作者BIASONICA (她的。發光搖擺)
看板Hornets
標題Re: Charlotte Hornets (1988 - 1989)
時間Wed Dec 31 01:53:34 2003
http://www.nba.com/hornets/history/history_hornets.html#1
Hornets Don't Take Long To Sting Opponents
The Charlotte Hornets joined the NBA in time for the1988-89 season,
as the league added four new teams in a two-year stretch. The club
suffered through the usual expansion-team doldrums for a few years
but then built a solid roster thanks to productive draft picks.
Within a relatively short period the Hornets assembled a star-quality
nucleus of forward Larry Johnson and center Alonzo Mourning, who led
the team to the playoffs in only its fifth year. By the 1996-97 season
both Johnson and Mourning had been traded, but Charlotte still looked
to be a team on the way up, and the Hornets responded by winning 54
games in 1996-97 and 51 this past season. Many doubted the Charlotte
community's ability and willingness to support a professional
basketball team. For one thing, it was a small city (although the area
did have a sizable market within a few hours' drive). And North Carolina
was college basketball country, where the fans' ardor for the amateur
game had never translated into a similar affection for the NBA.
Nevertheless, Charlotte was admitted to the league on April 22, 1987,
along with Minnesota, Miami, and Orlando. Charlotte and Miami began
play in 1988-89, while Minnesota and Orlando first saw action a year
later. The Charlotte team adopted the name Hornets, which had historic
importance in Charlotte sports history-for many years the city's minor
league baseball team was known as the Hornets, and its World Football
League team had carried the same name.
Owner George Shinn hired Carl Scheer as the team's first general manager.
As commissioner of the American Basketball Association, Scheer had
successfully run the ABA's Carolina Cougars from 1970 to 1974 before
moving on to revitalize the Denver Nuggets in the mid-1970s. On the
other hand, he had also been associated with the dismal Los Angeles
Clippers teams of the mid-1980s.
Shinn named Dick Harter as the Hornets' first head coach. Known as an
astute basketball man with a defensive orientation, Harter had been a
successful college coach and had several years' experience as an NBA
assistant.
http://www.nba.com/hornets/history/history_hornets.html#2
1988-89: Charlotte Stocks Roster With Veterans
Unlike many expansion franchises that invest in the future with a team
composed entirely of young players, Charlotte stocked its inaugural
roster with several veterans in hopes of putting a competitive lineup
on the court right away. The team's expansion draft picks included 6-5
Dell Curry of the Cleveland Cavaliers, who developed into one of the
NBA's best sixth men. The Hornets also acquired 6-10 Dave Hoppen from
the Golden State Warriors, the Utah Jazz's Rickey Green, and 5-3 Tyrone
"Muggsy" Bogues, who had just finished his rookie season with the
Washington Bullets. Charlotte added some experienced bangers to its
roster, signing 6-9 Earl Cureton, 7-footer Stuart Gray, and 6-8 Kurt
Rambis. The Hornets also picked up prolific scorer Kelly Tripucka and
smooth guard Robert Reid. Picking eighth in the 1988 NBA Draft, Charlotte
selected 6-4 Rex Chapman, an outstanding long-distance shooter who was
leaving the University of Kentucky after his sophomore year.
The Hornets began play in the 1988-89 season at the 23,698-seat,
$52-million Charlotte Coliseum. The opening-night lineup included
Tripucka, Rambis, Hoppen, Reid, and Green. The Hornets' first opponent
was Cleveland, and the Cavaliers gave the Hornets a rude welcome to
the NBA with a 133-93 drubbing. After a road loss, Charlotte picked up
its first victory with a 117-105 triumph over the Los Angeles Clippers.
Tripucka was Charlotte's top gun. In a December 14 win over the Indiana
Pacers he scored 40 points. On January 16 he matched that total, and the
Hornets scored a season-high 127 points while defeating the Philadelphia
76ers by 5 in overtime. On February 25 Tripucka notched his third 40-point
game of the season as Charlotte beat the San Antonio Spurs, 124-113.
The team struggled through midseason but managed to avoid disaster. Then
the Hornets hit the wall. From early March to mid-April they had two
nine-game losing streaks. However, on April 18 Charlotte displayed some
resiliency, beating the New Jersey Nets, 121-105, to establish the
largest margin of victory in their charter year. And on April 23 Muggsy
Bogues set a club record for assists, handing out 19 in a game against
the Boston Celtics.
It was a tough campaign. With the usual expansion mix of promising
youngsters and journeyman veterans on the floor, the squad managed a
20-62 record but never won more than two consecutive games. The Hornets
averaged 104.5 points per game while yielding 113.0 points per game to
their opponents.
Kelly Tripucka was the team's scoring leader with 22.6 points per game.
Kurt Rambis, the embodiment of blue-collar basketball, topped the club
in rebounding with 9.4 per contest. Rex Chapman had a successful rookie
season-his 16.9 points per game was the Hornets' second-best average,
and he ranked third among NBA rookies in scoring, earning a spot on the
NBA All-Rookie Second Team.
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