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1997 NBA draft

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1997 NBA draft
General information
SportBasketball
DateJune 25, 1997
LocationCharlotte Coliseum (Charlotte, North Carolina)
NetworkTNT
Overview
57 total selections in 2 rounds
LeagueNBA
First selectionTim Duncan (San Antonio Spurs)
Hall of Famers
← 1996
1998 →

The 1997 NBA draft took place on June 25, 1997, at Charlotte Coliseum in Charlotte, North Carolina. The Vancouver Grizzlies had the highest probability to win the NBA draft lottery, but since they were an expansion team along with the Toronto Raptors they were not allowed to select first in this draft. Although the Boston Celtics had the second-worst record in the 1996–97 season and the best odds (36 percent) of winning the lottery with two picks, the Spurs lost David Robinson and Sean Elliott to injury early in the season, finished with the third-worst record, and subsequently won the lottery. Leading up to the draft, there was no doubt that Tim Duncan would be selected at No. 1 by the Spurs as he was considered to be far and away the best prospect. After Duncan, the rest of the draft was regarded with some skepticism.[1] The Celtics had the third and sixth picks, selecting Chauncey Billups and Ron Mercer, both of whom were traded in the next two years.

Duncan became the Spurs' franchise player and in a 19-year career spent entirely in San Antonio, he led the Spurs to five NBA championships, winning NBA Finals MVP in three of those campaigns. In addition, Duncan was a two-time NBA MVP, 15-time All-Star, 15-time All-NBA and 15-time All-Defensive team selection. Billups went on to earn five All-Star selections and won Finals MVP honors in 2004 with the Detroit Pistons. The ninth pick, Tracy McGrady, captured two NBA scoring titles and was named to seven All-Star and All-NBA teams.

The Washington Wizards forfeited their 1997 first-round pick in connection with the signing of Juwan Howard. (Washington would have had the 17th pick.) Thus, the draft only had 28 first-round selections and 57 selections overall.

Draft selections

[edit]
BERJAYA
Tim Duncan was selected 1st overall by the San Antonio Spurs.
BERJAYA
Chauncey Billups was selected 3rd overall by the Boston Celtics.
BERJAYA
Tracy McGrady was selected 9th overall by the Toronto Raptors.
BERJAYA
Anthony Parker was selected 9th overall by the New Jersey Nets.
BERJAYA
Stephen Jackson was selected 42nd overall by the Phoenix Suns.
BERJAYA
Mark Blount was selected 54th overall by the Seattle SuperSonics.
PG Point guard SG Shooting guard SF Small forward PF Power forward C Center
^ Denotes player who has been inducted to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
* Denotes player who has been selected for at least one All-Star Game and All-NBA Team
+ Denotes player who has been selected for at least one All-Star Game
# Denotes player who has never appeared in an NBA regular-season or playoff game
~ Denotes player who has been selected as Rookie of the Year
Round Pick Player Position Nationality[n 1] NBA team School/Club team
1 1 Tim Duncan^~ PF/C BERJAYA United States[n 2] San Antonio Spurs Wake Forest (Sr.)
1 2 Keith Van Horn PF BERJAYA United States Philadelphia 76ers (traded to New Jersey) Utah (Sr.)
1 3 Chauncey Billups^ PG BERJAYA United States Boston Celtics Colorado (So.)
1 4 Antonio Daniels PG BERJAYA United States Vancouver Grizzlies Bowling Green (Sr.)
1 5 Tony Battie C/F BERJAYA United States Denver Nuggets Texas Tech (Jr.)
1 6 Ron Mercer SF BERJAYA United States Boston Celtics (from Dallas) Kentucky (So.)
1 7 Tim Thomas SF BERJAYA United States New Jersey Nets (traded to Philadelphia) Villanova (Fr.)
1 8 Adonal Foyle C BERJAYA Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Golden State Warriors Colgate (Jr.)
1 9 Tracy McGrady^ SG/SF BERJAYA United States Toronto Raptors Mt. Zion Christian Academy (Durham, North Carolina)
1 10 Danny Fortson PF BERJAYA United States Milwaukee Bucks (traded to Denver) Cincinnati (Jr.)
1 11 Tariq Abdul-Wahad SF BERJAYA France Sacramento Kings San Jose State (Sr.)
1 12 Austin Croshere PF BERJAYA United States Indiana Pacers Providence (Sr.)
1 13 Derek Anderson SG BERJAYA United States Cleveland Cavaliers Kentucky (Sr.)
1 14 Maurice Taylor PF BERJAYA United States Los Angeles Clippers Michigan (Jr.)
1 15 Kelvin Cato C BERJAYA United States Dallas Mavericks (from Minnesota) Iowa State (Jr.)
1 16 Brevin Knight PG BERJAYA United States Cleveland Cavaliers (from Phoenix) Stanford (Sr.)
1 17 Johnny Taylor PF BERJAYA United States Orlando Magic Chattanooga (Sr.)
1 18 Chris Anstey PF BERJAYA Australia Portland Trail Blazers SE Melbourne Magic (Australia)
1 19 Scot Pollard C BERJAYA United States Detroit Pistons Kansas (Sr.)
1 20 Paul Grant C BERJAYA United States Minnesota Timberwolves (from Charlotte via Milwaukee and Portland) Wisconsin (Sr.)
1 21 Anthony Parker SG BERJAYA United States New Jersey Nets (from L.A. Lakers; traded to Philadelphia) Bradley (Sr.)
1 22 Ed Gray PG/SG BERJAYA United States Atlanta Hawks California (Sr.)
1 23 Bobby Jackson PG BERJAYA United States Seattle SuperSonics Minnesota (Sr.)
1 24 Rodrick Rhodes SG BERJAYA United States Houston Rockets USC (Sr.)
1 25 John Thomas C BERJAYA United States New York Knicks Minnesota (Sr.)
1 26 Charles Smith SG BERJAYA United States Miami Heat New Mexico (Sr.)
1 27 Jacque Vaughn PG BERJAYA United States Utah Jazz Kansas (Sr.)
1 28 Keith Booth SF BERJAYA United States Chicago Bulls Maryland (Sr.)
2 29 Serge Zwikker# C BERJAYA Netherlands Houston Rockets (from Vancouver) North Carolina (Sr.)
2 30 Mark Sanford# SF/PF BERJAYA United States Miami Heat (from Boston) Washington (Jr.)
2 31 Charles O'Bannon PG BERJAYA United States Detroit Pistons (from San Antonio) UCLA (Sr.)
2 32 James Cotton SF BERJAYA United States Denver Nuggets Long Beach State (Sr.)
2 33 Marko Milič PG/SG BERJAYA Slovenia Philadelphia 76ers Smelt Olimpija (Slovenia)
2 34 Bubba Wells SF/PF BERJAYA United States Dallas Mavericks Austin Peay (Sr.)
2 35 Kebu Stewart SF/PF BERJAYA United States Philadelphia 76ers (from New Jersey Nets) Cal State Bakersfield (Sr.)
2 36 James Collins PG/SG BERJAYA United States Philadelphia 76ers(from Toronto) Florida State (Sr.)
2 37 Marc Jackson SF/PF BERJAYA United States Golden State Warriors Temple (Sr.)
2 38 Jerald Honeycutt PF BERJAYA United States Milwaukee Bucks Tulane (Sr.)
2 39 Anthony Johnson PG/SG BERJAYA United States Sacramento Kings College of Charleston (Sr.)
2 40 Ed Elisma# SF BERJAYA United States Seattle SuperSonics(from L.A. Clippers) Georgia Tech (Sr.)
2 41 Jason Lawson C BERJAYA United States Denver Nuggets(from Indiana) Villanova (Sr.)
2 42 Stephen Jackson SG BERJAYA United States Phoenix Suns Butler CC (Fr.)
2 43 Gordon Malone# SF BERJAYA United States Minnesota Timberwolves West Virginia (Sr.)
2 44 Cedric Henderson PF BERJAYA United States Cleveland Cavaliers Memphis (Sr.)
2 45 God Shammgod PG BERJAYA United States Washington Wizards Providence (So.)
2 46 Eric Washington SG BERJAYA United States Orlando Magic(traded to Denver) Alabama (Sr.)
2 47 Alvin Williams PG BERJAYA United States Portland Trail Blazers Villanova (Sr.)
2 48 Predrag Drobnjak C BERJAYA Yugoslavia Washington Wizards (from Charlotte) KK Partizan (Yugoslavia)
2 49 Alain Digbeu# SG BERJAYA France Atlanta Hawks(from Detroit) ASVEL Lyon-Villeurbanne (France)
2 50 Chris Crawford SF BERJAYA United States Atlanta Hawks Marquette (Sr.)
2 51 DeJuan Wheat PG BERJAYA United States Los Angeles Lakers Louisville (Sr.)
2 52 C.J. Bruton# PG/SG BERJAYA Australia Vancouver Grizzlies(from Houston) Indian Hills CC (So.)
2 53 Paul Rogers# C BERJAYA Australia Los Angeles Lakers (from New York) Gonzaga (Sr.)
2 54 Mark Blount C BERJAYA United States Seattle SuperSonics Pittsburgh (So.)
2 55 Ben Pepper# C BERJAYA Australia Boston Celtics (from Miami) Newcastle Falcons (Australia)
2 56 Nate Erdmann# SG BERJAYA United States Utah Jazz Oklahoma (Senior)
2 57 Roberto Dueñas# C BERJAYA Spain Chicago Bulls FC Barcelona (Spain)
  1. ^ Nationality indicates the player's national team or representative nationality. If a player has not competed at the international level, then the nationality indicates the national team which the player is eligible to represent according to FIBA rules.
  2. ^ Tim Duncan is a United States citizen by birth, as are all natives of the U.S. Virgin Islands, he has represented the United States internationally.[2]

Notable undrafted players

[edit]

These players eligible for the 1997 NBA Draft were not selected but played in the NBA.

BERJAYA
Despite going undrafted Pat Burke gained notability through being the NBA's first Irish player.
Player Pos. Nationality School/Club team
Peter Aluma C BERJAYA Nigeria Liberty (Sr.)
Mengke Bateer C BERJAYA China Beijing Ducks (China)
Etdrick Bohannon F BERJAYA United States Auburn Montgomery (Sr.)
Pat Burke C BERJAYA Ireland Auburn (Sr.)
Keith Closs C BERJAYA United States Norwich Neptunes (Atlantic Basketball Association)
Reggie Freeman SG BERJAYA United States Texas (Sr.)
Rubén Garcés PF/C BERJAYA Panama Providence (Sr.)
Chris Garner PG BERJAYA United States Memphis (Sr.)
Marlon Garnett G BERJAYA United States Santa Clara (Sr.)
Kiwane Garris PG BERJAYA United States Illinois (Sr.)
Derek Grimm SF BERJAYA United States Missouri (Sr.)
Troy Hudson G BERJAYA United States Southern Illinois (Jr.)
Nate Huffman C BERJAYA United States Central Michigan (Sr.)
Damon Jones G BERJAYA United States Houston (Jr.)
Garth Joseph C BERJAYA Dominica The College of Saint Rose (Sr.)
Jonathan Kerner PF BERJAYA United States East Carolina (Sr.)
Mikki Moore F/C BERJAYA United States Nebraska (Sr.)
Ira Newble F BERJAYA United States Miami (Ohio) (Sr.)
Fabricio Oberto C BERJAYA Argentina Atenas (Argentina)
Mike Penberthy G BERJAYA United States The Master's (Sr.)
Jamal Robinson SF BERJAYA United States Virginia (Sr.)
Shea Seals SG BERJAYA United States Tulsa (Sr.)
Alvin Sims SG BERJAYA United States Louisville (Sr.)
Michael Stewart F/C BERJAYA United States California (Sr.)
Dedric Willoughby PG BERJAYA United States Iowa State (Sr.)
Trevor Winter C BERJAYA United States Minnesota (Sr.)

Early entrants

[edit]

College underclassmen

[edit]

This year saw a continued rise of collegiate underclassmen and other players of similar nature declaring entry into the NBA draft. This year initially saw a total of 47 eligible players enter the draft at first, but seven of these players (including Cory Carr from Texas Tech University, former DePaul University player Ronnie Fields from the St. Paul Slam! in the International Basketball Association, the Greek born Dimitrios Papanikolaou of the Olympiacos Piraeus B.C. in Greece, Larell Redic from Utah State University, Dawood Thomas from the California University of Pennsylvania, the Turkish-Yugoslavian born Mirsad Türkcan of the Efes Pilsen in Turkey, and the Argentinian-Spanish born Lucas Victoriano of the Olimpia Venado Tuerto in Argentina) would later decline their entry for this year's draft. Including the likes of high school phenom Tracy McGrady from Mount Zion Christian Academy, the Slovenian born Marko Milič of the Smelt Olimpija in Slovenia, and former Central Connecticut State University player Keith Closs of the Norwich Neptunes from the Atlantic Basketball Association minor league, the number of qualified underclassmen would increase from 37 only in college to 40 total players. Regardless, the following college basketball players successfully applied for early draft entrance.[3]

High school players

[edit]

This would be the third year in a row where high school players were allowed entry into the NBA draft after previously only doing it back in 1975. However, only one player would go directly from high school to enter the NBA this year. The following high school player successfully applied for early draft entrance.[3]

International players

[edit]

This year, only one international born player would officially enter the NBA draft after seeing three other international players initially declare their interest in entering this year's draft. The following international player successfully applied for early draft entrance.[3]

Other eligible players

[edit]

This year marked the third time in NBA history (the first two times being in 1971 and 1987) that an eligible underclassman player of sorts would declare entry for an NBA draft by playing minor league basketball within the U.S.A. first (as well as have it be the first time that it wouldn't involve the Continental Basketball Association or its previous name in the Eastern Basketball Association). It would also be the fourth time that a player would declare entry while also playing in another American basketball league, with the second case of this occurring in 1973 with David Brent being allowed entry into the NBA draft despite him already playing for the Carolina Cougars of the rivaling American Basketball Association at the time.

Player Team Note Ref.
United States Keith Closs Norwich Neptunes (Atlantic Basketball Association) Left Central Connecticut in 1996; playing professionally since the 1996–97 season [4]

Invited attendees

[edit]

The 1997 NBA draft is considered to be the twentieth NBA draft to have utilized what's properly considered the "green room" experience for NBA prospects. The NBA's green room is a staging area where anticipated draftees often sit with their families and representatives, waiting for their names to be called on draft night. Often being positioned either in front of or to the side of the podium (in this case, being positioned somewhere within the Charlotte Coliseum[5]), once a player heard his name, he would walk to the podium to shake hands and take promotional photos with the NBA commissioner. From there, the players often conducted interviews with various media outlets while backstage. From there, the players often conducted interviews with various media outlets while backstage. However, once the NBA draft started to air nationally on TV starting with the 1980 NBA draft, the green room evolved from players waiting to hear their name called and then shaking hands with these select players who were often called to the hotel to take promotional pictures with the NBA commissioner a day or two after the draft concluded to having players in real-time waiting to hear their names called up and then shaking hands with David Stern, the NBA's commissioner at the time.[6] The NBA compiled its list of green room invites through collective voting by the NBA's team presidents and general managers alike, which in this year's case belonged to only what they believed were the top 15 prospects at the time.[7] Surprisingly, outside of the missing inclusion of Danny Fortson being the tenth pick of the draft, this would be the most accurate green room draft invitation group yet. With that in mind, the following players were invited to attend this year's draft festivities live and in person.[5]

See also

[edit]


References

[edit]
  1. ^ Peter May. May 21, 2007. "Luck of draw went Spurs' way in '97 with Duncan - The Boston Globe". Boston Globe
  2. ^ "Virgin Islands". CIA World Factbook. August 12, 2008. Archived from the original on January 13, 2021. Retrieved August 12, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c "1997 Underclassmen". The Draft Review. August 4, 2007. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  4. ^ "Keith Closs 1997 Underclassmen". The Draft Review. November 30, 2007. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  5. ^ a b "1997 Green Room Invites - the Draft Review". Retrieved April 14, 2026.
  6. ^ Maurer, Matthew (February 18, 2024). "Draft Broadcasts - The Draft Review". The Draft Review. Retrieved April 14, 2026.
  7. ^ "Green Room - The Draft Review". The Draft Review. Retrieved April 14, 2026.
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