The 1996 NBA lockout was the second
lockout of four in the
history of the NBA. It took place on July 10, 1996. The lockout was imposed after the league and the players union could not reach an agreement involving $50 million in profit sharing from television revenue. The league requested 50 percent of the profits be applied toward player salaries while the union pushed for a larger share. After a few hours of talks, the league agreed to allocate an additional $14 million per season in television revenue toward the salary cap during the last four years of the six-year
collective bargaining agreement. The agreement ending the lockout was announced a few hours after the lockout began.[1][2][3]
The
Chicago Bulls missed back to back 70 win seasons, going 69–13, tying the second best all-time record (with the
1971–72 Los Angeles Lakers season). With four games to play, the Bulls' record stood at 68–10, only needing a 2–2 split; however, they went 1–3 in those games. In the final game of the regular season, the Bulls lost to the Knicks 103–101 as Scottie Pippen missed a three-pointer that would have given the Bulls back to back 70 win seasons. This loss also prevented the Bulls from tying the best home record of 40–1, set by
the 1985–86 Boston Celtics, finishing 39–2 at the
United Center.
The
Los Angeles Lakers signed free-agent center
Shaquille O'Neal. Along with the addition of
Kobe Bryant, the duo would become a fixture on the team for eight years, winning three championships together. However, a
media created feud would eventually lead to O'Neal being traded to Miami in 2004.
Allen Iverson set a rookie record scoring with forty points or more in five games.
Dennis Rodman was suspended for 11 games after kicking a cameraman in a road game against the
Minnesota Timberwolves after tripping over him.
In the last game of the regular season for both teams, the
Washington Bullets defeated the
Cleveland Cavaliers to obtain the eighth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. Had Cleveland won, the Cavaliers would have qualified instead. As for the Bullets, this was their final playoff appearance until 2005 where the team was renamed the "Wizards". It was the last time until the
2017-18 NBA season a regular-season game has served as a direct play-in game to the postseason.
Following a last-second three-point shot by
John Stockton in Game 6 of the Western Conference Finals, the
Utah Jazz made their first ever NBA Finals appearance.
The
rivalry between the New York Knicks and the Miami Heat got underway in Game 5 of the Conference Semifinals with a brawl at
Miami Arena. In that brawl,
P. J. Brown flipped
Charlie Ward on the hardwood, inciting a bench brawl between the two. As a result, Brown was handed a two-game suspension, while Ward was suspended for Game 6. Meanwhile, as a result of leaving the bench during the brawl,
Patrick Ewing and
Allan Houston were suspended for Game 6, while
Larry Johnson and
John Starks were suspended for Game 7. The Heat eventually won the series in seven games.
In Game 4 of the Western Conference Semifinals against the Lakers,
Karl Malone hit all 18 of his free-throw attempts, setting a playoff record for most attempts without a miss, since broken by
Paul Pierce and
Dirk Nowitzki.
After seven seasons of futility, the
Minnesota Timberwolves finally made a postseason appearance, becoming the last of the late 1980s expansion teams to do so. In addition, their expansion counterparts (Miami, Orlando, and Charlotte) also made the playoffs. It would be seven years, however, before they could win their first playoff series.
The season marked the fiftieth anniversary of the NBA. To commemorate the occasion, some NBA teams wore
throwback uniforms they will not return again until the
2002–03 season in which Jordan's last season in the NBA, the NBA logo was decorated in gold for all uniforms, and the 50th anniversary logo patch was featured in the warmups. The 'NBA 50' logo also adorned all 29 NBA courts for the first month of the season, decorated in the respective team colors. In addition, the NBA also unveiled the
50 Greatest Players in NBA History during halftime of the 1997 NBA All-Star Game. One team, the
Toronto Raptors, honored the
Toronto HuskiesBAA team by wearing the Huskies' throwback uniforms, and even played the
New York Knicks at the
SkyDome on the 50th anniversary of the first ever BAA/NBA game on November 1, 1996.
The Boston Celtics not only set a record for the worst winning percentage and number of wins in franchise history, but also become the only NBA team to win only once in 24 games against other teams in its division, in its last game therein versus the Philadelphia 76ers.[4] Several other teams, previously
the 1970–71 Cleveland Cavaliers and latterly
the 2005–06 Houston Rockets, the
2006–07 Milwaukee Bucks (ten years later, suffered to the same franchise worst record finished with 24–58 record including a franchise–record 18–game losing streak before both
Kevin Garnett and
Ray Allen arrived in Boston along with
Paul Pierce and won the championship in 2008 against the
Los Angeles Lakers.), the
2008–09 Washington Wizards, the
2010–11 Minnesota Timberwolves (Shaquille O'Neal's last season before retiring in June 2011), the
2017–18 Brooklyn Nets (coincidentally, only one win against the same
Philadelphia 76ers team and also
Kyrie Irving's first of two seasons spent with the Celtics before leaving the team during the 2019 offseason free agency.), the
2020–21 Detroit Pistons (As part of the shortening 72 game schedule due to
COVID-19 pandemic started the regular season in late December 2020 until the end of the season in mid–May 2021) and the
2021–22 Portland Trail Blazers (As part of the
NBA 75th Anniversary season), won only one divisional game in a shorter schedule.
For the first time in NBA history, multiple teams – the above-mentioned Celtics and the second-year Vancouver Grizzlies – finished with a winning percentage below .200.[5] This was to be repeated in 1997–98 (
the Nuggets and
the Raptors) and again during 1998–99 (
the Grizzlies again and
the Los Angeles Clippers) but has never occurred in any season since 1999–2000.
After the
San Antonio Spurs got off to a poor 3–15 start, general manager
Gregg Popovich fired head coach
Bob Hill. Popovich immediately took over as the head coach, beginning (as of the
2023–24 season) the NBA's longest active coaching tenure. The Spurs, after finishing the previous season with 59 victories, plunged to a 20–62 record while dealing with a myriad of injuries, especially to
David Robinson and
Sean Elliott. The 39-game decline was the worst regular-season turnaround in NBA history, surpassed 14 seasons later by the
Cleveland Cavaliers, who lost 42 more games than the previous year.
The greatest comeback in National Basketball Association play occurred on November 27, 1996, when the Utah Jazz, down by 36 points to the Denver Nuggets late in the second quarter (70–34), overcame this deficit to win 107–103.
The
Detroit Pistons changed their logo and uniforms, replacing their primary blue and red colors with teal with side panels to their jerseys and shorts.
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.