Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

2004–05 Los Angeles Lakers season

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Record
  
34–48 (.415)

End date
  
2005

Owner
  
Arena
  
Staples Center

Playoff finish
  
Did Not Qualify

General manager
  
Radio
  
KLAC

Place
  
Division: 5th (Pacific)Conference: 12th (Western)

Televisions
  
Fox Sports West and Prime Ticket, KCAL-TV

The 2004–05 Los Angeles Lakers season was the 57th in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and 59th overall. The Los Angeles Lakers finished fifth in the Pacific Division. The season is best remembered as a tough one for the Lakers, starting with a crushing defeat to the Detroit Pistons in last year's NBA Finals in five games despite being the heavily favored team to win the Finals, winning only 34 games, missing the playoffs for the first time in 11 years. The off-season marked changes for the Lakers, who lost several members from the famed 2004 team: Rick Fox and Gary Payton were traded to the Boston Celtics, but Fox would retire before the season instead of suiting up for Boston, Shaquille O'Neal was traded to the Miami Heat in exchange for Brian Grant, Caron Butler, and Lamar Odom after bad blood between himself and teammate Kobe Bryant culminated after the loss to the Detroit Pistons in the NBA Finals, Derek Fisher left for the Golden State Warriors, though he would return to the Lakers in 2007 and would eventually win two more championships in 2009 and 2010, and Karl Malone retired in February 2005 after spending half of the season unsigned. The team hired Rudy Tomjanovich, who was well known for his tenure with the Houston Rockets, to be their new head coach for the upcoming season. But midseason, Tomjanovich once again resigned and Frank Hamblen took over for the rest of the season.

Contents

Kobe Bryant, for the sixth time in his career, did not make the All-NBA First Team.

Awards and records

  • Kobe Bryant, All-NBA Third Team
  • Transactions

  • Kareem Rush was traded to the Charlotte Bobcats on December 6, 2004 for a 2005 2nd round draft pick and a 2009 2nd round draft pick.
  • References

    2004–05 Los Angeles Lakers season Wikipedia


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