1993–94 Phoenix Suns season

The 1993–94 NBA season was the 26th season for the Phoenix Suns in the National Basketball Association.[1] During the off-season, the Suns signed free agents; A.C. Green, who won two championships with the Los Angeles Lakers in the 1980s,[2][3][4] and also signed Joe Kleine.[5] The Suns were led by Paul Westphal, in his second year as head coach of the Suns. All home games were played at America West Arena. The team got off to a 15–3 start after a 7-game winning streak in December, and held a 31–15 record at the All-Star break.[6] At midseason, the team signed free agent Elliot Perry.[7] The Suns won their final seven games of the season, finishing second in the Pacific Division with a 56–26 record.[8]

1993–94 Phoenix Suns season
Head coachPaul Westphal
General managerJerry Colangelo
Owner(s)Jerry Colangelo
ArenaAmerica West Arena
Results
Record5626 (.683)
PlaceDivision: 2nd (Pacific)
Conference: 3rd (Western)
Playoff finishConference semifinals
(lost to Rockets 3–4)

Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Local media
Television
RadioKTAR

Charles Barkley, an All-Star coming off an MVP season, led a Phoenix offense that had five players average at least 15 points per game or more, with Barkley averaging 21.6 points, 11.2 rebounds and 1.6 steals per game. He appeared in 65 games, missing 17 due to a quadriceps tendon injury.[9][10][11] In addition, point guard Kevin Johnson was the other 20-point scorer, averaging right at the mark with 20.0 points, and led the team with 9.5 assists and 1.9 steals per game; he also finished fifth in assist per game in the league for the season. In addition, Cedric Ceballos showed improvement, averaging 19.1 points and 6.5 rebounds per game, but only appeared in 53 games due to a foot injury,[12][13] while Dan Majerle provided with 16.5 points and 1.6 steals per game, and led the league with 192 three-point field goals, and Green contributed 14.7 points and 9.2 rebounds per game. Second-year center Oliver Miller averaged 9.2 points, 6.9 rebounds and led the Suns with 1.8 blocks per game, and Danny Ainge contributed 8.9 points per game off the bench.[14]

In the Western Conference First Round of the playoffs, the Suns swept the Golden State Warriors in three straight games, where Barkley scored a playoff career-high of 56 points in a 140–133 road win in Game 3.[15][16][17][18] However, after taking a 2–0 series lead over the Houston Rockets in the Western Conference Semi-finals,[19][20][21] the Suns lost the series in seven games.[22][23][24][25] The Rockets would go on to defeat the New York Knicks in seven games in the NBA Finals, winning their first ever championship.[26][27][28][29][30]

Barkley and Johnson both returned to the All-Star Game, Barkley's eighth and for Johnson, his third and final All-Star selection. However, Barkley was injured and did not play in the All-Star Game, which was held in Minneapolis.[31][32][33][34][35] At season's end, both players had earned All-NBA Second Team honors. Following the season, Ceballos was traded to the Los Angeles Lakers,[36][37][38] and Miller signed as a free agent with the Detroit Pistons, while Mark West was traded to the Pistons for a future draft pick.[39][40][41]

Offseason

NBA draft

Round Pick Player Position Nationality College
1 27 Malcolm Mackey Forward  United States Georgia Tech
2 49 Mark Buford Center  United States Mississippi Valley State
2 54 Byron Wilson Guard  United States Utah

Roster

1993–94 Phoenix Suns roster
Players Coaches
Pos.No.NameHeightWeightDOBFrom
G 22 Ainge, Danny 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 1959–03–17 BYU
F 34 Barkley, Charles (C) 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 263 lb (119 kg) 1963–02–20 Auburn
F 23 Ceballos, Cedric 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 1969–08–02 Cal State Fullerton
G 10 Cooper, Duane 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1969–06–25 USC
F 21 Dumas, Richard (S) 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 1969–05–19 Oklahoma State
F 45 Green, A. C. 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1963–10–04 Oregon State
G 4 Henry, Herman 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 1967–12–08 Oklahoma
G 3 Johnson, Frank 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1958–11–23 Wake Forest
G 7 Johnson, Kevin (C) 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 1966–03–04 California
C 35 Kleine, Joe 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 255 lb (116 kg) 1962–01–04 Arkansas
C 27 Mackey, Malcolm 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 248 lb (112 kg) 1970–07–11 Georgia Tech
G 9 Majerle, Dan 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1965–09–09 Central Michigan
C 25 Miller, Oliver 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 280 lb (127 kg) 1970–04–06 Arkansas
F 0 Mustaf, Jerrod 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 238 lb (108 kg) 1969–10–28 Maryland
G 2 Perry, Elliot 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 150 lb (68 kg) 1969–03–28 Memphis
C 41 West, Mark 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 230 lb (104 kg) 1960–11–05 Old Dominion
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • Injured Injured

Roster
Last transaction: April 15, 1994

Roster Notes

  • Small forward Richard Dumas was suspended indefinitely without pay by the NBA for refusing to cooperate in substance-abuse rehabilitation.[42][43]

Regular season

Standings

W L PCT GB Home Road Div
y-Seattle SuperSonics 6319.76837–426–1525–5
x-Phoenix Suns 5626.683736–520–2119–11
x-Golden State Warriors 5032.6101329–1221–2019–11
x-Portland Trail Blazers 4735.5731630–1117–2417–13
Los Angeles Lakers 3349.4023021–2012–297–23
Sacramento Kings 2854.3413520–218–339–21
Los Angeles Clippers 2755.3293617–2410–319–21
#
Team W L PCT GB
1 z-Seattle SuperSonics6319.768
2 y-Houston Rockets5824.7075
3 x-Phoenix Suns5626.6837
4 x-San Antonio Spurs5527.6718
5 x-Utah Jazz5329.64610
6 x-Golden State Warriors5032.61013
7 x-Portland Trail Blazers4735.57316
8 x-Denver Nuggets4240.51221
9 Los Angeles Lakers3349.40230
10 Sacramento Kings2854.34135
11 Los Angeles Clippers2755.32936
12 Minnesota Timberwolves2062.24443
13 Dallas Mavericks1369.15950

Record vs. opponents

1993–94 NBA records
Team ATL BOS CHA CHI CLE DAL DEN DET GSW HOU IND LAC LAL MIA MIL MIN NJN NYK ORL PHI PHO POR SAC SAS SEA UTA WAS
Atlanta 4–04–12–33–12–01–14–00–21–13–21–11–13–15–02–01–32–23–14–01–11–12–01–11–11–14–0
Boston 0–40–42–21–32–01–13–11–11–10–41–11–12–33–11–11–40–42–24–11–11–11–10–20–20–23–2
Charlotte 1–44–01–41–41–11–14–00–21–12–21–12–01–33–22–02–23–12–23–12–00–21–10–20–21–12–2
Chicago 3–22–24–11–32–01–15–02–01–14–12–01–12–24–02–03–11–32–23–11–10–21–11–11–12–04–0
Cleveland 1–33–14–13–12–01–13–22–00–22–32–01–11–33–22–02–20–42–24–00–22–02–00–21–11–13–1
Dallas 0–20–21–10–20–21–41–10–41–40–20–40–40–20–25–10–20–20–20–20–41–32–20–50–40–51–1
Denver 1–11–11–11–11–14–12–01–33–21–13–13–11–12–04–11–11–11–10–21–31–32–22–42–21–41–1
Detroit 0–41–30–40–52–31–10–20–20–21–41–10–22–21–42–01–30–41–31–31–10–21–11–11–10–22–2
Golden State 2–01–12–00–20–24–03–12–00–41–14–15–02–02–02–20–21–11–11–12–33–24–12–21–43–12–0
Houston 1–11–11–11–12–04–12–32–04–01–14–03–12–01–14–12–02–01–12–02–24–04–02–32–23–31–1
Indiana 2–34–02–21–43–22–01–14–11–11–12–00–23–13–12–03–10–42–22–21–11–12–00–21–11–13–1
L.A. Clippers 1–11–11–10–20–24–01–31–11–40–40–22–31–11–11–31–10–21–11–10–52–33–21–31–41–31–1
L.A. Lakers 1–11–10–21–11–14–01–32–00–51–32–03–21–12–03–10–20–22–01–13–20–51–40–40–52–21–1
Miami 1–33–23–12–23–12–01–12–20–20–21–31–11–14–02–02–32–22–34–10–20–21–10–21–11–13–1
Milwaukee 0–51–32–30–42–32–00–24–10–21–11–31–10–20–40–21–30–41–31–30–21–11–10–20–20–21–3
Minnesota 0–21–10–20–20–21–51–40–22–21–40–23–11–30–22–01–10–21–12–00–40–42–21–40–41–40–2
New Jersey 3–14–12–21–32–22–01–13–12–00–21–31–12–03–23–11–14–10–53–10–20–21–11–11–11–13–1
New York 2–24–01–33–14–02–01–14–01–10–24–02–02–02–24–02–01–43–23–21–12–02–01–11–10–25–0
Orlando 1–32–22–22–22–22–01–13–11–11–12–21–10–23–23–11–15–02–34–01–12–02–00–21–12–04–1
Philadelphia 0–41–41–31–30–42–02–03–11–10–22–21–11–11–43–10–21–32–30–40–20–20–20–20–21–12–3
Phoenix 1–11–10–21–12–04–03–11–13–22–21–15–02–32–02–04–02–01–11–12–03–24–13–12–32–22–0
Portland 1–11–12–02–00–23–13–12–02–30–41–13–25–02–01–14–02–00–20–22–02–34–11–31–41–32–0
Sacramento 0–21–11–11–10–22–22–21–11–40–40–22–34–11–11–12–21–10–20–22–01–41–41–30–51–32–0
San Antonio 1–12–02–01–12–05–04–21–12–23–22–03–14–02–02–04–11–11–12–02–01–33–13–10–40–52–0
Seattle 1–12–02–01–11–14–02–21–14–12–21–14–15–01–12–04–01–11–11–12–03–24–15–04–03–12–0
Utah 1–12–01–10–21–15–04–12–01–33–31–13–12–21–12–04–11–12–00–21–12–23–13–15–01–32–0
Washington 0–42–32–20–41–31–11–12–20–21–11–31–11–11–33–12–01–30–51–43–20–20–20–20–20–20–2

Game log

Regular season

1993–94 game log
Total: 56–26 (home: 36–5; road: 20–21)
November: 8–3 (home: 6–0; road: 2–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
1 November 5, 1993 @ L.A. Lakers L 108–116 Great Western Forum 0–1
2 November 7, 1993 Sacramento W 132–110 America West Arena 1–1
3 November 9, 1993 @ L.A. Clippers W 114–99 Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena 2–1
4 November 10, 1993 San Antonio W 101–93 America West Arena 3–1
5 November 13, 1993 @ Houston L 95–99 The Summit 3–2
6 November 16, 1993 @ Golden State W 116–104 Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena 4–2
7 November 19, 1993 Portland W 118–109 America West Arena 5–2
8 November 20, 1993 Cleveland W 112–96 America West Arena 6–2
9 November 24, 1993 Denver W 130–97 America West Arena 7–2
10 November 27, 1993 Utah W 120–98 America West Arena 8–2
11 November 30, 1993 @ Chicago L 113–132 Chicago Stadium 8–3
December: 13–2 (home: 8–1; road: 5–1)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
12 December 2, 1993 @ Detroit W 102–101 The Palace of Auburn Hills 9–3
13 December 3, 1993 @ New Jersey W 104–103 Brendan Byrne Arena 10–3
14 December 5, 1993 @ Milwaukee W 117–98 Bradley Center 11–3
15 December 9, 1993 Washington W 114–95 America West Arena 12–3
16 December 11, 1993 @ Dallas W 114–103 Reunion Arena 13–3
17 December 13, 1993 Milwaukee W 112–104 America West Arena 14–3
18 December 15, 1993 Golden State W 110–104 America West Arena 15–3
19 December 17, 1993 Orlando L 101–104 America West Arena 15–4
20 December 18, 1993 L.A. Clippers W 116–109 America West Arena 16–4
21 December 20, 1993 Indiana W 102–94 America West Arena 17–4
22 December 21, 1993 @ Denver L 95–121 McNichols Sports Arena 17–5
23 December 23, 1993 @ Seattle W 87–86 Seattle Center Coliseum 18–5
24 December 25, 1993 Houston W 111–91 America West Arena 19–5
25 December 27, 1993 Boston W 118–102 America West Arena 20–5
26 December 30, 1993 Philadelphia W 119–107 America West Arena 21–5
January: 7–8 (home: 3–2; road: 4–6)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
27 January 4, 1994 Seattle L 106–112 America West Arena 21–6
28 January 5, 1994 @ Utah W 107–91 Delta Center 22–6
29 January 7, 1994 @ Minnesota W 110–103 Target Center 23–6
30 January 9, 1994 Golden State W 122–107 America West Arena 24–6
31 January 11, 1994 Charlotte L 93–95 America West Arena 24–7
32 January 13, 1994 @ San Antonio L 88–107 Alamodome 24–8
33 January 15, 1994 @ Sacramento W 119–103 ARCO Arena 25–8
34 January 17, 1994 @ Golden State L 99–104 Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena 25–9
35 January 18, 1994 Dallas W 113–103 America West Arena 26–9
36 January 20, 1994 @ L.A. Lakers L 102–107 Great Western Forum 26–10
37 January 22, 1994 Portland W 118–117 America West Arena 27–10
38 January 25, 1994 @ New York L 96–98 Madison Square Garden 27–11
39 January 26, 1994 @ Atlanta L 107–116 The Omni 27–12
40 January 28, 1994 @ Philadelphia W 108–103 The Spectrum 28–12
41 January 30, 1994 @ Boston L 94–106 Boston Garden 28–13
February: 8–4 (home: 7–0; road: 1–4)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
42 February 1, 1994 L.A. Clippers W 108–106 America West Arena 29–13
43 February 3, 1994 @ Portland L 105–126 Memorial Coliseum 29–14
44 February 6, 1994 Chicago W 89–88 America West Arena 30–14
45 February 8, 1994 @ L.A. Lakers L 104–107 Great Western Forum 30–15
46 February 9, 1994 Minnesota W 111–106 America West Arena 31–15
All-Star Break
47 February 16, 1994 Portland W 126–100 America West Arena 32–15
48 February 18, 1994 L.A. Lakers W 113–96 America West Arena 33–15
49 February 19, 1994 @ Houston L 88–106 The Summit 33–16
50 February 21, 1994 Sacramento W 112–86 America West Arena 34–16
51 February 24, 1994 @ Minnesota W 120–101 Target Center 35–16
52 February 25, 1994 @ Utah L 87–107 Delta Center 35–17
53 February 27, 1994 New York W 92–78 America West Arena 36–17
March: 10–6 (home: 5–2; road: 5–4)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
54 March 3, 1994 @ Golden State L 107–120 Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena 36–18
55 March 4, 1994 Minnesota W 106–101 America West Arena 37–18
56 March 6, 1994 Utah L 92–103 America West Arena 37–19
57 March 8, 1994 @ Charlotte L 89–97 Charlotte Coliseum 37–20
58 March 9, 1994 @ Washington W 142–106 USAir Arena 38–20
59 March 11, 1994 @ Miami W 122–107 Miami Arena 39–20
60 March 13, 1994 @ Orlando W 100–93 Orlando Arena 40–20
61 March 15, 1994 @ Cleveland W 119–106 Richfield Coliseum 41–20
62 March 16, 1994 @ Indiana L 98–109 Market Square Arena 41–21
63 March 18, 1994 Detroit L 113–114 America West Arena 41–22
64 March 19, 1994 New Jersey W 105–93 America West Arena 42–22
65 March 22, 1994 Miami W 124–118 (OT) America West Arena 43–22
66 March 24, 1994 @ Seattle L 106–116 Seattle Center Coliseum 43–23
67 March 25, 1994 Dallas W 99–94 America West Arena 44–23
68 March 27, 1994 Houston W 113–98 America West Arena 45–23
69 March 31, 1994 @ L.A. Clippers W 117–102 Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena 46–23
April: 10–3 (home: 7–0; road: 3–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
70 April 1, 1994 Atlanta W 93–87 America West Arena 47–23
71 April 3, 1994 Denver W 108–98 America West Arena 48–23
72 April 5, 1994 @ Portland L 113–135 Memorial Coliseum 48–24
73 April 6, 1994 San Antonio W 107–95 America West Arena 49–24
74 April 8, 1994 @ Sacramento L 101–104 ARCO Arena 49–25
75 April 10, 1994 @ Seattle L 108–111 Seattle Center Coliseum 49–26
76 April 12, 1994 @ Denver W 107–102 McNichols Sports Arena 50–26
77 April 13, 1994 L.A. Lakers W 117–88 America West Arena 51–26
78 April 16, 1994 @ San Antonio W 96–94 Alamodome 52–26
79 April 18, 1994 @ Dallas W 106–97 Reunion Arena 53–26
80 April 19, 1994 Seattle W 122–116 America West Arena 54–26
81 April 22, 1994 L.A. Clippers W 127–121 America West Arena 55–26
82 April 23, 1994 Sacramento W 101–100 America West Arena 56–26
1993–94 schedule

Playoffs

Game log

1994 playoff game log
First Round: 3–0 (home: 2–0; road: 1–0)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 April 29, 1994 Golden State W 111–104 Charles Barkley (36) Charles Barkley (19) Barkley, Johnson (7) America West Arena
19,023
1–0
2 May 1, 1994 Golden State W 117–111 Kevin Johnson (38) A. C. Green (10) Kevin Johnson (9) America West Arena
19,023
2–0
3 May 4, 1994 @ Golden State W 140–133 Charles Barkley (56) Charles Barkley (14) Kevin Johnson (12) Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena
15,025
3–0
Conference semifinals: 3–4 (home: 1–2; road: 2–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 May 8, 1994 @ Houston W 91–87 Charles Barkley (21) Charles Barkley (12) Kevin Johnson (12) The Summit
15,073
1–0
2 May 11, 1994 @ Houston W 124–117 (OT) Charles Barkley (34) Charles Barkley (15) Barkley, Johnson (6) The Summit
16,611
2–0
3 May 13, 1994 Houston L 102–118 Kevin Johnson (38) Charles Barkley (14) Kevin Johnson (12) America West Arena
19,023
2–1
4 May 15, 1994 Houston L 96–107 Kevin Johnson (38) Charles Barkley (14) Kevin Johnson (12) America West Arena
19,023
2–2
5 May 17, 1994 @ Houston L 86–109 Charles Barkley (30) Oliver Miller (7) Henry, Miller (3) The Summit
16,611
2–3
6 May 19, 1994 Houston W 103–89 Kevin Johnson (28) Charles Barkley (15) Kevin Johnson (13) America West Arena
19,023
3–3
7 May 21, 1994 @ Houston L 94–104 Kevin Johnson (25) Charles Barkley (15) Kevin Johnson (11) The Summit
16,611
3–4
1994 schedule

Awards and honors

Week/Month

  • Charles Barkley was named Player of the Week for games played November 15 through November 21.
  • Oliver Miller was named Player of the Week for games played December 27 through January 2.

All-Star

  • Charles Barkley was voted as a starter for the Western Conference in the All-Star Game. It was his eighth consecutive All-Star selection. Barkley led all players in voting with 794,936 votes. Barkley was unable to play due to injury and was replaced by Gary Payton.
  • Kevin Johnson was selected as a reserve for the Western Conference in the All-Star Game. It was his third All-Star selection. Johnson finished third in voting among Western Conference guards with 431,885 votes.
  • Other Suns players receiving All-Star votes were A. C. Green (368,601) and Dan Majerle (329,618).

Season

Player statistics

Legend
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field-goal percentage  3P%  3-point field-goal percentage  FT%  Free-throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game

Season

Player GP GS MPG FG% 3FG% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
Danny Ainge68122.9.417.328.830^1.92.6.8.18.9
Charles Barkley656535.4.495.270.70411.24.61.6.621.6
Cedric Ceballos534330.2.535.000.7246.51.71.1.419.1
Duane Cooper2325.9.439.143.7330.41.2.1.02.1
Joe Courtney*3315.1.513..7190.80.3.1.23.1
A. C. Green825534.5.502.229.7359.21.7.9.514.7
Skeeter Henry403.8.200.000.5000.51.0.0.01.0
Frank Johnson70512.5.448.167.7831.22.1.6.04.6
Kevin Johnson676736.6.487.222.819^2.59.51.9.120.0
Joe Kleine74411.5.488.455.7692.60.6.2.33.9
Negele Knight*108.0.250..0.00.0.01.02.0
Malcolm Mackey2203.1.378.000.5001.10.0.0.11.5
Dan Majerle807640.1.418.382.7394.43.41.6.516.5
Oliver Miller693025.9.609.222.5846.93.51.22.39.2
Jerrod Mustaf3325.9.357..5911.70.2.1.22.2
Elliot Perry27916.0.372.000.7501.44.6.9.03.9
Mark West825015.1.566..5003.60.4.41.34.7

* – Stats with the Suns.
† – Minimum 50 three-pointers made.
^ – Minimum 125 free-throws made.

Playoffs

Player GP GS MPG FG% 3FG% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
Danny Ainge10023.0.458.425.7142.32.1.6.18.6
Charles Barkley101042.5.509.350.76413.04.82.5.927.6
Cedric Ceballos10821.2.462.000.8334.40.8.8.210.1
A. C. Green10235.0.482.412.6138.41.31.0.212.5
Skeeter Henry305.3.167.000.1.01.0.0.00.7
Frank Johnson706.6.083.000.5000.60.7.3.00.4
Kevin Johnson101042.7.458.300.8523.59.61.0.126.6
Joe Kleine8010.1.429..6672.10.4.1.53.5
Dan Majerle101041.0.362.339.6884.32.41.1.412.3
Oliver Miller10414.6.593..4294.41.3.61.23.5
Elliot Perry403.3.143..0.00.3.3.00.5
Mark West769.9.333..7002.90.0.01.02.4

† – Minimum 20 field goals made.

Transactions

Trades

November 8, 1993 To San Antonio Spurs---- To Phoenix Suns----

Additions

Date Player Contract Old Team
July 23, 1993 Richard Dumas Re-signed to multi-year contract Phoenix Suns
July 28, 1993 Frank Johnson Re-signed to 1-year contract for $500,000 Phoenix Suns
August 13, 1993 Joe Kleine Signed to 4-year contract for $3.8 million Boston Celtics
August 26, 1993 Cedric Ceballos Re-signed to 5-year contract for $11 million Phoenix Suns
September 3, 1993 Joe Courtney Signed to 1-year contract for $150,000 Golden State Warriors
September 28, 1993 A. C. Green Signed to 5-year contract for $15.1 million Los Angeles Lakers
October 7, 1993 Rod Higgins Undisclosed Sacramento Kings
November 10, 1993 Duane Cooper Signed to 1-year contract for $150,000 Los Angeles Lakers
January 22, 1994 Elliot Perry Signed to two 10-day contracts Grand Rapids Hoops (CBA)
February 11, 1994 Elliot Perry Signed for rest of season Phoenix Suns
April 15, 1994 Skeeter Henry Signed for rest of season Dijon (France)

Subtractions

Date Player Reason Left New Team
June 25, 1993 Tom Chambers Free agent Utah Jazz
October 16, 1993 Byron Wilson Waived Oklahoma City Cavalry (CBA)
November 2, 1993 Rod Higgins Waived Cleveland Cavaliers
January 21, 1994 Tim Kempton Waived Charlotte Hornets
February 26, 1994 Joe Courtney Waived Milwaukee Bucks

Player Transactions Citation:[45]

References

  1. "1993-94 Phoenix Suns Roster and Stats".
  2. "SPORTS PEOPLE: BASKETBALL; Can Suns Find Enough Green for A. C.?". The New York Times. July 11, 1993. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
  3. Howard-Cooper, Scott (September 29, 1993). "Suddenly, A.C. Green Is Long Gone: Basketball: He Becomes Former Laker After Signing a Five-Year Contract with the Phoenix Suns Worth $15.085 Million". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
  4. "Suns Turn Up the Heat by Signing Green". Deseret News. Associated Press. September 29, 1993. Retrieved July 26, 2021.
  5. "SPORTS PEOPLE: BASKETBALL; Kleine and Suns Agree to Contract". The New York Times. August 14, 1993. Retrieved December 4, 2022.
  6. "NBA Games Played on February 10, 1994". Basketball-Reference. Retrieved July 22, 2022.
  7. "Transactions". The New York Times. January 22, 1994. Retrieved September 26, 2022.
  8. "1993–94 Phoenix Suns Schedule and Results". Basketball-Reference. Retrieved June 23, 2021.
  9. "Barkley Out, But Suns Win". The New York Times. Associated Press. January 10, 1994. Retrieved September 26, 2022.
  10. "Phoenix Puts Barkley on Injured Reserve". Deseret News. Associated Press. January 10, 1994. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
  11. "SPORTS PEOPLE: BASKETBALL; Barkley Is Back". The New York Times. February 17, 1994. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  12. "SPORTS PEOPLE: BASKETBALL; Ceballos Out Again". The New York Times. October 26, 1993. Retrieved September 26, 2022.
  13. "Warriors Get Help". Orlando Sentinel. October 26, 1994. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
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