The Indiana Pacers
are a professional basketball team that plays in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The team is based in the state's capital and largest city, Indianapolis, Indiana, located in the center of the state. The Indiana Fever of the WNBA, also owned by Melvin & Herb Simon, are the Pacers' sister team and play at Conseco Fieldhouse as well. The Indiana Pacers also have 2 mascots at every home game, Boomer and Bowser, who also appear often for the NBA .
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Franchise history
ABA years: Dynasty
In early 1967, a group of six investors (among them attorney
Richard Tinkham, sports agent
Chuck Barnes and Indianapolis Star sports writer
Bob Collins) pooled their resources to purchase a franchise in the proposed
American Basketball Association.
According to Indianapolis attorney
Richard Tinkham, the nickname "Pacers" was decided on through a collective decision of the original investors. Tinkham, one of those investors, recalled that the nickname was a combination of the state's rich history with the
harness racing pacers and the
pace car used for the running of the
Indianapolis 500. Investor
Chuck Barnes was a horse racing enthusiast in addition to being business manager of
Mario Andretti,
A.J. Foyt and
Rodger Ward. Barnes' wife, Lois, suggested the name over dinner.
Tinkham said the "Pacers" decision was an easy one, but the real debate was whether the team should be called the Indiana Pacers or the Indianapolis Pacers. Since one of the original ideas for the team was to have it playing throughout the state with its base in Indianapolis, the official team name became the Indiana Pacers.
For their first seven years, they played in the Indiana State Fairgrounds Coliseum, now called the
Pepsi Coliseum. In 1974, they moved to the plush new
Market Square Arena in downtown Indianapolis, where they stayed for 25 years.
Early in the Pacers' second season, former
Indiana Hoosiers standout
Bob "Slick" Leonard became the team's head coach, replacing Larry Staverman. Leonard quickly turned the Pacers into a juggernaut. His teams were buoyed by the great play of superstars such as
Jimmy Rayl,
Mel Daniels,
George McGinnis,
Bob Netolicky,
Rick Mount and
Roger Brown. The Pacers were the most successful team in ABA history, winning three ABA Championships in four years. In all, they appeared in the ABA Finals five times in the league's nine year history.
Struggling through the early NBA years
The Pacers were one of four ABA teams that joined the NBA in the
ABA-NBA merger in 1976. For the
1976–77 season the Pacers were joined in the merged league by the
New York Nets,
Denver Nuggets and
San Antonio Spurs of the ABA. Financially, the Pacers were by far the weakest of the four ABA refugees. Indeed, they were on far weaker financial footing than the team acknowledged to be the last ABA team left out of the expansion, the
Kentucky Colonels. Although it has never been confirmed, it appeared the Pacers made the cut because Indianapolis was a far more lucrative television market than
Louisville, home of the Colonels.
The Pacers' financial troubles dated back to their waning days in the ABA; they already begun selling off some of their star players in the last ABA season. They were further weakened by the price required to join the NBA. The league charged a $3.2 million dollar entry fee to each former ABA team. Because the NBA would only agree to accept four ABA teams in the
ABA-NBA merger, the Pacers and the three other surviving ABA teams also had to compensate the two remaining ABA franchises which were not a part of the merger. The new NBA teams also were barred from sharing in national TV revenues for four years.
As a result of the steep price they paid to join the NBA, the Pacers were in a dire financial situation. It took a $100,000 contribution from a group of local businesses to keep the franchise going through June 1977. The team announced that unless season-ticket sales reached 8,000 by the end of July 1977, the club would be sold to someone who might take the franchise elsewhere.
WTTV, which was the television flagship for Pacers' games at the time, offered to hold a 16.5 hour telethon to keep the team in Indiana. The telethon began on the night of July 3, 1977, and the next day, 10 minutes before the show was set to go off the air, it was announced that team officials had reached the 8,000-ticket goal. In part because of the telethon, the Pacers' average attendance jumped from 7,615 during the 1976–77 season to 10,982 during the 1977–78 season.
They finished their inaugural NBA season with a record of 36–46, as
Billy Knight and
Don Buse were invited to represent Indiana in the NBA All-Star Game. This was one of the few highlights of the Pacers' first 13 years in the league--a time in which they had but one winning season and just two playoff appearances. A lack of year-to-year continuity became the norm for most of the next decade, as they traded away Knight and Buse before the
1977–78 season even started. They acquired
Adrian Dantley in exchange for Knight, but Dantley (who was averaging nearly 27 points per game at the time) was traded in December, while the Pacers' second-leading scorer,
John Williamson, was dealt in January.
As a result of their poor performance, the Pacers needed to resort to publicity stunts to attract fans' attention. Before the
1979 season started, they offered women's basketball star
Ann Meyers a tryout contract and invited her to the team's training camp. She became the first and, to this date, only woman to try out for an NBA team, but did not make the final squad.
During this time, the Pacers came out on the short end of two of the most one-sided trades in NBA history. In 1980, they traded
Alex English to the Nuggets in order to reacquire former ABA star
George McGinnis. McGinnis was long past his prime, and contributed very little during his two-year return. English, in contrast, went on to become one of the greatest scorers in NBA history. The next year, they traded a
1984 draft pick to the
Portland Trail Blazers for center
Tom Owens. Owens only played one year for the Pacers with little impact. This trade looked even more horrendous three years later. In
1983–84, the Pacers finished with the worst record in the Eastern Conference, which would have given the Pacers the second overall pick in the draft--the pick that that the Blazers famously used to select
Sam Bowie while
Michael Jordan was still available. As a result of the Owens trade, they were left as bystanders in the midst of one of the deepest drafts in NBA history--including such future stars as Jordan,
Hakeem Olajuwon,
Sam Perkins,
Charles Barkley, and
John Stockton.
The Pacers made their first appearance in the
NBA Playoffs in
1980–81, falling in the opening round to the
Philadelphia 76ers in two straight games. It was the team's only playoff appearance from 1977 to 1986.
Clark Kellogg was drafted by the Pacers in the
1982 and showed tremendous promise, finishing second in the Rookie of the Year voting, but the Pacers finished the
1982–83 season with their all-time worst record of 20–62, and won only 26 games the
following season. After winning 22 games in
1984–85 and 26 games in
1985–86,
Jack Ramsay replaced
George Irvine as coach and led the Pacers to a 41–41 record in
1986–87 and only their second playoff appearance as an NBA team.
Chuck Person, nicknamed "The Rifleman" for his renowned long-range shooting, led the team in scoring as a rookie and won NBA Rookie of the Year honors. Their first playoff win in NBA franchise history was earned in Game 3 of their first-round, best-of-five series against the
Atlanta Hawks, but it was their only victory in that series, as the Hawks defeated them in four games.
Reggie's arrival
1987–1989
Reggie Miller was drafted by the Pacers in
1987, beginning his career as a backup to
John Long. Many fans at the time disagreed with Miller's selection over Indiana Hoosiers' standout
Steve Alford. The Pacers missed the playoffs in
1987–88, drafted
Rik Smits in the
1988 NBA Draft, and suffered through a disastrous
1988–89 season in which coach Jack Ramsay stepped down following an 0–7 start. Mel Daniels and George Irvine filled in on an interim basis before
Dick Versace took over the 6–23 team on the way to a 28–54 finish. In February 1989, the team did manage to make a trade that would eventually pay off, as they traded veteran center
Herb Williams to the
Dallas Mavericks for future NBA 6th Man-of-the Year
Detlef Schrempf.
1989–90
In
1989–90 the Pacers parlayed a fast start into the team's third NBA Playoffs appearance. But the Pacers lost all three games in their
1990 NBA Playoffs experience, falling to the
Detroit Pistons, who would go on to win their second consecutive
NBA Championship. Reggie Miller became the first Pacer to play on the All-Star team since 1976 on the strength of his 24.6 points-per-game average.
1990–1992
In
1990–91, the Pacers
returned to the playoffs with a 41–41 record, and Schrempf was named the NBA's Sixth Man of the Year. Bob Hill was head coach at this time. The Pacers had a memorable series against the highly favored
Boston Celtics that they managed to extend to five games before losing Game 5, 124–121, with Larry Bird hosting one of the greatest comebacks in sports history. The Pacers returned to the playoffs in
1991–92 and met the Celtics again, but this time the Celtics left no doubt who was better as they swept the Pacers in three straight games.
1992–93
Chuck Person and point guard
Micheal Williams were traded to the
Minnesota Timberwolves in the offseason, and the Pacers got
Pooh Richardson and
Sam Mitchell in return. For the
1992–93 season, Detlef Schrempf moved from sixth man to the starter at small forward and was elected to his first All-Star game. Miller, meanwhile, became the Pacers' all-time NBA era leading scorer during this season (4th overall). The Pacers returned to the playoffs with a 41–41 record, but lost to the
New York Knicks in the first round, three games to one.
Breaking through
1993–94
Larry Brown was brought on as Pacers' coach for the
1993–94 season, and Pacers' general manager
Donnie Walsh completed a highly-criticized (at the time) trade as he sent Schrempf to the
Seattle SuperSonics in exchange for
Derrick McKey and little known Gerald Paddio. But the Pacers, who began the season in typically average fashion, kicked it up a notch in April, winning their last eight games of the season to finish with a franchise-high 47 wins. They stormed past
Shaquille O'Neal and the
Orlando Magic in a first-round sweep to earn their
first NBA playoff series win, and pulled off a tremendous upset by defeating the top-seeded
Atlanta Hawks in the Conference Semifinals.
It was during the 1994
Eastern Conference Finals that the Pacers—particularly Reggie Miller—finally became a household name. With the series tied 2–2 going into game 5 in New York, Miller had the first of many legendary playoff performances. With the Pacers trailing the Knicks by 15 points early in the 4th quarter, Miller scored 25 points in the 4th quarter, including five 3-point field goals. Miller also famously flashed the choke sign to Knick fans while leading the Pacers to the improbable come from behind victory. The Knicks ultimately came back to win the next two games and the series, but Reggie became an NBA superstar overnight. Miller was a tri-captain and leading scorer of the USA Basketball team that won the gold medal at the
1994 FIBA World Championship.
1994–95
Mark Jackson joined the team in an offseason trade with the
Los Angeles Clippers, giving the team the steady hand at the point guard position that had been lacking in recent years. The Pacers enjoyed a 52–30 campaign in
1994–95, giving them their first Central Division title and their first 50+ win season since the ABA days. The team swept the Hawks
in the first round, before another meeting with the rival Knicks in the conference semi-finals. Once again, it was up to Reggie Miller to provide some fireworks. This time, with the Pacers down six points with 16.4 seconds remaining in game one, Miller scored eight points in 8.9 seconds to help secure the two point victory. The Pacers ultimately dispatched the Knicks in seven games and pushed the Magic to seven games before falling in the Eastern Conference Finals.
Falling back
The Pacers duplicated their 52–30 record in
1995–96, but were hurt severely by an injury to Reggie Miller's eye socket in April, from which he was not able to return until Game 5 of their first-round series against the Hawks. Reggie scored 29 points in that game, but the Hawks came away with a two-point victory to put an early end to Indiana's season. This 1995–96 team
did
manage to go down in history as the only team to defeat the
Chicago Bulls twice that year, a Bulls team which made history with an all-time best 72–10 record.
The Pacers could not withstand several key injuries in
1996–97, nor could they handle the absence of Mark Jackson, who had been traded to the
Denver Nuggets before the season (though they did re-acquire Jackson at the trading deadline). The Pacers finished 39–43 and missed the playoffs for the first time in seven years, after which coach
Larry Brown stepped down.
Return to glory
1997–98
The Pacers selected
Larry Bird to coach the team in
1997–98 and they posted a new franchise record, finishing 58-24--a dramatic 19-game improvement from the previous season.
Chris Mullin joined the team in the offseason and immediately became a valuable part of the Pacers lineup-- and their starting small forward. Assistant coaches
Rick Carlisle, in charge of the offense, and
Dick Harter, who coached the defense, were key in getting the most out of the Pacers' role players such as
Dale Davis,
Antonio Davis and
Derrick McKey. Reggie Miller and Rik Smits both made the All-Star team that year, and
in the playoffs, the Pacers breezed past the
Cleveland Cavaliers and
New York Knicks before falling to the
Chicago Bulls in an epic seven-game Eastern Conference Final.
1998–2000
In the lockout-shortened
1998–99 season, the Pacers won the Central Division with a 33–17 record and swept the
Milwaukee Bucks and
Philadelphia 76ers before falling to the New York Knicks in a six-game Eastern Conference Finals series. The Pacers traded popular forward Antonio Davis to the
Toronto Raptors in exchange for first-round draft choice
Jonathan Bender, which remains to this day a subject of controversy among Pacers fans. But in the
Playoffs, after a 56–26
regular season, the Pacers survived the upset-minded Bucks in round one, handled the 76ers in the second round and finally broke through to the NBA Finals by virtue of a six-game East Finals victory over the New York Knicks.
Their first NBA Finals appearance was against the
Los Angeles Lakers, who proved too much for them to handle as they ended Indiana's championship hopes in six games. However, the Pacers dealt Los Angeles their worst playoff defeat up to that time by a margin of 33 points in Game Five.
Rebuilding
The offseason brought sweeping changes to the Pacers' lineup, as Rik Smits and coach Larry Bird retired, Chris Mullin returned to his old
Golden State Warriors team, Mark Jackson signed a long-term contract with
Toronto, and Dale Davis was traded to
Portland for
Jermaine O'Neal, who went on to average 12.9 points per game in his first year as a starter. It was a rebuilding year for the Pacers under new head coach
Isiah Thomas, but the team still managed to return to the playoffs, where they lost to the top-seeded
Philadelphia 76ers in four games.
2001–02
In the midseason of
2001–02, the Pacers made a blockbuster trade with the Chicago Bulls that sent Jalen Rose and Travis Best to Chicago in exchange for
Brad Miller,
Ron Artest,
Kevin Ollie and
Ron Mercer. Brad Miller and Ron Artest would, in the next few years, go on to be All-Stars for the Pacers. The trade bolstered a team that had been floundering, and the Pacers managed to
return to the playoffs, where they pushed the top-seeded
New Jersey Nets to five games before losing Game 5 in double overtime. Jermaine O'Neal made his first of what would be several All-Star appearances this year, erasing any doubt that trading the veteran workhorse, Dale Davis, to Portland for him was a good idea.
2002–03
The Pacers got off to a 13–2 start in
2002–03, but hit the wall after the All-Star break thanks in no small part to Ron Artest's multiple suspensions and family tragedies befalling Jermaine O'Neal,
Jamaal Tinsley and
Austin Croshere. O'Neal and Brad Miller both made the All-Star team and the Pacers made a substantial improvement as they finished 48–34, but they suffered a loss to the underdog Boston Celtics in the first round of the playoffs.
Pacers' new era
In the 2003 offseason, the Pacers managed to re-sign O'Neal for the NBA maximum and inked Reggie Miller to a modest two-year deal, but they could not afford to keep their talented center, Brad Miller. He was dealt to the
Sacramento Kings in exchange for
Scot Pollard, who spent much of the following year watching from the bench and backing up
Jeff Foster. But the Pacers signed Larry Bird as team president, and Bird wasted little time in dismissing coach Isiah Thomas and replacing him with
Rick Carlisle.
The Pacers responded to Carlisle extremely well, and had a breakthrough
2003–04 season in which they finished 61–21, earning the best record in the NBA as well as a franchise record. O'Neal and Artest made the All-Star team, and Artest was named the NBA's Defensive Player of the Year.
The Pacers swept the Boston Celtics easily in the
first round, and squeezed by a scrappy
Miami Heat team in the conference semi-finals. But the
Detroit Pistons proved an impediment to Indiana's championship aspirations, as they defeated the Pacers in six games on their way to the NBA Championship.
2004–05
Al Harrington, a small forward who had established himself as one of the best sixth-men in the NBA, was dealt in the offseason to the
Atlanta Hawks in return for
Stephen Jackson after Harrington allegedly demanded that the Pacers start him or trade him.
The Brawl at the Palace of Auburn Hills
Nevertheless, the Pacers started off the
2004–05 season in extremely strong fashion–until
the infamous events of November 19, 2004.
Towards the end of a Pacers victory over the Detroit Pistons at
The Palace of Auburn Hills, the Pacers'
Ron Artest committed a hard foul against Ben Wallace. Wallace retaliated, and the situation escalated to a full-scale brawl, with fans and several Pacers taking part. While Artest defiantly laid atop the scorer's table, Piston fan
John Green threw a cup of beer at Artest, causing him to charge into the stands. Stephen Jackson followed him into the stands while Jermaine O'Neal struck a fan who came onto the court. The game was called with 46 seconds left on the clock and the Pacers left the floor amid a shower of beer and other beverages that rained down from the stands . Artest was suspended for the rest of the season without pay for his role in the basketbrawl.
Several of the involved players were suspended by NBA Commissioner
David Stern, but the hardest hit were Artest (suspended for the remainder of the regular season and playoffs), Jackson (suspended for 30 games), O'Neal (25 games), Wallace (6 games) and the Pacers'
Anthony Johnson (5 games) (O'Neal's suspension was later reduced to 15 games by arbitrator Roger Kaplan, a decision that was upheld by U.S. District Judge George B. Daniels). O'Neal was charged with two counts of assault and battery, while Artest, Jackson, Johnson and
David Harrison were charged with one count each.
2004–05 (continued)
After the brawl and riot that followed, the Pacers fell downward into the Central Division. They went from a legitimate title contender to a team that hovered around .500 in winning percentage. The Pistons eventually became the Central Division champions. Despite the difficulties with the suspensions and injuries, the Pacers earned a sixth seed in the playoffs with a record of 44–38. An important reason for their strong finish was the re-acquisition of
Dale Davis, who had been released by New Orleans after being traded there by Golden State. He played the final 25 games of the regular season and every playoff game, contributing a strong presence at center. And Davis' signing coincided with an injury to Jermaine O'Neal that would knock him out for virtually the remainder of the regular season—indeed, O'Neal's first missed game due to his injury was Davis' first game back with the Pacers.
So despite the adversity they had gone through, the Pacers made the
playoffs for the 13th time in 14 years. In the first round, Indiana defeated the Atlantic Division champion Boston Celtics in seven games, winning Game 7 in Boston by the decisive margin of 97–70.
The Pacers then advanced to the second-round against the Detroit Pistons, in a rematch of last year's Eastern Conference Finals. The series featured games back at The Palace of Auburn Hills, the scene of the brawl that many assumed at the time had effectively ended the Pacers' season. After losing game 1, the Pacers won the next two games to take a 2–1 lead. However, the Pacers could not repeat their victories against the Pistons and lost the next 3 games, losing the series 4–2.
The final game (game 6) was on May 19, 2005;
Reggie Miller, in his final NBA game, scored 27 points and received a huge standing ovation from the crowd. Despite Miller's effort, the Pacers lost, sending Miller into retirement without an
NBA Championship in his 18-year career, all with the Pacers. Miller had his #31 jersey retired by the Pacers on March 30, 2006 when the Pacers played the Phoenix Suns.
The Pacers made a major move for the
2005–06 season by signing
Šarunas Jasikevicius, the floor leader of two-time defending
Euroleague champions
Maccabi Tel Aviv.
2005–06
In 2005, the Pacers got off to an average start. On December 10, 2005,
Ron Artest told a reporter for the
Indianapolis Star
that he wanted to be traded, saying "the team would be better off without me". Various Pacers, including Jermaine O'Neal, soon denounced him, as O'Neal did not want to talk about it. On December 12, the Pacers placed Artest on their inactive list and began seeking a trade for the troubled star. On December 16, the NBA fined Ron Artest $10,000 for publicly demanding a trade, which is similar to "degrading the league".
After that, the team had gone on a 9–12 tailspin and was 22–22, a far cry from the beginning where people mentioned that the Pacers would be one of the NBA's elite. On January 24, 2006, it was said that Artest would be traded to the
Sacramento Kings for
Peja Stojakovic, when the trade was declined suddenly. The following day, however, the trade was accepted, and Indiana finally cut ties with the troubled All-Star. On February 1, 2006, they managed to beat the
Kobe Bryant-led Lakers, keeping the high-scorer below his average.
Jermaine O'Neal was also sidelined with a torn left groin and missed two months. The Pacers finished the season 41–41.
Despite the Artest saga and many key injuries the Pacers
made the playoffs for the 14th time in 15 years. They also were the only road team to win Game 1 of a first-round playof series.. However New Jersey won game 2 to tie the series at 1–1 heading back to Indiana. In game 3
Jermaine O'Neal scored 37 points as the Pacers regained a 2–1 series lead. The Nets, however, won games four and five to take a 3–2 series lead. In Game 6
Anthony Johnson scored 40 points but the Pacers' season came to an end as the Nets won 96–90.
2006 Offseason--"Restoration" Project
The 2006 offseason saw big changes to the Pacers roster. They drafted
Shawne Williams and
James White . Additionally on July 1, 2006 they completed a sign-and-trade with starting small forward
Peja Stojakovic to the
New Orleans Hornets for a $100 million (sic) trade exception. . The trade raised questions around the league, as Stojakovic was a free agent and did not need to be traded for. Some believe the Hornets made the trade so the Pacers could use the exception to re-acquire
Al Harrington in a sign-and-trade, keeping the top free agent away from the Western Conference. On August 22 the Pacers completed the trade for Harrington and
John Edwards in exchange for a future first round pick.
In July, forward
Austin Croshere was traded to the
Dallas Mavericks for guard/forward
Marquis Daniels . The Pacers also made another trade with the Mavericks acquiring
Darrell Armstrong,
Rawle Marshall, and
Josh Powell in exchange for
Anthony Johnson .
The team lost
Fred Jones and
Scot Pollard via free agency, to the Toronto Raptors and the Cleveland Cavaliers, respectively.
Another move saw the Pacers sign Euro League Player
Maceo Baston
who previously teamed with former Pacer
Sarunas Jasikevicius on Israeli's premier team,
Maccabi Tel Aviv.
However, the "restoration project" took a major image hit when player Stephen Jackson and some teammates decided to visit a
strip club on October 6, 2006. Upon leaving the club, Jackson was involved in an argument during which he was hit by a car. In response, Stephen pulled a
gun out and fired off a warning shot.
2006–07 Season- The Downward Spiral
The Pacers finished the 2006–2007 season as one of the worst seasons in team history. At a record standing at 35–47, everything that could have gone wrong did in this dreadful season. The turning point of the season would be the 11 game losing streak that started around the all star break. Injuries to Jermaine O'Neal, Marquis Daniels, a lack of a solid back up point guard, the blockbuster trade midway through the season that interrupted the team chemistry, having poor defensive efforts and being last place in the league in the offensive department were the main reasons that led to the team's struggles. The April 15 loss to
New Jersey Nets knocked the Pacers out of the playoffs for the first time since the 1996–1997 season.
On January 17, 2007, the Indiana Pacers traded
Al Harrington,
Stephen Jackson,
Sarunas Jasikevicius, and
Josh Powell to the
Golden State Warriors for forward
Troy Murphy, forward/guard
Mike Dunleavy, Jr., forward
Ike Diogu, and guard
Keith McLeod.
On April 25, 2007, the Indiana Pacers announced the firing of coach
Rick Carlisle, with the Pacers' first losing record in ten seasons being the main reason for the coach's dismissal. Pacers' president Larry Bird noted that Carlisle had the opportunity to return to the Pacers franchise in another role. Later, Carlisle opted to not stay with the organization and instead took a broadcasting job with
ESPN He returned to coach the
Dallas Mavericks in 2008. On May 31, 2007,
Jim O'Brien was named the head coach of the Indiana Pacers. O'Brien made it clear that he intended to take the Pacers back to the playoffs in the 2007–2008 season. He also made it known that he favors a more up-tempo, fast-paced style as opposed to Carlisle's slower, more meticulous style of coaching.
2007–2008 Season: Signs of Growth
Despite missing the playoffs in back-to-back seasons for the first time since the 80's, the 2007–2008 season displayed many signs of growth in the team, especially towards the end of the season. Off-court legal distraction from Jamaal Tinsley, Marquis Daniels, and Shawne Williams in the middle of the season did not help the Pacers struggles, and injuries to Tinsley and Jermaine O'Neal damaged the Pacers' already weak defense and left almost all point guard duties to recently acquired Travis Diener, who saw minimal minutes on his previous NBA teams. Despite this, and a 36–46 record, the Pacers had a very strong finish to the season, which included a desperate attempt to steal the 8th seed from the Atlanta Hawks, and dramatic improvement in forwards Danny Granger and Mike Dunleavy. Both Granger and Dunleavy were involved in the voting for Most Improved Player, with Dunleavy finishing in the top 10. The two were also the first Pacer pair to score 1500 points each in a single season since Reggie Miller and Detlef Schrempf did it in the early 90s. On July 9, 2008, the Pacers traded
Jermaine O'Neal and the rights to
Nathan Jawai to the Toronto Raptors for
T.J. Ford,
Rasho Nesterovic,
Maceo Baston, and the rights to
Roy Hibbert.On the same day the Pacers acquired
Jarrett Jack,
Josh McRoberts, and the rights to
Brandon Rush from the Portland Trail Blazers in return for
Ike Diogu and the rights to
Jerryd Bayless. On October 10, 2008, the Pacers traded
Shawne Williams to the Dallas Mavericks for
Eddie Jones and two future second-round draft picks.
Departure of Donnie Walsh
In April of the 2007–2008 Season, Pacers
GM since 1984
Donnie Walsh left the
Pacers to join the
New York Knicks. All of Walsh's basketball-related duties were given to Pacers' President
Larry Bird. Walsh's business-related roles were given to co-owner Herbert Simon and Jim Morris, who was promoted to President of Pacers Sports & Entertainment.
2009 Offseason
In the 2009 NBA Draft, the Pacers drafted F
Tyler Hansborough out of the
University of North Carolina and G
A.J. Price from the
University of Connecticut. The Pacers signed G
Dahntay Jones to a 4 year deal, F
Solomon Jones to a 2 year deal, and PG
Earl Watson to a 1 year deal. The Pacers also completed the buyout of troubled PG Jamaal Tinsley. The
Toronto Raptors signed former Pacers
Jarrett Jack and
Rasho Nesterovic.
Season-by-season records
Home arenas
Indiana State Fair Coliseum (1967–1974)
Market Square Arena (1974–1999)
Conseco Fieldhouse (1999–present)
Uniforms
The Pacers wear the usual white home uniform with navy blue and gold trim. Their away uniform is navy blue with gold trim. They also have a third uniform which is gold with navy blue trim.
Players
Retired numbers
- 30 George McGinnis, F, 1971–75 & 1980–82
- 31 Reggie Miller, G, 1987–2005
- 34 Mel Daniels, C, 1968–74
- 35 Roger Brown, F, 1967–74
- 529 Bobby "Slick" Leonard, Head Coach, 1968–80 (number of career wins)
The Indiana Pacers are also the only team in the league in which all the players' jerseys they have retired are in the 30s.
Current roster
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Recent draft history
- 2009 Tyler Hansbrough (Round 1, pick 13); A. J. Price (Round 2, pick 52)
- 2008 Jerryd Bayless (Round 1, pick 11), traded to Portland Trail Blazers for Brandon Rush and others. The Pacers also drafted Roy Hibbert (Round 1, pick 17) after a trade with the Toronto Raptors involving Jermaine O'Neal.
- 2007 No selection; 1st Rd pick traded to Atlanta via sign and trade (Al Harrington)
- 2006 Shawne Williams (Round 1, pick 17); Alexander Johnson (Round 2, pick 45)
- 2005 Danny Granger §
(Round 1, pick 17); Erazem Lorbek (Round 2, pick 46)
- 2004 David Harrison (Round 1, pick 29); Rashad Wright (Round 2, pick 60)
- 2003 James Jones (Round 2, pick 49)
- 2002 Fred Jones (Round 1, pick 14)
- 2001 Jamison Brewer (Round 2, pick 41)
- 2000 Primož Brezec (Round 1, pick 27); JaQuay Walls (Round 2, pick 56)
- 1999 Vonteego Cummings (Round 1, pick 26)traded to Golden State along with future 1st round Pick for Jeff Foster.
- 1998 Al Harrington (Round 1, pick 25)
- 1997 Austin Croshere (Round 1, pick 12)
- 1996 Erick Dampier (Round 1, pick 10); Mark Pope (Round 2, pick 52)
§
– Still with team
Coaches and others
Basketball Hall of Famers
- Alex English (inducted primarily for his years with the Denver Nuggets)
- Larry Bird (former coach and current President of Basketball Operations; enshrined as player with the Boston Celtics)
- Larry Brown
- Dr. Jack Ramsay (inducted primarily for his stints at St. Joseph's University and the Portland Trail Blazers)
- Isiah Thomas (former coach; enshrined as player with the Detroit Pistons)
High points
Franchise leaders
Career
- Games
: Reggie Miller (1,389)
- Minutes Played
: Reggie Miller (47,621)
- Field Goals Made
: Reggie Miller (8,241)
- Field Goal Attempts
: Reggie Miller (17,699)
- 3-Point Field Goals Made
: Reggie Miller (2,560)
- 3-Point Field Goal Attempts
: Reggie Miller (6,486)
- Free Throws Made
: Reggie Miller (6,237)
- Free Throw Attempts
: Reggie Miller (7,026)
- Offensive Rebounds
: Dale Davis (2,276)
- Defensive Rebounds
: Mel Daniels (5,461)
- Total Rebounds
: Mel Daniels (7,643)
- Assists
: Reggie Miller (4,141)
- Steals
: Reggie Miller (1,505)
- Blocked Shots
: Jermaine O'Neal (1,113)
- Turnovers
: Reggie Miller (2,409)
- Personal Fouls
: Rik Smits (3,011)
- Points
: Reggie Miller (25,279)
Per game
- Minutes Played
: Mel Daniels (37.07)
- Field Goals Made
: Chuck Person (7.85)
- Field Goal Attempts
: Chuck Person (16.33)
- 3-Point Field Goals Made
: Reggie Miller (1.84)
- 3-Point Field Goal Attempts
: Stephen Jackson (4.73)
- Free Throws Made
: Detlef Schrempf (5.31)
- Free Throw Attempts
: George McGinnis (7.05)
- Offensive Rebounds
: Mel Daniels (4.56)
- Defensive Rebounds
: Mel Daniels (11.40)
- Total Rebounds
: Mel Daniels (15.96)
- Assists
: Mark Jackson (8.13)
- Steals
: Don Buse (2.55)
- Blocked Shots
: Jermaine O'Neal (2.42)
- Turnovers
: Ricky Sobers (4.10)
- Personal Fouls
: James Edwards (4.04)
- Points
: Danny Granger (25.80)
Per 48 minutes
- Field Goals Made
: Billy Knight (11.41)
- Field Goal Attempts
: George McGinnis (23.53)
- 3-Point Field Goals Made
: Chris Mullin (2.74)
- 3-Point Field Goal Attempts
: Reggie Miller (6.54)
- Free Throws Made
: Detlef Schrempf (7.57)
- Free Throw Attempts
: George McGinnis (10.33)
- Offensive Rebounds
: Mel Bennett (6.38)
- Defensive Rebounds
: Mel Daniels (14.76)
- Total Rebounds
: Mel Daniels (20.66)
- Assists
: Mark Jackson (13.09)
- Steals
: Dudley Bradley (4.89)
- Blocked Shots
: Granville Waiters (3.55)
- Turnovers
: George McGinnis (5.77)
- Personal Fouls
: Greg Dreiling (10.57)
- Points
: Billy Knight (29.09)
Individual awards
NBA Defensive Player of the Year
NBA Rookie of the Year
NBA Sixth Man of the Year
- Detlef Schrempf – 1991, 1992
NBA Most Improved Player of the Year
- Jalen Rose – 2000
- Jermaine O'Neal – 2002
- Danny Granger - 2009
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NBA Coach of the Year
- Jack McKinney – 1981
- Larry Bird – 1998
All-NBA Second Team
All-NBA Third Team
- Reggie Miller – 1995, 1996, 1998
- Jermaine O'Neal – 2002, 2003
- Ron Artest – 2004
NBA All-Defensive First Team
- Don Buse – 1977
- Ron Artest – 2004, 2006
NBA All-Defensive Second Team
- Dudley Bradley – 1981
- Micheal Williams – 1992
- Derrick McKey – 1995, 1996
- Ron Artest – 2003
NBA Rookie First Team
- Clark Kellogg – 1983
- Steve Stipanovich – 1984
- Chuck Person – 1987
- Rik Smits – 1989
NBA Rookie Second Team
- Jamaal Tinsley – 2002
- Danny Granger – 2006
Previous Indianapolis pro basketball teams
- Indianapolis Jets 1948
- Indianapolis Olympians 1949–1953