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词条 1999 NBA Finals
释义

  1. Background

     San Antonio Spurs  New York Knicks 

  2. Result

     Road to the Finals  Regular season series 

  3. 1999 NBA Finals rosters

     San Antonio Spurs  New York Knicks 

  4. Series summary

  5. Player statistics

  6. Aftermath

  7. See also

  8. External links

{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2014}}{{NBA Finals summary
| image = 1999NBAFinals.png
| league = NBA
| year = 1999
| runnerup = New York Knicks
| runnerup_coach = Jeff Van Gundy
| runnerup_games = 1
| champion = San Antonio Spurs
| champion_coach = Gregg Popovich
| champion_games = 4
| date = June 16–25
| MVP = Tim Duncan
(San Antonio Spurs)
| television = NBC (U.S.)
| announcers = Bob Costas and Doug Collins
| HOFers = Spurs:
David Robinson (2009)
Knicks:
Patrick Ewing (2008)
Officials:
Dick Bavetta (2015)
| radio_network = ESPN
| radio_announcers = Brent Musburger and Jack Ramsay
| referees_1 = Bennett Salvatore, Hugh Evans, Steve Javie
| referees_2 = Dan Crawford, Joe Crawford, Jess Kersey
| referees_3 = Dick Bavetta, Hue Hollins, Ronnie Nunn
| referees_4 = Hugh Evans, Ron Garretson, Mike Mathis
| referees_5 = Joe Crawford, Steve Javie, Bennett Salvatore
| ECF result = Knicks defeat Pacers, 4–2
| WCF result = Spurs defeat Trail Blazers, 4–0
}}

The 1999 NBA Finals was the championship round of the shortened 1998–99 NBA season or the 1999 season. The Western Conference champion San Antonio Spurs took on the Eastern Conference champion New York Knicks for the title, with the Spurs holding home court advantage. The series was played under a best-of-seven format, with the first team to collect four game victories winning the series. The Spurs defeated the Knicks 4 games to 1 to win the championship. {{as of|2018}}, this is the last NBA Finals where neither team scored 100 or more points in any game during the series.

Will Lyman narrated the season-ending documentary Go Spurs Go! for NBA Entertainment.

Background

The 1999 NBA season was shortened due to a labor dispute that led to a lockout, canceling the first 3 months of the season, technically making this the 1999 NBA season and Finals (as all games were played in the year 1999). The NBA schedule consisted of 50 regular season games (61% of regular 82 games), and a normal playoff schedule; many teams never played each other.

San Antonio Spurs

This was the second year of the "Twin Towers" pairing of David Robinson and second year star forward Tim Duncan, who switched from his natural center position in college to power forward to play alongside Robinson in San Antonio; the two had been teammates since the Spurs drafted Duncan with the first overall pick in the 1997 NBA Draft- a pick they earned through the draft lottery, due to a 62-loss 1996–97 season that saw Robinson suffer an injury very early in the season and the team collapse from there. As a result of the shaky start, veteran coach Bob Hill was fired and replaced by then-general manager Gregg Popovich. In the first season of the Duncan/Robinson tandem the Spurs won 56 games but were eliminated by the Utah Jazz in the second round of the playoffs. The following year, led by Robinson, Duncan, Sean Elliott, and Avery Johnson, the Spurs recovered from a 6-8 start to the season to win 31 of their last 36 games and qualify as the top seed in the Western Conference, as well as the league's best record.

After defeating the Minnesota Timberwolves in four games, San Antonio recorded back-to-back sweeps in the second round and conference finals, defeating the Los Angeles Lakers and Portland Trail Blazers. The victory over Portland gave the Spurs their first ever trip to the NBA Finals.

New York Knicks

The Knicks had a harder time getting to the playoffs than the Spurs did. Toward the end of the season, with the team teetering on the brink of making the playoffs, rumors had begun to spread in the New York media that head coach Jeff Van Gundy would lose his job before the end of the season if the team did not make the playoffs. Instead, New York fired general manager Ernie Grunfeld and allowed Van Gundy to lead the team to the playoffs, with the team barely qualifying as the #8 seed. They would face the Miami Heat, the top seed, in the first round.

Led by an injured Patrick Ewing and relying on contributions from Larry Johnson, Latrell Sprewell, and Allan Houston, as well as a newly acquired Marcus Camby, the Knicks were able to keep pace with the Heat and after Houston hit a shot with 0.8 seconds remaining in Game 5 of that series, the Knicks were victorious and became the second team in NBA history after the Denver Nuggets to win a playoff series as the #8 seed. The Nuggets were led by Dikembe Mutombo in that series, a center who now was playing for the Atlanta Hawks, the Knicks' next opponent. Although the center from Zaire guaranteed a victory, the Knicks won in a four-game sweep to set up a matchup with the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference Finals.

Ewing could not continue due to an injury and was lost for the series after the first two games. In the third game, with 11.9 seconds left and the Knicks trailing 91–88, Johnson looked to attempt a three-point shot but was unable to shake the defender. He continued moving, however, and got off the shot while being fouled. He made the basket and converted the subsequent free-throw for a game-winning four-point play and gave his team a 2–1 lead in the series. In Game 6, however, Johnson suffered a knee injury and although the Knicks rallied around him to get the victory and the conference championship, it would prove costly as his playing time was limited in the Finals.

Result

The Spurs won the series 4 games to 1. Spurs forward Tim Duncan was named the Most Valuable Player of the finals. On June 25 with 47 seconds to go in Game 5, Avery Johnson hit the game-winner. Johnson's shot was followed by a Latrell Sprewell miss that would have sent the series back to San Antonio.

This was the first of San Antonio's five NBA Championships, but they would not return to the Finals until 2003. New York has yet to return to the Finals. No #8 seed has advanced to the NBA Finals or as far as the Conference Finals since, but there have been other instances of #8 seeds defeating #1 seeds in the playoffs: in 2007 the Golden State Warriors defeated the Dallas Mavericks; in 2011 the Memphis Grizzlies defeated the Spurs; and in 2012 the Philadelphia 76ers defeated the Chicago Bulls.

The Spurs would also be the first champions since 1986 to not go on to repeat as champions. From 1987 to 1998 every champion either repeated or three-peated.

As of the 2014 NBA Finals, June 25 is the latest in the calendar that any NBA Finals game has ever been played. Had a Game 7 been required it would have been played on Tuesday, June 29.

Road to the Finals

{{Main|1999 NBA Playoffs}}
San Antonio Spurs (Western Conference champion)New York Knicks (Eastern Conference champion)
{{1998–99 NBA West standings|team=SAS}}1st seed in the West, best league recordRegular season{{1998–99 NBA East standings|team=NYK}}8th seed in the East, 14th best league record
Defeated the (8) Minnesota Timberwolves, 3–1First roundDefeated the (1) Miami Heat, 3–2
Defeated the (4) Los Angeles Lakers, 4–0Conference SemifinalsDefeated the (4) Atlanta Hawks, 4–0
Defeated the (2) Portland Trail Blazers, 4–0Conference FinalsDefeated the (2) Indiana Pacers, 4–2

Regular season series

The Knicks and Spurs did not meet in the regular season.

1999 NBA Finals rosters

San Antonio Spurs

1999 San Antonio Spurs Finals roster
Players Coaches
{{player2 | num = 33 | first = Antonio | last = Daniels | pos = PG | ft = 6 | in = 4 | lbs = 205 | college = Bowling Green | nat = USA }}{{player2 | num = 21 | first = Tim | last = Duncan | pos = PF | ft = 6 | in = 11 | lbs = 250 | college = Wake Forest | nat = VIR }}{{player2 | num = 17 | first = Mario | last = Elie | pos = SG | ft = 6 | in = 5 | lbs = 210 | college = American International | nat = USA }}{{player2 | num = 32 | first = Sean | last = Elliott | pos = SF | ft = 6 | in = 8 | lbs = 205 | college = Arizona | nat = USA }}{{player2 | num = 10 | first = Andrew | last = Gaze | pos = SG | ft = 6 | in = 7 | lbs = 205 | college = Seton Hall | nat = AUS }}{{player2 | num = 2 | first = Jaren | last = Jackson | pos = SG | ft = 6 | in = 4 | lbs = 190 | college = Georgetown | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 6 | first = Avery | last = Johnson | pos = PG | ft = 5 | in = 10 | lbs = 175 | college = Southern | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 4 | first = Steve | last = Kerr | pos = PG | ft = 6 | in = 3 | lbs = 175 | college = Arizona | nat = USA }}{{player2 | num = 25 | first = Jerome | last = Kersey | pos = SF | ft = 6 | in = 7 | lbs = 215 | college = Longwood | nat = USA }}{{player2 | num = 54 | first = Gerard | last = King | pos = PF | ft = 6 | in = 9 | lbs = 230 | college = Nicholls State| nat = USA }}{{player2 | num = 41 | first = Will | last = Perdue | pos = C | ft = 7 | in = 0 | lbs = 240 | college = Vanderbilt University | nat = USA }}{{player2 | num = 50 | first = David | last = Robinson | dab = basketball | pos = C | ft = 7 | in = 1 | lbs = 235 | college = Navy | nat = USA }}{{player2 | num = 31 | first = Malik | last = Rose | pos = PF | ft = 6 | in = 7 | lbs = 250 | college = Drexel | nat = USA }}{{player2 | num = 11 | first = Brandon | last = Williams | dab = basketball | pos = SG | ft = 6 | in = 6 | lbs = 215 | college = Davidson | nat = USA }}{{NBA roster footer
Pos. # Nat. Name Ht. Wt. From
head_coach =
  • {{player||USA|Gregg Popovich}}
roster_url = https://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/SAS/1999.html
}}

New York Knicks

1999 New York Knicks Finals roster
Players Coaches
{{player2 | num = 9 | first = Rick | last = Brunson | pos = PG | ft = 6 | in = 4 | lbs = 190 | college = Temple | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 23 | first = Marcus | last = Camby | pos = C | ft = 6 | in = 11 | lbs = 220 | college = Massachusetts | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 1 | first = Chris | last = Childs | dab = basketball | pos = PG | ft = 6 | in = 3 | lbs = 195 | college = Boise State | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 4 | first = Ben | last = Davis | dab = basketball | pos = PF | ft = 6 | in = 9 | lbs = 240 | college = Arizona | nat = USA }}{{player2 | num = 14 | first = Chris | last = Dudley | pos = C | ft = 6 | in = 11 | lbs = 235 | college = Yale | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 33 | first = Patrick | last = Ewing | pos = C | ft = 7 | in = 0 | lbs = 240 | college = Georgetown | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 20 | first = Allan | last = Houston | pos = SG | ft = 6 | in = 6 | lbs = 220 | college = Tennessee | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 2 | first = Larry | last = Johnson | dab = basketball, born 1969 | pos = PF | ft = 6 | in = 6 | lbs = 250 | college = UNLV | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 8 | first = Latrell | last = Sprewell | pos = SF | ft = 6 | in = 5 | lbs = 190 | college = Alabama | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 40 | first = Kurt | last = Thomas | dab = basketball |pos = PF | ft = 6 | in = 9 | lbs = 230 | college = TCU | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 21 | first = Charlie | last = Ward | pos = PG | ft = 6 | in = 2 | lbs = 190 | college = Florida State | nat = USA}}{{player2 | num = 32 | first = Herb | last = Williams | pos = C | ft = 6 | in = 10 | lbs = 242 | college = Ohio State | nat = USA }}{{player2 | num = 25 | first = David | last = Wingate | dab = basketball | pos = SG | ft = 6 | in = 5 | lbs = 185 | college = Georgetown | nat = USA}}{{NBA roster footer
Pos. # Nat. Name Ht. Wt. From
head_coach =
  • Jeff Van Gundy

}}

Series summary

Game Date Home Team Result Road Team
Game 1 Wednesday, June 16 San Antonio Spurs 89–77 (1–0) New York Knicks
Game 2 Friday, June 18 San Antonio Spurs 80–67 (2–0) New York Knicks
Game 3 Monday, June 21 New York Knicks 89–81 (1–2) San Antonio Spurs
Game 4 Wednesday, June 23 New York Knicks 89–96 (1–3) San Antonio Spurs
Game 5 Friday, June 25 New York Knicks 77–78 (1–4) San Antonio Spurs

The Finals were played using a 2–3–2 site format, where the first two and last two games are held at the team with home court advantage. The NBA, after experimenting in the early years, restored this original format for the Finals between 1985–2013. Since the 2013-2014 season, the Finals returned to a 2–2–1–1–1 site format.

{{Basketballbox|bg=#eee |date=June 16 |time= |place=Alamodome, San Antonio, Texas |TV=NBC
score1=77San Antonio Spurs>score2=89report=[https://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/199906160SAS.html Boxscores]Q2=10–24 |Q3=26–26 |Q4=14–18points2=Tim Duncan 33rebounds2=Tim Duncan 13assist2=Avery Johnson 8attendance=39,514referee=
  • Hugh Evans
  • Steve Javie
  • Bennett Salvatore
series=San Antonio led the series, 1–0
}}{{Basketballbox|bg=#fff |date=June 18 |time= |place=Alamodome, San Antonio, Texas |TV=NBC
score1=67San Antonio Spurs>score2=80report=[https://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/199906180SAS.html Boxscores]Q2=19–19 |Q3=15–17 |Q4=18–24points2=Tim Duncan 25rebounds2=Tim Duncan 15assist2=Avery Johnson 5attendance=39,554referee=
  • Dan Crawford
  • Joe Crawford
  • Jess Kersey
series=San Antonio led the series, 2–0
}}{{Basketballbox|bg=#eee |date=June 21 |time= |place=Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York |TV=NBC
score1=81New York Knicks>score2=89report=[https://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/199906210NYK.html Boxscores]Q2=25–17 |Q3=16–16 |Q4=19–24points2=Allan Houston 34rebounds2=Houston, Johnson 5assist2=Latrell Sprewell 5attendance=19,763referee=
  • Dick Bavetta
  • Hue Hollins
  • Ronnie Nunn
series=San Antonio led the series, 2–1
}}{{Basketballbox|bg=#fff |date=June 23 |time= |place=Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York |TV=NBC
San Antonio Spurs>score1=96score2=89report=[https://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/199906230NYK.html Boxscores]Q2=23–17 |Q3=22–17 |Q4=24–26points2=Latrell Sprewell 26rebounds2=Marcus Camby 13assist2=Charlie Ward 8attendance=19,763referee=
  • Hugh Evans
  • Ron Garretson
  • Mike Mathis
series=San Antonio led the series, 3–1
}}{{Basketballbox|bg=#eee |date=June 25 |time= |place=Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York |TV=NBC
San Antonio Spurs>score1=78score2=77report=[https://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/199906250NYK.html Boxscores]Q2=20–15 |Q3=19–20 |Q4=19–19points2=Latrell Sprewell 35rebounds2=Latrell Sprewell 10assist2=Allan Houston 5attendance=19,763referee=
  • Joe Crawford
  • Steve Javie
  • Bennett Salvatore
series=San Antonio won the NBA Finals, 4–1
}}

Player statistics

{{NBA roster statistics legend}}
San Antonio Spurs
{{NBA roster statistics start|team=San Antonio Spurs}}
{{sortname|Antonio|Daniels}} 4 0 6.0 .800 1.000 .000 0.5 1.0 0.3 0.0 2.5
{{sortname|Tim|Duncan}} 5 5 45.8 .537 .000 .795 14.0 2.4 1.0 2.2 27.4
{{sortname|Mario|Elie}} 5 5 35.0 .447 .308 .870 4.0 2.6 1.2 0.0 11.6
{{sortname|Sean|Elliott}} 5 5 36.2 .333 .278 .636 3.0 3.0 0.8 0.2 8.0
{{sortname|Jaren|Jackson}} 5 0 19.2 .324 .375 .000 1.4 1.0 1.0 0.0 6.6
{{sortname|Avery|Johnson}} 5 5 39.2 .500 .000 .600 2.6 7.2 0.6 0.0 9.2
{{sortname|Steve|Kerr}} 5 0 8.8 .400 .500 .000 1.0 0.4 0.0 0.0 1.8
{{sortname|Jerome|Kersey}} 2 0 2.0 1.000 .000 .000 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.0
{{sortname|Gerard|King}} 2 0 1.0 .000 .000 .000 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
{{sortname|David|Robinson|dab=basketball}} 5 5 37.0 .424 .000 .688 11.8 2.4 1.0 3.0 16.6
{{sortname|Malik|Rose}} 5 0 12.8 .200 .000 .500 2.4 0.4 0.6 0.4 1.2{{s-end}}
New York Knicks
{{NBA roster statistics start|team=New York Knicks}}
{{sortname|Rick|Brunson}} 1 0 1.0 .001 .000 .000 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
{{sortname|Marcus|Camby}} 5 3 27.0 .500 .000 .750 7.8 0.2 0.6 2.0 9.6
{{sortname|Chris|Childs|dab=basketball}} 5 0 21.0 .227 .200 .500 1.2 2.2 0.4 0.0 2.4
{{sortname|Chris|Dudley}} 5 2 15.6 .250 .000 .333 3.8 0.2 0.2 0.6 1.2
{{sortname|Allan|Houston}} 5 5 44.4 .427 .167 .923 3.2 3.4 0.4 0.0 21.6
{{sortname|Larry|Johnson|dab=basketball, born 1969}} 5 5 37.0 .286 .111 .615 4.8 1.4 1.2 0.2 7.6
{{sortname|Latrell|Sprewell}} 5 5 44.2 .410 .286 .842 6.6 2.6 1.4 0.2 26.0
{{sortname|Kurt|Thomas|dab=basketball}} 5 0 21.0 .344 .000 .600 7.6 0.4 1.2 0.0 5.6
{{sortname|Charlie|Ward}} 5 5 29.0 .462 .333 .500 3.2 3.6 2.6 0.4 5.8
{{sortname|Herb|Williams}} 2 0 1.5 .000 .000 .000 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0{{s-end}}

Aftermath

The Spurs would become the first defending champion since the 1985–86 Celtics to not win consecutive championships. They won 53 games that season, but were severely handicapped by Sean Elliott's early season kidney transplant, and Tim Duncan's late-season knee injury. The Spurs were eliminated in the first round of the 2000 NBA Playoffs by the Phoenix Suns. The Spurs would also win four more NBA titles in 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2014 and appear in the 2013 NBA Finals, with Duncan and head coach Gregg Popovich the only members of the team to appear in all of the Spurs' Finals appearances.

{{As of|2018|05|alt=As of the 2017–18 season}}, the series remains the Knicks' last NBA Finals appearance. The next season, the Knicks won fifty games but fell to the Indiana Pacers in six games in the Eastern Conference Finals. After that season, the Patrick Ewing era came to an end when Ewing was traded to the SuperSonics. Over the fifteen ensuing post-Ewing seasons, the Knicks have been among the least successful NBA franchises, with only three winning seasons and one playoff series win.

See also

  • 1999 NBA Playoffs

External links

  • NBA History
  • {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/19991012152809/http://nba.com/finals99/index.html |date=October 12, 1999 |title=Official Website on NBA.com }}
{{NBA Finals}}{{San Antonio Spurs 1998–99 NBA champions}}{{San Antonio Spurs}}{{New York Knicks}}{{1998–99 NBA season by team}}{{NBA on NBC}}

10 : National Basketball Association Finals|1998–99 NBA season|New York Knicks games|San Antonio Spurs games|1999 in sports in New York City|1999 in sports in Texas|20th century in San Antonio|June 1999 sports events|Sports competitions in New York City|Sports competitions in San Antonio

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