1987–88 NBA season explained

1987–88 NBA season
League:National Basketball Association
Sport:Basketball
Duration:November 6, 1987 – April 24, 1988
April 28 – June 4, 1988 (Playoffs)
June 7–21, 1988 (Finals)
No Of Teams:23
Tv:CBS, TBS
Draft:Draft
Draft Link:1987 NBA Draft
Top Pick Link:List of first overall NBA draft picks
Top Pick:David Robinson (did not play regular season games until the 1989–90 season)
Picked By:San Antonio Spurs
Season:Regular season
Top Seed:Los Angeles Lakers
Mvp:Michael Jordan (Chicago)
Mvp Link:NBA MVP
Top Scorer:Michael Jordan (Chicago)
Playoffs:Playoffs
Playoffs Link:1988 NBA playoffs
Conf1:Eastern
Conf1 Link:Eastern Conference (NBA)
Conf1 Champ:Detroit Pistons
Conf1 Runner-Up:Boston Celtics
Conf2:Western
Conf2 Link:Western Conference (NBA)
Conf2 Champ:Los Angeles Lakers
Conf2 Runner-Up:Dallas Mavericks
Finals:Finals
Finals Link:1988 NBA Finals
Finals Champ:Los Angeles Lakers
Finals Runner-Up:Detroit Pistons
Finals Mvp:James Worthy (L.A. Lakers)
Finals Mvp Link:NBA Finals MVP
Seasonslist:List of NBA seasons
Seasonslistnames:NBA
Prevseason Link:1986–87 NBA season
Prevseason Year:1986–87
Nextseason Link:1988–89 NBA season
Nextseason Year:1988–89

The 1987–88 NBA season was the 42nd season of the National Basketball Association. The season ended with the Los Angeles Lakers winning their second straight Championship, beating the Detroit Pistons in seven hard-fought games in the NBA Finals, becoming the NBA's first repeat champions since the Boston Celtics did it in the 1968–69 NBA season.

Notable occurrences

Offseason
Team1986–87 coach1987–88 coach
Dallas MavericksDick MottaJohn MacLeod
Phoenix SunsDick Van ArsdaleJohn Wetzel
Milwaukee BucksDon NelsonDel Harris
New York KnicksBob HillRick Pitino
Sacramento KingsJerry ReynoldsBill Russell
Los Angeles ClippersDon ChaneyGene Shue
In-season
TeamOutgoing coachIncoming coach
Golden State WarriorsGeorge KarlEd Gregory
Philadelphia 76ersMatt GuokasJim Lynam
New Jersey NetsDave WohlBob MacKinnon
Bob MacKinnonWillis Reed
Sacramento KingsBill RussellJerry Reynolds
Washington BulletsKevin LougheryWes Unseld

Teams

1987-88 National Basketball Association
Division Team City Arena Capacity
AtlanticBoston CelticsBoston, MassachusettsBoston Garden14,890
New Jersey NetsEast Rutherford, New JerseyBrendan Byrne Arena20,049
New York KnicksNew York, New YorkMadison Square Garden19,812
Philadelphia 76ersPhiladelphia, PennsylvaniaThe Spectrum18,176
Washington BulletsLandover, MarylandCapital Centre18,756
CentralAtlanta HawksAtlanta, GeorgiaOmni Coliseum16,378
Chicago BullsChicago, IllinoisChicago Stadium18,676
Cleveland CavaliersRichfield, OhioRichfield Coliseum20,900
Detroit PistonsPontiac, MichiganPontiac Silverdome33,000
Indiana PacersIndianapolis, IndianaMarket Square Arena17,171
Milwaukee BucksMilwaukee, WisconsinMECCA Arena10,783
MidwestDallas MavericksDallas, TexasReunion Arena18,293
Denver NuggetsDenver, ColoradoMcNichols Sports Arena17,171
Houston RocketsHouston, TexasThe Summit16,285
Sacramento KingsSacramento, CaliforniaARCO Arena10,333
San Antonio SpursSan Antonio, TexasHemisFair Arena16,057
Utah JazzSalt Lake City, UtahSalt Palace12,686
PacificGolden State WarriorsOakland, CaliforniaOakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena13,335
Los Angeles ClippersLos Angeles, CaliforniaLos Angeles Memorial Sports Arena16,161
Los Angeles LakersInglewood, CaliforniaThe Forum17,505
Phoenix SunsPhoenix, ArizonaArizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum14,870
Portland Trail BlazersPortland, OregonMemorial Coliseum12,888
Seattle SuperSonicsSeattle, WashingtonSeattle Center Coliseum17,072

Map of teams

1987–88 NBA changes

Final standings

By conference

Notes

Playoffs

See main article: 1988 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.

Statistics leaders

Category Player Team Stat
Points per game 35.0
Rebounds per game 13.0
Assists per game 13.8
Steals per game Michael Jordan Chicago Bulls 3.16
Blocks per game Utah Jazz 3.71
FG% .604
FT% .922
3FG% Milwaukee Bucks .492

NBA awards

Yearly awards

Mark Jackson, New York Knicks

Michael Jordan, Chicago Bulls

Roy Tarpley, Dallas Mavericks

Kevin Duckworth, Portland Trail Blazers

Doug Moe, Denver Nuggets

Player of the week

The following players were named NBA Player of the Week.

WeekPlayer
Nov. 6 – Nov. 15Larry Bird (Boston Celtics)
Nov. 16 – Nov. 22Xavier McDaniel (Seattle SuperSonics)
Nov. 23 – Nov. 29Clyde Drexler (Portland Trail Blazers)
Nov. 30 – Dec. 6Clyde Drexler (Portland Trail Blazers)
Dec. 7 – Dec. 13Magic Johnson (Los Angeles Lakers)
Dec. 14 – Dec. 20Larry Nance (Phoenix Suns)
Dec. 21 – Dec. 27Dominique Wilkins (Atlanta Hawks)
Dec. 28 – Jan. 3Karl Malone (Utah Jazz)
Jan. 4 – Jan. 10Byron Scott (Los Angeles Lakers)
Jan. 11 – Jan. 17Dominique Wilkins (Atlanta Hawks)
Jan. 18 – Jan. 24Michael Jordan (Chicago Bulls)
Jan. 25 – Jan. 31Bernard King (Washington Bullets)
Feb. 1 – Feb. 14Dominique Wilkins (Atlanta Hawks)
Feb. 15 – Feb. 21John Stockton (Utah Jazz)
Feb. 22 – Feb. 28Roy Tarpley (Dallas Mavericks)
Feb. 29 – Mar. 6Bobby Hansen (Utah Jazz)
Feb. 7 – Mar. 13Clyde Drexler (Portland Trail Blazers)
Mar. 14 – Mar. 20Charles Barkley (Philadelphia 76ers)
Mar. 21 – Mar. 27Michael Jordan (Chicago Bulls)
Mar. 28 – Apr. 3Michael Jordan (Chicago Bulls)
Apr. 4 – Apr. 10Harold Pressley (Sacramento Kings)
Apr. 11 – Apr. 17Lafayette Lever (Denver Nuggets)
Apr. 18 – Apr. 24Karl Malone (Utah Jazz)

Player of the month

The following players were named NBA Player of the Month.

MonthPlayer
NovemberMichael Jordan (Chicago Bulls)
DecemberLarry Nance (Phoenix Suns)
JanuaryMichael Jordan (Chicago Bulls)
FebruaryJohn Stockton (Utah Jazz)
MarchKarl Malone (Utah Jazz)
AprilLafayette Lever (Denver Nuggets)

Rookie of the month

The following players were named NBA Rookie of the Month.

MonthRookie
NovemberMark Jackson (New York Knicks)
DecemberMark Jackson (New York Knicks)
JanuaryArmon Gilliam (Phoenix Suns)
FebruaryMark Jackson (New York Knicks)
MarchGreg Anderson (San Antonio Spurs)
AprilKevin Johnson (Phoenix Suns)

Coach of the month

The following coaches were named NBA Coach of the Month.

MonthCoach
NovemberDoug Collins (Chicago Bulls)
DecemberChuck Daly (Detroit Pistons)
JanuaryWes Unseld (Washington Bullets)
FebruaryPat Riley (Los Angeles Lakers)
MarchDoug Moe (Denver Nuggets)
AprilLenny Wilkens (Cleveland Cavaliers)

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: A Record the Fans Wouldn’t Sit Still for : With Crowd’s Urging, Abdul-Jabbar Returns to Set an All-Star Scoring Mark. Chris. Baker. Los Angeles Times. February 8, 1988. February 1, 2024.
  2. News: Michael Jordan, Dominique Wilkins reflect on legendary 1988 dunk contest battle. Kurt. Helin. NBC Sports. February 15, 2020. February 1, 2024.
  3. News: Suns center among dead in jet crash. Bob. Cohn. The Washington Post. August 18, 1987. February 1, 2024.