The Charlotte Bobcats
are a professional basketball team based in Charlotte, North Carolina. The team is part of the Southeast Division of the Eastern Conference in the National Basketball Association. The Bobcats were established in 2004 as an expansion team, two seasons after Charlotte's previous NBA team, the Charlotte Hornets, relocated to New Orleans and became the New Orleans Hornets. [1] The Bobcats play their home games at Time Warner Cable Arena in uptown Charlotte.
Charlotte's NBA Development League team is the Maine Red Claws. [2] The Bobcats were also the brother team of the Charlotte Sting of the WNBA before the Sting folded on January 3, 2007. [3]
The Bobcats are currently for sale by majority owner Robert Johnson. [4] Johnson paid $300 million for the franchise in 2003. However, Forbes currently estimates the team's value at $284 million. Michael Jordan, a minority owner and head of basketball operations, has shown interest in putting together a group to purchase majority control in the team. [5]
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Franchise history
Creating the Bobcats
When the Hornets relocated to
New Orleans for the
2002–03 season, the NBA promised Charlotte leaders that the city would be granted an NBA expansion team for the
2004–05 season. Several ownership groups, including one led by former
Boston Celtics star
Larry Bird, made bids for the team.
[6] On December, 18, 2002, a group led by
Black Entertainment Television founder Robert Johnson was awarded the franchise,
[7] becoming one of the first prominent
African American owners in
U.S. professional sports.
[8] On June 15, 2006 it was announced that NBA legend and North Carolina native Michael Jordan would become the second largest shareholder in the Bobcats. As part of the deal, Jordan became head of basketball operations.
[9] Another notable co-owner is the
rapper Nelly.
[10]
In June 2003, the new team was named the Bobcats.
[11] Bobcats, along with Charlotte Flight and Charlotte Dragons were the top three choices as voted by fans.
The Charlotte Regional Sports Commission aided with the "Help Name The Team" effort that drew over 1,250 suggestions. The
bobcat, an expert at survival according to the North Carolina Wildlife Commission, is athletic, fierce and an indigenous predator to the Carolinas.
[12] Charlotte, already being home to the
Carolina Panthers of the
National Football League, made the cat-related name a natural choice for the
area's new basketball team.
Despite failed attempts at the ballot box to fully fund a new
uptown arena, city politicians decided to go ahead with plans and implemented a hotel and leisure tax in Charlotte to help pay for it.
[13] [14] George Shinn, owner of the Hornets, also wanted the city to pay for a new arena, and subsequently left town for New Orleans when it failed to do so.
2004–2006: Beginnings of a franchise
The Bobcats held their
expansion draft on June 22, 2004, picking up such seasoned players as
Predrag Drobnjak and talented youngsters such as
Sacramento Kings forward
Gerald Wallace.
[15] They also traded with the
Los Angeles Clippers to acquire the second pick in the
2004 NBA Draft, which they used to select
Emeka Okafor, a
center from
Connecticut. Okafor went on to win the
NBA Rookie of the Year in 2005.
[16]
The Bobcats first game of the 2004–05 season took place on November 4 and was a 103–96 loss to the
Washington Wizards.
[17] Two days later they won their first game in franchise history over the
Orlando Magic, 111–100.
[18] On December 14, the Bobcats really gave their fans something to roar about, beating the New Orleans Hornets 94–93 in overtime in the team's first trip to Charlotte after the move.
[19] The Bobcats would go on to post an 18–64 record finishing in 4th place in their division. In the
2005 NBA Draft, the Bobcats drafted two
North Carolina players:
Raymond Felton and
Sean May. With these two players, in addition to Okafor, the Bobcats hoped to build a young, solid foundation for future success. The
2005–06 season saw the Bobcats finish with a record of 26–56, a slight improvement over the previous year.
Adam Morrison, from
Gonzaga, was selected with the third pick in the
2006 NBA Draft. The Bobcats again improved on their record from the previous two seasons, finishing the
2006–07 season with a 33–49 record.
On March 13, 2007, Jordan announced that head coach
Bernie Bickerstaff, who had guided the team for its first three seasons, would not return to coach the 2007–08 season. Jordan stated that Bickerstaff would finish the rest of the current season and that he remained an integral part of the organization.
[20] Candidates interviewing for the head coaching position included
Stan Van Gundy,
Paul Silas,
Herb Williams, and
Mike Fratello. Two months later the team announced that
Sam Vincent, a former assistant with the
Dallas Mavericks, would be the second coach in franchise history.
[21]
2007: Not a good year
The front office was a key issue for the Bobcats during the 2007 offseason.
Rod Higgins was hired as
general manager, assuming the same role he filled with the
Golden State Warriors.
[22] Phil Ford was added to the coaching staff over the summer,
[23] and another position was filled when
Buzz Peterson was hired from
Coastal Carolina University, where he served as head basketball coach, to become director of player personnel.
[24]
Brandan Wright was selected with the eighth pick by the Bobcats in the
2007 NBA Draft. He was subsequently traded to Golden State in a deal that included
Jason Richardson being sent to Charlotte. Gerald Wallace, the team's leading scorer for the 2006–07 season, was resigned to a reported six-year contract.
[25] Unfortunately, the Bobcats were unable to capitalize on offseason moves, finshing the
2007–08 season with a disappointing 32–50 record. The team, which felt confident the season would end with its first playoff berth, struggled amid rumors of players clashing with the coach.
[26] Only lasting a year, in which he struggled with personnel decisions, Sam Vincent was fired as head coach on April 26, 2008.
[27]
2008–present: The Larry Brown era
On April 29, 2008 the Bobcats reached an agreement to hire
Larry Brown as the third head coach in franchise history.
[28] Brown, a member of the
Basketball Hall of Fame, had over twenty years of experience coaching teams in
college, the
American Basketball Association and NBA.
The
2008 NBA Draft saw the Bobcats select
D. J. Augustin from
Texas with the ninth selection in the first round. During the offseason an agreement with the teams first ever draft pick,
Emeka Okafor, was reached on a six-year $72 million dollar contract extension.
[29] On December 10, 2008, the team traded Jason Richardson to the
Phoenix Suns along with
Jared Dudley and a 2010 second-round draft pick for
Boris Diaw,
Raja Bell and
Sean Singletary.
[30] Adam Morrison, who had struggled in Charlotte and fallen out of favor with Brown, was involved in a trade to the
Los Angeles Lakers for forward
Vladimir Radmanovic on February 7, 2009.
[31] The Bobcats came very close to reaching the franchise's first playoff berth during the
2008–09 season, but finished just four games out of eighth place with a team record 35 wins. Members of the team voiced their frustration at management for hosting the Charlotte Jumper Classic, a horse event, at the end of the season.
[32] The scheduling conflict forced the Bobcats to play their final four games on the road, virtually ending any playoff hopes.
Gerald Henderson from
Duke was chosen with the 12th pick by the Bobcats in the
2009 NBA Draft.
Xavier's
Derrick Brown was also selected.
On July 28, 2009, the Bobcats traded Emeka Okafor for
New Orleans Hornets center
Tyson Chandler.
Seasons
Personnel
Current roster
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Head coaches
Charlotte Bobcats head coaches
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2000s
Name
| Start
| End
| Seasons
| Regular season
| Playoffs
|
W
| L
| PCT
| G
| W
| L
| PCT
| G
|
Bernie Bickerstaff
| October 16, 2003
| March 13, 2007
| 3
| 77
| 169
| .313
| 246
| 0
| 0
| .000
| 0
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Sam Vincent
| May 25, 2007
| April 26, 2008
| 1
| 32
| 50
| .390
| 82
| 0
| 0
| .000
| 0
|
Larry Brown
| April 29, 2008
| Incumbent
| 1
| 35
| 47
| .427
| 82
| 0
| 0
| .000
| 0
|
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Franchise records and awards
Honors
Rookie of the Year
'''
NBA All-Rookie First Team
'''
NBA All-Rookie Second Team
- Raymond Felton – 2006
- Wálter Herrmann – 2007
- Adam Morrison – 2007
- D. J. Augustin – 2009
Logos and arenas
Logos
The alternate logo features an orange bobcat head on a blue and
silver basketball. It was changed in 2008 and features the face of the orange and blue bobcat head with part of a silver basketball on the right corner. This is currently the center court logo at
Time Warner Cable Arena.
Since their creation, home
jerseys have been
white reading "Bobcats" in
orange with
blue and
black trimming. The primary away jersey is orange reading "Charlotte" in white with blue and black trimming.
[33] In the 2006 offseason, the Bobcats announced a new alternate away jersey which debuted during the 2006–07 season. The alternate jersey is blue and read reads "Bobcats" in white on a with black, orange and white trimming.
[34] Racing Day blue alternates used to honor Charlotte's
NASCAR fanbase.
There will also be a new addition to the Charlotte Bobcats Jerseys. It will be a mix of the old the old Charlotte Hornets
New Orleans Hornets and the Bobcats colors.
Arenas
The Charlotte Bobcats first played their games at the
Charlotte Coliseum as a new replacement, Charlotte Bobcats Arena, was being built. The city closed the Coliseum in the offseason of 2005, and opened the new arena with a
Rolling Stones concert shortly before the new 2005–06 season.
- Charlotte Coliseum (2004–2005)
- Time Warner Cable Arena (2005–present, known as Charlotte Bobcats Arena 2005–08)
In April 2008, the Bobcats reached a
naming rights deal with
Time Warner Cable, the Charlotte area's largest
cable television provider. In exchange for the naming rights, Time Warner agreed to tear up the cable television deal that had limited the Bobcats' exposure over the team's first four years.
[35]
Media coverage
For the Bobcats' first season, Johnson partnered with Time Warner to create
Carolinas Sports Entertainment Television (C-SET), a
regional sports network. It aired 60 Bobcats games that also shown on Comporium Cable in the
South Carolina portion of the Charlotte market. However, Time Warner placed C-SET on its
digital package as an incentive to try to get customers to switch to its digital service, leaving analog customers in the dark. It also refused to allow
DirecTV or
Dish Network to pick up the network on their local feeds. As a result, most of the
western Carolinas and those without digital cable were left to rely on radio coverage.
C-SET folded on the day of the 2005 NBA Draft, and most games then moved to
News 14 Carolina, a cable news channel available on Time Warner Cable's systems in Charlotte, the
Triad and
The Research Triangle. However, this left viewers in most of South Carolina (except for the South Carolina side of the Charlotte area, which saw games on Comporium) as well as
eastern and western North Carolina, out in the cold. News 14 was also not available on satellite.
As part of the Time Warner Cable Arena deal, the Bobcats signed over broadcasting rights to
Fox Sports South. The last five games of the 2007–08 season, and 70 games during the 2008–09 season, will be shown on Fox Sports South and sister network
SportSouth in North and South Carolina. The deal is believed to be the first simultaneous naming rights/broadcast rights deal in the history of North American professional sports.
[36] Games now air on the new channel
Fox Sports Carolinas.
Select games also air on a network of over-the-air stations across North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia, fronted by
WMYT-TV in Charlotte.
The flagship station for radio coverage is
WOLS, a station based in Charlotte whose frequency is 106.1 FM. WOLS switched its non-sports programming from
Oldies to Spanish language on January 1, 2009, making Bobcats and Duke basketball the station's only non-Spanish language programming. This also makes it likely that at the end of the 2008–2009 season, another station will serve as the Bobcats flagship station for radio coverage of its games.
In Popular Culture
- In the The CW Television Network drama One Tree Hill
, Nathan Scott (portrayed by James Lafferty) is called up to the Bobcats from the D-League in the sixth season finale, "Remember Me as a Time of Day". Nathan, his wife Haley James Scott (Bethany Joy Galeotti) and son Jamie (Jackson Brundage) tour the arena before the game. Nathan is expected to remain with the team through season seven, which premieres Sept. 14, 2009. One Tree Hill is filmed in Wilmington, North Carolina, Michael Jordan's hometown. Most of the basketball games are also shot at Laney High school, best known for being the high school of Jordan as well. [37]
References
- Owners approve Hornet's move to New Orleans
- NBA D-League Announces Affiliates For 2009-10 Season
- WNBA Franchise Charlotte Sting Folds
- Jordan tipped as possible buyer
- Jordan interested in Bobcats
- Bird, Carr thinking pro hoops in Charlotte?
- Winning NBA bid just the start for Johnson
- Johnson will be NBA's first black majority owner
- Michael Jordan to Become Part Owner of the Charlotte Bobcats
- Robert L. Johnson Adds Nelly To Bobcats Ownership Team
- NBA Expansion Franchise To Be Named Charlotte Bobcats
- The Bobcat: Athletic, Fierce, & Hardworking
- Arena bounces back
- With new plan and new NBA team, arena project finally heads uptown
- Building the Bobcats
- Emeka Okafor Named 2004-05 NBA got milk? Rookie Of The Year
- Magical night: Bobcats fall to Wizards in debut
- 2 for 1: First win for Okafor, Bobcats vs. Magic
- Cats protect their house in Charlotte in OT
- Jordan: Bickerstaff won't return as coach
- Bobcats New Era Begins With Vincent
- Rod Higgins Named Bobcats General Manager
- Bobcats Announce Portion Of Coaching Staff
- More Members Added To Basketball Operations Staff
- Bobcats keep top scorer Wallace with big deal
- Bobcats fire Sam Vincent as coach after one season
- Sam Vincent Relieved of Head Coaching Duties
- Bobcats Name Larry Brown Head Coach
- Okafor, Bobcats officially sign off on 6-year, $72 million deal
- Bobcats Acquire Boris Diaw, Raja Bell and Sean Singletary from Phoenix
- Lakers swap Radmanovic for Morrison
- Bobcats ticked about four-game road trip to close out season
- Bobcats Unveil New Team Uniforms
- Bobcats Unveil Alternate Road Uniform
- Warner gets naming rights for Bobcats Arena
- Bobcats, Time Warner Cable, Fox Sports Strike Unprecedented Deal
- Hilarie Burton Online