Chapter 382: The logos of NBA teams

After talking about the NBA logo, let's talk about the logos of each team...

The Bobcats have only been around for five years, so the improvement they did a year ago was to darken the orange in the badge. Overall, it looks fairly coordinated, but there are a few things that could be improved. First of all, the English letters BOBCATS are dark gray, the background is dark blue, and all the English letters on them are italicized, and they are all skewed to the right. Other than that, the logo doesn't look so professional, like the work of a high school student graffiti, not like the work of a professional team designer.

The previous logo (1968-1993) is not much different from the current version in my mind, except for the font, of course, the old version of the cartoon buck is really a bit naïve. The Bucks' logo for the 30th anniversary was simply a patchwork of the two versions, but the purple and green themes made the two look very coordinated.

The only team logo that hasn't changed The Bulls' name shows strength and prowess. And, the name is associated with Chicago's meatpacking industry and bullrings.

The Cavaliers' current crest is not bad, showing a mighty heavy sword to remind the audience of the "knightly" spirit, and there is also a basketball embellished with this icon to represent which professional sport.

The Celtics' logo is a top-notch design, without a hint of prostitution and focus. Although the current team emblem has only been in use since 1994, the version before the improvement has been in use for a long time, and has been appearing in the rivers and lakes since 1968! In the team logo, there is a tycoon spinning basketball, and the English name of the team, the advantage of this team logo is that readers are unlikely to confuse it with other team logos in any sport, the simple and concise theme is prominent, and no one even notices that it actually uses 6 different colors! When it was revised in 1994, a color was added to further enhance the beauty of the logo. Want to know the Celtics' logo when "The Lord of the Rings" Russell won 11 championships? It's really a great contrast, it's an extremely ugly clown jumping up and down with a basketball, it's really miserable!

In 1978, the coastal city of San Diego welcomed the Buffalo Warriors to the city, as San Diego's team, the Rockets, moved to Houston seven years earlier. But San Diego's athletic officials argued that the name Warriors did not represent the spirit of the city. To that end, San Diego held a call for names. In the end, the name Clipper was chosen because San Diego is known for its large ships crossing San Diego Bay. In 1984, the Clippers traveled to Los Angeles, but still kept their original name.

Prior to the 1995-96 season, the NBA expanded and the Grizzlies were born in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The team's owners wanted to choose a name that would be appropriate for Vancouver and British Columbia.

AFTER INITIAL NEGOTIATIONS, THE TEAM CHOSE MOUNTIES AS THE TEAM'S NAME TO SHOW THEIR APPRECIATION FOR THE ROYAL CANADIAN MOUNTED POLICE. However, it didn't take long for the team to decide to switch to the Grizzlies name. Because grizzly bears are endemic to British Columbia, they have a special place in the culture of Northwest Canada and in Canada as a whole.

Why did the Eagles abandon the red and yellow logo they had used from 1972-2007? I don't understand this very much, is it because they don't want the audience to think of "Ronald McDonald"? They've been using this logo for a long time, and I've always thought it was good, at least better than the current "Angry Eagles clutching a gray basketball" logo, but it's not bad.

A burning hot basketball? It's a good idea, just like the speakers in Miami, the white hoop in the picture looks like a catalytic device for temperature, but the icon is infused with too much 90s features. The rest of them should completely revert to the previous icon, which has a more colorful and aesthetically pleasing basketball in the burning basketball.

The Hornets logo is really nothing new, so can you just throw the words Hornets and New Orleans together and call it design? Last year, the Hornets "revamped" their logo, but the end result was that the Bobcats were replaced by the Hornets. It's unexpected.

The pelican (tíhú) is the state bird of Louisiana, and Louisiana is also known as the pelican state, and the image of the pelican can be seen everywhere here. This bird symbolizes Louisiana's environmental recovery from an oil spill.

In 1974, the city of New Orleans held a call for names for its professional basketball team. In total, citizens of the city provided more than 6,500 names to the organizing committee. In the end, eight names made it to the "retest phase": Jazz, Duke, Crescent, Aviator, Arcadian, Blues, Delta, and Knight. After a heated discussion, team officials announced on June 7, 1974, that the new team would be called the New Orleans Jazz.

The predecessor of the Kings was the Rochester Royals, who joined the NBL league in 1947. In 1957 the team moved to Cincinnati, but at that time the team was still named Royals.

THE NAME NIKS IS DERIVED FROM THE ENGLISH "KNICKERBOCKER". The term refers to the descendants of Dutch immigrants, that is, the descendants of early Dutch immigrants in New York. At that time, a man named Alexander Cartwhite formed a baseball team with people living near Manhattan as the "New York Bloomers," or "Bloomers Nine."

The logo used by the Lakers during the Minneapolis period not only made people exclaim, "I always thought that only high school teams would compose pictures, but I didn't expect that such a professional team as the Lakers would do this!" The icon included a miniature of the shape of Minneapolis, but the basketball clearly stole the show, and the four letters of MPLS looked like an abbreviation for a high school team.

In April 1987, the NBA officially approved Orlando's team to join the league through a meeting. Unlike other teams, the City of Orlando had already decided on the name of their team eight months before joining the league.

The Mavericks' current emblem has been used since Mark Cuban bought the team in 2000, which reflects his character. Radiant and angular, like a luxury. The ponies in the chart are not deep enough, just like the "horses" in chess, and the English team names are in a generic font, with large sides and small in the middle, which is not very coordinated, and the star at the bottom seems to exist only to fill a small gap at the bottom, lacking a sense of wholeness.