1994–95 Portland Trail Blazers season
| 1994–95 Portland Trail Blazers season | |
|---|---|
| Head coach | P. J. Carlesimo | 
| General manager | Bob Whitsitt | 
| Arena | Memorial Coliseum | 
| Results | |
| Record | 44–38 (.537) | 
| Place | Division: 4th (Pacific) Conference: 7th (Western)  | 
| Playoff finish | First round (lost to Suns 0–3)  | 
Stats at Basketball Reference  | |
| Local media | |
| Television | KGW Prime Sports Northwest  | 
| Radio | KEX | 
The 1994–95 NBA season was the 25th season for the Portland Trail Blazers in the National Basketball Association. The Trail Blazers 25th season was marked by change as they played their final season at the Memorial Coliseum under new head coach P.J. Carlesimo. The team also had the seventeenth overall pick in the 1994 NBA draft, and selected shooting guard Aaron McKie out of Temple University.
The Trail Blazers started the regular season by defeating the Los Angeles Clippers in their first two games, which were played overseas in Yokohama, Japan. The team got off to a 6–6 start, and played around .500 basketball for the first half of the season, holding a 25–20 record at the All-Star break, as Terry Porter only played just 35 games due to an ankle injury. Clyde Drexler averaged 22.0 points per game for the first half of the season, but was not selected for the All-Star Game in Phoenix, Arizona.
On February 14, 1995, with the Trail Blazers out of serious contention for the championship, the team honored Drexler's request to be traded to a contender, sending him along with three-point specialist Tracy Murray to the defending NBA champion Houston Rockets in exchange for forward Otis Thorpe. The Rockets went on to win their second straight title defeating the Orlando Magic in four straight games in the 1995 NBA Finals; it was Drexler's first ever championship. With the addition of Thorpe, the Trail Blazers finished in fourth place in the Pacific Division with a 44–38 record, and earned the #7 seed in the Western Conference; it was their thirteenth consecutive trip to the NBA playoffs.
Clifford Robinson averaged 21.3 points and 5.6 rebounds per game, and led the Trail Blazers with 142 three-point field goals, while Rod Strickland averaged 18.9 points, 8.8 assists and 1.9 steals per game, and Thorpe played a sixth man role, averaging 13.5 points and 6.9 rebounds per game off the bench in 34 games with the Blazers. In addition, Buck Williams averaged 9.2 points and 8.2 rebounds per game, and Chris Dudley led the team with 9.3 rebounds and 1.5 blocks per game. Off the bench, Harvey Grant provided the team with 9.1 points per game, while Porter contributed 8.9 points and 3.8 assists per game, second-year guard James Robinson provided with 9.2 points per game, and Jerome Kersey contributed 8.1 points per game.
However, in the 1995 NBA playoffs, the Trail Blazers were swept in the Western Conference First Round by a 0–3 margin against the Phoenix Suns. Following the season, Thorpe was traded to the Detroit Pistons, while Porter signed as a free agent with the Minnesota Timberwolves, Kersey was left unprotected in the 1995 NBA expansion draft, where he was selected by the newly expansion Toronto Raptors, and Mark Bryant signed with the Houston Rockets.