Thursday, June 12, 2014

Unsung NBA Players: Otis Thorpe


In "Unsung NBA Players", we take a look at some former pros that might not have been fixtures at the All-Star Game or All NBA team, but were notable in their own right. Our first UNBAP is Otis Thorpe. 

Otis Thorpe had a career that many of his fellow NBA players would be quite envious of, with an All-Star appearance in 1992 and being a key contributor to the Rockets' 1994 title winning squad. To start our illustrious journey, Thorpe was taken by the Kansas City Kings with the ninth pick in the fabled 1984 Draft out of Providence. After a strong rookie season, Thorpe and the Kings left the Fountain City and headed to Sacramento. By the time Thorpe hung up his Converses in 2001, he was the last active player to have been a Kansas City King.

In Thorpe's second season, his numbers took a dive to just under 10 points a game and 5.6 boards, but was still able grab his first taste of the postseason, as the 37-45 Kings were able to slip into the playoffs, where they lost to the Houston Rockets. In '86-'87, Thorpe awakened, nearly doubling his output to a sliver under 19 points and 10 rebounds a game. '87-'88 would become the season of Thorpe's highest scoring output, averaging 20.8 points a contest, as well as 10.2 rebounds. But the days of lighting up the stat sheets in Sacramento would come to an end. In October of 1988, just before the season, Thorpe was shipped off to the team that eliminated him in the playoffs two seasons ago, the Rockets. In exchange, Rodney McCray and Jim Petersen, two key members of the Western champion '86 Houston team were moved to the Kings.

In '88-'89, Thorpe's points per game average took a slight four point hit, but his rebounding maintained the status quo. From '88-'89 to '90-'91, Thorpe and the Rockets never dipped below .500, but were ousted in the first round each season. '91-'92 brought a new high and a new low for Otis Thorpe and Houston. Thorpe averaged 17.3 points and 10.5 boards a game, which earned him a spot at the 1992 All-Star Game in Orlando, where he earned only four minutes and had only two points. But in the Space City, things were not as bright. The Rockets missed the playoffs and almost traded Olajuwon after a dispute with the team's medical staff. Coach Don Chaney resigned and was replaced with Rudy Tomjanovich.

 Thorpe's scoring output and tensions in Houston cooled down in '92-'93. Thorpe dropped to 12.8 points a game, but thanks to Tomajanovich and a pacified Olajuwon, the Rockets shot up to 55 wins and won a playoff series. The next season, '93-'94, would be the year the Rockets would finally blast off. Thorpe contributed 11.3 points and slightly under 10 rebounds per game in 23 contests to help Houston claim their first title over the New York Knicks in seven in what came to be known as the "Forgotten Finals".  


But while '94 brought Otis Thorpe a ring, '95 would bring the end of his run in Houston. After two seasons with first round exits, Clyde Drexler asked the Portland Trail Blazers for a trade to a contender. The contender that was able to grab Drexler was the Rockets. Houston put together a package with Thorpe as the centerpiece, and sent him to the Rose City for Clyde the Glide on Valentine's Day of '95. Thorpe failed to miss a beat on the Trail Blazers, but Portland was swept by the Phoenix Suns in the first round. Houston, only three games ahead Portland in the West standings, beat four 55+ win teams in the playoffs en route to their second consecutive title.

Otis Thorpe's time in Portland ended soon afterwards. In the '95 offseason,  Thorpe moved on yet again, this time sent to Detroit for Bill Curley and Randolph Childress. In his two seasons with the Pistons, he stayed at a steady pace of play with 13.6 points and 8.1 rebounds, not all that far off from his numbers in Sacramento or Houston. One change he made was a switch to center in '96-'97 after a career of playing power forward. By '97, the Pistons would no longer need Thorpe, and traded him to the Vancouver Grizzlies for a first round pick. The Grizzlies were slow to give the Pistons a pick, and finally did so six years after the trade. In exchange for 47 games of Thorpe in '97-'98 (after which he was traded back to the Kings for former Duke star Bobby Hurley and Michael Smith), the Grizzlies, now in Memphis, coughed up the second pick in the fabled 2003 draft, which was used by Detroit to select Darko Milicic.

By '98, Otis Thorpe's play had begun to drop. However, after 14 years in the NBA, he was still on the move. For the third time in almost a year, he was swapped to another team. This time it was being packaged with All-Star Mitch Richmond to the Washington Wizards in exchange for talented but enigmatic Chris Webber. In a lockout shortened '99 season, Thorpe would give the 18-32 Wizards 11 points and almost seven boards a night. Sacramento would garner a 27-23 record on the back of rebounding crown holder Chris Webber.

Once the '99 season was over, Otis Thorpe was 37 and at the twilight of his career. As a free agent, Thorpe decided to sign with the Miami Heat, co-owners of the best record in the league the previous season, and the closest team to his hometown of Boynton Beach. However, due to a thumb injury, Thorpe wouldn't see the court until December. After he was able to recover, Thorpe was a backup for the Heat, giving them dwindling numbers. The Heat were knocked out of the postseason once again by the Knicks, and for one final time, Thorpe was traded, sent to Charlotte along with Jamal Mashburn, P.J. Brown and two other players for Eddie Jones, Ricky Davis, Dale Ellis, and Anthony Mason. In his final season, Thorpe gave the Hornets 2.8 points and three rebounds in 49 games, and in the playoffs, Charlotte beat Miami, then succumbed to Milwaukee in the second round.

In his 16 year career, Otis Thorpe logged 17600 points and 10370 rebounds, made an All-Star team, and won an NBA championship. Thorpe also has the notable distinction of being involved in three trades that drastically altered the landscape of the league: the trade that sent Clyde Drexler to the Rockets and helped Houston secure a second title, the deal that gave a Pistons team coming off a Conference Finals appearance the second pick in one of the most loaded drafts of all time, and the swap that helped the Kings build a powerhouse by handing them Chris Webber. Sometimes your impact isn't just measured by what you did on the court, but also by the moves others made off of it.