ROSTER              
No. Player Pos Ht Wt Birth Date Exp College  
40 Willie Anderson G-F 6-7 190 January 8, 1967 7 University of Georgia
13 Doug Christie G-F 6-6 200 May 9, 1970 3 Pepperdine University
55 Acie Earl F-C 6-10 240 June 23, 1970 2 University of Iowa
4 Vincenzo Esposito G 6-3 198 January 3, 1969 R Caserta, Campania
24 Jimmy King G 6-5 210 August 9, 1973 R University of Michigan
44 Martin Lewis F 6-5 210 April 28, 1975 R Seward County CC
9 Tony Massenburg F 6-9 220 July 31, 1967 3 University of Maryland
30 Oliver Miller C 6-9 280 April 6, 1970 3 University of Arkansas
35 Tracy Murray F 6-7 225 July 25, 1971 3 U.C.L.A.
52 Dan O’Sullivan C 6-10 250 March 3, 1968 3 Fordham University
54 Ed Pinckney F 6-9 195 March 27, 1963 10 Villanova University
7 Alvin Robertson G 6-3 185 July 22, 1962 9 University of Arkansas
33 Carlos Rogers C-F 6-11 220 February 6, 1971 1 Tennessee State
22 John Salley F-C 6-11 230 May 16, 1964 9 Georgia Tech
20 Damon Stoudamire G 5-10 171 Sept. 3, 1973 R University of Arizona
3 Zan Tabak C 7-0 245 June 15, 1970 1 Split, Croatia
23 Dwayne Whitfield F 6-9 240 August 21, 1972 R Jackson State University
32 Herb Williams C-F 6-10 242 Feb. 16, 1958 14 Ohio State University
9 Sharone Wright F-C 6-11 260 January 30, 1973 1 Clemson University

Transactions

-May/95: The Raptors ink Vincenzo Esposito, a 6-3 guard from the Italian League club Filodoro Bologna. But Filodoro demanded a high fee for transferring his contract and the NBA initially refused to approve the signing. It is later approved and Esposito is officially unveiled as the first Raptor on Sept. 21.

-June 24/95: In the expansion draft, the Raptors select B.J. Armstrong (Chicago); Tony Massenburg (LA Clippers); Andres Guibert (Minnesota); Keith Jennings (Golden State); Dontonio Wingfield (Seattle); Doug Smith (Dallas); Jerome Kersey (Portland); Zan Tabak (Houston); Willie Anderson (San Antonio); Ed Pinckney (Milwaukee); Acie Earl (Boston); B.J. Tyler (Philadelphia); John Salley (Miami); and Oliver Miller (Detroit). The Raptors select Kersey after Portland agrees to pick up all of Kersey’s $4.4-million salary for next season if Toronto selects him. In October, just before their training camp opens, the Raptors waive Kersey to free up $4.1-million in salary obligations under the cap. Armstrong promptly threatened not to come to Toronto, so he was traded to the Golden State Warriors for Carlos Rogers and the rights to 1995 second-round draft picks Dwayne Whitfield, Martin Lewis and Michael McDonald.

-June 28/95: The NBA Draft is staged at the SkyDome, the first time it is held outside the U.S. It drew a crowd of 21,168. With the seventh overall pick of the draft, the Raptors select Arizona guard Damon Stoudamire, who many never thought should be a top 10 pick. The selection brought a smattering of boos in the SkyDome. Stoudamire, a quick penetrating guard, was thought to be too small to play in the league at 5-10. Raptors vice-president Isiah Thomas “was one of the best point guards to every play and I know I’ll learn a lot from him,” says Stoudamire. “On the defensive end, I might have some problems, but I can work on them and the offence will take care of itself.” Stoudamire dismisses the boos. “It doesn’t make any difference. I’m going to try to make a name for myself. By the time I’m through playing here, these fans will know who Damon Stoudamire is.” In the second round, with the 35th overall pick, Toronto selects Michigan ‘Fab Five’ guard Jimmy King, a 6-5, 210-pounder who averaged 14.7 ppg for the Wolverines.

-July 1/95: Andres Guibert, Keith Jennings, Doug Smith and Dontonio Wingfield become free agents.

-September 18/95: With conclusion of lockout, B.J. Armstrong is traded to the Golden State Warriors for former No. 11 (1994) pick and 6-11 forward Carlos Rogers (Tennessee State), former No. 17 selection 6-10 forward Victor Alexander, as well as the rights to three of the Warriors second-round draft picks in the June entry draft: 6-4 Martin Lewis (from Seward County Community College); Dwayne Whitfield (Jackson State) and Michael McDonald (New Orleans) who is playing in Lyon, France on a one-year contract worth %150,000. The deal was made before the league locked out its players on July 1 but was announced when the lockout is lifted September 18th.

-October 2/95: Sign Alvin Robertson as a free agent.

-October 3/95: Renounce free agent exception rights to Dontonio Wingfield.

-October 4/95: Waive Jerome Kersey. He becomes a free agent.

-October 5/95: Under rookie salary cap, Stoudamire inks a US$4.6-million three-year agreement.

-October 6/95: Training camp opens with 23 invitees, including Ivano Newbill (waived by the Pistons); Dan O’Sullivan; Continental Basketball Association MVP Aaron Swinson; CBA defensive player of the year Mike Bell; former Chicago prep phenom Thomas Hamilton, who was signed as a free agent; Chris Whitney, the CBA’s rookie of the year; 6-8 Kendrick Warren, who toiled in the CBA; Montreal’s Dwight Walton, who’d played previous season in Israel. “I was anxious, not nervous,” said Walton, a veteran of the Canadian national team. “I’ve been waiting for this chance for five years. I’m finally getting my shot to show some people a few things.” Also invited as Ron Vercruyssen, a 6-11 centre from Blythe, Ont. who now lives in Belgium. “This is maybe a bit out of my league,” said Vercruyssen. “There’s a lot of talent out there and I’ve got a lot of things to learn.” Free agent Dontonio Wingfield, who the Raptors selected in the expansion draft, does not attend, with the agent saying he was pursuing a multi-year offer elsewhere. Others invited include Canadian national team veteran Wayne Yearwood. Jimmy King signs multi-year contract. Martin Lewis signs contract.
-October 12/95: Cut Gerrod Abram and Canadian team veteran Wayne Yearwood.

-October 17/95: Release Kendrick Warren and Thomas Hamilton, trimming roster to 18 players.

-October 18/95: Trade Victor Alexander to the Atlanta Hawks for 6-5 guard Harold Miner (chosen 12th in 1992 draft by Miami Heat), a second-round pick in 1996 and cash. The deal is quashed four days later when Alexander fails a physical.

-October 31/95: Sign free agent 6-7 forward Tracie Murray to a one-year deal from the Houston Rockets. Murray, from UCLA, appeared in 54 games with the Portland Trail Blazers and Houston Rockets in 94-95, averaging 4.8 ppg, 1.1 rpg and 10 mpg.

-November 2/95: In a salary cap measure, the Raptors cut Chris Whitney is cut from roster despite averaging 7.9 ppg and 3.1 apg in the backup point guard spot during eight preseason games. Isiah Thomas says “all of us … would say Chris is a guy who probably deserves to be on this team.” Waive two-year NBA veteran Andres Guibert and Dwayne Whitfield, who had arthroscopic surgery October 13th. Place rookie guard Martin Lewis on the suspended list (with pay) for failure to keep himself in good physical condition. Elect to keep B.J. Tyler and his guaranteed US$1.2-million (U.S.) contract despite the fact the deal is worth $6-million over the term of the contract. Tyler hadn’t played during exhibition season because of nerve damage in left leg caused when he fell asleep with an ice pack on it.

-November 3/95: Renounced free agent exception rights to Andres Guibert.

-January 29/96: Waive John Salley. He becomes a free agent.

-February 18/96: Trade Willie Anderson and injured forward Victor Alexander to New York Knicks for 6-6 guard Doug Christie (drafted out of Pepperdine by Seattle in 1992), 6-11 centre Herb Williams (Ohio State) and $700,000 in cash.

-February 22/96: Trade forward Ed Pinckney, Tony Massenburg, a 1996 2nd round draft pick and a 1997 2nd round draft pick to the Philadelphia 76ers for 6-11 centre Sharone Wright (6th overall pick in 1994 draft from Clemson), who has $15.2-million left on a six-year contract.

-February 23/96: Sign Dwayne Whitfield as a free agent. Exercise option buyout on Herb Williams to void the remaining years on his contract. Waive Williams, who becomes a free agent.

-April 9/96: Sign Dan O’Sullivan to a 10-day contract.

-April 18/96. Waive Dan O’Sullivan, who becomes a free agent.

-April 30/96: Oliver Miller exercises early termination contract option to void the remaining seasons on his contract and become free agent.

-Spring/96: Raptors lose small forward Tracy Murray to free agency. They are already committed to their league mandated $18-million salary cap and are limited to offering free agents like Murray and Alvin Robertson a 20% pay increase. Murray was only earning $250,000 and Raptors can only offer him $300,000. He bails.

Standings

Eastern Conference W L W/L% GB PS/G PA/G
Atlantic Division            
Orlando Magic 60 22 .732 104.5 99.0
New York Knicks 47 35 .573 13.0 97.2 94.9
Miami Heat 42 40 .512 18.0 96.5 95.0
Washington Bullets 39 43 .476 21.0 102.5 101.5
Boston Celtics 33 49 .402 27.0 103.6 107.0
New Jersey Nets 30 52 .366 30.0 93.7 97.9
Philadelphia 76ers 18 64 .220 42.0 94.5 104.5
Central Division            
Chicago Bulls 72 10 .878 105.2 92.9
Indiana Pacers 52 30 .634 20.0 99.3 96.1
Cleveland Cavaliers 47 35 .573 25.0 91.1 88.5
Atlanta Hawks 46 36 .561 26.0 98.3 97.1
Detroit Pistons 46 36 .561 26.0 95.4 92.9
Charlotte Hornets 41 41 .500 31.0 102.8 103.4
Milwaukee Bucks 25 57 .305 47.0 95.6 100.9
Toronto Raptors 21 61 .256 51.0 97.5 105.0
Western Conference W L W/L% GB PS/G PA/G
Midwest Division            
San Antonio Spurs 59 23 .720 103.4 97.1
Utah Jazz 55 27 .671 4.0 102.5 95.9
Houston Rockets 48 34 .585 11.0 102.5 100.7
Denver Nuggets 35 47 .427 24.0 97.7 100.4
Minnesota Timberwolves 26 56 .317 33.0 97.9 103.2
Dallas Mavericks 26 56 .317 33.0 102.5 107.5
Vancouver Grizzlies 15 67 .183 44.0 89.8 99.8
Pacific Division            
Seattle Supersonics 64 18 .780 104.5 96.7
Los Angeles Lakers 53 29 .646 11.0 102.9 98.5
Portland Trail Blazers 44 38 .537 20.0 99.3 97.0
Phoenix Suns 41 41 .500 23.0 104.3 104.0
Sacramento Kings 39 43 .476 25.0 99.5 102.3
Golden State Warriors 36 46 .439 28.0 101.6 103.1
Los Angeles Clippers 29 53 .354 35.0 99.4 103.0

Raptors 1995-96 Player Stats at basketballreference.com

Salaries

1 John Salley $2,402,000
2 Oliver Miller $2,372,000
3 Ed Pinckney $1,926,000
4 Victor Alexander $1,595,000
5 Damon Stoudamire $1,345,000
6 Acie Earl $1,040,000
7 Carlos Rogers $930,000
8 B.J. Tyler $845,000
9 Zan Tabak $650,000
10 Tony Massenburg $550,000
11 Vincenzo Esposito $500,000
12 Jimmy King $300,000
13 Tracy Murray $250,000
14 Alvin Robertson $225,000
15 Martin Lewis $200,000

Season wrap

        The Raptors finish 21-61, the third worst record in the league but within game of tying for expansion team record (i.e., 22 by Minnesota in 89-90). Front office squabbling between Isiah Thomas and president Richard Peddie and majority owner Allan Slaight dominates the headlines. Previous expansion teams results: the Dallas Mavericks in 80-81 won 23, the Charlotte Hornets in 88-89 won 20, the Miami Heat in 88-89 won 15, the Orlando Magic in 89-90 won 18 and the Minnesota Timberwolves in 89-90 won 22. Raptors finished third in the league in attendance, averaging 23,179 in the unfriendly confines of the Skydome. The highlight of the season was a home win over Chicago Bulls in late March. The Raptors had 16 sellouts, including 36,000 to see Chicago. Damon Stoudamire was selected NBA rookie of the year and named to the league’s all-rookie first team. Booed at the entry draft, he told the fans “I forgive you” during season finale at SkyDome. He earned 76 of a possible 113 votes by panel of writers and broadcasters to win the award. One day after the season ends, the Raptors turf coach Brendon Malone and replace him with assistant Darrell Walker. Malone is turfed after a series of highly-publicized tiffs with vice-president Isiah Thomas. The discord began as early as the Raptors first training camp, when Thomas cut Chris Whitney over Malone’s objections. Thomas believed Malone overworked certain players and didn’t apparently develop the bench and younger players like Jimmy King, Carlos Rogers, Vincenzo Esposito, Martin Lewis and Dwayne Whitfield. Thomas also thought Malone jeopardized rookie Damon Stoudamire’s career by playing him too much. Late in the season, Stoudamire’s left knee flared up with aggravated tendinitis, an overuse injury. “A coach coaches to win,” Malone said at farewell press conference. Stoudamire said Malone “didn’t respect us.” Months later, NBA veteran Carlos Rogers says he’d asked several times to be traded because “I didn’t want to have anything to do with an organization that had a fool for a coach.”