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The 2011–12 Charlotte Bobcats season was the 8th season of the Charlotte Bobcats in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and the 22nd overall season of NBA basketball in Charlotte. Considered to be the worst NBA team of all time, the Bobcats failed to improve on their 34–48 record from the previous season and set the record for the ...
The 2011–12 NBA season was the 66th season of the National Basketball Association (NBA), which began with the signing of a new collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between the owners of the 30 NBA teams and the NBA's players. The previous CBA, which was ratified in 2005, expired at 12:01 am EDT on July 1, 2011, resulting in a lockout. With ...
In the 2005 NBA draft, the Bobcats drafted Raymond Felton and Sean May from North Carolina. [71] In their second season, the Bobcats opened Charlotte Bobcats Arena with an overtime victory over the Celtics. Despite struggling for most of the year, they managed to close out the season with four straight wins to finish with a record of 26–56 ...
NBA Eastern 6th Central 3rd 46 36 .561 10 Won First round 3–0 Lost conference semifinals 4–3 2001–02: 2001–02: NBA Eastern 4th Central 2nd 44 38 .537 8 Won First round 3–1 Lost conference semifinals 4–1 2002–03 [c] Inactive: 2003–04; Charlotte Bobcats: 2004–05 [d] 2004–05: NBA Eastern 14th Southeast: 4th 18 64 .220 41
The 2010–11 Charlotte Bobcats season was the 21st season of NBA Basketball in Charlotte in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and their 7th as the Charlotte Bobcats. Key dates [ edit ]
Players are eligible to be on a team's playoff roster as long as they were on the team for at least one regular season game, and were not on another NBA team's roster after March 1. [21] Prior to the 2005–06 season, [ citation needed ] playoff rosters were limited to 12 players who were named before the playoffs began.
The Bobcats started the 2011–12 season with a close 96–95 win against Stephen Jackson and the Milwaukee Bucks in their home opener but wins would be scarce after that. [129] In the lockout-shortened season the Bobcats struggled and posted an NBA-worst record of 7–59, losing the last 23 games of the season.
It was also the 10th and final season under the Bobcats name. The Bobcats reached the playoffs for the first time since 2010 and were swept by the two-time defending champion and eventual Eastern Conference champion Miami Heat in the first round. Like in 2010, the Bobcats were swept in the first round.