Vancouver Grizzlies | |||
---|---|---|---|
Conference | Western | ||
Division | Midwest | ||
Founded | 1995 | ||
History | Vancouver Grizzlies 1995–2001 Memphis Grizzlies 2001–present[1][2] | ||
Arena | General Motors Place | ||
Location | Vancouver, British Columbia | ||
Team colors | Turquoise, bronze, red, black[3][4] | ||
General manager | Stu Jackson (1994–2000) Billy Knight (2000–2001) | ||
Head coach | Brian Winters (1995–1997) Stu Jackson (1997) Brian Hill (1997–1999) Lionel Hollins (1999–2000) Sidney Lowe (2000–2001) | ||
Ownership | Orca Bay Sports and Entertainment (1995–2000) Michael Heisley (2000–2001) | ||
Championships | 0 | ||
Conference titles | 0 | ||
Division titles | 0 | ||
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The Vancouver Grizzlies were a Canadian professional basketball team based in Vancouver. The Grizzlies competed in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the Midwest Division of the Western Conference. The team was established in 1995, along with the Toronto Raptors, as part of the NBA's expansion into Canada. Following the 2000–01 season, the team relocated to Memphis, Tennessee, United States and was renamed the Memphis Grizzlies. The Grizzlies played their home games at General Motors Place (now Rogers Arena) for all of their six seasons in Vancouver.
Like most expansion teams, the Grizzlies struggled in their early years. The team finished last in their division in all but one season (1997-98 Denver Nuggets), and never won more than 30% of its games in any of the team's seasons in Vancouver. In total, the team won 101 games, lost 359, and never qualified for the NBA playoffs. The two expansion teams were denied early draft picks in the first season, but the Grizzlies secured Shareef Abdur-Rahim in 1996 and Mike Bibby with the second pick of the 1998 NBA draft. The team continued to lose games despite high draft picks. After they selected Steve Francis as second pick in 1999, he refused to play in Vancouver and was traded away. After the 1998–99 lockout, lower attendance and a weak Canadian dollar caused the owner Orca Bay Sports and Entertainment to lose money on the franchise. After a failed attempt to sell the team to Bill Laurie, it was instead sold to Michael Heisley and subsequently moved to Memphis, Tennessee, for the 2001–02 season.
The new Classic Edition uniform features the team's original primary logo and team colors of turquoise, bronze, red and black in one of the more memorable uniform looks in NBA history.