2005-06 NBA SEASON
'The 2005-06 NBA season' was the 60th season of the National Basketball Association. It began on November 1, 2005 and ran through April 19, 2006. The Miami Heat were crowned NBA champions, defeating the Dallas Mavericks in the NBA Finals, 4 games to 2.
| Contents |
| Notable occurrences |
| Final standings |
| 2005-06 NBA statistics leaders |
| NBA awards |
Notable occurrences
★ A new league dress code was put into effect at the beginning of the year by commissioner David Stern.
★ The Miami Heat win their first NBA championship in franchise history. They become the third franchise (joining the 1969 Boston Celtics and 1977 Portland Trail Blazers) to win the NBA Finals after losing the first two games.
★ The All-Star Game was played on February 19, 2006 at the Toyota Center in Houston with the East beating the West 122–120. LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers won the game's MVP honors.
★ This season marked the first season of the Charlotte Bobcats in their new arena in downtown Charlotte.
★ Due to the damages caused by Hurricane Katrina, the New Orleans Hornets played 32 regular season games in the Ford Center in Oklahoma City, 6 games at LSU's Pete Maravich Assembly Center, and just 3 games at the New Orleans Arena in New Orleans in March. [1] Due to the split, the team was officially referred to as the New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets.
★ This season marked the first under the NBA's new Collective Bargaining Agreement, agreed upon by the owners and the player union on June 21.
★ The season was marked by the 30th anniversary of the absorption of four American Basketball Association members into the league: The Indiana Pacers, the New Jersey Nets, the Denver Nuggets and the San Antonio Spurs all joined in 1976.
★ On January 22, 2006, Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant scored 81 points in a game against the Toronto Raptors. This was the second-highest single game scoring total in league history, second only to Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point game in 1962.
★ Scottie Pippen (Bulls), Karl Malone (Jazz), and Reggie Miller (Pacers) had their numbers retired by their respective franchises.
★ The NBA held the Hardwood Classics program for the fifth straight season. The Bulls, Rockets, Clippers, Grizzlies, Heat, Nets, Knicks, Magic, Suns, Sonics, and Wizards all took part by wearing throwback jerseys for select games.
★ On the last day of the regular season, Ray Allen broke the single season record for most three-pointers, at 269. [2]
★ In Game 5 of the first round playoff series between the Phoenix Suns and Los Angeles Lakers, Suns guard Raja Bell did a clotheslining of Lakers guard Kobe Bryant. On the eve of Game 6, Kobe stated that Bell "didn't get hugged as a child" to which Bell replied that Kobe was arrogant and got all the cheap calls from referees.
★ The NBA Finals was jokingly referred to as the "American Airlines" series since both competing teams played in an arena sponsored by the airlne. The Miami Heat play their games at American Airlines Arena while the Dallas Mavericks reside in the American Airlines Center.
Final standings
Eastern Conference
|
|
|
Western Conference
|
|
|
★ x - Clinched playoff berth
★ y - Clinched division title
★ z - Clinched top conference record
★ (1) – (8) - Playoff seedings
★ 'C' - NBA Champions
2005-06 NBA statistics leaders
| Category | Player | Team | Stat |
|---|---|---|---|
| Points per game | Kobe Bryant | Los Angeles Lakers | 35.4 |
| Rebounds per game | Kevin Garnett | Minnesota Timberwolves | 12.7 |
| Assists per game | Steve Nash | Phoenix Suns | 10.5 |
| Steals per game | Gerald Wallace | Charlotte Bobcats | 2.5 |
| Blocks per game | Marcus Camby | Denver Nuggets | 3.3 |
| FG% | Shaquille O'Neal | Miami Heat | 60.0% |
| FT% | Steve Nash | Phoenix Suns | 92.1% |
| 3FG% | Richard Hamilton | Detroit Pistons | 45.8% |
NBA awards
★ 'Most Valuable Player:' Steve Nash, Phoenix Suns
★ 'Rookie of the Year:' Chris Paul, New Orleans Hornets
★ 'Defensive Player of the Year:' Ben Wallace, Detroit Pistons
★ 'Sixth Man of the Year:' Mike Miller, Memphis Grizzlies
★ 'Most Improved Player:' Boris Diaw, Phoenix Suns
★ 'Coach of the Year:' Avery Johnson, Dallas Mavericks
★ 'All-NBA First Team:'
★
★ F LeBron James - Cleveland Cavaliers
★
★ F Dirk Nowitzki - Dallas Mavericks
★
★ C Shaquille O'Neal - Miami Heat
★
★ G Kobe Bryant - Los Angeles Lakers
★
★ G Steve Nash - Phoenix Suns
★ 'All-NBA Second Team:'
★
★ F Elton Brand - Los Angeles Clippers
★
★ F Tim Duncan - San Antonio Spurs
★
★ C Ben Wallace - Detroit Pistons
★
★ G Dwyane Wade - Miami Heat
★
★ G Chauncey Billups - Detroit Pistons
★ 'All-NBA Third Team:'
★
★ F Shawn Marion - Phoenix Suns
★
★ F Carmelo Anthony - Denver Nuggets
★
★ C Yao Ming - Houston Rockets
★
★ G Allen Iverson - Philadelphia 76ers
★
★ G Gilbert Arenas - Washington Wizards
★ 'NBA All-Defensive First Team:'
★
★ Bruce Bowen - San Antonio Spurs
★
★ Ben Wallace - Detroit Pistons
★
★ Andrei Kirilenko - Utah Jazz
★
★ Ron Artest - Sacramento Kings
★
★ Kobe Bryant - Los Angeles Lakers
★
★ Jason Kidd - New Jersey Nets
★ 'NBA All-Defensive Second Team:'
★
★ Tim Duncan - San Antonio Spurs
★
★ Chauncey Billups - Detroit Pistons
★
★ Kevin Garnett - Minnesota Timberwolves
★
★ Marcus Camby - Denver Nuggets
★
★ Tayshaun Prince - Detroit Pistons
★ 'All-NBA Rookie First Team:'
★
★ Chris Paul - New Orleans Hornets
★
★ Charlie Villanueva - Toronto Raptors
★
★ Andrew Bogut - Milwaukee Bucks
★
★ Deron Williams - Utah Jazz
★
★ Channing Frye - New York Knicks
★ 'All-NBA Rookie Second Team:'
★
★ Danny Granger - Indiana Pacers
★
★ Raymond Felton - Charlotte Bobcats
★
★ Luther Head - Houston Rockets
★
★ Josh Smith - Atlanta Hawks
★
★ Ryan Gomes - Boston Celtics
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español