Klay Thompson Sam Hodde/Getty Images

10 NBA Stars Wearing the 'Wrong' Jersey Since 2000

David Kenyon

Watching a star player spend his entire NBA career with one organization is a rarity, especially in the modern era.

Many factors can cause a breakup. Perhaps the team has struggled in recent years, so the player—even reluctantly—requests a trade or leaves in free agency to chase a ring. Maybe the franchise is looking to get younger, yet its longtime face is not ready to retire.

And the result is that standout player moving on.

Afterward, though, it sometimes doesn't feel right. We know it's historically accurate Michael Jordan played for the Washington Wizards, Tony Parker went to the Charlotte Hornets and Klay Thompson signed with the Dallas Mavericks, but that image just feels strange.

The choices are subjective, but each player highlighted is remembered primarily for his accomplishments on a particular NBA team.

Hakeem Olajuwon

Kent Horner

The first overall pick of the 1984 NBA draft, Hakeem Olajuwon had a sensational 17-year tenure with the Houston Rockets.

Along with winning an MVP, he landed two Defensive Player of the Year honors. Olajuwon made 12 All-Star and All-NBA teams, nine All-Defensive Teams and a pair of Finals MVPs with two championships.

In his final season, however, he suited up for the Toronto Raptors.

Olajuwon had rejected a $13 million offer from Houston, and he ended up retiring after one season because of a back injury.

Patrick Ewing

Fernando Medina

When you think of Patrick Ewing, it's the New York Knicks.

Olajuwon went first overall in 1984, and Ewing followed suit in 1985. He immediately made a major impact in New York, averaging 20 points, making the All-Star team and taking home Rookie of the Year.

Ultimately, the Hall of Famer played 15 seasons with the Knicks and collected seven All-NBA and three All-Defensive nods.

Did you know he actually spent another year on two different teams? After not receiving a desired extension from the Knicks, Ewing requested a trade. New York shipped him to the Seattle SuperSonics, and then Ewing signed with the Orlando Magic for his final NBA season.

Michael Jordan

Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

The third act of Michael Jordan's career is one of the more memorable "wrong jersey" moments in NBA history.

Jordan built his legendary reputation on the Chicago Bulls over two stints of a combined 13 seasons. MJ's trophy case included six championships and Finals MVPs, five league MVPs, 12 All-Star, 11 All-NBA, nine All-Defensive selections, 10 scoring titles and a Rookie of the Year.

After retiring (for the second time) in 1998, Jordan took on a different role as a part-owner and executive for the Washington Wizards. He watched for three seasons, then couldn't help but return to the court.

Jordan put up 21.2 points per game during his two years on the Wizards, who fell short of the playoffs in both seasons.

Karl Malone

Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images

Karl Malone didn't need to prove anything else.

Throughout his 18 seasons on the Utah Jazz, he'd built an undisputed Hall of Fame resume. "The Mailman" delivered 25.4 points, 10.2 rebounds and 3.6 assists per game while amassing two league MVPs with 14 All-Star, 14 All-NBA honors and four All-Defensive honors.

But, hey, he wanted that elusive championship. Malone left the Jazz for the Los Angeles Lakers in the summer of 2003.

Malone took a $17.7 million pay cut to join L.A., and the sacrifice almost paid off as the team stormed to the 2004 NBA Finals. However, the Lakers memorably lost to the Detroit Pistons.

Gary Payton

Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images

Another ring-chaser on that Lakers team? Gary Payton, one of the best defenders in league history.

For more than 12 seasons, "The Glove" starred on the SuperSonics. Along with one Defensive Player of the Year award, he received nine All-Defensive honors and nine trips to the All-Star Game.

Payton went to the Milwaukee Bucks in a 2003 trade sending Ray Allen to Seattle. That offseason, he signed with the Lakers.

That championship fell narrowly short, but Payton ultimately won a ring as a member of the Miami Heat in 2006.

Allen Iverson

Melissa Majchrzak/NBAE via Getty Images

The history of Allen Iverson's time on the Philadelphia 76ers is full of twists, but what he achieved in Philly is unforgettable.

Iverson, the No. 1 pick in the 1996 draft, lifted a proud franchise out of the NBA's basement. By his third season, the Sixers snapped an eight-year drought and returned to the playoffs.

"The Answer" was a staple of postseason awards, winning an MVP in 2001—when he propelled the franchise to its first NBA Finals trip in 17 years—with All-Star and All-NBA recognition seven times. He added four scoring titles over 10-plus seasons in Philly.

But as the relationship between AI and the Sixers crumbled, they shipped him to the Denver Nuggets.

Iverson played parts of three seasons in Denver, then jumped to the Pistons and Memphis Grizzlies before returning to Philly for the final 25 games of his Hall of Fame career.

Shaquille O'Neal

Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images

The reality is Shaquille O'Neal actually played more seasons on different teams than on the Los Angeles Lakers.

But one of those—the Boston Celtics—was just plain wrong.

The most historic rivalry in the league is between the Lakers and Celtics. During the 1960s, they played in five NBA Finals. Every single year of the 1980s included L.A., Boston or both in the Finals. After the Lakers three-peated with Shaq during the early 2000s, the Celtics won in 2008 with Kobe Bryant-led L.A. taking back-to-back titles in 2009 and 2010.

Given all of that, the very notion of Lakers legend Shaquille O'Neal in Boston's green-and-white uniform was unsightly.

Orlando, sure. Miami, no problem. Phoenix Suns and Cleveland Cavaliers, all good. But the Celtics? No way.

Dwyane Wade

Brian Sevald/NBAE via Getty Images

Similar to Iverson, the comforting detail is Dwyane Wade finished where he started with the Heat.

This final memory—statue notwithstanding—is a proper one.

Nevertheless, the three-time champion in Miami departed the Heat after the 2016 season. Wade and the organization could not agree on a new contact, and he left for the Chicago Bulls. He briefly reunited with LeBron James on the Cavaliers early in 2017-18, as well.

When the Cavs rebuilt the roster near the 2018 trade deadline, they shipped D-Wade to Miami. He appeared in 93 more games and retired in 2019 as a member of the Heat.

Tony Parker

Kent Smith/NBAE via Getty Images

Remembering the San Antonio Spurs' two-decade dynasty is a chance to highlight the incredible trio of Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili. They won four of the Spurs' five championships together.

Duncan retired after the 2016 campaign, and Ginobili hung up the shoes two years later—both on the Spurs.

Tony Parker left in a different way.

San Antonio ripped apart the roster in 2018, trading Kawhi Leonard and Danny Green to Toronto. Ginobili retired, and Parker chose to pursue a larger role on the Charlotte Hornets instead of being a reserve to the young backcourt of Dejounte Murray and Derrick White.

Parker spent one year in Charlotte, averaging 9.5 points and 3.7 assists in his backup role.

Klay Thompson

Tim Heitman/Getty Images

The story of the NBA cannot be told without Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and the Golden State Warriors.

Curry rose to superstardom, and he always had a hot-shooting sidekick. In their 12 seasons together—even 10, if you remove two seasons Klay missed with injuries—the Splash Brothers won four NBA titles.

Thompson made a handful of All-Star teams and two All-NBA teams during his time in Golden State.

However, he left the Warriors after the 2023-24 season because of a gap in contract negotiations that could not be bridged. Thompson joined the Dallas Mavericks in free agency.

   

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