1993 NBA Finals









































1993 NBA Finals
1993NBAFinals.png
















Team Coach Wins
Chicago Bulls Phil Jackson 4
Phoenix Suns Paul Westphal 2
Dates June 9–20
MVP
Michael Jordan
(Chicago Bulls)
Television
NBC (U.S.)
Announcers


  • Marv Albert

  • Mike Fratello


  • Magic Johnson (Games 1-5)


Referees

























Game 1:
Hugh Evans • Jess Kersey • Hue Hollins
Game 2:
Jake O'Donnell • Joey Crawford • Jack Madden
Game 3:
Darell Garretson • Mike Mathis • Dick Bavetta
Game 4:
Hugh Evans • Ed T. Rush • Bill Oakes
Game 5:
Jake O'Donnell • Joey Crawford • Jess Kersey
Game 6:
Darell Garretson • Ed T. Rush • Mike Mathis
Hall of Famers


  • Suns:
    Charles Barkley (2006)


  • Bulls:
    Michael Jordan (2009)


  • Scottie Pippen (2010)


  • Coaches:

    • Phil Jackson (2007)


    • Tex Winter (2011)


    • Officials:
      Dick Bavetta (2015)


    • Darell Garretson (2016)



Eastern Finals Bulls defeat Knicks, 4–2
Western Finals Suns defeat SuperSonics, 4–3

 < 1992
NBA Finals
1994 > 


The 1993 NBA Finals was the championship round of the 1992–93 NBA season, featuring the Chicago Bulls, led by Michael Jordan, and the Phoenix Suns, winners of 62 games and led by regular season MVP Charles Barkley. The Bulls became the first team since the legendary Boston Celtics of the 1960s to win three consecutive championship titles, clinching the "three-peat" with John Paxson's game-winning 3-pointer that gave them a 99–98 victory in Game 6. Remarkably, the road team won every game except for Chicago's win at home in Game 4.


This series was aired on NBC with Marv Albert, Bob Costas (hosts), Mike Fratello, Magic Johnson, Quinn Buckner (analysts), Ahmad Rashād (Bulls sideline) and Hannah Storm (Suns sideline) (reporters) calling the action.


The 1993 NBA championship documentary, Three-Peat, marked the first time since 1982 that NBA Entertainment used film in on-court or off-court action, although most of it used videotape. It was narrated by Hal Douglas, who narrated the NBA Championship documentaries of 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996 and 1997.




Contents






  • 1 Background


    • 1.1 Chicago Bulls


    • 1.2 Phoenix Suns


    • 1.3 Road to the Finals


    • 1.4 Regular season series




  • 2 Team rosters


    • 2.1 Chicago Bulls


    • 2.2 Phoenix Suns




  • 3 Series summary


    • 3.1 Game 1


    • 3.2 Game 2


    • 3.3 Game 3


    • 3.4 Game 4


    • 3.5 Game 5


    • 3.6 Game 6




  • 4 Player statistics


  • 5 Aftermath


  • 6 See also


  • 7 External links





Background



Chicago Bulls



With two consecutive NBA championships, the Bulls aimed at an elusive 'three-peat'. No team had won a third consecutive NBA title since the Boston Celtics achieved a run of eight titles in a row from 1959 to 1966.


In the offseason, Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen played for the Dream Team at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, winning the gold medal. They entered the new season with little rest, but it did not stop both Jordan and Pippen from leading the Bulls to a 57–25 record, good for second in the Eastern Conference.


Chicago began its push for a 'three-peat' with back-to-back sweeps of the Atlanta Hawks and Cleveland Cavaliers. But against the top-seeded New York Knicks, the Bulls fell behind 2–0, before winning the next two games in Chicago, tying the series. In a crucial Game 5 at Madison Square Garden, the Bulls stole a rare road victory, aided by an array of blocks on Charles Smith in the final seconds, before wrapping up the series in Game 6 at Chicago Stadium.



Phoenix Suns



The Suns were a team on the rise, led by their All-Star point guard Kevin Johnson. Johnson arrived via trade in 1988, and propelled the Suns to two consecutive trips to the conference finals in his first two full seasons.


In the 1992 offseason, the Suns made a blockbuster trade, acquiring Charles Barkley from the Philadelphia 76ers in exchange for Jeff Hornacek, Tim Perry and Andrew Lang. They also hired Paul Westphal as head coach, unveiled new logos and uniforms, and moved to the brand new America West Arena from the Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum.


The Suns made the most of these moves, winning a franchise record 62 games. Barkley's efforts won him the MVP award. In the first round of the Western Conference playoffs, the Suns eliminated the Los Angeles Lakers in five games. In the second round the Suns defeated the San Antonio Spurs in six games, and were again pushed to a decisive game seven by the Seattle SuperSonics before ultimately winning the conference finals. For the Suns, it was their first NBA finals appearance since 1976 and second overall.



Road to the Finals





























Phoenix Suns (Western Conference champion)

Chicago Bulls (Eastern Conference champion)





























































































































#

Western Conference
Team

W

L

PCT

GB
1

z-Phoenix Suns
62 20 .756
2

y-Houston Rockets
55 27 .671 7
3

x-Seattle SuperSonics
55 27 .671 7
4

x-Portland Trail Blazers
51 31 .622 11
5

x-San Antonio Spurs
49 33 .598 13
6

x-Utah Jazz
47 35 .573 18
7

x-Los Angeles Clippers
41 41 .500 21
8

x-Los Angeles Lakers
39 43 .476 23

9
Denver Nuggets 36 46 .439 26
10
Golden State Warriors 34 48 .415 28
11
Sacramento Kings 25 57 .305 37
12
Minnesota Timberwolves 19 63 .232 43
13
Dallas Mavericks 11 71 .134 51
1st seed in the West, best league record

Regular season





































































































































#

Eastern Conference
Team

W

L

PCT

GB
1

c-New York Knicks
60 22 .732
2

y-Chicago Bulls
57 25 .695 3
3

x-Cleveland Cavaliers
54 28 .659 6
4

x-Boston Celtics
48 34 .585 12
5

x-Charlotte Hornets
44 38 .537 16
6

x-New Jersey Nets
43 39 .524 17
7

x-Atlanta Hawks
43 39 .524 17
8

x-Indiana Pacers
41 41 .500 19

9
Orlando Magic 41 41 .500 19
10
Detroit Pistons 40 42 .488 20
11
Miami Heat 36 46 .439 24
12
Milwaukee Bucks 28 54 .341 32
13
Philadelphia 76ers 26 56 .317 36
14
Washington Bullets 22 60 .268 38
2nd seed in the East, 3rd best league record
Defeated the (8) Los Angeles Lakers, 3–2
First Round
Defeated the (7) Atlanta Hawks, 3–0
Defeated the (5) San Antonio Spurs, 4–2
Conference Semifinals
Defeated the (3) Cleveland Cavaliers, 4–0
Defeated the (3) Seattle SuperSonics, 4–3
Conference Finals
Defeated the (1) New York Knicks, 4–2


Regular season series


Both teams split the two meetings, each won by the road team:




November 22, 1992






Chicago Bulls 128, Phoenix Suns 111



America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona






March 30, 1993






Phoenix Suns 113, Chicago Bulls 109



Chicago Stadium, Chicago, Illinois





Team rosters



Chicago Bulls













1993 Chicago Bulls Finals roster
Players
Coaches
























































































































































Pos. # Nat. Name Ht. Wt. DOB From

PG

7001100000000000000♠10

United States

Armstrong, B.J.

7000187960000000000♠6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
175 lb (79 kg)
1967–09–09

Iowa

C

7001240000000000000♠24

United States

Cartwright, Bill

7000215899999999999♠7 ft 1 in (2.16 m)
245 lb (111 kg)
1957–07–30

San Francisco

PF

7001540000000000000♠54

United States

Grant, Horace

7000208279999999999♠6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)
245 lb (111 kg)
1965–07–04

Clemson

SG

7001230000000000000♠23

United States

Jordan, Michael

7000198120000000000♠6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
215 lb (98 kg)
1963–02–17

North Carolina

PF

7001210000000000000♠21

United States

King, Stacey

7000210820000000000♠6 ft 11 in (2.11 m)
230 lb (104 kg)
1967–01–29

Oklahoma

SF

7001220000000000000♠22

United States

McCray, Rodney

7000200659999999999♠6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)
220 lb (100 kg)
1961–08–29

Louisville

PF

7001450000000000000♠45

United States

Nealy, Ed

7000200659999999999♠6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)
238 lb (108 kg)
1960–02–19

Kansas State

PG

7000500000000000000♠5

United States

Paxson, John

7000187960000000000♠6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
185 lb (84 kg)
1960–09–29

Notre Dame

C

7001320000000000000♠32

United States

Perdue, Will

7000213360000000000♠7 ft 0 in (2.13 m)
240 lb (109 kg)
1965–08–29

Vanderbilt

SF

7001330000000000000♠33

United States

Pippen, Scottie

7000200659999999999♠6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)
220 lb (100 kg)
1965–09–25

Central Arkansas

SG

7000600000000000000♠6

United States

Tucker, Trent

7000195580000000000♠6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)
193 lb (88 kg)
1959–12–20

Minnesota

SG

7001200000000000000♠20

United States

Walker, Darrell

7000193040000000000♠6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
180 lb (82 kg)
1961–03–09

Arkansas

PG

7001120000000000000♠12

United States

Williams, Corey

7000187960000000000♠6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
190 lb (86 kg)
1970–04–24

Oklahoma State

PF

7001420000000000000♠42

United States

Williams, Scott

7000208279999999999♠6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)
230 lb (104 kg)
1968–03–21

North Carolina


Head coach


  • United States Phil Jackson (North Dakota)

Assistant coach(es)





  • United States Johnny Bach (Fordham)




  • United States Jim Cleamons (Ohio State)




  • United States Tex Winter (Southern California)




Legend



  • (C) Team captain


  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick


  • (FA) Free agent


  • (S) Suspended


  • Injured Injured




Phoenix Suns













1993 Phoenix Suns Finals roster
Players
Coaches














































































































































Pos. # Nat. Name Ht. Wt. DOB From

SG

7001220000000000000♠22

United States

Ainge, Danny

7000193040000000000♠6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
175 lb (79 kg)
1959–03–17

BYU

PF

7001340000000000000♠34

United States

Barkley, Charles

7000198120000000000♠6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
252 lb (114 kg)
1963–02–20

Auburn

SF

7001230000000000000♠23

United States

Ceballos, Cedric

7000198120000000000♠6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
190 lb (86 kg)
1969–08–02

Cal State Fullerton

PF

7001240000000000000♠24

United States

Chambers, Tom

7000208279999999999♠6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)
220 lb (100 kg)
1959–06–21

Utah

SF

7001210000000000000♠21

United States

Dumas, Richard

7000200659999999999♠6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)
200 lb (91 kg)
1969–05–19

Oklahoma State

PG

7000300000000000000♠3

United States

Johnson, Frank

7000185420000000000♠6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
185 lb (84 kg)
1958–11–23

Wake Forest

PG

7000700000000000000♠7

United States

Johnson, Kevin

7000185420000000000♠6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
180 lb (82 kg)
1966–03–04

California

C

7000800000000000000♠8

United States

Kempton, Tim

7000208279999999999♠6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)
245 lb (111 kg)
1964–01–25

Notre Dame

PG

7001320000000000000♠32

United States

Knight, Negele

7000185420000000000♠6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
175 lb (79 kg)
1967–03–06

Dayton

SG

7000900000000000000♠9

United States

Majerle, Dan

7000198120000000000♠6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
215 lb (98 kg)
1965–09–09

Central Michigan

C

7001250000000000000♠25

United States

Miller, Oliver

7000205740000000000♠6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)
280 lb (127 kg)
1970–04–06

Arkansas

PF

5000000000000000000♠0

United States

Mustaf, Jerrod

7000208279999999999♠6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)
238 lb (108 kg)
1969–10–28

Maryland

C

7001410000000000000♠41

United States

West, Mark

7000208279999999999♠6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)
230 lb (104 kg)
1960–11–05

Old Dominion


Head coach





  • United States Paul Westphal (Southern California)


Assistant coach(es)





  • United States Scotty Robertson (Arkansas)




  • United States Lionel Hollins (Arizona State)




Legend



  • (C) Team captain


  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick


  • (FA) Free agent


  • (S) Suspended


  • Injured Injured




Series summary



























































Game Date Home Team Result Road Team Local Time
Game 1 Wednesday, June 9 Phoenix Suns 92–100 (0–1) Chicago Bulls 6:00pm MST
Game 2 Friday, June 11 Phoenix Suns 108–111 (0–2) Chicago Bulls 6:00pm MST
Game 3 Sunday, June 13 Chicago Bulls 121–129 3OT (2–1) Phoenix Suns 6:30pm CDT
Game 4 Wednesday, June 16 Chicago Bulls 111–105 (3–1) Phoenix Suns 8:00pm CDT
Game 5 Friday, June 18 Chicago Bulls 98–108 (3–2) Phoenix Suns 8:00pm CDT
Game 6 Sunday, June 20 Phoenix Suns 98–99 (2–4) Chicago Bulls 4:30pm MST


Game 1




NBC



June 9
9:00et















Chicago Bulls 100, Phoenix Suns 92

Scoring by quarter: 34–20, 18–21, 21–28, 27–23

Pts: Michael Jordan 31
Rebs: Scott Williams 10
Asts: Armstrong, Grant, Jordan, Pippen 5 each

Pts: Charles Barkley 21
Rebs: Richard Dumas 12
Asts: Charles Barkley 5
Chicago leads the series, 1–0



America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
Attendance: 19,023
Referees:

  • No. 25 Hugh Evans

  • No. 20 Jess Kersey

  • No. 42 Hue Hollins






Phoenix displayed an introduction animation in the vein of Chicago's well-known intro animation, set to the same song, before the game, which was remarked upon by the commentators. Before the game a moment of silence was observed in memory of New Jersey Nets guard Dražen Petrović, who had been killed in a car accident two days earlier.



Game 2




NBC



June 11
9:00et















Chicago Bulls 111, Phoenix Suns 108

Scoring by quarter: 28–29, 31–24, 28–31, 24–24

Pts: Michael Jordan 42
Rebs: Grant, Pippen 12 each
Asts: Scottie Pippen 12

Pts: Charles Barkley 42
Rebs: Charles Barkley 13
Asts: Kevin Johnson 7
Chicago leads the series, 2–0



America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
Attendance: 19,023
Referees:

  • No. 11 Jake O'Donnell

  • No. 17 Joey Crawford

  • No. 14 Jack Madden






Both teams were locked in battle throughout the first half until Chicago took over in the 2nd quarter, shooting with a higher shooting percentage. In the second half, the Suns began to pressure the Bulls, but late in the 4th quarter with time running out, it came down to a battle of determination. Scottie Pippen blocked Danny Ainge's 3-point attempt to seal the win and Phoenix became the first team to lose their home-court advantage twice in the first two games of the NBA Finals.



Game 3




NBC



June 13
7:00et















Phoenix Suns 129, Chicago Bulls 121 (3OT)

Scoring by quarter: 29–29, 29–28, 28–28, 17–18, Overtime: 26–18

Pts: Dan Majerle 28
Rebs: Charles Barkley 19
Asts: Kevin Johnson 9

Pts: Michael Jordan 44
Rebs: Horace Grant 17
Asts: Scottie Pippen 9
Chicago leads the series, 2–1



Chicago Stadium, Chicago
Attendance: 18,676
Referees:

  • No. 10 Darell Garretson

  • No. 13 Mike Mathis

  • No. 27 Dick Bavetta






The Phoenix Suns won Game 3 in triple overtime, 129–121. Suns Head Coach Paul Westphal became the only person to appear in two triple-overtime finals games: the first was the classic 1976 Game 5 contest against Boston as a player. His Suns also became the only team to appear in two triple-overtime finals games, the first of which they lost 126–128. Westphal made a surprising move that paid off, helping to get Kevin Johnson back on track after Johnson had two terrible performances in Games 1 and 2, by having him guard Michael Jordan. KJ played much better all-around basketball for the rest of the Finals.


Suns: Kevin Johnson 25, Dan Majerle 28, Charles Barkley 24, Mark West 11, Richard Dumas 17, Danny Ainge 10, Tom Chambers 12, Oliver Miller 2, Frank Johnson 0, Jerrod Mustaf 0


Bulls: B.J. Armstrong 21, Michael Jordan 44, Scottie Pippen 26, Horace Grant 13, Bill Cartwright 8, Scott Williams 4, Trent Tucker 3, Stacey King 0, John Paxson 2, Darrell Walker 0



Game 4




NBC



June 16
9:00et















Phoenix Suns 105, Chicago Bulls 111

Scoring by quarter: 27–31, 31–30, 23–25, 24–25

Pts: Charles Barkley 32
Rebs: Charles Barkley 12
Asts: Charles Barkley 10

Pts: Michael Jordan 55
Rebs: Horace Grant 16
Asts: Scottie Pippen 10
Chicago leads the series, 3–1



Chicago Stadium, Chicago
Attendance: 18,676
Referees:

  • No. 25 Hugh Evans

  • No. 4 Ed T. Rush

  • No. 21 Bill Oakes






In Game 4, Michael Jordan was unstoppable, scoring 55 points at Chicago Stadium and making a tough driving layup late in the game while getting fouled. The Bulls won 111–105. Scott Williams, who like MJ played his college basketball at UNC for Dean Smith, joked afterwards about "being proud that the two former Tar Heels combined for 57 points."


Suns: Charles Barkley 32, Dan Majerle 14, Kevin Johnson 19, Richard Dumas 17, Mark West 8, Tom Chambers 7, Danny Ainge 2, Oliver Miller 2, Frank Johnson 4


Bulls: Michael Jordan 55, Scottie Pippen 14, Horace Grant 17, B.J. Armstrong 11, Bill Cartwright 3, John Paxson 6, Scott Williams 2, Stacey King 3, Rodney McCray 0, Darrell Walker 0, Trent Tucker 0



Game 5




NBC



June 18
9:00et















Phoenix Suns 108, Chicago Bulls 98

Scoring by quarter: 33–21, 21–28, 26–24, 28–25

Pts: Johnson, Dumas 25 each
Rebs: Dan Majerle 12
Asts: Kevin Johnson 8

Pts: Michael Jordan 41
Rebs: Grant, Jordan 7 each
Asts: Michael Jordan 7
Chicago leads the series, 3–2



Chicago Stadium, Chicago
Attendance: 18,676
Referees:

  • No. 11 Jake O'Donnell

  • No. 17 Joey Crawford

  • No. 20 Jess Kersey






Before Game 5, Charles Barkley told the press he had announced to his teammates that they needed to win to "Save the City", a reference to the riots anticipated in Chicago if the Bulls won the championship at home. Both Paul Westphal and Kevin Johnson later expressed amusement about Barkley taking credit for the line because Westphal had made a tongue-in-cheek comment to that effect in a pregame meeting.


The Suns won 108–98 and headed home for Game 6 down 3–2.


Suns: Dan Majerle 11, Charles Barkley 24, Kevin Johnson 25, Mark West 5, Richard Dumas 25, Danny Ainge 8, Oliver Miller 8, Frank Johnson 2, Tom Chambers 0, Jerrod Mustaf 0


Bulls: Michael Jordan 41, Scottie Pippen 22, Horace Grant 1, B.J. Armstrong 7, Bill Cartwright 2, John Paxson 12, Scott Williams 4, Stacey King 4, Will Perdue 0, Trent Tucker 5, Darrell Walker 0



Game 6




NBC



June 20
7:30et















Chicago Bulls 99, Phoenix Suns 98

Scoring by quarter: 37–28, 19–23, 31–28, 12–19

Pts: Michael Jordan 33
Rebs: Scottie Pippen 12
Asts: Michael Jordan 7

Pts: Barkley, Majerle 21 each
Rebs: Charles Barkley 17
Asts: Kevin Johnson 10
Chicago wins the series, 4–2



America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
Attendance: 19,023
Referees:

  • No. 10 Darell Garretson

  • No. 4 Ed T. Rush

  • No. 13 Mike Mathis






The Bulls got off to a good start in Game 6 but struggled in the fourth quarter, squandering a double-digit lead to trail 98–94. Michael Jordan made a layup to cut the lead to 2 points, and Dan Majerle's 30-foot three-pointer fell short on the Suns' next possession. Trailing 98–96 and facing a Game 7 on the road if they lost that day, Chicago ran a play that Phil Jackson called "Blind Pig" that had them increasing the play's "thrust" by bringing the ball from 3/4 back of the basket. Although Westphal's sole instruction on the play was for none of the players to double-team any of the Bulls (even Michael Jordan), Danny Ainge left John Paxson to try and either steal the ball or foul Horace Grant, who had missed all five of his shot attempts in the game and wasn't a good crunch-time free throw shooter. Grant saw Paxson alone 25 feet from the basket and fired a perfect pass, and Paxson then made a three pointer with 3.9 seconds left, giving the Bulls a 99–98 lead. Paxson's three-point field goal was the only score by any Bulls player other than Michael Jordan in the entire fourth quarter. The victory was secured by a last-second block from Grant on Kevin Johnson.


Bulls: Michael Jordan 33, Scottie Pippen 23, B.J. Armstrong 18, Horace Grant 1, Bill Cartwright 2, John Paxson 8, Scott Williams 5, Trent Tucker 9, Stacey King 0


Suns: Dan Majerle 21, Kevin Johnson 19, Charles Barkley 21, Richard Dumas 8, Mark West 4, Tom Chambers 12, Danny Ainge 9, Oliver Miller 4, Frank Johnson 0


Michael Jordan, who averaged a Finals-record 41.0 PPG during the six-game series, became the first player in NBA history to win three straight Bill Russell NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Awards. He joined Magic Johnson as the only other player to win the award three times. The NBA started awarding the Finals MVP in 1969.



Player statistics




































Legend
  GP
Games played
  GS 
Games started
 MPG 

Minutes per game
 FG% 

Field-goal percentage
 3P% 

3-point field-goal percentage
 FT% 

Free-throw percentage
 RPG 

Rebounds per game
 APG 

Assists per game
 SPG 

Steals per game
 BPG 

Blocks per game
 PPG 

Points per game



Chicago Bulls
























































































































































































Player
GP
GS
MPG
FG%
3FG%
FT%
RPG
APG
SPG
BPG
PPG
B. J. Armstrong 6 6 41.8 .508 .526 1.000 1.8 5.0 0.8 0.2 13.5
Bill Cartwright 6 6 21.3 .400 .000 .500 3.2 1.7 0.5 0.2 4.3
Horace Grant 6 6 38.8 .528 .000 .579 10.3 2.3 1.5 1.5 11.2
Michael Jordan 6 6 45.7 .508 .400 .694 8.5 6.3 1.7 0.7
41.0
Stacey King 6 0 8.2 .273 .000 .875 1.3 0.5 0.3 0.2 2.2
Rodney McCray 1 0 4.0 .000 .000 .000 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
John Paxson 6 0 16.0 .619 .643 .000 1.5 0.8 0.5 0.2 5.8
Will Perdue 1 0 9.0 .000 .000 .000 3.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Scottie Pippen 6 6 44.3 .439 .000 .543 9.2 7.7 2.0 1.0 21.2
Trent Tucker 6 0 6.8 .700 .600 .000 0.3 0.7 0.2 0.0 2.8
Darrell Walker 3 0 1.7 .000 .000 .000 0.0 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0
Scott Williams 6 0 26.5 .406 .000 .286 6.3 1.7 0.5 1.5 4.7

Phoenix Suns




























































































































































Player
GP
GS
MPG
FG%
3FG%
FT%
RPG
APG
SPG
BPG
PPG
Danny Ainge 6 0 27.0 .475 .667 .778 3.0 2.5 0.3 0.0 8.8
Charles Barkley 6 6 46.2 .476 .250 .750 13.0 5.5 1.2 0.5
27.3
Tom Chambers 6 0 15.3 .359 .000 .800 3.0 0.5 0.2 0.5 6.7
Richard Dumas 6 6 26.7 .571 .000 .778 4.3 1.0 1.3 1.0 15.8
Frank Johnson 6 0 7.3 .412 .000 1.000 0.3 0.8 0.5 0.0 3.0
Kevin Johnson 6 6 43.3 .421 .000 .920 3.0 6.5 1.3 0.3 17.2
Dan Majerle 6 6 46.8 .443 .436 .800 8.2 3.7 1.3 2.2 17.2
Oliver Miller 6 0 17.8 .444 .000 .750 4.2 1.3 0.7 2.0 5.0
Jerrod Mustaf 2 0 1.0 .000 .000 .000 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Mark West 6 6 21.7 .619 .000 .533 4.3 0.7 0.0 1.2 5.7


Aftermath


A month after the Bulls' third straight championship, Michael Jordan's father, James R. Jordan, Sr., was murdered. Distraught by the murder of his father, Jordan announced his retirement from basketball a few weeks before the 1993–94 NBA season began, citing a loss of desire to play basketball. Even without Jordan, the Bulls still managed to win 55 games behind the All-Star efforts of Scottie Pippen; however the loss of Jordan was steep to overcome, and following a controversial call that gave the New York Knicks a win in Game 5, the Bulls lost to Knicks in the conference semi-finals of the 1994 NBA Playoffs in Game 7. Jordan returned from retirement in March 1995, following a brief baseball career and made the 1995 NBA Playoffs, losing to the Orlando Magic in six games.


The Phoenix Suns finished with 56 wins in the 1993–94 season, but were eliminated from the playoffs by the Houston Rockets after leading 2–0 in the Western Conference semifinals. The following year, Phoenix took a commanding 3–1 lead against a sixth-Seeded Houston team only to lose again, losing Games 5 and 7 on their home court, the last of which was decided on a 3-pointer by Mario Elie and an ensuing free throw session. The Rockets went on to win both the 1994 and 1995 NBA Finals. As of the 2017–18 season[update], this remains the Suns' last Finals appearance. In a last-ditch attempt to win a championship, Barkley was soon traded to the Rockets in 1996 for Sam Cassell, Robert Horry and Chucky Brown. Despite forming a "Big Three" with Clyde Drexler and Hakeem Olajuwon, the Rockets failed to make the NBA Finals in Barkley's four seasons. The 1993 Finals was the only appearance of Charles Barkley's Hall of Fame career.



See also


  • 1993 NBA Playoffs


External links


  • NBA History














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