Greatest of All-Time: The 1989 Seattle Supersonics

The 1989 Sonics would be the last team Bernie Bickerstaff would take to the playoffs before being fired at the end of the 1989-1990 season. The '89 Sonics won 47 games, which was good enough for a fourth seed in the Western Conference.

These Sonics brought to the table a formidable offense, ranking in the top ten of points-scored-per-game (112.1) and offensive rating.

In the 1988 draft the Sonics selected PG Gary Grant from Michigan in the first round and combo guard Corey Gaines from Loyola Marymount in the second round. Before the season started, Grant was traded to the Los Angeles Clippers in a package that would bring big man Michael Cage to the Sonics. Gaines would also not play for the Sonics; after being placed on waivers, he was acquired by the New Jersey Nets and would go on to play in the NBA for five seasons. Most recently, Gaines was the head coach of the WNBA's Phoenix Mercury, a position he held from 2008 to 2013.

So much for that draft. The Sonics did, however, acquire guard Avery Johnson from the Palm Beach Stingrays of the United States Basketball League (USBL). Johnson went undrafted in the 1988 draft after a college career with stops at New Mexico Junior College, Cameron, and Southern. The "Little General" would play for the Sonics from 1988-1990, and went on to enjoy a successful 16-year NBA career as a pass-first, defensive point guard. He won the 1999 NBA title with the San Antonio Spurs and had his number 6 jersey retired by them as well. Johnson went into coaching afterwards and became the fastest coach to reach 150 wins while coaching the Dallas Mavericks. He led the Mavericks to the 2006 NBA Finals (where they lost to the Miami Heat) and most recently coached the Brooklyn Nets in 2012.

This 1989 Sonics team would be led by the veterans already in place, with guys like Dale Ellis, Xavier McDaniel, and newly acquired big man Michael Cage leading the charge. Ellis had arguably the best year of his career during the 1988-89 season and was the only Sonic voted to appear in the All-Star Game that season. He averaged a career-high in points-per-game that season as well, with 27.5. Ellis also made his way onto the All-NBA third team that year.

Another Sonic that had a great year was a young point guard named Nate McMillan, who averaged 9.3 assists-per-game that season, a career-high for him and good enough to rank in the top five among the league leaders in that stat.

In the playoffs, the Sonics would face the Houston Rockets in the first round and beat Hakeem Olajuwon and company 3-1 in a best-of-five series.

In the Western Conference Semi-Finals, the Sonics would once again run into the Showtime Lakers, the same team that had swept them two seasons ago in the conference finals. It was like déjà vu as the Sonics were again swept by Magic Johnson and the Lakers in four games, bringing an end to a decade of mixed success for the Sonics.

Here's how the roster and stats shaped out for this Sonics team:

ROSTER

No. Player Pos Ht Wt Exp College
42 Greg Ballard SF 6-7 215 10 University of Oregon
44 Michael Cage PF 6-9 224 4 San Diego State University
41 Mike Champion SF 6-10 230 R Gonzaga University
3 Dale Ellis SG 6-7 205 5 University of Tennessee
15 Avery Johnson PG 5-10 175 R Southern University and A&M College
53 Alton Lister C 7-0 240 7 Arizona State University
20 John Lucas PG 6-3 175 12 University of Maryland
34 Xavier McDaniel SF 6-7 205 3 Wichita State University
31 Derrick McKey SF 6-9 205 1 University of Alabama
10 Nate McMillan PG 6-5 195 2 North Carolina State University
23 Olden Polynice C 6-11 220 1 University of Virginia
35 Jerry Reynolds SG 6-8 200 3 Louisiana State University
40 Russ Schoene PF 6-10 210 3 University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
4 Sedale Threatt PG 6-2 175 5 West Virginia University Institute of Technology

STATS

Player G GS MP FG% 3P% FT% TRB AST STL BLK PPG
Dale Ellis 82 82 3190 .501 .478 .816 342 164 108 22 27.5
Xavier McDaniel 82 10 2385 .489 .306 .732 433 134 84 40 20.5
Derrick McKey 82 82 2804 .502 .337 .803 464 219 105 70 15.9
Michael Cage 80 71 2536 .498 .000 .743 765 126 92 52 10.3
Alton Lister 82 82 1806 .499 .000 .646 545 54 28 180 8.0
Sedale Threatt 63 0 1220 .494 .367 .818 117 238 83 4 8.6
Nate McMillan 75 74 2341 .410 .214 .630 388 696 156 42 7.1
Jerry Reynolds 56 0 737 .417 .200 .760 100 62 53 26 7.6
Russ Schoene 69 1 774 .387 .382 .807 165 36 37 24 5.2
John Lucas 74 8 842 .398 .265 .701 79 260 60 1 4.2
Olden Polynice 80 0 835 .506 .000 .593 206 21 37 30 2.9
Avery Johnson 43 0 291 .349 .111 .563 24 73 21 3 1.6
Greg Ballard 2 0 15 .125 .000 1.000 7 0 0 0 3.0
Mike Champion 2 0 4 .000 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0.0

There are some clips of this team on YouTube, but outside of that, I never saw them play. The '89 team sounded like a fun team that scored a lot of points with guys like McMillan, X-Man, Lister, Cage, and Ellis. Did you see this team play? Share your memories, thoughts, and debate which Sonics team was the greatest of all-time in the comment section. And don't forget to vote!

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Comments

Mike Champion-Everett High Alum

About as brief a career as anyone has ever had..4mins

That gif is so awesome. Thanks Kevin!

that's what I'm here to do

Provide awesome GIFs for awesome write ups 😀;-)

is that McKey

dropping the dime?

that is McKey!

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