1995 NBA expansion draft
The 1995 NBA expansion draft was a special selection process conducted by the National Basketball Association (NBA) on June 24, 1995, at the league's studios in Secaucus, New Jersey, enabling the newly established Toronto Raptors and Vancouver Grizzlies to build initial rosters from unprotected players on the 27 existing teams ahead of their debut in the 1995–96 season.[1][2] This draft marked the NBA's return to Canada since the folding of the Toronto Huskies in the original Basketball Association of America after the 1946–47 season and represented the league's 28th and 29th franchises, each paying a $125 million expansion fee to join.[1] Under the rules, each incumbent team could protect up to eight players, leaving the rest eligible for selection, with the Raptors receiving 14 picks and the Grizzlies 13 in an alternating format; expansion teams were restricted from selecting more than one player from any single franchise, to manage cap constraints.[2][1] The event, hosted by NBA Commissioner David Stern alongside broadcasters Bob Costas and Rod Black, was televised and highlighted the challenge of assembling competitive squads from often overlooked or high-salary veterans, as existing teams strategically exposed "cast-off" players to avoid losing key assets.[1][2] The Raptors, led by vice president Isiah Thomas, opened by selecting guard B.J. Armstrong from the Chicago Bulls—a three-time champion known for his sharpshooting—followed by forward Tony Massenburg from the Los Angeles Clippers and later adding veterans like four-time champion John Salley from the Miami Heat and center Oliver Miller—who was the final pick of the draft and passed away in March 2025—from the Detroit Pistons, aiming for a mix of experience and tradeable youth such as Dontonio Wingfield and Acie Earl.[3][1][4] The Grizzlies, under general manager Stu Jackson, countered with point guard Greg Anthony from the New York Knicks, who proved a standout with 14.0 points and 6.9 assists per game in his first season there, alongside selections like forward Antonio Harvey from the Los Angeles Lakers, guard Trevor Ruffin from the Phoenix Suns, and aging contributors including Byron Scott from the Indiana Pacers and center Benoit Benjamin from the New Jersey Nets.[3][5] Other notable Raptors picks included Doug Smith, Willie Anderson, Ed Pinckney, and Jerome Kersey, while the Grizzlies added Reggie Slater, Larry Stewart, and Kenny Gattison, resulting in rosters heavy on role players but light on star power.[1] While the draft provided foundational pieces—such as Anthony's immediate impact for Vancouver and Toronto's subsequent trades of Armstrong for forward Carlos Rogers—the expansions diluted talent across the league, contributing to the new teams' struggles—with the Raptors defeating the Grizzlies 93–81 in their first-ever matchup on December 10, 1995, at General Motors Place in Vancouver[6]—and the Raptors finishing 21–61 and the Grizzlies 15–67 in their rookie year, underscoring the limitations of building from leftovers in a salary-capped era.[5]Background
League Expansion
In November 1993, the NBA Board of Governors approved the addition of an expansion franchise in Toronto, marking the league's first venture into Canada and increasing its roster from 27 teams—the number it had maintained since adding the Minnesota Timberwolves and Orlando Magic in 1989.[7] The franchise was awarded to a group led by Canadian businessman John Bitove Jr., who served as the initial team president and spearheaded efforts to bring professional basketball to the city. This approval set the stage for the team's inaugural 1995–96 season, with the expansion fee set at a then-record $125 million.[7] The league continued its northward expansion in early 1994 by granting preliminary approval for a second Canadian franchise in Vancouver on February 14, with full Board of Governors ratification following shortly thereafter in April.[8] This addition, owned by Vancouver businessman Arthur Griffiths—who also held stakes in the NHL's Vancouver Canucks—established the Vancouver Grizzlies as the NBA's second Canadian team and brought the total to 29 franchises ahead of the 1995–96 campaign.[9] Both teams represented a strategic push into international markets, leveraging growing global interest in basketball during the mid-1990s.[10] As preparations advanced, each franchise moved quickly to assemble leadership. The Toronto Raptors hired Brendan Malone, a veteran NBA assistant with championship experience from the Detroit Pistons, as their first head coach on June 2, 1995.[11] Shortly after, on June 19, 1995, the Vancouver Grizzlies selected Brian Winters, an assistant with the Atlanta Hawks and a former All-Star player, to lead their inaugural roster.[12] The expansion draft, held on June 24, 1995, would then allow these new teams to build their lineups from existing NBA rosters.[13]Draft Rules and Eligibility
The 1995 NBA expansion draft was governed by rules designed to balance the addition of two new franchises, the Toronto Raptors and Vancouver Grizzlies, while minimizing disruption to existing teams. Each of the league's 27 established teams was permitted to protect up to eight players on their roster from selection, ensuring that only unprotected players under contract were eligible for drafting. Unrestricted free agents could not be protected and thus were unavailable in the draft. Additionally, no existing team could lose more than one player in total, which limited the pool of available talent and structured the selection process to prevent any single franchise from being overly depleted.[14] To determine the order of selections, a coin flip was held between the two expansion teams prior to the draft. The Vancouver Grizzlies won the coin flip but elected to defer their advantage, granting the Toronto Raptors the first overall pick in the expansion draft while securing a higher position for the Grizzlies in the subsequent 1995 NBA Draft. The draft proceeded with alternating picks between the Raptors and Grizzlies, with Toronto selecting first, continuing until one player was selected from each of the 27 existing teams. In the initial round, the expansion teams were required to select players from different parent clubs to comply with the one-player-per-team loss limit, and this restriction carried forward, with picks thereafter alternating while avoiding teams that had already contributed a player.[15][16] Eligibility extended to all unprotected players with NBA contracts, though certain restrictions applied to less experienced talent; specifically, rookies and players with fewer than three years of service were generally automatically protected, leaving the available pool dominated by veterans and role players. The Raptors ultimately selected 14 players to form the core of their initial roster, while the Grizzlies selected 13, reflecting the draft's structure and the strategic choices made under the salary cap constraints imposed on expansion teams in their first two seasons (limited to 66.67% and 75% of the league cap, respectively).[17] Undrafted college players and international free agents were not part of the expansion draft but could be signed directly by the new teams outside this process. The entire event took place on June 24, 1995, at the NBA Entertainment Studios in Secaucus, New Jersey.[13][18]Draft Proceedings
Player Protection Lists
Prior to the 1995 NBA expansion draft, all 27 existing teams were required to submit player protection lists by June 14, 1995, with each team allowed to protect up to eight players under contract who were ineligible for selection by the new franchises, the Toronto Raptors and Vancouver Grizzlies.[14] This process ensured that core rosters remained intact while exposing a mix of veterans, role players, and fringe contributors to build the expansion teams' foundations.[19] Teams like the Chicago Bulls exemplified straightforward star protection, safeguarding Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, and Toni Kukoč alongside centers Luc Longley, Bill Wennington, and Will Perdue, while leaving guards B.J. Armstrong and Ron Harper, as well as veteran center Bill Cartwright, unprotected due to recent roster adjustments including Harper's acquisition.[19][20] Similarly, the New York Knicks prioritized their frontcourt and backcourt leaders by protecting Patrick Ewing, Charles Oakley, Derek Harper, John Starks, Charles Smith, Hubert Davis, and Monty Williams, opting to expose point guard Greg Anthony in favor of emerging option Charlie Ward.[14] The Los Angeles Lakers followed suit by leaving guards Sedale Threatt and Antonio Harvey unprotected, focusing protections on key contributors like Shaquille O'Neal and Eddie Jones amid salary considerations and depth evaluations.[21] Other notable unprotected players included four-time champion John Salley from the Miami Heat, whose high salary and diminishing role made him expendable despite his championship pedigree, as well as Rex Chapman of the Phoenix Suns and Gerald Wilkins of the Cleveland Cavaliers, both veterans exposed to preserve younger assets.[22][2] These decisions reflected broader strategic trade-offs, where teams weighed the risk of losing established depth against retaining high-upside youth; for instance, the Golden State Warriors prioritized protecting emerging talents like Latrell Sprewell and Joe Smith over aging contributors to maintain long-term competitiveness.[5] The resulting pool skewed heavily toward journeymen and role players, with over 100 available selections from the 27 teams' exposed rosters, providing the expansion franchises a broad but talent-diluted group from which to build without accessing elite stars.[2][22]Selection Order and Process
The 1995 NBA expansion draft took place on June 24, 1995, at the NBA Entertainment offices in Secaucus, New Jersey, and was televised nationally on NBC beginning at 4:30 p.m. ET.[22][2] The event allowed the newly formed Toronto Raptors and Vancouver Grizzlies to build initial rosters from unprotected players across the league's 27 existing teams.[2] A coin flip conducted earlier that month determined the selection order; the Grizzlies won and opted for the sixth overall pick in the upcoming regular NBA draft, granting the Raptors the first choice in the expansion draft and subsequent odd-numbered selections.[23] The proceedings unfolded in multiple rounds, with the teams alternating picks—Raptors first, followed by Grizzlies—until each had selected one player from every existing team.[15] In later rounds, after exhausting the one-per-team restriction, the expansion franchises could select multiple players from the same parent club, enabling more strategic depth.[16] NBA Commissioner David Stern presided over the draft, announcing each selection and prompting immediate responses from the general managers of the new teams.[24] A notable early moment came in the first round when the Raptors selected guard B.J. Armstrong from the Chicago Bulls, a move that caught observers off guard as the Bulls had unexpectedly left the three-time champion unprotected.[3] The Grizzlies responded by choosing point guard Greg Anthony from the New York Knicks as their second overall pick.[3] In total, 27 players were selected across the draft—14 by the Raptors and 13 by the Grizzlies—providing each team with a foundational roster prior to the regular 1995 NBA draft two days later.[2]Selections
Toronto Raptors
The Toronto Raptors entered the 1995 NBA expansion draft with the first overall selection, a result of losing a pre-draft coin flip to the Vancouver Grizzlies that determined priority in the regular draft lottery. Under executive vice president Isiah Thomas, the Raptors focused on acquiring a mix of veteran players for leadership and trade potential alongside younger talents with upside, emphasizing favorable contract situations under the league's salary cap to build a competitive inaugural roster. The selections prioritized experienced guards to orchestrate the offense and versatile big men for frontcourt depth, aiming for immediate balance despite the limited pool of unprotected players. The Raptors made 14 picks across two rounds, alternating with the Grizzlies. The full list of selections is as follows:| Pick | Player | Position | Previous Team |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | B.J. Armstrong | G | Chicago Bulls |
| 3 | Tony Massenburg | F | Los Angeles Clippers |
| 5 | Andres Guibert | F | Minnesota Timberwolves |
| 7 | Keith Jennings | G | Golden State Warriors |
| 9 | Dontonio Wingfield | F | Seattle SuperSonics |
| 11 | Doug Smith | F | Dallas Mavericks |
| 13 | Jerome Kersey | F | Portland Trail Blazers |
| 15 | Žan Tabak | C | Houston Rockets |
| 17 | Willie Anderson | G/F | San Antonio Spurs |
| 19 | Ed Pinckney | F | Milwaukee Bucks |
| 21 | Acie Earl | C | Boston Celtics |
| 23 | B.J. Tyler | G | Philadelphia 76ers |
| 25 | John Salley | F/C | Miami Heat |
| 27 | Oliver Miller | C | Detroit Pistons |
Vancouver Grizzlies
The Vancouver Grizzlies entered the 1995 NBA expansion draft with the second selection in each round, following the pre-draft coin flip won by the Grizzlies, who opted for the higher pick in the regular NBA draft and thus received the second selection in each round of the expansion draft, with the Raptors taking the odd-numbered picks.[23] Under general manager Stu Jackson, the Grizzlies focused on building a balanced backcourt with multiple point guard options while emphasizing cost-controlled contracts to manage the financial constraints of an expansion franchise.[26] This approach prioritized perimeter players for playmaking and shooting, supplemented by power forwards for frontcourt depth, blending experienced veterans with younger reserves to address the immediate challenges of competing in the league.[27] The Grizzlies' selections are detailed below:| Pick | Player | Position | Previous Team |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | Greg Anthony | PG | New York Knicks |
| 4 | Rodney Dent | PF | Orlando Magic |
| 6 | Antonio Harvey | PF | Los Angeles Lakers |
| 8 | Reggie Slater | PF | Denver Nuggets |
| 10 | Trevor Ruffin | PG | Phoenix Suns |
| 12 | Derrick Phelps | PG | Sacramento Kings |
| 14 | Larry Stewart | PF | Washington Bullets |
| 16 | Kenny Gattison | PF | Charlotte Hornets |
| 18 | Byron Scott | SG | Indiana Pacers |
| 20 | Gerald Wilkins | SG | Cleveland Cavaliers |
| 22 | Benoit Benjamin | C | New Jersey Nets |
| 24 | Doug Edwards | SF | Atlanta Hawks |
| 26 | Blue Edwards | SF | Utah Jazz |