David Stern begins his tenure as the league's fourth commissioner, effective April 1.
The NBA Playoffs were expanded from 6 teams per conference to 8, where it stands to this date (with a play-in tournament for the #7 and #8 seeds in each conference added in
2020). As a result, the 'first round bye' system was eliminated.
Marked the first year the first round of the NBA Playoffs went from best-of-three to
best-of-five playoff. The first round remained best-of-five until going to best-of-seven in 2003.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar surpassed
Wilt Chamberlain to become the all-time NBA career leader in points. He passed Chamberlain in a game against the Utah Jazz at
Las Vegas'
Thomas & Mack Center on April 5. Fittingly, it was his trademark sky-hook that put him in the record books.
The
Denver Nuggets and Detroit Pistons play in the highest scoring game in NBA history with the Pistons winning 186–184 in three overtimes.
The
Utah Jazz appeared in the postseason for the first time, defeating the Denver Nuggets 3–2 in the opening round and then losing to the
Phoenix Suns 4–2 in the Western semis. This started a streak of 20 consecutive playoff appearances, fourth longest in the NBA behind the
Portland Trail Blazers (21 between 1983 and 2003), the
Philadelphia 76ers (23 between 1949 (as
Syracuse Nationals) and 1971), and the
San Antonio Spurs 22 between 1998 and 2019).[1]
This would be the last season until
2013–14 that the
Finals had the 2–2–1–1–1 format. The Finals would adopt the 2–3–2 format the
following season.
The
New Jersey Nets won a playoff series for the first time in their NBA history, upsetting the defending champion
Philadelphia 76ers in five games. The series marked the only time (to date) a road team won every game in a five-game playoff series.
Final season of
ESPN broadcasting NBA games until the
2002–03 season, which also marked the league's return to future corporate partner
ABC. It also marked the final season of NBA broadcasts on the
USA Network.
Spalding replaced
Wilson as manufacturer of the official NBA game ball, a relationship that continued until 2021.
It was the final season for eventual Hall of Famers
Tiny Archibald,
Elvin Hayes and
Bob Lanier. Another eventual Hall of Famer
David Thompson unexpectedly retired due to his injury from an accident.
All five teams in the Atlantic Division made the Playoffs, the first such occurrence for any division.
Teams in bold advanced to the next round. The numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's seeding in its conference, and the numbers to the right indicate the number of games the team won in that round. The division champions are marked by an asterisk.
Home court advantage does not necessarily belong to the higher-seeded team, but instead the team with the better regular season record; teams enjoying the home advantage are shown in italics.