The Portland Trail Blazers
, commonly known as the Blazers
, are an American professional basketball team based in Portland, Oregon. They play in the Northwest Division of the Western Conference of the National Basketball Association (NBA). The Trail Blazers originally played their home games in the Memorial Coliseum, before moving to the Rose Garden Arena in 1995. Based in Portland throughout its existence, the franchise entered the league in 1970, and is the only major league franchise in Oregon until 2011 when the Portland Timbers will join the MLS. The franchise has also enjoyed a strong following; from 1977 through 1995, the team sold out 814 consecutive home games, the longest such streak in American professional sports. [2]
The team has advanced to the NBA Finals three times, winning the NBA Championship once, in 1977. The other NBA Finals appearances were in 1990 and 1992. [3] The team has qualified for the playoffs in 26 seasons of their 39-season existence, including a streak of 21 straight appearances from 1983 through 2003. [4] Four Hall of Fame players have played for the Trail Blazers (Lenny Wilkens, Bill Walton, Clyde Drexler, and Drazen Petrovic), [5]as well as one player (Scottie Pippen) who was recognized as one of the league's 50 greatest but who is not yet eligible for the Hall. Bill Walton is the franchise's most decorated player; he was the NBA Finals Most Valuable Player in 1977, and the regular season MVP the following year. [6] Three Blazer rookies (Geoff Petrie, Sidney Wicks, and Brandon Roy) have won the NBA Rookie of the Year award. Two Hall of Fame coaches, Lenny Wilkens and Jack Ramsay, have patrolled the sidelines for the Blazers, and two others, Mike Schuler and Mike Dunleavy, have won the NBA Coach of the Year award with the team. [7] since December 2008}}" style="white-space: nowrap;">[dead link]
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Name and branding
The team has been known as the "Trail Blazers" throughout its history. Two weeks after being awarded an expansion franchise in 1970, team management held a contest to select the team's name. More than 10,000 entries were submitted. The most popular choice was "Pioneers," but that name was excluded from consideration as it was already used by sports teams at Portland's
Lewis and Clark College. The name "Trail Blazers" received 172 entries, and was selected as the name.
The team's colors are red, white, black, and silver, which was added in 2002.
[8] The team's "pinwheel" logo, originally designed by the cousin of former Blazer executive
Harry Glickman, is a graphic interpretation of two five-on-five basketball teams lined up against each other. One side of the pinwheel is rendered in red; the other side is rendered in a monochrome color (black, silver, or white). The logo has gone from a vertical alignment to a slanted one over time.
Portland's home uniforms are white in color, with red, black, and silver accents; the primary road uniform is black, with red, white, and sliver accents. The alternate road uniform is red with white, silver, and black accents. From 1970 to the
1977–78 season, the team wore red road uniforms, switching to black in that year. The team again wore red during the
1984–85 season, switching back to black road jerseys after that. In 2002, the team reintroduced red jerseys.
The team's
mascot is Blaze the Trail Cat, a two-tone silver-colored
mountain lion,
[9] which has been the team's official mascot since 2002.
[10] Prior to Blaze's debut, the Trail Blazers never had any official mascot. A popular unofficial mascot was the late Bill "The Beerman" Scott, a
Seattle beer vendor/cheerleader who worked for numerous pro teams, including the Trail Blazers, the
Seattle Seahawks, and the
Seattle Mariners. Scott worked for the Trail Blazers from 1981 through 1985.
[11]
History
The Trail Blazers entered the NBA in
1970 as an expansion team, playing in the
Memorial Coliseum. The team was led in its early years by
Geoff Petrie and
Sidney Wicks, and failed to qualify for the
NBA postseason in their first six years of existence. During that span, the team had three head coaches (including future hall-of-famer
Lenny Wilkens); team executive
Stu Inman also served as coach.
[12] The team won the first pick in the
NBA Draft twice during that span. In 1972 the team drafted
LaRue Martin with the number one pick, and in 1974 the team selected
Bill Walton from
UCLA.
Championship
In 1976, the
ABA-NBA merger saw those two rival leagues join forces. Four ABA teams joined the NBA; the remaining teams were dissolved and their players distributed among the remaining NBA squads in a
dispersal draft. The Trail Blazers selected
Maurice Lucas in the dispersal draft.
[13] That summer they also hired
Jack Ramsay as head coach. The two moves, coupled with the emergence of Walton as a premier NBA big man, led the team to its first winning record (49–33), its first playoff appearance, and its only
NBA Championship in
1977.
Starting on April 5 of that year, the team began a sellout streak of 814 straight games—the longest in sports history—which did not end until 1995, after the team moved into a
larger facility.
The team started the next season with a 50–10 record, and many
[14] predicted a
dynasty in Portland, but it was not to be. Walton suffered a foot injury that ended his season and would plague his entire career, and the team struggled to a 58–24 record, losing to the
Seattle SuperSonics in the 1978 conference semifinals.
[15] That summer, Bill Walton demanded to be traded to a team of his choice (
Clippers,
Knicks,
Warriors, or
76ers) because he was unhappy with his medical treatment in Portland.
[16] Walton was never traded, and he held out the entire
1978–79 season and left the team as a
free agent thereafter.
[17] Maurice Lucas left the team in 1980, and the Blazers "dynasty" was finished.
1980s
upright.
During the 1980s, the team was a consistent presence in the NBA post-season, failing to qualify for the playoffs only in 1982. However, they never advanced past the conference semifinals during the decade.
[18] The
Pacific Division of the NBA was dominated by the
Los Angeles Lakers throughout the decade, and only the Lakers and the
Houston Rockets represented the Western Conference in the NBA Finals. Key players for the Blazers during the early 1980s included
Mychal Thompson,
Fat Lever,
Darnell Valentine,
Wayne Cooper,
T. R. Dunn,
Jim Paxson, and
Calvin Natt.
In 1983, the team selected
University of Houston guard/forward
Clyde Drexler with the 13th pick in the draft;
"Clyde the Glide" would become the face of the franchise for over a decade, and the team's second-most decorated player (after Walton).
[19] The following year, the Trail Blazers landed the #2 pick in the NBA Draft. After the Houston Rockets selected Drexler's college teammate
Hakeem Olajuwon, known at that time as Akeem Olajuwon, at #1, the Trail Blazers selected
Kentucky center
Sam Bowie. Drafting third, the
Chicago Bulls selected
Michael Jordan. Many sportswriters and analysts have criticized the selection of the injury-plagued Bowie over Jordan as the worst draft pick in the history of American professional sports.
[20] That summer, the Blazers also made a controversial trade, sending Lever, Cooper, and Natt to the
Denver Nuggets for high-scoring forward
Kiki Vandeweghe.
[21]. In the
1985 Draft, the Blazers selected point guard
Terry Porter with the last pick of the first round. Porter would go on to become one of the top point guards in the league, and the Blazers' all-time leader in assists.
However, the Blazers continued to struggle in the post-season, and in 1986, Ramsay was fired and replaced with
Mike Schuler.
That off-season, the team drafted two players from behind the
Iron Curtain,
Arvydas Sabonis and
Dražen Petrovic,
[22] and sent Thompson to the
San Antonio Spurs for former
Oregon State University star
Steve Johnson. Johnson was a high-scoring forward-center who the team intended to pair with Bowie on the frontline. It was not to be, as Bowie broke his leg five games into the
1986–87 season, missing the next two and a half seasons.
[23] [24] During Schuler's brief tenure, the Blazers failed to advance out of the first round of the NBA playoffs.
Paul Allen buys the team
In 1988, billionaire
Paul Allen purchased the Blazers.
[25] His first season as owner was one marked by turmoil, as conflicts erupted over who should start at several positions. Both Vandeweghe and Johnson suffered injuries; they were replaced in the starting lineup by
Jerome Kersey and
Kevin Duckworth. Several players, most notably Drexler, were accused of undermining Schuler.
[26] The team struggled to a losing record and appeared in danger of missing the playoffs. Schuler was fired
and replaced on an interim basis with assistant coach
Rick Adelman,
[27] and Vandeweghe was traded to the
New York Knicks.
[28] Under Adelman, the team achieved a 39–43 record, and barely qualified for the playoffs. That offseason, the team traded Sam Bowie (who had returned to the team to end the season) to the
New Jersey Nets for forward
Buck Williams, and Adelman was given the coaching job on a non-interim basis.
The addition of Williams, and the replacement of the defensively-challenged Vandeweghe with the defensive-minded Kersey, turned the team from a poor defensive squad into a good one.
[29] Led by the charismatic Drexler, the team reached the NBA Finals in
1990 and
1992, losing to the
Detroit Pistons and
Chicago Bulls, respectively. Possibly inspired by the
1985 Chicago Bears's
Super Bowl Shuffle, during the runnup to their
1990 Finals appearance, the Blazers recorded two songs: "Bust a Bucket" and "Rip City Rhapsody" (in reference to the city's nickname). The year in between their two finals appearances, the team posted a league-best 63–19 record before losing to the
Los Angeles Lakers in the Western Conference finals. However, the team failed to win an NBA title, and failed to advance past the first round in
1993 and
1994.
Adelman was fired after the 1994 season,
[30] and replaced with
P. J. Carlesimo,
[31] which led to the resignation of executive vice-president Geoff Petrie, a close friend of Adelman's.
[32]
Whitsitt years
In July 1994, the Trail Blazers announced the hire of a new team president, former
Seattle SuperSonics general manager
Bob Whitsitt.
Whitsitt immediately set about revamping the Blazers roster; this included dismantling the Drexler-led team that had twice been to the finals,
[33] but which was getting old. In 1993,
Kevin Duckworth was traded to the
Washington Bullets for forward
Harvey Grant. Several key players were permitted to walk away in free agency, including
Buck Williams (1996),
Terry Porter (1996), and
Cliff Robinson (1997),
[34] which left
Jerome Kersey unprotected in the
1996 expansion draft.
[35] Drexler requested to be traded to a contender, and the Trail Blazers traded him to the
Houston Rockets.
In the fall of 1995, the team left the Memorial Coliseum for a new home, the 20,000-seat
Rose Garden.
The sellout streak ended in the new building.
In an effort to rebuild, the team acquired several players who were highly talented, but had reputations for off-court troubles.
Isaiah Rider, who was traded by the
Minnesota Timberwolves for just a draft pick and career backups due to his frequent arrests and lack of punctuality,
[36] was arrested for
marijuana possession two days before his debut with the Blazers.
[37] Rasheed Wallace, who was acknowledged as a hot-tempered player since college,
[38] was also acquired in a trade with the
Washington Bullets.
Point guard Kenny Anderson was signed as a free agent,
[39] and subsequently traded for
Damon Stoudamire.
[40] Initially, this approach worked, as the team returned to the Western Conference finals in
1999 under head coach
Mike Dunleavy.
After being swept by the eventual champion
San Antonio Spurs, Whitsitt sent Rider and guard
Jim Jackson to the
Atlanta Hawks for guard
Steve Smith and acquired former All-Star forward
Scottie Pippen from the Houston Rockets. This team again advanced to the Western Conference Finals, where they faced a Los Angeles Lakers team led by
Shaquille O'Neal and
Kobe Bryant. In that series, the Trail Blazers dropped three out of the first four games before winning the next two, forcing a pivotal
Game 7. The Blazers had a 15-point lead in the fourth quarter, but lost the game and the series to the Lakers, who went on to win the first of three consecutive titles.
[41]
"Jail Blazers" era
The Portland Trail Blazers made a series of personnel moves in the
2000 and
2001 off-seasons that failed to produce the desired results, and continued to alienate the community. Up-and-coming forward
Jermaine O'Neal was traded to the
Indiana Pacers for
Dale Davis.
Brian Grant signed with the
Miami Heat, and he was replaced with troubled ex-Seattle forward
Shawn Kemp.
[42] The team started off well, posting the Western Conference's best record through March 2001, but then signed guard
Rod Strickland to augment their point guard corps.
[43] The move backfired, and the team lost 17 of its remaining 25 games, and was eliminated in the first round of the playoffs (swept by the Los Angeles Lakers).
Many in the media began to criticize the team,
[44] and Whitsitt, previously proclaimed a genius for his work in both Seattle and Portland, started coming under criticism.
[45] A particular criticism was that Whitsitt was attempting to win a title by assembling a roster of superstars, without paying attention to team chemistry.
Longtime NBA coach and analyst
Doug Collins referred to Whitsitt as a "
rotisserie-league manager."
A fan was ejected from the Rose Garden for holding up a banner that said "Trade Whitsitt",
and many in the national media started referring to the team as the "Portland Jail Blazers".
[46]
That offseason, the churning continued. Dunleavy was fired,
[47] and replaced with
Maurice Cheeks, a "players coach" who some thought would relate better to the players than Dunleavy did.
[48] More transactions followed as the Blazers traded Steve Smith to the Spurs for
Derek Anderson.
In one of his most controversial moves to that time, Whitsitt signed free agent
Ruben Patterson, who had previously pled
no contest to a felony sexual assault charge, and was required to register as a sex offender.
[49] Popular center
Arvydas Sabonis, who during the playoffs had a towel flung in his face by Wallace,
[50] decided to leave the team.
[51]
The next two seasons were just as disastrous for the team's reputation. Numerous players, including Wallace, Stoudamire, and
Qyntel Woods, were arrested for marijuana possession.
[52] Woods pled guilty to first-degree animal abuse for staging dog fights in his house, some involving his pit bull named Hollywood. Both Hollywood and Woods' other pit bull, Sugar, were confiscated, and Woods was given eighty hours of community service. He also agreed to donate $10,000 to the Oregon Humane Society.
[53] Wallace was suspended for seven games for threatening a referee.
[54] Zach Randolph and Patterson got in a fight during practice, with Randolph
sucker punching his teammate in the jaw.
[55] Police answering a burglar alarm at Stoudamire's house noticed a marijuana smell, searched the premises, and found a pound of cannabis located in a crawlspace;
[56] the search was later declared illegal and charges in the matter were dropped.
[57] Guard
Bonzi Wells famously told
Sports Illustrated in a 2002 interview:
[58]
they [fans] really don't matter to us. They can boo us every day, but they're still going to ask for our autographs if they see us on the street.
Fan discontent soared; despite the team continuing to post a winning record, attendance at the Rose Garden started to decline.
[59] In the summer of 2003, with attendance declining, the team going nowhere on the court, and an exorbitant payroll, Whitsitt announced that he would leave the team to focus on Paul Allen's other franchise, the
Seattle Seahawks.
[60]
Downfall; Rose Garden bankruptcy
To replace Whitsitt, the team hired two men at new positions.
John Nash, a veteran NBA executive, was hired as general manager,
[61] and
Steve Patterson as team president.
[62] The new management promised a focus on character while remaining playoff contenders; the team soon published a "Twenty-Five Point Pledge" to fans.
[63] Troublesome players including Wells, Wallace, and
Jeff McInnis were traded away.
However, the team failed to qualify for the
2004 NBA Playoffs, ending a streak of 21 straight appearances.
The following year was marked by more trouble as the team plummeted to a 27–55 record. The
bankruptcy of the Oregon Arena corporation, which resulted in the Rose Garden being owned by a consortium of investment firms, further alienated the fanbase, as did an incident in which forward
Darius Miles (himself African-American) called coach Maurice Cheeks a "
nigger."
[64] The latter incident was compounded by what many viewed as inadequate discipline for Miles, followed by a secret agreement between the team and Miles to refund the amount of his fine.
Cheeks was fired that season and replaced on an interim basis by director of player-personnel
Kevin Pritchard.
[65] That summer the team hired
Nate McMillan, who had coached the Sonics the prior season,
[66] and Pritchard returned to the front office.
The following
2005–06 season was not better, as the Blazers posted a league-worst 21–61 record.
[67] Attendance was low, and the year was not free of player incidents. Players such as Miles, Patterson, Randolph, and
Sebastian Telfair were involved in either on-court bickering or off-court legal incidents.
Nash was fired at the end of the season, with Steve Patterson assuming the general manager role in addition to his duties as president.
[68] In addition, the team had a poor relationship with the management of the Rose Garden, frequently complaining of a "broken economic model".
[69] It was widely speculated by the end of the year that Paul Allen would sell the team; and the team was offered for sale that summer, with several groups expressing interest.
[70] However, Allen was willing to spend money and urged Pritchard to make draft-day trades. He subsequently took the team off the market.
[71]
Rebirth in 2007
In the spring of 2007, Steve Patterson resigned as team president,
and Paul Allen entered into an agreement to re-purchase the Rose Garden.
[72] On the court, the team finished with a 32–50 record, an 11-game improvement, and
Brandon Roy was named the
2006–07 Rookie of the Year.
[73] That summer Pritchard was promoted to general manager,
[74] and former
Nike Inc. executive
Larry Miller was hired as team president. The Blazers won the
2007 NBA Draft Lottery and selected
Ohio State center Greg Oden with the #1 pick in the draft. Many had speculated that they might choose
Kevin Durant instead
[75]; Durant was picked at #2 by local rivals the
Seattle SuperSonics. Oden suffered a pre-season knee injury requiring
microfracture surgery, and missed the entire 2007–08 season.
[76]
Despite this, the Trail Blazers had a 13-game winning streak that began in early December, resulting in a 13–2 record, an NBA best for the month of December. McMillan won NBA Coach of the Month honors, and Roy garnered NBA Western Conference Player of the Week honors in back-to-back weeks (the first Trail Blazer to accomplish the feat since
Clyde Drexler in the 1990–91 season). Roy was also named as a reserve for the
2008 NBA All-Star Game, the first All-Star for the Blazers since
Rasheed Wallace in
2001.
[77] The Blazers finished the season 41–41, their best record since the 2003–04 season.
The team continued to improve in the 2008–09 season. Greg Oden debuted with the Blazers, as did Spanish swingman
Rudy Fernández. Roy appeared in his second straight
All-Star Game, and had a career-high 52 points against the
Phoenix Suns and game-winning shots against the
Houston Rockets and
New York Knicks.
[78] [79] [80] [81] The Blazers clinched a playoff berth for the first time since 2003 and achieved a winning season for the first time since the 2002–03 season.
[82] As the fourth seed and holding home court advantage, the Portland Trail Blazers played the fifth-seeded Houston Rockets in the
2009 Playoffs. Houston won the playoff series 4 games to 2.
In the 2009 offseason, the Trail Blazers traded the #24 pick to Dallas for the #22 pick and selected
Victor Claver. They also selected Wildcats forward
Dante Cunningham with the #33 pick,
Jon Brockman and guard
Patrick Mills. Brockman was traded to the Kings in exchange for #31 pick
Jeff Pendergraph. Free Agent
Channing Frye signed with the Phoenix Suns and
Sergio Rodriguez moved to the Kings. The Blazers attempted to sign free agent small forward
Hedo Turkoglu, who led the Orlando Magic to the
2009 NBA Finals, but after a verbal agreement he decided to sign with the
Toronto Raptors. The Blazers then attempted to sign restricted free agent
Paul Millsap; however, their offer was matched by the Utah Jazz. On July 24, 2009 the Trail Blazers signed point guard
Andre Miller.
Season-by-season results
In the Blazers' 39 years of existence (through summer 2009), they have qualified for the NBA playoffs 27 times. This includes a streak of 21 straight playoff appearances from 1983 through 2003. The team has one NBA title, in 1977, and appeared in the NBA Finals two other times, in 1990 and 1992. The best record posted by the team was 63–19, in 1991; the worst record was 18–64, in the team's second season.
Players
Current roster
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Retired numbers
- 1
– Larry Weinberg, Owner, 1970–88
- 13
– Dave Twardzik, G, 1976–80
- 14
– Lionel Hollins, G, 1975–80
- 15
– Larry Steele, G, 1971–80
- 20
– Maurice Lucas, F, 1976–80, 1987–88
- 22
– Clyde Drexler, G, 1983–95
- 30
– Bob Gross, F, 1975–82
- 30
– Terry Porter, G, 1985–95
- 32
– Bill Walton, C, 1974–79
- 36
– Lloyd Neal, F/C, 1972–79
- 45
– Geoff Petrie, G/F, 1970–76
- 77
– Jack Ramsay, Head Coach, 1976–86
Hall of Famers
- Players:
- Lenny Wilkens: 1974–1975
- Bill Walton: 1974–1978
- Clyde Drexler: 1983–1995
- Dražen Petrovic: 1989–1990
- Coaches
- Lenny Wilkens: 1974–1976
- Jack Ramsay: 1976–1986
NBA Draft
The Trail Blazers have had the #1 pick in the
NBA Draft four times in their history; each time selecting a
center. In 1972 the choice was
LaRue Martin,
Bill Walton was picked in 1974,
Mychal Thompson in 1978, and
Greg Oden was taken in 2007. Several Blazer picks have been criticized by NBA commentators as particularly unwise:
[83]
- The selection of Martin over Bob McAdoo.
- The selection of Thompson over Larry Bird (drafted #6 by the Boston Celtics) in 1978.
- The selection of center Sam Bowie with the #2 pick in the 1984 NBA Draft over Michael Jordan (who was then drafted by the Chicago Bulls); other notable players taken later in that draft include future Hall-of-Famers Charles Barkley and John Stockton.
Other notable draft picks include player-coach
Geoff Petrie,
Sidney Wicks,
Larry Steele,
Lionel Hollins and
Jim Paxson in the 1970s and
Clyde Drexler,
Jerome Kersey,
Terry Porter and
Arvydas Sabonis in the 1980s.
In the 1990s the Blazers selected
Jermaine O'Neal and in the modern millennium drafted
Zach Randolph and, in 2006, acquired
Brandon Roy and
LaMarcus Aldridge in a blockbuster draft day that included six trades involving the Trail Blazers.
Franchise and NBA records
Front office
thumb
The team is ultimately owned by
Microsoft co-founder
Paul Allen; ownership of the Trail Blazers is via a series of holding companies which Allen owns.
Vulcan Inc. is a private corporation which has Allen as chairman and sole shareholder. A subsidiary of Vulcan,
Vulcan Sports and Entertainment (VSE), manages Allen's sports-related properties, including the Trail Blazers, the
Seattle Seahawks NFL team, the
Seattle Sounders MLS team, and the
Rose Garden. The president of VSE is
Tod Leiweke, who also briefly served as the president of the Trail Blazers.
[84]
The Trail Blazers as a corporate entity are owned by VSE. Allen serves as the team's chairman, and his longtime associate Bert Kolde is vice-chairman. The current president of the Trail Blazers is
Larry Miller. The post of
chief operating officer is currently vacant; the most recent COO of the team was
Mike Golub, who resigned in July 2008 to take a more enhanced role with VSE.
[85] [86]. The team's general manager is
Kevin Pritchard.
[87] Before Allen purchased the team in 1988, the Trail Blazers were owned by a group of investors headed by
Larry Weinberg.
Venue
The Trail Blazers play their home games in the Rose Garden, a multipurpose arena which is located in Portland's
Rose Quarter, northeast of downtown. The Rose Garden, which opened in 1995, can seat a total of 19,980 spectators for basketball games; capacity increases to 20,580 with
standing room.
[88] Like the Trail Blazers, the Rose Garden is owned by Paul Allen through subsidiary
Vulcan Sports and Entertainment,
[89] and the arena is managed by
Global Spectrum.
[90] During a two-year period between 2005 and 2007, the arena was owned by a consortium of creditors who financed its construction after the Oregon Arena Corporation, a now-defunct holding company owned by Allen, filed for
bankruptcy in 2004.
[91]
Prior to 1995, the Trail Blazers home venue was the
Memorial Coliseum, which today stands adjacent to the Rose Garden. This facility, built in 1960, can seat 12,888 spectators for basketball.
In-game entertainment
The team has a cheerleading/dance squad known as the BlazerDancers. Consisting of 16 members, the all-female BlazerDancers perform dance routines at home games, charity events, and promotional events. The 2008–2009 team held auditions in late July 2008. Seven new dancers, as well as nine returning dancers make up the new team.
[92] A junior dance team composed of 8–11 year old girls also performs at selected home games,
[93] as does a
hip-hop dance troupe.
[94] Other regular in-game entertainment acts include a co-educational acrobatic stunt team which performs technically-difficult cheers,
[95] a
break dancing squad,
[96] and a pair of
percussion acts.
[97] [98]
Fan support and "Blazermania"
thumb
The relationship between the team and its fans, commonly known as "Blazermania", has been well-chronicled. The Trail Blazers have long been one of the NBA's top draws, with the exception of two periods in the team's history. The team drew poorly during its first four seasons of existence, failing to average more than 10,000 spectators per game. Attendance increased in 1974, when the team drafted
Bill Walton.
[99]
The phenomenon known as Blazermania started during the 1976–77 season, when the team would post its first winning record, make its first playoff appearance—and capture its only NBA title, defeating the heavily-favored
Philadelphia 76ers in the NBA Finals; the team has been wildly popular in Portland since that time.
[100] That season, the team started their famous sellout streak which would continue until the team moved into the Rose Garden in 1995.
The team continued to average over 19,000 spectators per game until the 2003–04 season, when attendance declined after the team continued to suffer image problems due to the "Jail Blazer" reputation it had gained, and was no longer competitive on the court.
After drafting eventual Rookie of the Year and two-time All Star
Brandon Roy in 2006, attendance climbed in the 2006–07 season and continued to rebound in the 2007–08 season. The final 27 home games of the 2007–2008 season were consecutive sell-outs, a streak which continued through the entire 2008–2009 season.
Media
Television and radio broadcast
Like all NBA franchises, games of the Trail Blazers are routinely broadcast via television and radio. The team was one of the first in the NBA to produce its own television broadcasts.
[101] The team's
television production facility is known as Post-Up Productions. Television broadcasts of Blazer games, when not carried on a national network, are broadcast either on
Comcast SportsNet Northwest or the Blazers Television Network, a network of four over-the-air television stations located in Oregon.
[102] The flagship station of the Blazers Television Network is
KGW-TV in Portland.
For the
2007–08 season, all but six regular-season games were carried on one these networks; the other six were broadcast nationally on
TNT or
ESPN. Thirty-four games were produced and broadcast in
high-definition television.
The Trail Blazers television
play-by-play announcer and analyst are
Mike Barrett and
Mike Rice, respectively. The sideline reporter during the broadcasts is
Rebecca Haarlow. The team was also known for its long association with
Steve "Snapper" Jones, who played for the team prior to his career as a television analyst; Jones departed the franchise in 2005.
[103]
All Trail Blazer games are broadcast over the radio, with broadcasting carried on the Trail Blazers radio network, which consists of 25 stations located in the
Pacific Northwest. The flagship station of the Blazers' radio network is
KXTG (95.5 The Game), the FM sports radio station in Portland. The radio broadcasting team consists of play-by-play announcer
Brian Wheeler, analyst
Antonio Harvey, and studio host Jay Allen.
[104] All games are preceded by a pre-game analysis show,
Blazers Courtside
, and followed by a post-game show known as
The 5th Quarter
.
Tony Luftman serves as studio host and former Trail Blazers' player
Michael Holton as studio analyst. The original radio announcer for the team was
Bill Schonely, who served as the team's radio play-by-play announcer from 1970 until his retirement in 1998—calling 2,522 Blazers games—and remains with the team as a community ambassador.
[105]
Trail Blazers broadcasts have been criticized on several fronts. The broadcast personalities, all of whom are Trail Blazers employees, have been criticized in the media for being "
homers"; further it has been alleged that the 2005 departure of Steve Jones was due in part to team displeasure with Jones' sometimes frank analysis of the team's on-court performance and off-court decisions.
[106] (It should be pointed out that current radio flagship KXTG is owned by the team.) A television deal signed with Comcast SportsNet in 2007 has also been criticized for not ensuring access to Blazer games via cable company
Charter, as well as satellite television providers such as
DirecTV and
Dish Network, both of which compete with Comcast's cable television operations.
[107]
Press relations
Several local news outlets provide in-depth coverage of the Trail Blazers. Chief among them is
The Oregonian
, the largest paper in the state of Oregon. Other newspapers providing detailed coverage of the team (including the assignment of beat writers to cover the team) include the
Portland Tribune
, a weekly Portland paper, and the
Vancouver, Washington Columbian
. Notable local journalists to cover the team include
John Canzano and Jason Quick of the
Oregonian
and
Dwight Jaynes of the
Portland Tribune
. Online coverage of the
Oregonian
is provided through
oregonlive.com,
[108] a website collaboration between the paper and
Advance Internet.
[109] In addition to making
Oregonian
content available, oregonlive.com hosts several
blogs covering the team written by
Oregonian
journalists,
[110] [111] as well as an additional blog, "Blazers Blog", written by Sean Meagher.
[112]
Relations between the team and
The Oregonian
have often been tense; the paper is editorially independent of the team and is often critical. During the Steve Patterson era, relations between the two institutions became increasingly hostile; several NBA executives told
ESPN's
Chris Sheridan that the situation was the "most dysfunctional media-team relationship" that they could recall.
[113] For instance during a portion of a pre-
2006 NBA Draft workout, which was closed to the media, an
Oregonian
reporter looked through a curtain separating the press from the workout and wrote about this on his blog.
[114] Outraged, the team closed subsequent practices to the press altogether,
[115] leading John Canzano of the paper to respond with outrage on his blog.
[116] In November 2006, the
Oregonian
commissioned an outside editor to investigate the deteriorating relationship,
[117] a move the rival
Willamette Week
called "unusual".
[118] In the report,
[119] both sides were criticized somewhat, but did not make any revelations which were unexpected.
References
- Blazers logo information and history
- Company History: Portland Trail Blazers
- NBA Finals: All Time Champions
- Portland Trailblazers: Not so Cheeky after missing the playoffs for first time in 21 years
- Portland Trail Blazers Hall of Fame Register
- NBA Postseason awards: Most Valuable Player
- National Basketball Association: Portland Trail Blazers
- Going Retro: Portland Trail Blazers
- Blaze's Bungalow
- Blaze's Favorites
- Ailing 'Bill the Beerman' says he hasn't made his last call
- Portland Trail Blazers history
- Learn more about Maurice Lucas
- Going Like Blazers: Portland is not just running away from everybody in the NBA, it's mounting an assault on the record books as well
- The Breaks of the Game
- Off On A Wronged Foot
- Red Hot and Rollin': A Retrospection of the Portland Trail Blazers' 1976–77 NBA Championship Season
- Portland Trail Blazers (team profile)
- Clyde Drexler Biography
- NBA Draft Busts
- Denver Nuggets History: 1979 to 1990
- Portland Trail Blazers Draft History
- Broken leg sidelines Sam Bowie
- Blazers' Bowie breaks his leg—again
- Trail Blazers Deal
- Is anybody happy here?
- PRO BASKETBALL; Changing Team Chemistry Adds Risk to Equation
- A Question Mark for Vandeweghe
- Man at Work: Buck Blends With Blazers
- Trail Blazers fire Adelman
- Carlesimo Leaves Hall To Coach Trail Blazers
- Allen is ready to write a program for the Blazers
- It is a crime what has happened
- Clifford Robinson NBA.com Bio
- All-time NBA Expansion draft results
- Rider still a valuable commodity to Wolves
- Rider Finds Trouble As a Trail Blazer
- Rich and famous - Washington Bullets' Rasheed Wallace - NBA Special
- Rift city—Portland Trail Blazers
- Blazers obtain Stoudamire from Raptors, Darrel Walker resigns
- Dreadful drought: Blazers dry spell allows Lakers to take Game 7
- Blazers make the right move
- Where was L.A. on Strickland?
- Shame on these Fail-Blazers
- Blazers won't be under control until Whitsitt is
- Revised Blazers on road to rehabilitation
- Trail Blazers fire coach Mike Dunleavy
- Blazers name Cheeks as head coach
- Patterson signs offer sheet with Blazers
- Blazers suspend Wallace
- Blazers' Sabonis Planning to Retire
- Trail Blazers Trying to Fix a Troubled Family
- Qyntel Woods Pleads Guilty to Animal Abuse Charges
- Wallace suspended for threatening ref; Blazers cry foul
- Randolph's punch may KO Blazers' season
- An inside look at Damon's pot case
- COURT NEWS; Oregon Judge Rules For Stoudamire
- Out of Bounds: Inside the NBA's Culture of Rape, Violence, and Crime
- Losing their grip
- Blazers President Quits, Leaving Troubled Team
- Report: Blazers Hire Nash As GM
- NBA Basketball: Blazers hire Steve Patterson as new president.
- 25 Point Pledge
- Blazers losing in exit polls
- In Portland, Misery and lots of company
- McMillan leaves Seattle for Portland
- Fans react as the Trail Blazers season comes to an end
- Nash won't return as Trail Blazers' general manager
- The not-so-great Northwest
- It's official: Blazers and Rose Garden are for sale
- Rose Garden statement on no sale of Blazers
- Vulcan Inc. completes acquisition of Rose Garden arena (PRESS RELEASE)
- Trail Blazers' Brandon Roy Named 2006-07 T-Mobile NBA Rookie of the Year
- Kevin Pritchard named general manager of Trail Blazers
- Durant wows Blazers
- Oden's recovery from surgery likely in range of 6-12 months
- 'Brandon Roy Named Western Conference All-Star'
- 2009 All-Star Rosters
- Blazers end 11-game skid vs. Phoenix behind Roy's career-high 52
- Roy's buzzer-beating 3-pointer sinks Rockets in overtime
- Roy's buzzer-beating lay up hands Knicks fourth straight defeat
- Yao posts double-double as Rockets rout playoff-bound Blazers
- The 100 worst draft picks ever
- Tod Leiweke to Assume Management Oversight for the Portland Trail Blazers
- Trail Blazers New Hires and Promotions
- Golub resigns from Trail Blazers
- Trail Blazers name Larry Miller president
- Rose Quarter Venue Facts
- Tod Leiweke to Assume Management Oversight for the Portland Trail Blazers
- Blazers overseer ponders new cohort
- Global Spectrum names Rose Garden Manager
- BlazerDancers Team Page
- Junior BlazerDancers
- Jam Squad
- Stunt team
- TrailBreakers
- Funk Plastic
- Groove Machine
- When we fell hard
- Blazermania
- Portland Trailblazers on EditShare
- Trail Blazers Announce 2007/08 Broadcast Schedule
- Future's a bit hazy for Blazer analyst Jones
- Trail Blazers announce 2007/08 Broadcast Schedule
- Pyramid Taproom at Schonely's Place Pays Tribute to Trail Blazers Broadcast Legend
- Blazer analysts risking credibility
- Comcast-Blazers TV deal leaves fans out of the picture
- Portland Trail Blazers with ''The Oregonian''
- About Us
- Behind the Blazers Beat
- John Canzano's blog
- Blazers Blog
- Blazers owner foresees a "few turns in the road"
- Adam Morrison vs. Rudy Gay vs. Brandon Roy vs. Hassan Adams
- Team shuts media out
- The Blazers...hit a new low
- Craig Lancaster describes his ''Oregonian'' story
- Blazer Gazers
- A difference of perspective: The Oregonian v. Blazers