They dispatched them quickly three games to one (the conference quarterfinals were best of five at the time). They matched up with the Lakers in the first round of the playoffs where their championship pedigree shined through. Clyde Drexler missed 31 games in the regular season, and the Rockets were only able to grab the fifth seed out west. Unfortunately, the team found out the hard way how difficult it is to complete a three peat in the NBA. That Hall of Fame duo, along with several more than serviceable role players such as Sam Cassell, Mario Elie, and Robert Horry, had Clutch City looking poised for another title run. Taking advantage of Michael Jordan’s year and a half retirement from the Chicago Bulls, they had won back to back championships in 1994 behind an MVP season from Hakeem Olajuwon, and in 1995, after signing superstar wing Clyde Drexler from the Portland Trail Blazers. A super team before superteams.Ĭoming into the 1995-96 season, the Houston Rockets were the best team in the NBA. However, what many forget is that more than two decades before either of those teams were created, three future Hall of Famers, and former rivals, teamed up in Houston to attempt to take down a dynasty. Some say it was ‘08 Celtics, while others claim it was the 2010 Heat. There is much debate as to who was the first real superteam. This move haunted the team for a decade, as Pierce and Garnett couldn’t help them get any farther than the second round of the playoffs, as the picks they gave away turned into Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, and Collin Sexton. The Brooklyn Nets tried to manufacture their success in 2013 by trading for Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce for three first round picks. This led to two more championships for the organization. The Golden State Warriors were able to recruit Kevin Durant in 2016 to join their star studded team. This trend has resulted in some of the most talented teams in the history of the league, but has also created some of the worst trades and signings of all time. Teams are also more aggressive in trying to acquire star players for draft picks and assets, rather than building slowly through the draft.
Houston rockets roster 1996 free#
Superstars aren’t waiting for their teams to build around them they are recruiting other stars to join them through free agency. This has resulted in the “era of the superteam”.
Contracts are shorter, agents are more involved, and players are forming relationships with members of other teams like never before. No longer do organizations have the kind of power over personnel that they once did. Not only has the game itself transformed dramatically, but the business side of the association has seen quite the shift in it’s power dynamics.
The NBA looks a whole lot different than it did 20 years ago.