A ticket for Game 4 of the 1993 Western Conference Finals between the Seattle SuperSonics and the Phoenix Suns
The 1993 NBA Playoffs was the postseason tournament of the National Basketball Association's 1992–93 season. The tournament concluded with the Eastern Conference champion Chicago Bulls defeating the Western Conference champion Phoenix Suns 4 games to 2 in the NBA Finals. Michael Jordan was named NBA Finals MVP for the third straight year. This was the Suns' second Western Conference title; they made their first NBA Finals appearance since 1976, losing to the Boston Celtics.
The Knicks–Pacers rivalry started in their first-round encounter, which New York won, 3–1. But it wasn't until the next two meetings (1994 and 1995) that the rivalry became even more intense, particularly due to Reggie Miller's heroics in the Garden that made him a household name and Indiana legitimate contenders in the East.[citation needed]
The Charlotte Hornets made their playoff debut. Their opening-round series versus Boston was also last time the Celtics made the playoffs with Kevin McHale, who retired after the series, and Robert Parish, who left as a free agent. Game 1 of the series was the final game of Reggie Lewis' career, as he collapsed during the first quarter and did not play for the rest of the series; he died in July of a heart attack.
Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals saw the Suns attempt sixty-four free throws while connecting on fifty-seven of them, both NBA postseason records.[1]
Sportswriter Bill Simmons called the 1993 post-season the best in NBA history.[2][3][4]
Contents
1Bracket
2Western Conference
2.1First Round
2.2Conference Semifinals
2.3Conference Finals
3Eastern Conference
3.1First Round
3.2Conference Semifinals
3.3Conference Finals
4NBA Finals
5Notes
6References
7External links
Bracket
First Round
Conference Semifinals
Conference Finals
NBA Finals
1
New York
3
8
Indiana
1
1
New York
4
5
Charlotte
1
4
Boston
1
5
Charlotte
3
1
New York
2
Eastern Conference
2
Chicago
4
3
Cleveland
3
6
New Jersey
2
3
Cleveland
0
2
Chicago
4
2
Chicago
3
7
Atlanta
0
E2
Chicago
4
W1
Phoenix
2
1
Phoenix
3
8
LA Lakers
2
1
Phoenix
4
5
San Antonio
2
4
Portland
1
5
San Antonio
3
1
Phoenix
4
Western Conference
3
Seattle
3
3
Seattle
3
6
Utah
2
3
Seattle
4
2
Houston
3
2
Houston
3
7
LA Clippers
2
Western Conference
Champion: Phoenix Suns
First Round
(1) Phoenix Suns vs. (8) Los Angeles Lakers: Suns win series 3–2
Game 1 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (April 30): LA Lakers 107, Phoenix 103
Game 2 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (May 2): LA Lakers 86, Phoenix 81
Game 3 @ Great Western Forum, Los Angeles (May 4): Phoenix 107, LA Lakers 102
Game 4 @ Great Western Forum, Los Angeles (May 6): Phoenix 101, LA Lakers 86
Game 5 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (May 9): Phoenix 112, LA Lakers 104 (OT) (Before winning Games 3, 4 and 5, former Suns head coach Paul Westphal guaranteed that they would come back from the 2–0 deficit)
Regular-season series
Phoenix won 5–0 in the regular-season series
December 4, 1992
Recap
Los Angeles Lakers 93, Phoenix Suns103
America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
December 18, 1992
Recap
Phoenix Suns116, Los Angeles Lakers 100
Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California
February 5, 1993
Recap
Los Angeles Lakers 104, Phoenix Suns132
America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
March 24, 1993
Recap
Phoenix Suns120, Los Angeles Lakers 105
Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California
April 6, 1993
Recap
Los Angeles Lakers 114, Phoenix Suns115
America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
This was the eighth playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Lakers winning six of the first seven meetings.
Previous playoff series[5]
Los Angeles leads 6–1 in all-time playoff series.
1970
Los Angeles Lakers 4, Phoenix Suns 3
1970 Western Division Semifinals
1980
Los Angeles Lakers 4, Phoenix Suns 1
1980 Western Conference Semifinals
1982
Los Angeles Lakers 4, Phoenix Suns 0
1982 Western Conference Semifinals
1984
Los Angeles Lakers 4, Phoenix Suns 2
1984 Western Conference Finals
1985
Los Angeles Lakers 3, Phoenix Suns 0
1985 Western Conference First Round
1989
Los Angeles Lakers 4, Phoenix Suns 0
1989 Western Conference Finals
1990
Los Angeles Lakers 1, Phoenix Suns 4
1990 Western Conference Semifinals
(2) Houston Rockets vs. (7) Los Angeles Clippers: Rockets win series 3–2
Game 1 @ The Summit, Houston (April 29): Houston 117, LA Clippers 94
Game 2 @ The Summit, Houston (May 1): LA Clippers 95, Houston 83
Game 3 @ Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, Los Angeles (May 3): Houston 111, LA Clippers 99
Game 4 @ Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, Los Angeles (May 5): LA Clippers 93, Houston 90
Game 5 @ The Summit, Houston (May 8): Houston 84, LA Clippers 80
Regular-season series
Houston won 4–0 in the regular-season series.
November 24, 1992
Recap
Los Angeles Clippers 83, Houston Rockets88
The Summit, Houston, Texas
January 12, 1993
Recap
Houston Rockets113, Los Angeles Clippers 103
Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, Los Angeles
March 2, 1993
Recap
Houston Rockets99, Los Angeles Clippers 83
Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, Los Angeles
April 6, 1993
Recap
Los Angeles Clippers 101, Houston Rockets114
The Summit, Houston, Texas
This was the first playoff meeting between the Rockets and the Clippers.[6]
(3) Seattle SuperSonics vs. (6) Utah Jazz: Sonics win series 3–2
Game 1 @ Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle (April 30): Seattle 99, Utah 85
Game 2 @ Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle (May 2): Utah 89, Seattle 85
Game 3 @ Delta Center, Salt Lake City (May 4): Utah 90, Seattle 80
Game 4 @ Delta Center, Salt Lake City (May 6): Seattle 93, Utah 80
Game 5 @ Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle (May 8): Seattle 100, Utah 92
Regular-season series
Tied 2–2 in the regular-season series
January 14, 1993
Recap
Seattle SuperSonics 89, Utah Jazz96
Delta Center, Salt Lake City
January 18, 1993
Recap
Utah Jazz 96, Seattle SuperSonics106
Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle
February 11, 1993
Recap
Utah Jazz101, Seattle SuperSonics 96
Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle
March 19, 1993
Recap
Seattle SuperSonics108, Utah Jazz 97
Delta Center, Salt Lake City
This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Jazz winning the first meeting.
Previous playoff series[7]
Utah leads 1–0 in all-time playoff series
1992
Seattle SuperSonics 1, Utah Jazz 4
1992 Western Conference Semifinals
(4) Portland Trail Blazers vs. (5) San Antonio Spurs: Spurs win series 3–1
Game 1 @ Memorial Coliseum, Portland (April 29): San Antonio 87, Portland 86
Game 2 @ Memorial Coliseum, Portland (May 1): Portland 105, San Antonio 96
Game 3 @ HemisFair Arena, San Antonio (May 5): San Antonio 107, Portland 101
Game 4 @ HemisFair Arena, San Antonio (May 7): San Antonio 100, Portland 97 (OT)
Regular-season series
Tied 2–2 in the regular-season series
November 24, 1992
Recap
San Antonio Spurs 91, Portland Trail Blazers95
Memorial Coliseum, Portland, Oregon
January 9, 1993
Recap
Portland Trail Blazers 93, San Antonio Spurs109
HemisFair Arena, San Antonio
March 13, 1993
Recap
Portland Trail Blazers 99, San Antonio Spurs108
HemisFair Arena, San Antonio
April 18, 1993
Recap
San Antonio Spurs 101, Portland Trail Blazers105
Memorial Coliseum, Portland, Oregon
This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Trail Blazers winning the first meeting.
Previous playoff series[8]
Portland leads 1–0 in all-time playoff series
1990
Portland Trail Blazers 4, San Antonio Spurs 3
1990 Western Conference Semifinals
Conference Semifinals
(1) Phoenix Suns vs. (5) San Antonio Spurs: Suns win series 4–2
Game 1 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (May 11): Phoenix 98, San Antonio 89
Game 2 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (May 13): Phoenix 109, San Antonio 103
Game 3 @ HemisFair Arena, San Antonio (May 15): San Antonio 111, Phoenix 96
Game 4 @ HemisFair Arena, San Antonio (May 16): San Antonio 117, Phoenix 103
Game 5 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (May 18): Phoenix 109, San Antonio 97
Game 6 @ HemisFair Arena, San Antonio (May 20): Phoenix 102, San Antonio 100 (Charles Barkley hits the series-winning shot with 1.8 seconds left, also the Spurs played their final game at the HemisFair Arena before moving to the Alamodome the following season)
Regular-season series
Phoenix won 3–1 in the regular-season series.
January 3, 1993
Recap
Phoenix Suns 113, San Antonio Spurs114 (OT)
HemisFair Arena, San Antonio
January 29, 1993
Recap
San Antonio Spurs 110, Phoenix Suns125
America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
February 23, 1993
Recap
Phoenix Suns105, San Antonio Spurs 103
HemisFair Arena, San Antonio
April 24, 1993
Recap
San Antonio Spurs 97, Phoenix Suns99
America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Suns winning the first meeting.
Previous playoff series[9]
Phoenix leads 1–0 in all-time playoff series.
1992
Phoenix Suns 3, San Antonio Spurs 0
1992 Western Conference First Round
(2) Houston Rockets vs. (3) Seattle SuperSonics: Sonics win series 4–3
Game 1 @ Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle (May 10): Seattle 99, Houston 90
Game 2 @ Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle (May 12): Seattle 111, Houston 100
Game 3 @ The Summit, Houston (May 15): Houston 97, Seattle 79
Game 4 @ The Summit, Houston (May 16): Houston 103, Seattle 92
Game 5 @ Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle (May 18): Seattle 120, Houston 95
Game 6 @ The Summit, Houston (May 20): Houston 103, Seattle 90
Game 7 @ Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle (May 22): Seattle 103, Houston 100 (OT)
Regular-season series
Seattle won 3–1 in the regular-season series
November 6, 1992
Recap
Seattle SuperSonics111, Houston Rockets 94
Yokohama Arena, Yokohama, Japan
November 7, 1992
Recap
Houston Rockets 85, Seattle SuperSonics89
Yokohama Arena, Yokohama, Japan
March 21, 1993
Recap
Seattle SuperSonics100, Houston Rockets 89
The Summit, Houston, Texas
April 17, 1993
Recap
Houston Rockets86, Seattle SuperSonics 81
Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle
This was the fourth playoff meeting between these two teams, with the SuperSonics winning the first three meetings.
Previous playoff series[10]
Seattle leads 3–0 in all-time playoff series
1982
Houston Rockets 1, Seattle SuperSonics 2
1982 Western Conference First Round
1987
Houston Rockets 2, Seattle SuperSonics 4
1987 Western Conference Semifinals
1989
Houston Rockets 0, Seattle SuperSonics 3
1989 Western Conference First Round
Conference Finals
(1) Phoenix Suns vs. (3) Seattle SuperSonics: Suns win series 4–3
Game 1 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (May 24): Phoenix 105, Seattle 91
Game 2 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (May 26): Seattle 103, Phoenix 99
Game 3 @ Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle (May 28): Phoenix 104, Seattle 97
Game 4 @ Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle (May 30): Seattle 120, Phoenix 101
Game 5 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (June 1): Phoenix 120, Seattle 114
Game 6 @ Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle (June 3): Seattle 118, Phoenix 102
Game 7 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (June 5): Phoenix 123, Seattle 110
Regular-season series
Seattle won 3–2 in the regular-season series.
November 16, 1992
Recap
Seattle SuperSonics 108, Phoenix Suns117
America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
December 26, 1992
Recap
Seattle SuperSonics 110, Phoenix Suns113
America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
January 12, 1993
Recap
Phoenix Suns 113, Seattle SuperSonics122
Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle
February 13, 1993
Recap
Phoenix Suns 94, Seattle SuperSonics95
Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle
April 16, 1993
Recap
Seattle SuperSonics108, Phoenix Suns 102
America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
This was the third playoff meeting between these two teams, with each team winning one series.
Previous playoff series[11]
Tied 1–1 in all-time playoff series
1976
Phoenix Suns 4, Seattle SuperSonics 2
1976 Western Conference Semifinals
1979
Phoenix Suns 3, Seattle SuperSonics 4
1979 Western Conference Finals
Eastern Conference
Champion: Chicago Bulls
First Round
(1) New York Knicks vs. (8) Indiana Pacers: Knicks win series 3–1
Game 1 @ Madison Square Garden, New York City (April 30): New York 107, Indiana 104
Game 2 @ Madison Square Garden, New York City (May 2): New York 101, Indiana 91
Game 3 @ Market Square Arena, Indianapolis (May 4): Indiana 116, New York 93 (John Starks is ejected after headbutting Reggie Miller)
Game 4 @ Market Square Arena, Indianapolis (May 6): New York 109, Indiana 100 (OT)
Regular-season series
New York won 3–1 in the regular-season series
December 29, 1992
Recap
Indiana Pacers 91, New York Knicks97
Madison Square Garden, New York City
December 30, 1992
Recap
New York Knicks94, Indiana Pacers 90
Market Square Arena, Indianapolis
March 14, 1993
Recap
Indiana Pacers 90, New York Knicks121
Madison Square Garden, New York City
April 16, 1993
Recap
New York Knicks 94, Indiana Pacers100
Market Square Arena, Indianapolis
This was the first playoff meeting between the Pacers and the Knicks.[12]
(2) Chicago Bulls vs. (7) Atlanta Hawks: Bulls win series 3–0
Game 1 @ Chicago Stadium, Chicago (April 30): Chicago 114, Atlanta 90
Game 2 @ Chicago Stadium, Chicago (May 2): Chicago 117, Atlanta 102 (MJ hits the half-court shot at the buzzer to end the first half)
Game 3 @ The Omni, Atlanta (May 4): Chicago 98, Atlanta 88
Regular-season series
Tied 2–2 in the regular-season series
November 7, 1992
Recap
Atlanta Hawks100, Chicago Bulls 99
Chicago Stadium, Chicago, Illinois
December 8, 1992
Recap
Chicago Bulls 114, Atlanta Hawks123
The Omni, Atlanta
February 27, 1993
Recap
Atlanta Hawks 92, Chicago Bulls112
Chicago Stadium, Chicago, Illinois
April 9, 1993
Recap
Chicago Bulls88, Atlanta Hawks 87
The Omni, Atlanta
This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Hawks winning the first meeting.
Previous playoff series[13]
Atlanta leads 1–0 in all-time playoff series
1970
Atlanta Hawks 4, Chicago Bulls 1
1970 Western Division Semifinals
(3) Cleveland Cavaliers vs. (6) New Jersey Nets: Cavaliers win series 3–2
Game 1 @ The Coliseum, Richfield (April 29): Cleveland 114, New Jersey 98
Game 2 @ The Coliseum, Richfield (May 1): New Jersey 101, Cleveland 99
Game 3 @ Meadowlands Arena, East Rutherford (May 5): Cleveland 93, New Jersey 84
Game 4 @ Meadowlands Arena, East Rutherford (May 7): New Jersey 96, Cleveland 79 (Bernard King's final NBA game)
Game 5 @ The Coliseum, Richfield (May 9): Cleveland 99, New Jersey 89 (Maurice Cheeks and Dražen Petrović's final NBA game; Petrović dies a month later in a car crash)
Regular-season series
Tied 2–2 in the regular-season series
December 26, 1992
Recap
New Jersey Nets119, Cleveland Cavaliers 114
The Coliseum, Richfield, Ohio
January 13, 1993
Recap
Cleveland Cavaliers 98, New Jersey Nets104
Meadowlands Arena, East Rutherford, New Jersey
April 4, 1993
Recap
New Jersey Nets 99, Cleveland Cavaliers105
The Coliseum, Richfield, Ohio
April 10, 1993
Recap
Cleveland Cavaliers100, New Jersey Nets 99
Meadowlands Arena, East Rutherford, New Jersey
This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Cavaliers winning the first meeting.
Previous playoff series[14]
Cleveland leads 1–0 in all-time playoff series
1992
Cleveland Cavaliers 3, New Jersey Nets 1
1992 Eastern Conference First Round
(4) Boston Celtics vs. (5) Charlotte Hornets: Hornets win series 3–1
Game 1 @ Boston Garden, Boston (April 29): Boston 112, Charlotte 101 (Celtics forward Reggie Lewis collapses on the court and did not play for the rest of the series; he dies 3 months later from a heart defect.)
Game 2 @ Boston Garden, Boston (May 1): Charlotte 99, Boston 98 (2OT)
Game 3 @ Charlotte Coliseum, Charlotte (May 3): Charlotte 119, Boston 89
Game 4 @ Charlotte Coliseum, Charlotte (May 5): Charlotte 104, Boston 103 (Alonzo Mourning hits the series-winning shot with 4 tenths left; also Kevin McHale's final NBA game)
Regular-season series
Boston won 3–1 in the regular-season series
November 11, 1992
Recap
Boston Celtics109, Charlotte Hornets 99
Charlotte Coliseum, Charlotte, North Carolina
November 27, 1992
Recap
Charlotte Hornets 102, Boston Celtics111
Boston Garden, Boston
January 5, 1993
Recap
Boston Celtics107, Charlotte Hornets 103
Charlotte Coliseum, Charlotte, North Carolina
March 14, 1993
Recap
Charlotte Hornets96, Boston Celtics 93
Boston Garden, Boston
This was the first playoff meeting between the Celtics and the Hornets.[15]
Conference Semifinals
(1) New York Knicks vs. (5) Charlotte Hornets: Knicks win series 4–1
Game 1 @ Madison Square Garden, New York City (May 9): New York 111, Charlotte 95
Game 2 @ Madison Square Garden, New York City (May 12): New York 105, Charlotte 101 (OT)
Game 3 @ Charlotte Coliseum, Charlotte (May 14): Charlotte 110, New York 106 (2OT)
Game 4 @ Charlotte Coliseum, Charlotte (May 16): New York 94, Charlotte 92
Game 5 @ Madison Square Garden, New York City (May 18): New York 105, Charlotte 101
Regular-season series
New York won 3–1 in the regular-season series
December 10, 1992
Recap
Charlotte Hornets110, New York Knicks 103 (OT)
Madison Square Garden, New York City
January 20, 1993
Recap
Charlotte Hornets 91, New York Knicks114
Madison Square Garden, New York City
February 17, 1993
Recap
New York Knicks124, Charlotte Hornets 116
Charlotte Coliseum, Charlotte, North Carolina
April 14, 1993
Recap
New York Knicks111, Charlotte Hornets 107
Charlotte Coliseum, Charlotte, North Carolina
This was the first playoff meeting between the Hornets and the Knicks.[16]
(2) Chicago Bulls vs. (3) Cleveland Cavaliers: Bulls win series 4–0
Game 1 @ Chicago Stadium, Chicago (May 11): Chicago 91, Cleveland 84
Game 2 @ Chicago Stadium, Chicago (May 13): Chicago 104, Cleveland 85
Game 3 @ The Coliseum, Richfield (May 15): Chicago 96, Cleveland 90
Game 4 @ The Coliseum, Richfield (May 17): Chicago 103, Cleveland 101 (Michael Jordan hits the series-winning shot at the buzzer against Cleveland for the second time in his career.)
Regular-season series
Cleveland won 3–2 in the regular-season series
November 6, 1992
Recap
Chicago Bulls101, Cleveland Cavaliers 96
The Coliseum, Richfield, Ohio
December 9, 1992
Recap
Cleveland Cavaliers 91, Chicago Bulls108
Chicago Stadium, Chicago, Illinois
January 6, 1993
Recap
Chicago Bulls 95, Cleveland Cavaliers117
The Coliseum, Richfield, Ohio
February 13, 1993
Recap
Cleveland Cavaliers116, Chicago Bulls 111
Chicago Stadium, Chicago, Illinois
April 18, 1993
Recap
Chicago Bulls 94, Cleveland Cavaliers103
The Coliseum, Richfield, Ohio
This was the fourth playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Bulls winning the first three meetings.
Previous playoff series[17]
Chicago leads 3–0 in all-time playoff series
1988
Chicago Bulls 3, Cleveland Cavaliers 2
1988 Eastern Conference First Round
1989
Chicago Bulls 3, Cleveland Cavaliers 2
1989 Eastern Conference First Round
1992
Chicago Bulls 4, Cleveland Cavaliers 2
1992 Eastern Conference Finals
Conference Finals
(1) New York Knicks vs. (2) Chicago Bulls: Bulls win series 4–2
Game 1 @ Madison Square Garden, New York City (May 23): New York 98, Chicago 90
Game 2 @ Madison Square Garden, New York City (May 25): New York 96, Chicago 91 (John Starks' famous dunk with 47.3 seconds left in the game)
Game 3 @ Chicago Stadium, Chicago (May 29): Chicago 103, New York 83
Game 4 @ Chicago Stadium, Chicago (May 31): Chicago 105, New York 95 (Michael Jordan scores 54 points, the most against the Knicks in a playoff game by any player)
Game 5 @ Madison Square Garden, New York City (June 2): Chicago 97, New York 94 (B.J. Armstrong hits the game-winning 3 with 1:16 left; Charles Smith gets blocked 4 straight times by Horace Grant, Michael Jordan, and Scottie Pippen at the end of the game)
Game 6 @ Chicago Stadium, Chicago (June 4): Chicago 96, New York 88
Regular-season series
New York won 3–1 in the regular-season series.
November 28, 1992
Recap
Chicago Bulls 75, New York Knicks112
Madison Square Garden, New York City
December 25, 1992
Recap
New York Knicks 77, Chicago Bulls89
Chicago Stadium, Chicago, Illinois
February 12, 1993
Recap
New York Knicks104, Chicago Bulls 98
Chicago Stadium, Chicago, Illinois
April 25, 1993
Recap
Chicago Bulls 84, New York Knicks89
Madison Square Garden, New York City
This was the fifth playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Bulls winning the first four meetings.
Previous playoff series[18]
Chicago leads 4–0 in all-time playoff series
1981
Chicago Bulls 2, New York Knicks 0
1981 Eastern Conference First Round
1989
Chicago Bulls 4, New York Knicks 2
1989 Eastern Conference Semifinals
1991
Chicago Bulls 3, New York Knicks 0
1991 Eastern Conference First Round
1992
Chicago Bulls 4, New York Knicks 3
1992 Eastern Conference Semifinals
NBA Finals
Main article: 1993 NBA Finals
(1) Phoenix Suns vs. (2) Chicago Bulls: Bulls win series 4–2
Game 1 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (June 9): Chicago 100, Phoenix 92
Game 2 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (June 11): Chicago 111, Phoenix 108 (The team with home-court advantage in the NBA Finals loses the first two games at home for the first time ever)
Game 3 @ Chicago Stadium, Chicago (June 13): Phoenix 129, Chicago 121 (3OT) (This game marks the second time in NBA Finals history that a game goes to triple OT)
Game 4 @ Chicago Stadium, Chicago (June 16): Chicago 111, Phoenix 105 (Michael Jordan scores 55 points)
Game 5 @ Chicago Stadium, Chicago (June 18): Phoenix 108, Chicago 98
Game 6 @ America West Arena, Phoenix (June 20): Chicago 99, Phoenix 98 (John Paxson hits the title-winning 3 with 3.9 seconds left; Horace Grant then blocks Kevin Johnson just before the buzzer.)
Regular-season series
Tied 1–1 in the regular-season series
November 22, 1992
Recap
Chicago Bulls128, Phoenix Suns 111
America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
March 30, 1993
Recap
Phoenix Suns113, Chicago Bulls 109
Chicago Stadium, Chicago, Illinois
This was the first playoff meeting between the Bulls and the Suns.[19]
Notes
The league's best team during the regular season, the Phoenix Suns, were on the verge of playoff elimination after losing the first two games at home against the No. 8 seeded Los Angeles Lakers. However, they recovered to win Games 3 and 4 in Los Angeles to tie the series at 2–2. In Game 5, Dan Majerie hit a three-pointer to force overtime. The Suns eventually pulled away to win Game 5, 112–104, at home to avoid becoming the first No. 1 seed to lose to a #8 seed. This would happen the following postseason, when the No. 8 Denver Nuggets defeated the #1 Seattle SuperSonics 3–2 (The Nuggets came back from a 2–0 series deficit to pull it off).
Both #5 seeds, Charlotte and San Antonio, beat their No. 4 seeded opponent in the first round.
The fifth-year Charlotte Hornets made their playoff debut, and became the first of the 1988/89 expansion teams (Charlotte, Orlando, Minnesota, and Miami) to win a playoff series, beating Boston 3–1.
The New York Knicks took a 2–0 series lead over the Chicago Bulls in the Conference Finals. However, headlines in New York papers and tabloids angered and energized Bulls superstar Michael Jordan, who torched the Knicks for 54 points in Game 4 [20] after shooting 3–18 in Game 3 to even up the series.[21] This performance surpassed Sam Jones's 51-point game against the 1967 Knicks as the most points ever scored by a player against the Knicks in a playoff game.[22] The Bulls went to Madison Square Garden, won Game 5 97–94, and clinched the series at home in Game 6 with a 96–88 victory.[23]
Celtics' star Reggie Lewis fainted on the court during Game 1 against the Hornets. He briefly returned to the game before sitting out the rest of the series. He died less than three months later from a heart condition.[citation needed]
After the Suns defeated the Sonics in Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals, there were complaints[by whom?] about the free throw comparison between the two teams.[citation needed]
Game 6 of the Suns–Spurs series was the last game ever played at the HemisFair Arena.
The Cavaliers defeated the Nets in the Eastern Conference First Round, which was their last win in a playoff series until 2006. Game 5 of that series was also the last game played by Dražen Petrović, who died in a car accident five weeks later.
References
^"Flashback: The Day Phoenix Won The Western Conference On 64 Free Throw Attempts". June 5, 2013. Retrieved June 21, 2018..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}
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NASA's Deep Space Network activity can be viewed conveniently at https://eyes.nasa.gov/dsn/dsn.html but if you would like data in a more raw XML form, it can be accessed as described in this answer Below is a small Python script that reads the XML into a list of dictionaries, and saves it to disk as a JSON. The dictionaries are organized at the higher level by dish, then by spacecraft per dish. Question: What are the most-likely meanings of all the data field contained in the Deep Space Network XML data? This is the example url from the other answer, used in the script below: https://eyes.nasa.gov/dsn/data/1365107113.xml def dictify(r,root=True): # https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2148119/how-to-convert-an-xml-string-to-a-dictionary-in-python/30923963#30923963 if root: ret...