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2011–12 NBA season

66th NBA season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 2011–12 NBA season was the 66th season of the National Basketball Association (NBA). Due to the lockout, the regular season was reduced to 66 games for each team, and began on December 25, 2011, coinciding with Christmas Day. The 2012 NBA All-Star Game was played on February 26, 2012, at Amway Center in Orlando, Florida. The regular season ended on April 26, 2012. The playoffs then began on April 28, and ended on June 21 with the Miami Heat defeating the Oklahoma City Thunder in the 2012 NBA Finals.

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Transactions

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Free agency

Free agency started on December 9, 2011.[1]

Coaching changes

Off-season

In-season

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2011 NBA lockout

The lockout was the fourth work stoppage in the history of the NBA. It began at UTC (12:01 am EDT) on July 1, 2011. The main issues dividing the owners and the players were revenue sharing and the structure of the salary cap. During the lockout, teams could not trade, sign or contact players and players couldn't access NBA team facilities, trainers, or staff members. All preseason games (scheduled to begin October 9) and the first six weeks of the regular season (scheduled to begin November 1, through December 15) were canceled.[19][20] Some players signed contracts to play in other countries, and most had the option to return to the NBA as soon as the lockout ended. On November 26, 2011, after 15 hours of talks, a tentative deal was reached; once officially ratified, the NBA started a revised 2011–12 season.[1] Owners allowed players to have voluntary workouts at team sites starting December 1. On December 8, 2011, the lockout ended when the owners and players ratified a new CBA agreement.[21]

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Preseason

Training camp began on December 9. A revised two-game preseason schedule took place.[22]

Regular season

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A revised 66-game regular season began on December 25, 2011, with five Christmas Day games, two more than the original schedule.[23] The league built a new schedule from scratch based on available arena dates. In October, the league allowed arenas in Los Angeles and Chicago to reassign NBA dates for other events. The number of games between conferences was affected as was the case in the 1999 lockout, when each team played only five or six interconference games in a 50-game schedule. Normally, each team plays teams in the other conference twice each.[24] Teams played 48 conference games and 18 non-conference games in a 66-game schedule, compared to 52 conference games and 30 non-conference games in a normal 82-game season.[25] Teams played on average two more games per month and also were required to play three-consecutive games at least once in the season. In total, the league had 42 sets of back-to-back-to-back games throughout the season, with 11 teams playing two such sets. The exception was the then champion Dallas Mavericks, who never had a set of 3 consecutive back to backs.[26][27][28] The three-game set, or "triple", also occurred during the shortened 1998–99 season, which featured 64 triples and sloppier play due to tired players.[26][27] Before that, the last occurrence was two decades earlier.[27] On 29 occasions during the season, teams played a stretch of five games in six days.[28] With fewer off days during the season, the level of play was lower due to fatigue, and some older players rested to avoid burnout and recuperate from injuries.[29] When the San Antonio Spurs rested Tim Duncan for a game in March at the end of a back-to-back-to-back, coach Gregg Popovich submitted the description of Duncan's injury as "Old".[30]

Standings

By division

Eastern Conference
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Western Conference
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By conference

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Notes

  • z – Clinched home court advantage for the entire playoffs
  • c – Clinched home court advantage for the conference playoffs
  • x – Clinched playoff spot
  • y – Clinched division title

Tiebreakers

  • Chicago clinched the #1 overall seed over San Antonio based on head-to-head record (1–0).
Western Conference
  • The Los Angeles Lakers clinched #3 seed over Memphis upon winning the Pacific Division.
  • Dallas clinched #7 seed over Utah based on head-to-head record (3–1).
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Playoffs

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The 2012 NBA playoffs began on April 28, and concluded on June 21, 2012, when the Miami Heat defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder.

The Chicago Bulls were eliminated after losing Derrick Rose and Joakim Noah to injuries, and the New York Knicks lost to the Miami Heat while losing Baron Davis and Iman Shumpert to knee injuries. The Heat were not immune, losing Chris Bosh for most of the playoffs en route to their championship. Commissioner David Stern initially said there was no connection between the injuries and the 66-game schedule compressed into 124 days; however, he backed off those comments a week later, saying more research was needed.

This season also marked the final time that Kobe Bryant appeared in the playoffs, as an Achilles injury the following season prevented him from joining the Lakers for the 2013 first round.

[31][32]

Bracket

First Round Conference Semifinals Conference Finals NBA Finals
            
E1 Chicago* 2
E8 Philadelphia 4
E8 Philadelphia 3
E4 Boston* 4
E4 Boston* 4
E5 Atlanta 2
E4 Boston* 3
Eastern Conference
E2 Miami* 4
E3 Indiana 4
E6 Orlando 1
E3 Indiana 2
E2 Miami* 4
E2 Miami* 4
E7 New York 1
E2 Miami* 4
W2 Oklahoma City* 1
W1 San Antonio* 4
W8 Utah 0
W1 San Antonio* 4
W5 LA Clippers 0
W4 Memphis 3
W5 LA Clippers 4
W1 San Antonio* 2
Western Conference
W2 Oklahoma City* 4
W3 LA Lakers* 4
W6 Denver 3
W3 LA Lakers* 1
W2 Oklahoma City* 4
W2 Oklahoma City* 4
W7 Dallas 0
  • * Division winner
  • Bold Series winner
  • Italic Team with home-court advantage
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Statistics leaders

Individual statistic leaders

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Individual game highs

Team statistic leaders

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Notable occurrences

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Milestones and records

Individual

Team

  • April 26: NBA Record: Charlotte Bobcats set the record for worst winning percentage in a season at 0.106 (7–59), surpassing the record previously held by the 1972–73 Philadelphia 76ers. In doing so, they also set a record for worst home winning percentage at 0.121 (4–29), beating out the record previously held by the 1947–48 Providence Steamrollers.
  • April 26: NBA Record: San Antonio Spurs finish the season with a 50–16 record, in doing so they won at least 50 games for the 13th straight season.
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Awards

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Yearly awards

Players of the week

The following players were named the Eastern and Western Conference Players of the Week.

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Players of the month

The following players were named the Eastern and Western Conference Players of the Month.

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Rookies of the month

The following players were named the Eastern and Western Conference Rookies of the Month.

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Coaches of the month

The following coaches were named the Eastern and Western Conference Coaches of the Month.

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Community Assist Award

The following players won the Community Assist Award.

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See also

References

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