Foto

Portland Trail Blazers' team chemistry in early 90s was just different

Rip City has so many fond memories and moments that come to mind when looking back at the 1989-92 Trail Blazers seasons.

The early 90s teams were special on the court, no doubt, but their bond off the court may have been even more special.

"Those were fun times," Terry Porter reminisced on NBA TV's Trail Blazers documentary, 'Rip City Revival.' "There's nothing like playing professional sports. You build a bond, a brotherhood, a willingness to protect each other, and you always have that."

The final two segments of Sunday's special on the 1989-92 Trail Blazers era focused on what made this Blazers squad so unique: their team chemistry.

[RELATED]: 'Rip City Revival' was a Trail Blazer history lesson that left out a few chapters

During Portland's 1989-90 campaign, the team posted a 59-23 record. They defeated the Dallas Mavericks , San Antonio Spurs , and Phoenix Suns in the Western Conference playoffs, before ultimately losing to the defending-champion Detroit Pistons .

In the 1990-91 season, the Blazers posted a 63-19 record, which was the best in the league and the best in franchise history. Their season ended in the West Finals when the Lakers defeated the Blazers 4-2.

As for the 1991-92 season, Portland repeated as Pacific Division champions as they dominated through the Western Conference playoffs. They met the Chicago Bulls in the Finals, losing 4-2, with the big storyline being Michael Jordan vs. Drexler.

[RELATED]: 'Rip City Revival' vs. 'The Last Dance': A different take on the 1992 NBA Finals

"The whole team, I mean that's what made this team so unique, is the chemistry, the personnel," Buck Williams said during the NBA TV special.

Drexler discussed how on the road they would hang out and go to movies together as a team. Porter reiterated that, adding this was a team that enjoyed hanging out with each other and would do so every chance they got.

"What made it all go was trust, we trusted each other," Williams added.

They had fun together.

"To have the success we had as a group and the excitement we brought this city and this state -- it is always going to be somewhere special in my heart. We grew up together on and off the court," Porter said.

As Drexler put it, "That bond will keep you together for a lifetime."

Be sure to check out the full Talkin' Blazers Podcast with host NBA Champion Channing Frye and Emmy Award winner Dan Sheldon, and Timbers midfielder Diego Valeri.

Portland Trail Blazers' team chemistry in early 90s was just different originally appeared on NBC Sports Northwest