

PlayerGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
69225.0.493.337.7643.22.4.7.28.4
63815.7.488.405.7092.4.9.4.15.4
2815.0.375.160.765.9.2.3.03.2
828234.4.473.384.8743.62.71.8.215.6
816018.8.511.333.6695.3.6.51.65.5
797633.3.561.417.74211.42.21.21.619.6
551422.9.420.380.7073.83.61.7.35.0
818139.0.484.328.7484.27.52.9.219.3
822026.5.408.355.7934.51.51.0.611.8
3525.2.533.200.474.9.1.2.11.7
636034.9.486.408.7765.24.4.9.117.1
4319.0.420.200.5921.01.7.7.02.7
60311.6.415.441.780.91.0.3.13.7

Playoffs

PlayerGPGSMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
19018.2.343.261.6072.21.4.7.43.7
2139.8.421.273.7501.4.5.3.22.0
212134.0.452.344.8953.02.21.3.212.3
181814.1.371.000.8183.8.4.3.83.1
202036.0.570.000.79510.41.51.22.020.9
19020.3.406.475.6433.72.71.2.34.4
212143.4.485.410.6335.16.81.8.320.7
21131.1.459.368.7544.31.7.7.312.3
802.8.000.000.000.8.3.1.0.0
212137.6.475.368.7505.03.2.7.216.0
1002.4.143.000.000.4.6.2.0.2
1305.2.438.5001.000.2.0.0.01.5

Player statistics citation:

Awards and records

Awards

  • Gary Payton was named the Defensive Player of the Year and led the league in total steals and steals per game.

;All-NBA Teams

  • Shawn Kemp – All-NBA Second Team
  • Gary Payton – All-NBA Second Team

;NBA All-Defensive Teams

  • Gary Payton – All-Defensive First Team

;1996 NBA All-Star Game

  • Shawn Kemp (fourth appearance, second start)
  • Gary Payton (third appearance)

Records

Transactions

Main article: List of 1995–96 NBA season transactions

Trades

September 18, 1995To **Seattle SuperSonics**Frank BrickowskiTo **Sacramento Kings**Byron Houston
Šarūnas Marčiulionis

Free agents

Additions

Trevor WilsonOctober 25Sacramento Kings

Subtractions

Trevor Wilsonwaived, October 31Somontano Huesca (LEB Oro)

Player Transactions Citation:

References

References

  1. [https://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/SEA/1996.html 1995–96 Seattle SuperSonics]
  2. (June 28, 1995). "SPORTS PEOPLE: PRO BASKETBALL; Hornets Re-Acquire Gill in Trade with Sonics". The New York Times.
  3. (June 28, 1995). "Sonics Trade Gill Back to Hornets". The Washington Post.
  4. Newnham, Blaine. (June 28, 1995). "Sonics Kept Karl, So Gill Had to Go". The Seattle Times.
  5. (September 18, 1995). "Sonics Trade Houston, Marciulionis to Kings". The Seattle Times.
  6. (September 19, 1995). "Toronto Expands Quickly, Getting Five for Armstrong". Los Angeles Times.
  7. Lilly, Dick. (March 16, 1994). "Sonics to Play '94-95 Games in Tacoma Dome, Says Official". The Seattle Times.
  8. Berry, Tyler. "A Look Back at the History of KeyArena at Seattle Center". SeatGeek.
  9. "NBA Games Played on February 8, 1996". Basketball-Reference.
  10. "1995–96 Seattle SuperSonics Schedule and Results". Basketball-Reference.
  11. (May 7, 1996). "N.B.A. PLAYOFFS; Payton Honored for Defense". The New York Times.
  12. (May 7, 1996). "Payton Honored for Defensive Play". The Spokesman-Review.
  13. "NBA & ABA Defensive Player of the Year Award Winners". Basketball Reference.
  14. (December 12, 1995). "BASKETBALL; Sonics' Schrempf to Miss Six Weeks". The New York Times.
  15. (December 12, 1995). "Sonics Lose Schrempf for at Least Six Weeks". The Spokesman-Review.
  16. (December 12, 1995). "Mourning Could Miss 3 Weeks". Orlando Sentinel.
  17. "1995–96 Seattle SuperSonics Roster and Stats". Basketball-Reference.
  18. Heisler, Mark. (February 11, 1996). "NBA Has All-Stars in Its Eyes". Los Angeles Times.
  19. (September 13, 2021). "1996 NBA All-Star Recap". NBA.com.
  20. "1996 NBA All-Star Game: East 129, West 118". Basketball-Reference.
  21. (May 20, 1996). "Jordan Named NBA MVP". United Press International.
  22. "1995–96 NBA Awards Voting". Basketball-Reference.
  23. (April 29, 1996). "NBA PLAYOFFS; Kings End 15-Year Drought in Playoff Upset of Sonics". The New York Times.
  24. (April 29, 1996). "Richmond Scores 37 to Help Sacramento Steal One in Seattle". Los Angeles Times.
  25. (April 29, 1996). "Kings Latest to Lower Boom on Sonics". The Washington Post.
  26. (May 3, 1996). "Seattle Finally Reaches Round 2". Los Angeles Times.
  27. (May 3, 1996). "Sonics Trounce Kings, Live to See Second Round; Payton, Kemp Guide Relieved Seattle Into Quarterfinals Against Houston". The Spokesman-Review.
  28. "1996 NBA Western Conference First Round: Kings vs. SuperSonics". Basketball-Reference.
  29. Friend, Tom. (May 13, 1996). "N.B.A. PLAYOFFS; Rockets' Furious Rally Makes Sweep Interesting". The New York Times.
  30. (May 13, 1996). "Fired-Up Rockets Go Out with Bang". Los Angeles Times.
  31. "1996 NBA Western Conference semifinals: Rockets vs. SuperSonics". Basketball-Reference.
  32. (June 3, 1996). "SuperSonics Finally Put Away Jazz". Los Angeles Times.
  33. Cotton, Anthony. (June 3, 1996). "SuperSonics Shake Jazz, Make a Final Statement". The Washington Post.
  34. "1996 NBA Western Conference Finals: Jazz vs. SuperSonics". Basketball-Reference.
  35. Friend, Tom. (June 10, 1996). "N.B.A. FINALS; Sonics See Rodman, Rodman Everywhere". The New York Times.
  36. Howard-Cooper, Scott. (June 10, 1996). "Seattle Needled, Gored as Bulls Near the Ring". Los Angeles Times.
  37. Adande, J.A.. (June 10, 1996). "Supersonics Get Caught in Bulls' Stampede, 108-86". The Washington Post.
  38. Friend, Tom. (June 13, 1996). "NBA FINALS; McMillan Puts Bulls' Brooms in Closet". The New York Times.
  39. Wise, Mike. (June 15, 1996). "N.B.A. FINALS; Bulls Can't Win as a One-Man Show". The New York Times.
  40. Brown, Clifton. (June 17, 1996). "N.B.A. FINALS; After a Few Anxious Days, Jordan and Bulls Get Their Title". The New York Times.
  41. (June 17, 1996). "Bulls Drown Out SuperSonics, 87-75". Los Angeles Times.
  42. "1996 NBA Finals: SuperSonics vs. Bulls". Basketball-Reference.
  43. "1995–96 NBA Season Summary". Basketball-Reference.
  44. (July 18, 1996). "Grant Signs with Magic for $50 Million". Los Angeles Times.
  45. (July 23, 1996). "C Ervin Johnson Signs with Nuggets". United Press International.
  46. Heisler, Mark. (October 31, 1996). "NBA Preview". Los Angeles Times.
  47. Condotta, Bob. (July 17, 1996). "Sonics Swap with Nets, Unload Brick, Johnson". The Spokesman-Review.
  48. (July 16, 1996). "Nets Acquire Askew from Seattle". United Press International.
  49. (August 2, 1996). "Transactions". Hartford Courant.
  50. "Seattle SuperSonics Logo".
  51. "Seattle SuperSonics Uniform".
  52. "Seattle SuperSonics Uniform".
  53. "1995–96 Seattle SuperSonics Schedule and Results". Basketball-Reference.
  54. "1995–96 Seattle SuperSonics Transactions". Basketball-Reference.
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