(3) Drazen Petrovic, (4) Wendell Ladner, (23) Jason Williamson, (25)
Bill Melchionni, (32) Julius Erving, (52) Charles "Buck"
Williams
Season Recaps
A Soaring Success With "Dr. J," Nets Have Struggled
Since
The New Jersey Nets franchise has endured its share of difficulties
since it first took the floor in 1967. One of 11 original American
Basketball Association teams, the club has played in six arenas
in the New York metropolitan area. Along the way, the franchise
soared to the top of the ABA on the back of Julius "Dr. J" Erving,
then fell to the cellar upon entry into the NBA. The late 1980s
and early 1990s saw the Nets' slow rise to respectability in the
NBA's Eastern Conference and, following a 43-39 mark in 1997-98
and an appearance in the playoffs, the franchise appears to be
back on solid ground.
The franchise was the result of the ABA's desire
to field a team in New York City, the nation's media center and
glamour capital. Having a team in the Big Apple would provide
the league with some desperately needed legitimacy. What it ended
up with was the New Jersey Americans, a ragtag team that played
in a converted armory in Teaneck, New Jersey. It was neither what
the league nor owner Arthur Brown had in mind, but it was the
best Brown could do after a frantic search for an arena in Manhattan
had turned up nothing.
Brown tabbed Max Zaslofsky as his head coach. Zaslofsky
had starred for the Chicago Stags, the New York Knicks, and the
Fort Wayne Pistons from 1946 to 1955. At the start of 1967 he
had been coaching the team fielded by Brown's trucking company.
Brown gave Zaslofsky a makeshift bunch to work with.
Center Dan Anderson came to the Americans from the Akron Goodyears,
an industrial team playing under the auspices of the AAU; forward
Tony Jackson was a 26-year-old graduate of St. John's playing
his first professional season; the other starting forward, Hank
Whitney, was a 28-year-old rookie. The rest of the team featured
the likes of Bruce Spraggins, Mel Nowell (who had played with
Jerry Lucas and John Havlicek at Ohio State), Bobby Lloyd, John
Mathis, and Dexter Westbrook. Only a handful of players lasted
more than a year in the pro ranks, and none had careers that stretched
beyond two seasons.
Return to top of page
1967-68: Free Throws Don't Equal Wins
Zaslofsky found the team a challenge to coach. "We really had
semipro players," he remembered 15 years later. "They were not
the caliber of players in the NBA, but each of them felt like
a superstar. They were all prima donnas."
The Americans took the floor for the first time
on October 23, 1967, against the Pittsburgh Pipers. Yogi Berra
tossed up the first jump ball, and attendance was somewhere in
the neighborhood of 3,000 fans.
The Americans posted a 36-42 record that first season
and were led in scoring by Levern Tart, who was acquired from
the Oakland Oaks in January. Tart averaged 23.6 points, third
best in the ABA. On the boards, the Americans were paced by Whitney,
who pulled down 12.9 rebounds per game. The club had the third-worst
defense and scored the fourth-fewest points in the league. The
only part of the court where the team from Teaneck really excelled
was at the charity stripe. Three of the league's top five foul
shooters came from the Americans, and the team's .743 free throw
percentage was second best in the circuit.
But good foul shooting was not enough to lure basketball
fans out to Teaneck, New Jersey; the Americans averaged fewer
than 1,000 spectators per game.
1968: The Playoff Game That Never Happened
New Jersey's 36-42 finish earned the team a tie with the Kentucky
Colonels for the fourth and final playoff spot in the ABA's Eastern
Division. A single-game playoff was scheduled to determine which
team would advance to face the Minnesota Muskies in the first
round of postseason play. Unfortunately for the Americans, the
Teaneck Armory was booked for a circus on the scheduled date.
Owner Arthur Brown scrambled to find an alternate site and managed
to reserve Commack Arena in the Long Island, New York, town of
the same name.
When the teams showed up for the game, however,
they found that the court was in unplayable condition, with floorboards
loose, bolts unscrewed, and basket stanchions unpadded. The Colonels
refused to play. ABA commissioner George Mikan ruled the game
a forfeit, with Kentucky the winner. The Americans' first taste
of postseason action had ended without so much as an opening jump
ball.
1968-69: Brown Finds New Home But Fails
To Land Alcindor
Brown kept busy during the offseason. Despite the playoff fiasco,
he decided to move the team to Commack Arena for the 1968-69 season,
a decision that enabled him to use "New York" in the team name.
He then dropped "Americans" in favor of "Nets" after a reporter's
facetious suggestion that he find a name that rhymed with Mets
and Jets.
Brown's attempt to find a new home for the Nets
succeeded, but he failed in his second important objective for
the offseason, which had implications not only for his franchise
but for the ABA as a whole. The league granted the draft rights
to UCLA standout Lew Alcindor (the future Kareem Abdul-Jabbar)
to the newly renamed New York Nets, reasoning that Alcindor had
grown up in New York and the ABA needed to generate some interest
and excitement in the prime New York market. Alcindor told the
ABA and the NBA that he would accept one sealed bid from each
league for his services. The Milwaukee Bucks of the NBA submitted
a higher bid than did Brown. When Brown and the ABA learned they
had been outbid, they went back to Alcindor with a higher offer,
but he turned down the Nets and signed with Milwaukee.
The failure to sign Alcindor was a big blow to the
Nets. During the 1968-69 season, 23 players wore Nets uniforms,
and only 6 spent the entire season with the club as the franchise
made 10 trades. Walt Simon led the team in scoring with an average
of 21.1 points per game, and Bobby Lloyd established an ABA record
by nailing 49 straight free throws. But overall the team was hapless,
generating less offense while allowing more points than any other
Eastern Division team. The Nets' 17-61 record was the worst mark
in the ABA.
1969-70: New Owner Names Carnesecca
Head Coach
Arthur Brown gave up on the ABA after the 1968-69 season. On May
26, 1969, he sold the franchise to a wealthy businessman named
Roy Boe. One of the new owner's first moves was to announce that
the New York Nets would play at the Island Garden in West Hempstead,
a Long Island town much closer to Manhattan than Commack. He also
named St. John's University Coach Lou Carnesecca as the Nets'
general manager and head coach. But Carnesecca had one year left
on his contract before he could leave St. John's, so York Larese
was hired as the Nets' new coach.
The team added some punch on the court by signing
Lloyd "Sonny" Dove, its first-round draft choice in 1967. A St.
John's graduate, Dove had spent the previous two seasons with
the NBA's Detroit Pistons, where he had seen very little playing
time. Another key addition was 6-1 guard Bill Melchionni, who
had averaged 4.6 points for the Philadelphia 76ers the season
before.
Melchionni joined Levern Tart in the Nets' backcourt.
Tart had played with Oakland and New Jersey during the 1967-68
campaign and for the Nets, Houston, and Denver during 1968-69.
He spent all of 1969-70 with the Nets and led the team in scoring
(24.2 ppg). Melchionni finished second in the ABA in assists (5.7
apg), while Dove chipped in 14.4 points per game.
The now-competitive Nets finished with a 39-45 record
and made the playoffs for the first time. With a stronger team
playing in an arena closer to the city, attendance tripled. New
York gave the 45-39 Kentucky Colonels a tough series in the opening
round of the playoffs, but the Nets fell, four games to three.
1970-72: Nets Become Scary With Barry
Carnesecca took over as head coach before the start of the 1970-71
season, and the Nets engineered a major coup by signing Rick Barry
on September 2. Barry had played for the Oakland Oaks during 1968-69
and had reluctantly stayed with the franchise when it moved to
Washington for the 1969-70 campaign. But when owner Earl Foreman
announced that the Washington Capitols would become the Virginia
Squires to start the next season, Barry made it clear he would
not stay with the team.
With Carnesecca running the show and Barry filling
up the basket, the Nets had to be taken seriously. Finally, the
league had a competitive team with a superstar player in the country's
biggest market.
The Nets made another important acquisition before
the new season began by picking up rookie Billy Paultz from Virginia
for cash and a draft choice. Paultz, a 6-11 center affectionately
known as "the Whopper," had played for Carnesecca at St. John's.
Barry missed 25 games during the 1970-71 season
with a knee injury, but he battled with Kentucky's Dan Issel for
the league's scoring title. In the end, Barry scored 29.4 points
per game, finishing second to Issel, who prevailed with a 29.8
scoring average. Bill Melchionni led the ABA in assists with 8.3
per game. Paultz put up good numbers in his rookie year, crashing
the boards for 11.3 rebounds per game while averaging 14.7 points
on the strength of a .524 field-goal percentage, the second-highest
mark in the league.
Coach Carnesecca guided the Nets to a 40-44 record
and a third-place finish in the ABA's Eastern Division. New York
went up against Virginia in the first round of the playoffs and
was ousted in six games during a high-scoring, closely played
series. After falling behind two games to none, the Nets came
back with a 135-131 victory in Game 3 and a 130-127 win in Game
4. But the Squires took Game 5, 127-124, and then took the series
with a 118-114 victory in Game 6.
The Nets continued to improve in the 1971-72 season.
Although Sonny Dove was lost for most of the year with an eye
injury, the Nets found an adequate replacement in Thomas "Trooper"
Washington, a much-traveled ABA veteran, who held down the power
forward position for New York with 11.0 points and 9.4 rebounds
per game. Melchionni led the league in assists (8.4 apg) for the
second year in a row. Rick Barry enjoyed an injury-free season
after three years of knee problems and led the league in free
throw percentage (.878); his average of 45.2 minutes per game
paced the circuit. Barry pumped in 31.5 points per game and finished
second in scoring to Charlie Scott (34.6 ppg), who played most
of the season with the Virginia Squires before defecting to the
NBA.
In February the franchise shifted venues for the
fourth time in five years. The new home was Nassau Veterans Memorial
Coliseum in Uniondale, New York. For the first time in franchise
history, the team posted a winning record, at 44-40. The Nets'
first-round playoff opponent was Kentucky, a team that had posted
the best record in ABA history, winning 68 games. But New York
went to Louisville and routed the Colonels in Games 1 and 2 to
take the series lead. Kentucky never recovered and was eliminated,
four games to two.
The Nets faced Virginia in the second round and
survived a 138-91 blowout in Game 1 and a 115-106 defeat in Game
2 to oust the Squires in seven games. That set up an ABA Finals
matchup between the Nets and the Indiana Pacers. Indiana took
the first game easily, but New York bounced back with a two-point
win in Game 2. After four games, the series stood tied at two
wins apiece. Indiana went on to win the championship by scratching
out a one-point victory in Game 5 and a three-point win in Game
6.
The 1972 Playoffs gave the ABA a great deal of credibility.
New York averaged better than 12,000 fans per game at the Nassau
Coliseum during the team's playoff run, and the Nets and Pacers
combined to draw more than 70,000 spectators for the ABA Finals.
The exciting postseason finally attracted the attention of the
New York media, which until then had shown only marginal interest
in the franchise.
1972-73: No Barry? No Chance!
The Nets fared well in the 1972 ABA Draft, selecting and then
signing All-American Brian Taylor from Princeton and Jim Chones
from Marquette. But the club suffered a major setback when Rick
Barry received a court order to return to the NBA and report back
to the Golden State Warriors. Without Barry, the Nets stumbled
to 30-54 in 1972-73, then tumbled out of the playoffs in the first
round at the hands of the Carolina Cougars.
Everything changed for the franchise during the
offseason. The Nets obtained Julius Erving, the league's biggest
star, and Willie Sojourner from the Virginia Squires for George
Carter, the draft rights to Kermit Washington, and cash. The Nets
also added a pair of promising rookies in Larry Kenon and John
Williamson.
1973-75: "Dr. J" Rescues The Franchise
The New York press turned Julius Erving into an overnight media
sensation, and "Dr. J" turned the Nets into a championship-caliber
club and a box-office bonanza. He was surrounded by a young but
talented supporting cast. Erving was only 23 years old; his cohorts
in the starting lineup were rookies Kenon (age 22) and Williamson
(21), and second-year guard Brian Taylor (22). The "old man" of
the starting five was center Billy Paultz, a four-year veteran
at 25. The grateful recipient of this plethora of talent was Kevin
Loughery, who replaced Lou Carnesecca as the team's head coach.
Loughery guided the 1973-74 Nets to a 55-29 record
and a first-place finish in the ABA's Eastern Division. Erving
won the league scoring title, finished sixth in assists, and was
third in both blocked shots and steals. The league thanked him
with its Most Valuable Player Award.
The playoffs were a cakewalk. In the opening round
the Nets clubbed the Virginia Squires, four games to one, then
swept the Eastern Division Finals, winning by an average of almost
12 points per game against Kentucky. The Nets moved on to the
ABA Finals to face the Utah Stars. New York took Game 1 behind
a 47-point performance by Erving; Game 2 was a rout; and Game
3 was an overtime win for the Nets, but it took a three-pointer
at the buzzer from Taylor to send the game into an extra period.
The Stars staved off elimination by winning Game 4, but the Nets
came back with a home-court win before 15,934 fans to capture
the 1974 ABA Championship. Suddenly, Erving and the Nets were
every bit as popular in New York as the NBA's New York Knicks.
The only offseason change for the Nets was in the
front office, where former New York Knicks star Dave DeBusschere
took over as general manager. The defending NBA-champion Nets
came back for the 1974-75 season with the same starting five that
had earned the title the year before. Erving set an ABA record
by scoring 63 points on February 14, 1975, in a four-overtime
game in San Diego. He led the Nets in scoring for the second year
in a row (27.9 ppg) and paced the team in rebounding (10.9 rpg)
and assists (5.5 apg).
New York finished with a 58-26 record, but a four-game
losing streak late in the season, coupled with Kentucky's nine-game
winning streak, allowed the Colonels to catch the Nets down the
stretch. The Colonels made it 10 in a row with a win over the
Nets in a one-game playoff that earned Kentucky the Eastern Division
title.
In the first round of the playoffs the Nets faced
the Spirits of St. Louis, a team that had posted a 32-52 record,
lost 11 straight to New York, and was accorded no chance to advance.
The Nets took Game 1 without a struggle, but the young St. Louis
team roared back to win the next four and send New York home for
the year.
After the disappointing postseason, the Nets made
wholesale changes. The club first sent Larry Kenon to San Antonio
for Swen Nater. Later, Billy Paultz was also shipped to the Spurs.
In return the Nets received four players, including Rich Jones
and Kim Hughes. Nater was a washout for New York. Slowed by a
knee injury, he spent half a season with the Nets before being
traded to Virginia.
1975-76: Nets Are Best In ABA's Last
Season
There were off-court changes as well. After one year as the Nets'
general manager, DeBusschere became the ABA Commissioner. Also,
in a surprise move only one month before the 1975-76 season began,
Denver and New York, the ABA's two strongest franchises, applied
for admission to the NBA. An antitrust suit filed against the
NBA forced the league to table the two applications, but the overriding
impression was that the ABA was making its last hurrah.
Once the regular season got underway, the Nets performed
well. Erving led the league in scoring at 29.3 points per contest.
The starting backcourt of Brian Taylor (16.7 ppg) and John Williamson
(16.2) provided Dr. J with competent help. The Nets won 55 games
during 1975-76 to finish five games behind Denver. New York faced
San Antonio in the league semifinals, and the Spurs extended the
series to seven games despite losing starting guard James Silas
in the first outing to a broken ankle. On April 24 the Nets beat
the Spurs, 121-114, in front of a sellout crowd at Nassau Coliseum
to close out the series.
The ABA Finals opened in Denver on May 1. A crowd
of 19,034 filled McNichols Sports Arena and set an ABA attendance
record. They were treated to a spectacular performance from Julius
Erving, who piled up 45 points (including a jump shot at the buzzer)
to give the Nets a 120-118 win. An even larger crowd was on hand
for Game 2 as the Nuggets knotted the series at one game apiece,
despite a 48-point performance from Erving.
Playing back at Nassau Coliseum, the Nets nailed
down Game 3, with Erving scoring 8 consecutive points in the game's
final minute and a half. New York then went up three games to
one with a win in Game 4. Back in Denver, the Nuggets remained
alive with a 118-110 victory in Game 5. David Thompson of the
Nuggets provided the fireworks in Game 6, firing in 42 points
as the Nuggets built a 22-point lead in the third quarter. But
the Nets outscored Denver by 20 points in the fourth period to
record a 112-106 victory and earn a second ABA Championship in
three years. Erving averaged 34.7 points during the playoffs and
was named the series MVP. He was also given his third ABA regular-season
MVP Award.
With that championship the Nets' glory days came
to a crashing end. On June 17 the long-awaited merger of the NBA
and the ABA was made official, and New York, San Antonio, Denver,
and Indiana were granted admission into the new league. It cost
the Nets $8 million: $3.2 million went to the NBA, and another
$4.8 million went to the Knicks as compensation for allowing the
Nets to continue as competitors in the same territory.
1976-78: New Jersey Acquires "Tiny,"
But Club Starts Out On The Wrong Foot
The New York Nets expected to enter the NBA as a solid contender,
and they acquired Nate "Tiny" Archibald from Kansas City to improve
the team's backcourt. The franchise fell apart, however, before
the season began, when a salary dispute erupted between Erving
and Roy Boe. The Nets' owner ended the dispute by selling his
star player to the Philadelphia 76ers for $3 million. All remaining
hope for the Nets evaporated in January when Archibald broke his
foot.
The 1976-77 Nets chalked up the worst record in
the NBA with a mark of 22-60. They were the only team in the league
to score fewer than 8,000 points for the season. The club's leading
scorer (among players who finished the season) was a 6-4 guard
named Robert "Bubbles" Hawkins, who averaged 19.3 points in 52
appearances. Bubbles had averaged only 3.9 points with Golden
State the season before; he went on to play a total of 19 more
games during the next two years before his career came to an end.
The Nets' inaugural season in the NBA was the first
of five lean years for the franchise. Boe moved the team to New
Jersey in the offseason and settled into Rutgers Athletic Center,
where the club played for four years while waiting for a new arena
to be built at the Meadowlands. The Nets' new home was 40 miles
from New York City, and the franchise's financial problems went
from bad to worse.
The team's on-court performance during the 1977-78
campaign was no worse than the season before, but it was certainly
no better. The Nets (now the New Jersey Nets) were once again
the weakest team in the league, winning only 24 games. What the
team did have was rookie forward Bernard King, a 6-7 Tennessee
graduate who averaged 24.2 points and 9.5 rebounds.
1978-81: Owner Boe Sells Team
Some of the franchise's fiscal uncertainty was resolved during
the offseason, when Boe sold his interest in the club to a partnership
headed by Joseph Taub and Alan Cohen. The 1978-79 Nets featured
a high-scoring tandem in King (21.6 ppg) and guard John Williamson
(22.2). Veteran center George Johnson was second in the league
in blocked shots (3.24 per game), and second-year guard Edward
"Fast Eddie" Jordan ranked second in steals (2.45 per game).
New Jersey improved by 13 wins over the previous
season, posting a 37-45 record in 1978-79. The Nets made the NBA
Playoffs for the first time but were swept in a best-of-three
first-round series by Philadelphia. At the very least, New Jersey
enjoyed the satisfaction of finishing with a better record than
the rival Knicks.
New Jersey had a pair of first-round choices in
the 1979 NBA Draft and selected Calvin Natt with the No. 8 pick
and Cliff Robinson at No. 11. With Natt on board, the Nets traded
King, along with John Gianelli and Jim Boylan, to the Utah Jazz
for Rich Kelley.
Natt averaged 19.7 points in 53 contests for the
Nets. On February 8 the team traded him to Portland for a pair
of first-round draft picks and Maurice Lucas, who provided New
Jersey with a menacing presence inside. Mike Newlin, a ninth-year
guard acquired from Houston prior to the season, turned in his
finest campaign, averaging 20.9 points. The Nets finished with
a 34-48 record, and the trades may have saved the team from falling
even further. But New Jersey was left with an aging cast of players
and dim prospects for the future.
The Nets went for size in the 1980 NBA Draft, selecting
6-7 forward Mike O'Koren with the sixth pick and 6-11 center Mike
Gminski with the seventh selection. That gave the team a young
frontcourt (the other starting forward was second-year player
Cliff Robinson) and a glimmer of better things to come. Head Coach
Kevin Loughery, however, paid for the team's inexperience with
his job. Loughery, who was piloting the Nets for his eighth season,
resigned in mid-December and was replaced by assistant coach Bob
MacKinnon. In March the franchise announced that Larry Brown,
a three-time ABA Coach of the Year, would assume the helm at season's
end. New Jersey finished the 1980-81 season with a 24-58 record,
good for last place in the Atlantic Division.
1981-83: Brown Plays "Let's Make
A Deal"
Brown made wholesale changes for 1981-82. He brought in an entirely
new backcourt, trading for Otis Birdsong and picking up Ray Williams,
a free agent who had spent the previous four seasons with the
Knicks. The most important switch was at the power forward position,
where first-round draft pick Buck Williams had a banner season,
pulling down 12.3 rebounds per game (third best in the league)
and adding 15.5 points per contest. The numbers were good enough
to earn Williams the league's Rookie of the Year Award.
Playing in the brand-new Brendan Byrne Arena at
the Meadowlands in East Rutherford, New Jersey, the Nets got off
to a 3-12 start in 1981-82. But the club went 41-26 the rest of
the way to finish with a mark of 44-38, a 20-game improvement
from the previous year. New Jersey advanced to the playoffs but
was swept by Washington in a best-of-three first-round series.
The 1982-83 season saw a virtual revolving door
at guard. Ray Williams was dealt to Kansas City in a trade that
brought Phil Ford to the Nets. Ford then was traded for Wallace
Edgar "Mickey" Johnson, who led the team to an 11-game winning
streak from December 23 to January 12. Three weeks later, Johnson
and first-round draft pick Eric "Sleepy" Floyd were sent to Golden
State for Micheal Ray Richardson.
The other new face on the club was 6-11 center Darryl
Dawkins, who came to New Jersey in the offseason after spending
seven seasons with Philadelphia. "Chocolate Thunder" (as Dawkins
was called) gave the team 12.0 points and 5.2 rebounds per game.
He also set a new league record with 379 personal fouls and fouled
out of an NBA-high 23 games.
The 1982-83 season marked the franchise's high-water
mark since joining the NBA. Led in scoring by Buck Williams and
Albert King, both of whom averaged 17.0 points, the team posted
a 49-33 record. But the club's playoff hopes were dashed in the
waning days of the regular season. With two weeks left to go,
Coach Larry Brown resigned to take the coaching job at the University
of Kansas. The team collapsed and was swept by the Knicks in the
first round of the playoffs.
1983-84: Albeck Makes A Big Promise
The Nets had a new coach-Stan Albeck-for the 1983-84 campaign,
but for the first time since joining the NBA they made no changes
in the starting lineup between seasons. Once again, Dawkins fouled
out of more games (22) than anyone else in the league; he also
put up the best numbers of his career, averaging 16.8 points and
6.7 rebounds. Buck Williams finished among the NBA's top three
in rebounding (12.3 rpg) for the third consecutive season and
became the ninth player in NBA history to pull down at least 1,000
boards in each of his first three seasons. Otis Birdsong represented
New Jersey at the 1984 NBA All-Star Game in Denver. The only disappointment
for the Nets was Micheal Ray Richardson, who missed almost half
the season as he battled a drug problem.
The Nets went 19-6 down the stretch, and Albeck
promised the New Jersey fans a playoff victory. The promise looked
like sheer bravado as the team drew the defending NBA-champion
Philadelphia 76ers in Round 1, but Albeck looked good after his
club took the first two games of the best-of-five matchup. The
76ers evened the series at two games apiece, but the Nets came
back in Game 5 with a three-point victory. It was the first playoff-series
triumph for the franchise since joining the NBA.
New Jersey tangled with Milwaukee in the Eastern
Conference Semifinals. After squaring the series at two games
apiece, the Nets lost the next two games, including a one-point
defeat in Game 6, and were eliminated.
1984-86: Team Struggles Without Darryl
And Micheal Ray
A plague of injuries descended upon the Nets during the 1984-85
campaign. Darryl Dawkins missed 43 games with a back injury, Albert
King was lost for 40 games, Mike O'Koren was sidelined for 39,
and Otis Birdsong suffered a knee injury and missed 26 contests.
Head Coach Stan Albeck was forced to use 13 different starting
lineups during the regular season. One player he could count on
was Buck Williams, who appeared in all 82 games and led the league
with 3,182 minutes played.
Albeck also got a sterling performance from Micheal
Ray Richardson. After missing almost half of the 1983-84 season,
Richardson came back the following year to play in every game.
He had the best season of his career, averaging 20.1 points, 8.2
assists, and 5.6 rebounds.
Even though his team was plagued by injuries, Albeck
coaxed a winning season out of the club. The Nets posted a 42-40
record and finished above .500 for the fourth straight season.
In the playoffs, however, New Jersey was swept in the first round
by a fast-rising Detroit Pistons ballclub.
Albeck stepped down as head coach during the offseason
and Dave Wohl was named as his replacement. The Nets jumped out
to a 23-14 record, but the 1985-86 season quickly unraveled after
Richardson earned the dubious distinction of becoming the first
player ever to be banned from the NBA for violating the league's
drug policy for the third time. The team was hurt again when Dawkins's
back problem flared up and forced him to miss all but one of the
season's final 32 games.
New Jersey did make the playoffs with a 39-43 record,
and Wohl had Buck Williams and Mike Gminski to thank. Williams
made his third All-Star appearance and went on to average 15.9
points and 12.0 rebounds for the season. Gminski performed well
as the team's starting center, leading the club with 16.5 points
per game and chipping in 8.2 rebounds per contest. The Nets' visit
to the playoffs in 1986 was a brief one as Milwaukee eliminated
them in the first round with a three-game sweep.
1986-88: A Seven-Year Drought
The 1985-86 season was the first of seven straight in which the
Nets failed to crack the .500 mark. Injuries were to blame during
1986-87. Dawkins lasted six contests before back problems all
but ended his career. Otis Birdsong was lost for the season after
just seven games. Buck Williams was the only player to appear
in all 82 contests. Orlando Woolridge, who came to New Jersey
from Chicago as a free agent, led the team in scoring with 20.7
points per game. The Nets tied the Knicks for last place in the
Atlantic Division, with both teams posting 24-58 records.
The injury jinx continued to hex the Nets through
the 1987-88 season. The club set an NBA record as its players
missed more games because of injury than any other team in league
history. Even Buck Williams was bitten by the injury bug. For
the first season in his career he missed at least one game. Despite
playing in only 70 contests, he led the team in scoring, rebounding,
average minutes, and field goal percentage.
1988-89: Can Nets Succeed With Reed?
The Nets opened 1987-88 with a 2-13 record, and Dave Wohl was
released as head coach. Assistant General Manager Bob MacKinnon
stepped in and guided the team to a 10-29 mark before giving way
to Hall of Famer Willis Reed, who didn't fare any better-the squad
posted a 7-21 record after he took over. The Nets finished with
a 19-63 record; only the Los Angeles Clippers, with a mark of
17-65, won fewer games.
The 1988-89 team had seven new names on its roster,
including Joe Barry Carroll, Lester Conner, and Mike McGee, all
of whom came to the club in the offseason and were inserted into
the starting lineup by Coach Reed. The Nets actually went 5-3
to start the season and were hovering around the .500 mark at
the end of November when Carroll went down with an injury. The
team sputtered to a 26-56 record; an expansion team in Charlotte
saved the Nets from repeating as the cellar dwellers in the Atlantic
Division. Buck Williams led the team in rebounding but averaged
just 9.4 boards per game, the first time in his career that he
did not reach double figures.
1989-90: Fitch Named New Head Coach
After just over one season at the helm, Reed moved up the ladder
in the Nets organization to become senior vice president in charge
of basketball operations. Bill Fitch became the new head coach.
During the offseason New Jersey traded away its best player, Buck
Williams, to Portland, for oft-injured center Sam Bowie and the
No. 12 pick in the 1989 NBA Draft. The team used the draft choice
to select point guard Mookie Blaylock, who had a decent rookie
year but missed 32 games with a broken finger. Bowie led the team
in rebounding with 10.1 boards per game.
Fitch's first season with the Nets was a trial.
The team won only 17 games, fewer than any other team in the NBA,
which that season included a pair of first-year expansion teams
in Orlando and Minnesota. New Jersey did manage to embarrass Boston
on January 9, 1990, by holding the Celtics to only six points
during the second quarter.
1990-91: "D. C." Earns An "A" In
Rookie Season
After bottoming out during the 1989-90 season, the team began
a slow rise out of the netherworld of basketball mediocrity. The
first step came on draft day. Wielding the No. 1 pick in 1990,
the Nets drafted Syracuse forward Derrick Coleman, then bolstered
their backcourt with the addition of veteran Reggie Theus and
strengthened the bench by plucking Drazen Petrovic from the Portland
Trail Blazers.
Coleman proved that he was the best player in the
draft by earning NBA Rookie of the Year honors during his first
season. Theus paced the club in scoring (18.6 ppg), narrowly edging
out Coleman (18.4). The Nets led the league in blocked shots with
600. On March 16 the Nets beat Washington, giving Coach Fitch
career win No. 800. New Jersey finished the 1990-91 season with
a 26-56 record, two games ahead of the last-place Miami Heat in
the Atlantic Division.
1991-92: Nets Acquire A Playmaker
Blessed for the second year in a row with a high pick in the draft,
the Nets chose Kenny Anderson, a brilliant young point guard from
Georgia Tech who had grown up in New York City. But a contractual
dispute kept Anderson from joining the team until after the season
was underway. New Jersey started slowly, losing 11 of its first
13 games and 18 of its first 25. From that point on, however,
the team hit its stride, posting a 32-25 mark the rest of the
way to finish at 39-43 and earn a playoff spot for the first time
since 1986. The Nets were eliminated in the first round by the
Cleveland Cavaliers but managed to win one game, the team's first
postseason victory since 1984.
Despite their success, the 1991-92 season was anything
but a smooth ride for Fitch and his young team. The Nets got solid
performances out of Coleman, who averaged 19.8 points and 9.5
rebounds, and Petrovic, who led the team with 20.6 points per
game while finishing second in the league with a .444 three-point
field goal percentage. But Fitch, who was criticized throughout
the year for choosing to play Blaylock over Anderson at point
guard, was released at season's end.
1992-93: Injuries On The Court, Tragedy
Off It
Willis Reed brought in Chuck Daly, former coach of the Pistons,
to guide the franchise for the 1992-93 campaign. Shortly before
the regular season began, Daly declared that Anderson would be
his starting point guard, then reinforced that decision by trading
Blaylock to Atlanta with Roy Hinson for Rumeal Robinson.
Daly succeeded with the team where Fitch had failed.
By the end of February the team was cruising along with a 31-24
record. But Anderson broke his wrist in a February 28 game against
the Knicks and was lost for the season. The Nets went 12-15 without
their playmaker and finished with a 43-39 mark. Anderson had been
blossoming into a star with averages of 16.9 points and 8.2 assists
per game at the time of his injury.
Anderson had a lot of company on the injured list.
The Nets entered the playoffs with both of the team's centers,
Sam Bowie and Chris Dudley, out of action. New Jersey faced Cleveland
in the first round, with Coleman fighting to fill the void in
the middle. After averaging 20.7 points and 11.2 rebounds during
the regular season, he boosted his numbers to 26.8 points and
13.4 rebounds during the five-game series against Cleveland. But
it wasn't enough; the Cavs eliminated the Nets, three games to
two.
Tragedy struck the team one month after the playoffs
ended when Drazen Petrovic was killed in an automobile accident
in Germany. "Petro" was coming off his best season in the NBA,
having led the team in scoring with 22.3 points per game. He was
28 years old.
1993-94: Nets Make Playoffs But Make
A Quick Exit
The loss of Drazen Petrovic left a void that was difficult to
fill. In 1993-94 the Nets continued to improve but were a few
players short of mounting a serious challenge for the Atlantic
Division crown. Derrick Coleman and Kenny Anderson, both All-Stars
for the first time, each had an outstanding season. Coleman scored
20.2 points per game, 14th in the NBA, and grabbed 11.3 rebounds
per contest for ninth in the league. Anderson ranked fourth in
the league in assists (9.6 apg) and led all NBA point guards in
scoring (18.8 ppg).
New Jersey posted a winning record in every month
except November. From January 13 through the end of the year the
Nets went 29-13. They finished at 45-37, the club's second-best
victory total since it entered the NBA. The wins paid off at the
box office, as the franchise drew a record 620,416 fans.
Facing New York in the first round of the playoffs,
the Nets were confident, having defeated the Knicks in four of
five meetings during the regular season. But a New York team headed
for the NBA Finals dropped the Nets in four games. On May 26,
1994, Chuck Daly stepped down as head coach after two years. He
was replaced by Butch Beard, a former NBA player who had been
coaching at Howard University.
1994-95: Nets Endure Another Injury-Riddled
Campaign
The New Jersey Nets entered the 1994-95 campaign with a string
of three consecutive postseason appearances and high hopes for
another. Their hopes were dashed when they finished the year out
of the playoffs with a 30-52 record, 15 fewer wins than they had
posted the previous season.
First-year coach Butch Beard had all that he could
handle, struggling with disciplinary problems and injuries to
key players. Thirteen different players were injured during the
season, resulting in 320 player-games lost, the third-highest
total in the NBA. Among the Nets' starters, Kevin Edwards missed
68 games, Benoit Benjamin 21, Derrick Coleman 26, Kenny Anderson
10, and Chris Morris 11. First-round draft choice Yinka Dare played
just three minutes all season. Only Armon Gilliam, who had a fine
year (14.8 ppg, 7.5 rpg), saw action in all 82 contests.
The Nets finished the season ranked last in the
NBA in field goal percentage at .436. Gilliam was the only Nets
player to rank among the NBA's top 40 in field goal percentage,
placing 33rd at .503. The Nets recorded 544 steals, the lowest
total in the league, and they forced fewer turnovers than any
other team. Coleman led the team in scoring (20.5 ppg) and rebounding
(10.6 rpg), while Anderson was second in the NBA in assists at
9.4 per contest.
1995-96: Out With the Old; In With
the New
The 1995-96 Nets were a team definitely in transition. The season
marked the end of the Coleman/Anderson era as both players were
traded away midseason. In return, the Nets got younger, and definitely
taller.
On Nov. 30, the Nets dealt Coleman, with Sean Higgins
and Rex Walters, to the Philadelphia 76ers in exchange for Tim
Perry, Greg Graham and 7-6 third-year center Shawn Bradley. Then
on Jan. 19, Anderson and Gerald Glass were dealt to Charlotte
for guards Kendall Gill and Khalid Reeves.
In the absence of Coleman and Anderson, other Nets
shined. Armon Gilliam became the first Net in two years to be
named Player of the Week. Chris Childs came into his own, averaging
12.8 points and 7.0 assists per game. Jayson Williams proved to
be one of the league's better rebounders, averaging 10.0 rpg and
pulling down 25 on Jan. 30 against the Seattle SuperSonics. Bradley,
the second overall pick in the 1993 draft, averaged 3.65 blocked
shots and recorded two triple-doubles. Williams, Gilliam and Bradley
combined to help the Nets lead the NBA in rebounding
Despite a talented nucleus, wins were hard to come
by, particularly after the team lost Gill for the season when
he suffered a broken hand on February 14. The team finished with
a record of 30-52, sixth in the Atlantic Division, and out of
the playoffs for the second straight season. After the season,
Coach Butch Beard was relieved of his duties. The Nets dipped
into the college ranks for his replacement, tabbing successful
University of Massachusetts Coach John Calipari, and signing him
to a five-year contract.
1996-97: Cal's Crew Builds Foundation
John Calipari's task of building the Nets into a winner took huge
steps forward in 1996-97, even though the team took a small step
backward in the standings, finishing 26-56 on the year.
The first step was the immediate emergence of rookie
Kerry Kittles, who played in all 82 games and averaged nearly
37 minutes per game. Kittles, a 37.7 percent three-point shooter,
was fourth among rookies in points (16.4), second in steals (1.9)
and fifth in assists (3.0).
Two seven-year veterans, Kendall Gill and Jayson
Williams, had breakout seasons for the Nets. Gill averaged a career-best
21.8 ppg (ninth in the NBA) and set or tied personal bests in
rebounds, steals and blocked shots. Willliams averaged 13.5 rebounds
per game, despite playing much of the season with a torn thumb
ligament that limited him to only 41 games.
Just prior to the trading deadline, the Nets and
Dallas Mavericks engineered one of the biggest trades in NBA history,
at least in terms of the number of players involved. New Jersey
sent point guard Robert Pack, guard Khalid Reeves, forward Ed
O'Bannon and center Shawn Bradley to Dallas in exchange for forward
Chris Gatling, guards Jimmy Jackson and Sam Cassell, center Eric
Montross and swingman George McCloud. Days later, McCloud went
to the Los Angeles Lakers in exchange for Joe Kleine and a first-round
pick in the 1997 Draft.
With a new nucleus featuring Gill, Kittles, Jackson
and Cassell, the Nets' quickness gave some teams trouble. During
a three-day span in March, the Nets posted consecutive wins over
the eventual champion Chicago Bulls and their crosstown rivals,
the New York Knicks. They handled the Knicks again later that
month, and also posted wins over division winners Seattle and
Miami.
Though the season ended with a 2-9 record in April,
the Nets appeared to strike draft gold in Keith Van Horn after
trading up to get second overall pick. In addition to a prominent
new face, June brought the Nets a new look as the team adopted
a futuristic logo and colors.
1997-98: Excitement Returns to the
Meadowlands
For a few days in April, the youthful 1997-98 New Jersey Nets
captured the attention of the basketball world as more than just
foils for the mighty Chicago Bulls in the first round of the 1998
NBA Playoffs. Though they didn't win a game, let alone the series,
they played the Bulls tough in their first postseason appearance
since 1994, capping a 43-39 season that brought excitement back
to the Meadowlands.
The Nets began the season by winning their first
four games, maintained a winning record through all 82 games for
the first time in the franchise's NBA history, and clinched a
playoff berth with a victory over Detroit on the final day of
the season. The heart and soul of the Nets was loquacious center
Jayson Williams, who averaged 13.6 rebounds, (2nd in the NBA),
and 12.9 points per game. Williams became the first Net to appear
in an All-Star Game since 1994, and did so at Madison Square Garden
in his native New York.
Another Nets All-Star may not be too many years
away. After missing the first 17 games of the season due to injury,
rookie Keith Van Horn quickly acclimated himself to the NBA game
and led the Nets in scoring at 19.7 ppg. Rounding out the frontcourt
was forward Kendall Gill, who sacrificed his scoring average for
the good of the team, and still put home 13.4 ppg.
Also stepping up were Sam Cassell and Kerry Kittles
in the backcourt. Cassell ranked second on the team in scoring,
just behind Van Horn at 19.6 ppg, and led the Nets in assists
with 8.0 apg. Kittles, in his second NBA season, was third on
the team in scoring with 17.2 ppg. Off the bench, the Nets weapons
included Sherman Douglas (8.0 ppg, 4.0 apg) and Chris Gatling
(11.5 ppg, 5.9 rpg), as well as Rony Seikaly, who joined the Nets
in a five-player trade with Orlando on Feb. 19.
Seikaly played in only nine games for New Jersey
because of a nagging injury to his right foot. Injuries became
an epidemic for the Nets, who entered the playoffs with several
stars nursing wounds. In Game 1 against Chicago, Cassell nursed
a strained groin and Williams played (and had 21 rebounds) despite
a broken thumb. The Nets nevertheless forced overtime at the United
Center before falling by a score of 96-93. The Bulls ultimately
swept the series, but the Nets' valiant effort suggested a team
on the rise in the East.
1998-99: Marbury Trade is Silver
Lining
The Nets had the NBA's highest-scoring duo, the league-leader
in steals and one of the top rebounders in the game. But, due
in large part to injuries and a slow start to the lockout-shortened
season, New Jersey finished 16-34 and missed the playoffs.
New Jersey struggled to a 3-17 start under coach
John Calipari, but the team rallied to go 13-17 after Don Casey
took the reins. The Nets were particularly strong at the end of
the season, winning 11 of their last 21 games. Stephon Marbury
averaged 36.5 points in the final four games, including a career-high
41 against Milwaukee in the season finale.
The Nets acquired Marbury on March 11 in a three-team,
eight-player blockbuster that sent Sam Cassell from New Jersey
to Milwaukee. Marbury averaged 23.4 points and 8.7 assists in
31 games with the Nets, and for the season he posted 21.3 points
and 8.9 assists per game.
Keith Van Horn (21.8 ppg) and Marbury were fifth
and eighth, respectively, in the NBA's scoring race. Marbury was
third in assists and Kendall Gill was tops in the NBA with 2.68
steals per game.
Gill was also the only Net to play all 50 games.
Injuries hit New Jersey's centers the hardest, as Jayson Williams
(20 games), Rony Seikaly (38) and Jim McIlvaine (27) all missed
significant time. Williams sustained a season-ending broken leg
on April 1. He was the NBA's second-leading rebounder (12.0 rpg)
at the time.
Injuries also affected the point guard rotation.
Because of a sprained ankle, Cassell only played four games before
being traded. Backup Eric Murdock missed 35 games with knee and
groin injuries.
1999-2000: Marbury and Gill Reach
Milestones
During the 1999-2000 season, Stephon Marbury dished out his 2,000th
assist and Kendall Gill scored his 10,000th career point, but
the team finished 31-51 and missed the playoffs for a second consecutive
year.
To say that the New Jersey Nets season was an emotional
roller coaster ride would be a vast understatement. After starting
the season at 2-15 - a franchise record low - few thought the
team would ever come close to making the playoffs. But they did.
And though the team fell short in the end, the Nets were still
alive in the playoff race at the beginning of April with three
weeks left in the season. Once again, injuries hurt the team down
the stretch. After the first week of April, the team was without
their leading scorer and assist man, Stephon Marbury (knee), tough
rookie Evan Eschmeyer (ankle), and starting shooting guard Kerry
Kittles (knee).
The Nets were officially eliminated from playoff
contention on April 7 after a 103-85 loss to the Miami Heat. The
team lost their final 11 games of the year.
Stephon Marbury led the team in scoring (22.2 ppg)
and Kendal Gill led the team in total steals (139), ranking him
ninth in the league.
2000-01: Marbury voted an All-Star;
No. 1 pick proves worthy
In his NBA head-coaching debut, Byron Scott certainly did not
have the type of season he had hoped for. Injuries hampered the
team right out of the gate, having to start the season without
three of their players (Kerry Kittles, Jamie Feick and Keith Van
Horn). From there, the chemistry of the team fluctuated as they
tried to make adjustments each time a new player was injured.
The team finished with a 26-56 record and missed the playoffs
for a third consecutive season.
Individually, rookie Kenyon Martin was outstanding
in his NBA debut and point guard Stephon Marbury was voted to
the All-Star Team for the first time in his career. Reserves like
veteran Johnny Newman and Lucious Harris stepped up in their roles
as starters, while sophomore Evan Eschmeyer showed great effort
at his starting center position. But the injury quotient (345
games lost to injury) provided distraction and disruption, depriving
Coach Scott of a consistent, healthy lineup. The potential success
of a team that featured Marbury, Van Horn, Martin and Kittles
was never able to materialize.
2001-02: Nets go all the way to the
NBA Finals
The New Jersey Nets experienced a franchise-best season during
their 2001-02 campaign. With a club-record 52-win season, the
Nets were Atlantic Division Champions and Eastern Conference Champions
and made their first appearance in the NBA Finals. The good fortune
began with the trade for All-Star point guard Jason Kidd in July
2001 and escalated from there.
Sophomore Kenyon Martin continued to show why he
was a number one draft pick the season before, while rookie Richard
Jefferson caught the attention of many with his excellent play
during his first year. Jason Kidd moved into the NBA's top 5 list
of all-time for triple-doubles. Kidd finished the regular season
with 46.
After defeating Indiana, Charlotte and Boston,
respecitvely, the New Jersey Nets lost to the Los Angeles Lakers
in the NBA Finals. Even with the loss, 2001-02 was a magical season
and will go down in Nets history as the best ever.
2002-03: Nets make consecutive trip
to NBA Finals
For a second consecutive season, the New Jersey Nets found themselves
in the NBA Finals. The Nets swept both the Boston Celtics and
Detroit Pistons before falling 4-2 to the San Antonio Spurs in
the Championship round.
Despite their loss in the Finals, New Jersey celebrated
another successful season, winning 49 games. Sophomore Richard
Jefferson emerged as a rising young star in his starting role
at small forward, while Kenyon Martin continued to be one of the
most dominant power forwards in the East. The team leader, Jason
Kidd, was his usual magnificent self, guiding his team all the
way to the Finals.
The team was never able to experience the impact
of newly acquired Dikembe Mutombo after the center injured his
wrist early on and missed the majority of the regular season.
Regardless, the Nets were able to stay atop the Eastern Conference
and finished just one win short of the best record in the East.
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