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Chambers scored 20,049 total points in the NBA for a career average of 18.1 points per game. His career high was a 60-point performance with the Suns against the Sonics on March 24, 1990. [ 16 ] He appeared in four NBA All-Star Games during his career (1987, 1989, 1990, and 1991), earning game MVP honors in 1987 after scoring 34 points.
One of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA history; Hall of Famer; gold medalist with the Dream Team at the 1992 Olympics; won the NBA MVP award in 1993 and led Suns to NBA Finals the same year; is an Emmy award winning broadcaster for the NBA on TNT: Tom Chambers: 24* F 1988–1993 April 18, 1999
[10] [11] [12] The team also signed former Suns, and All-Star forward Tom Chambers, who played for the team from 1988 to 1993, and also appeared in the 1993 NBA Finals; however, he was out with a lower strained back injury before the regular season began.
Under Johnson, and after trading for perennial NBA All-Star Charles Barkley, and combined with the output of Tom Chambers and Dan Majerle, the Suns reached the playoffs for a franchise-record thirteen consecutive appearances and remained a regular title contender throughout the 1990s, and reached the 1993 NBA Finals. However, the team would ...
Chambers made four All-Star teams and was the MVP of the game in 1987. Crawford was an NBA official from 1977 to 2016, where he officiated 2,561 regular season games and a record 344 playoff games.
The Suns struggled in Hornacek's first two seasons, but after hiring Cotton Fitzsimmons as a coach and acquiring free agent Tom Chambers, the Suns went from 28 wins in 1987–88 to 55 in 1988–89. Hornacek was a "third option" on offense after Chambers and Kevin Johnson. This trio led the Suns to four straight NBA playoff appearances ...
The Phoenix Suns honored their greats in the Ring of Honor ceremony during halftime of the team's season home-opening win over Utah Jazz on Saturday. Suns owner Ishbia praised by Nash, Chambers ...
He played in the National Basketball Association (NBA) for 12 seasons; with the Pistons, Cincinnati Royals/Kansas City–Omaha Kings, Philadelphia 76ers, Atlanta Hawks, and Phoenix Suns. A consecutive three-time NBA All-Star starting in 1970, [12] Van Arsdale's play peaked as the Royals lost star Oscar Robertson to the Milwaukee Bucks. [13]