1988–89 NBA season

{{short description|43rd NBA season}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}

{{more citations needed|date=December 2022}}

{{Infobox sports season

| title =1988–89 NBA season

| league =National Basketball Association

| sport =Basketball

| duration =November 4, 1988 – April 23, 1989
April 27 – June 2, 1989 (Playoffs)
June 6–13, 1989 (Finals)

| no_of_teams =25

| TV =CBS, TBS

| draft =Draft

| draft_link =1988 NBA Draft

| top_pick_link =List of first overall NBA draft picks

| top_pick =Danny Manning

| picked_by =Los Angeles Clippers

| season =Regular season

| top_seed =Detroit Pistons

| MVP =Magic Johnson (L.A. Lakers)

| MVP_link =NBA MVP

| top_scorer =Michael Jordan (Chicago)

| playoffs =Playoffs

| playoffs_link =1989 NBA Playoffs

| conf1 =Eastern

| conf1_link =Eastern Conference (NBA)

| conf1_champ =Detroit Pistons

| conf1_runner-up =Chicago Bulls

| conf2 =Western

| conf2_link =Western Conference (NBA)

| conf2_champ =Los Angeles Lakers

| conf2_runner-up =Phoenix Suns

| finals =Finals

| finals_venue = *Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California

| finals_link =1989 NBA Finals

| finals_champ =Detroit Pistons

| finals_runner-up =Los Angeles Lakers

| finals_MVP =Joe Dumars (Detroit)

| finals_MVP_link =NBA Finals MVP

| seasonslist =List of NBA seasons

| seasonslistnames =NBA

| prevseason_link =1987–88 NBA season

| prevseason_year =1987–88

| nextseason_link =1989–90 NBA season

| nextseason_year =1989–90

}}

File:Lakers Celtics Lipofsky.jpg facing the Boston Celtics in Dec. 1988. This would be Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's last jump ball at Boston Garden.]]

The 1988–89 NBA season was the 43rd season of the National Basketball Association. The season ended with the Detroit Pistons winning the NBA Championship, sweeping the Los Angeles Lakers. This was the first season of the Miami Heat and Charlotte Hornets.

Notable occurrences

class="wikitable" style="float:right"

|+Coaching changes

! colspan="3"|Off-season

Team

! 1987–88 coach

! 1988–89 coach

Boston Celtics

| K.C. Jones

| Jimmy Rodgers

Charlotte Hornets

| Expansion

| Dick Harter

Houston Rockets

| Bill Fitch

| Don Chaney

Miami Heat

| Expansion

| Ron Rothstein

Phoenix Suns

| John Wetzel

| Cotton Fitzsimmons

San Antonio Spurs

| Bob Weiss

| Larry Brown

Golden State Warriors

| Ed Gregory

| Don Nelson

colspan="3"|In-season
Team

! Outgoing coach

! Incoming coach

Portland Trail Blazers

| Mike Schuler

| Rick Adelman

Los Angeles Clippers

| Gene Shue

| Don Casey

rowspan="3"|Indiana Pacers

| Jack Ramsay

| Mel Daniels

Mel Daniels

| George Irvine

George Irvine

| Dick Versace

Utah Jazz

| Frank Layden

| Jerry Sloan

  • The NBA adopts the three-official system used in college basketball permanently. The league experimented with three officials per game in 1978–79, but went back to two officials per game for the next nine seasons, although they actually have three with the inclusion of an alternate referee for all playoff games and selected regular season games.
  • The Charlotte Hornets and Miami Heat become the league's 24th and 25th franchises.
  • The Heat plays its inaugural season in the Midwest Division. As a result, the Sacramento Kings move to the Pacific Division.
  • The Hornets play their inaugural season in the Atlantic Division.
  • The 1989 NBA All-Star Game was played at the Astrodome in Houston, Texas, with the West defeating the East 143–134. Karl Malone of the Utah Jazz takes home the game's MVP award.
  • New Arenas: The Milwaukee Bucks move from the MECCA Arena to the then-Bradley Center, the Sacramento Kings move from ARCO Arena I to the then-ARCO Arena (later Power Balance Pavilion, now Sleep Train Arena), and the Detroit Pistons move from the Pontiac Silverdome to The Palace of Auburn Hills.
  • Michael Jordan records ten triple-doubles in eleven games near the end of the season.
  • Prior to the season, the first-year Hornets announce that they choose teal as their primary color, which gave them immediate attention. In the next decade, expansion teams in the other professional sports leagues (most notably the San Jose Sharks of the NHL, the Florida Marlins of Major League Baseball's NL, and the Jacksonville Jaguars of the NFL) further popularized the use of the color. The Hornets also popularized the use of pinstripes on the uniforms, which were later adopted by the Orlando Magic, Chicago Bulls (alternates only), Toronto Raptors, Indiana Pacers and the later Charlotte Hornets' predecessor franchise, the second incarnation of the Hornets (formerly known as the Charlotte Bobcats).
  • The Chicago Bulls started a playoff tradition by wearing black sneakers. Prior to that, the Boston Celtics were the only team to wear black sneakers. Following the Bulls' unlikely playoff run, other teams began adopting the style, beginning with the Philadelphia 76ers in 1990.
  • This was Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's last season.
  • The Los Angeles Lakers became the first team to sweep two consecutive best-of-seven series.
  • The Celtics, who had never won fewer than 57 games in any of the previous nine seasons, slump to 42 as Larry Bird played only six games due to injuries.
  • The Indiana Pacers had four different head coaches during the season, a rare occurrence that has not happened since.
  • Seattle SuperSonics guard Dale Ellis won the All-Star game's 3-point shootout.
  • The first postponement of an NBA game due to a civil disturbance. In the wake of the Miami riots, the game between the Miami Heat and Phoenix Suns on January 17, 1989, was postponed.
  • Utah Jazz coach Frank Layden, citing burnout, resigns from the Jazz after 17 games and an 11–6 record. Assistant Jerry Sloan begins the first season of 23 for the Utah Jazz, at the time of his retirement, the longest tenure of any professional coach for one city and franchise, but since surpassed by Gregg Popovich of the San Antonio Spurs.
  • This was the only season for Ricky Berry, who was selected by the Sacramento Kings with the 18th overall pick in the 1988 NBA draft, who committed suicide during the off-season.
  • On January 6, 1989,[https://www.upi.com/Archives/1989/01/29/The-last-time-the-Washington-Bullets-played-in-Baltimore/7587602053200/ The last time the Washington Bullets played in Baltimore] United Press International the Bullets franchise played its first regular season game in Baltimore since 1973; this was the first of 35 regular season "home" games the Bullets played in Baltimore through the 1996–97 season.[https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-1997-03-30-1997089160-story.html "Bullets leave Baltimore with win Mavericks fall, 94-87"] The Baltimore Sun
  • Akeem Olajuwon becomes the only player in NBA history to accumulate over 200 steals with over 200 blocks in a season.{{cite web | url=https://thesportsrush.com/nba-news-300-million-hakeem-olajuwon-outdid-michael-jordan-with-200-blocks-and-steals-but-lost-dpoy-to-74-jazz-star/ | title=$300 million Hakeem Olajuwon outdid Michael Jordan with 200+ blocks and steals but lost DPOY to 7'4 Jazz star | date=11 September 2022 }}

1988–89 NBA changes

Teams

class="wikitable" style="width:auto"
bgcolor="#0047AB" align="center" colspan="5"|1988-89 National Basketball Association
bgcolor="red" align="center" colspan="5"|{{color|#FFFFFF|Eastern Conference}}
Division || Team || City || Arena || Capacity
rowspan="6" | Atlantic

| Boston Celtics

| Boston, Massachusetts

| Boston Garden

| 14,890

style="background-color:#00FF00;"

| Charlotte Hornets *

| Charlotte, North Carolina

| Charlotte Coliseum

| 24,042

New Jersey Nets

| East Rutherford, New Jersey

| Brendan Byrne Arena

| 20,049

New York Knicks

| New York, New York

| Madison Square Garden

| 19,812

Philadelphia 76ers

| Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

| The Spectrum

| 18,176

Washington Bullets

| Landover, Maryland

| Capital Centre

| 18,756

rowspan="6" | Central

| Atlanta Hawks

| Atlanta, Georgia

| Omni Coliseum

| 16,378

Chicago Bulls

| Chicago, Illinois

| Chicago Stadium

| 18,676

Cleveland Cavaliers

| Richfield, Ohio

| Richfield Coliseum

| 20,900

Detroit Pistons

| Auburn Hills, Michigan

| The Palace of Auburn Hills

| 22,076

Indiana Pacers

| Indianapolis, Indiana

| Market Square Arena

| 17,171

Milwaukee Bucks

| Milwaukee, Wisconsin

| Bradley Center

| 18,717

bgcolor="red" align="center" colspan="5"|{{color|#FFFFFF|Western Conference}}
rowspan="6" | Midwest

| Dallas Mavericks

| Dallas, Texas

| Reunion Arena

| 18,293

Denver Nuggets

| Denver, Colorado

| McNichols Sports Arena

| 17,171

Houston Rockets

| Houston, Texas

| The Summit

| 16,285

style="background-color:#00FF00;"

| Miami Heat *

| Miami, Florida

| Miami Arena

| 15,200

San Antonio Spurs

| San Antonio, Texas

| HemisFair Arena

| 16,057

Utah Jazz

| Salt Lake City, Utah

| Salt Palace

| 12,686

rowspan="7" | Pacific

| Golden State Warriors

| Oakland, California

| Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena

| 13,335

Los Angeles Clippers

| Los Angeles, California

| Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena

| 16,161

Los Angeles Lakers

| Inglewood, California

| Great Western Forum

| 17,505

Phoenix Suns

| Phoenix, Arizona

| Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum

| 14,870

Portland Trail Blazers

| Portland, Oregon

| Memorial Coliseum

| 12,888

Sacramento Kings

| Sacramento, California

| ARCO Arena

| 17,317

Seattle SuperSonics

| Seattle, Washington

| Seattle Center Coliseum

| 14,252

class="wikitable"

| style="background-color:#00FF00;font-size:90%;" | Expansion team *

Map of teams

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| lon_deg = -74.07

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| lat_deg = 40.75

| lon_deg = -73.99

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| lon_deg = -87.67

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| lon_deg = -87.92

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| lon_deg = -96.81

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{{Location map~ | USA

| lat_deg = 29.42

| lon_deg = -98.48

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| label = Spurs}}

{{Location map~ | USA

| lat_deg = 40.77

| lon_deg = -111.90

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| label = Warriors}}

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| label = Kings}}

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| label = Sonics}}

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}}

{{Clear}}

Final standings

=By division=

{{1988–89 NBA Atlantic standings}}

{{1988–89 NBA Central standings}}

{{1988–89 NBA Midwest standings}}

{{1988–89 NBA Pacific standings}}

File:Detroit Pistons at Dallas Mavericks 1988-11-15 (ticket).jpg and the season's eventual champions Detroit Pistons.]]

=By conference=

{{1988–89 NBA East standings}}

{{1988–89 NBA West standings}}

File:Miami Heat at Charlotte Hornets 1988-11-29 (ticket).jpg

Notes

  • z – Clinched home court advantage for the entire playoffs
  • c – Clinched home court advantage for the conference playoffs
  • y – Clinched division title
  • x – Clinched playoff spot

Expansion

The League expands from twenty-three to twenty-five franchises, with new expansion teams in Charlotte and Miami.

The Heat began its season as a member of the Western Conference despite its geographical position, enduring its longest road trips when playing Western Conference teams. It also began the season 0–17, at the time the worst start in NBA history. The Hornets finished at 20–62. Such records are typical of expansion NBA franchises in their initial seasons, with 15–67 being the poorest record repeated by the Cavaliers, Grizzlies, Rockets, and Mavericks, as well as the Heat.List Expansion Team & Date: http://www.nba.com/analysis/00422957.html {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110312070616/http://www.nba.com/analysis/00422957.html |date=2011-03-12 }} The Sacramento Kings were belatedly moved to the Pacific Division in their fourth season after leaving Kansas City.

File:1989 NBA Eastern Conference Semifinals - Game 1 - Chicago Bulls at New York Knicks 1989-05-09 (ticket).jpg

Playoffs

{{main article|1989 NBA playoffs}}

Teams in bold advanced to the next round. The numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's seeding in its conference, and the numbers to the right indicate the number of games the team won in that round. The division champions are marked by an asterisk. Home court advantage does not necessarily belong to the higher-seeded team, but instead the team with the better regular season record; teams enjoying the home advantage are shown in italics.

{{excerpt|1989 NBA playoffs|Bracket|bold=yes|hat=no}}

Statistics leaders

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

|+

CategoryPlayer || Team || Stat
Points per gameMichael JordanChicago Bulls32.5
Rebounds per gameAkeem OlajuwonHouston Rockets13.5
Assists per gameJohn StocktonUtah Jazz13.6
Steals per gameJohn StocktonUtah Jazz3.21
Blocks per gameManute BolGolden State Warriors4.31
FG%Dennis RodmanDetroit Pistons.595
FT%Magic JohnsonLos Angeles Lakers.911
3FG%Jon SundvoldMiami Heat.522

NBA awards

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{{col-end}}

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=Player of the week=

The following players were named NBA Player of the Week.

class="wikitable"
Week

!Player

align=center|Nov. 4 – Nov. 13

|Akeem Olajuwon (Houston Rockets)

align=center|Nov. 14 – Nov. 20

|Michael Jordan (Chicago Bulls)

align=center|Nov. 21 – Nov. 27

|Patrick Ewing (New York Knicks)

align=center|Nov. 28 – Dec. 4

|Magic Johnson (Los Angeles Lakers)

align=center|Dec. 5 – Dec. 11

|Michael Adams (Denver Nuggets)

align=center|Dec. 12 – Dec. 18

|Robert Parish (Boston Celtics)

align=center|Dec. 20 – Dec. 25

|Clyde Drexler (Portland Trail Blazers)

align=center|Dec. 26 – Dec. 30

|Magic Johnson (Los Angeles Lakers)

align=center|Jan. 2 – Jan. 8

|Dale Ellis (Seattle SuperSonics)

align=center|Jan. 9 – Jan. 15

|Michael Jordan (Chicago Bulls)

align=center|Jan. 16 – Jan. 22

|Chris Mullin (Golden State Warriors)

align=center|Jan. 23 – Jan. 29

|Tom Chambers (Phoenix Suns)

align=center|Jan. 30 – Feb. 5

|Ron Harper (Cleveland Cavaliers)

align=center|Feb. 6 – Feb. 19

|Akeem Olajuwon (Houston Rockets)

align=center|Feb. 20 – Feb. 26

|Patrick Ewing (New York Knicks)

align=center|Feb. 27 – Mar. 5

|Chuck Person (Indiana Pacers)

align=center|Mar. 6 – Mar. 12

|Isiah Thomas (Detroit Pistons)

align=center|Mar. 13 – Mar. 19

|Kevin Johnson (Phoenix Suns)

align=center|Mar. 20 – Mar. 26

|Michael Jordan (Chicago Bulls)

align=center|Mar. 27 – Apr. 2

|Michael Jordan (Chicago Bulls)

align=center|Apr. 3 – Apr. 9

|Clyde Drexler (Portland Trail Blazers)

align=center|Apr. 10 – Apr. 16

|Karl Malone (Utah Jazz)

align=center|Apr. 17 – Apr. 23

|Xavier McDaniel (Seattle SuperSonics)

=Player of the month=

The following players were named NBA Player of the Month.

class="wikitable"
Month

!Player

align=center|November

|Charles Barkley (Philadelphia 76ers)

align=center|December

|Michael Jordan (Chicago Bulls)

align=center|January

|Chris Mullin (Golden State Warriors)

align=center|February

|Kevin Johnson (Phoenix Suns)

align=center|March

|Michael Jordan (Chicago Bulls)

align=center|April

|Patrick Ewing (New York Knicks)

=Rookie of the month=

The following players were named NBA Rookie of the Month.

class="wikitable"
Month

!Rookie

align=center|November

|Willie Anderson (San Antonio Spurs)

align=center|December

|Mitch Richmond (Golden State Warriors)

align=center|January

|Mitch Richmond (Golden State Warriors)

align=center|February

|Charles Smith (Los Angeles Clippers)

align=center|March

|Mitch Richmond (Golden State Warriors)

align=center|April

|Charles Smith (Los Angeles Clippers)

=Coach of the month=

The following coaches were named NBA Coach of the Month.

class="wikitable"
Month

!Coach

align=center|November

|Chuck Daly (Detroit Pistons)

align=center|December

|Lenny Wilkens (Cleveland Cavaliers)

align=center|January

|Del Harris (Milwaukee Bucks)

align=center|February

|Don Nelson (Golden State Warriors)

align=center|March

|Chuck Daly (Detroit Pistons)

align=center|April

|Cotton Fitzsimmons (Phoenix Suns)

See also

References

{{reflist}}

{{NBA seasons|1989}}

{{1988–89 NBA season by team}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:1988-89 NBA season}}