| 2000-01:
Lead team in scoring, rebound and blocked shots in 77 games including 75 starts...Averaged a career-high 19.2 points, 7.8 rebounds, 2.7 assists, 1.7 blocks and 1.1 steals in 38.1 minutes per game...Career-high 42 points, 27 field goal attempts and career-high matching 17 field goals vs. Denver February 20...Career-high 18 rebounds January 1 vs. Charlotte...Career-high-tying 5 blocks at Philadelphia January 10...Hit a career-high 32.1% of his three-pointers on 52-162...Played a career-high 52 minutes at LA Clippers Feb. 24...Had a career-high 12-17 from the free throw line in the November 14 game at Atlanta...Led the Blazers in double figures games with 71...Had 34 games with 20+ points...Had 18 games with 10+ points...Scored 37 points on 12-20 from the field, 4-5 from three-point land and 9-10 from the free throw line along with 7 rebounds, 6 assists and a career-high 5 blocks in the November 19 win over Orlando...Scored 33 points in 12-20 shooting in Christmas Day win over the Lakers...Was 11th in the NBA in field goal percentage, hitting 50.1% of his shots...Selected to play in his second straight All-Star game February 11 in Washington D.C.
1999-2000:
Led team in scoring and blocked shots and was second in rebounding. Posted 24 games with 20 or more points and 14 with 10 or more rebounds. Scored in double figures in 69 of his last 70 games. In his first NBA All-Star Game appearance, tallied nine points, four rebounds, a steal and a block in 21 minutes. Averaged a team-high 17.9 ppg and 1.25 blocked shots in the playoffs.
1998-99:
Led the Blazers in field-goal percentage (.508, 6th in the NBA) and ranked 2nd on the team in scoring (12.8 rpg). Averaged 14.6 ppg, 6.0 rpg, 1.6 apg, 1.28 bpg and 1.22 spg, and shot .545 from the field, in 18 games as a starter.
1997-98:
Third-leading scorer on the Blazers with 14.6 ppg. Ranked eighth in the league in field goal percentage (.533). Scored n double figures 64 times and posted eight double-doubles. His then career-best 195 assists for the season was more than the two previous seasons combined.
1996-97:
Wallace improved upon his rookie season with a solid second campaign, ranking third on the Blazes in scoring at 15.1 ppg, rebounbding at 6.8 rpg and shotblocking at 0.95 bpg. He led the team with a .558 field goal percentage, ranking third in the NBA. He led the Blazers in scoring 12 times, getting 20 or more points in 17 of his 62 games played. He suffered a fractured left thumb in a game against Washington on Dec. 23, underwent surgery and did not return to action until Feb. 4. Wallace scored a career-high 38 points on 17-for-25 shooting in a 101-99 overtime loss at Sacramento on Dec. 21. He had two other 30+ games and a total of 17 20+ games. He grabbed double-digits in rebounds 11 times, matching his career-high with 14 in a 109-105 win at Houston on Feb. 15. Wallace rose to the occasion in the playoff series against the Lakers, leading the Blazers with 19.8 points per game and also averaging 6.0 rebounds in 37.0 minutes per game, shooting .578 from the field. He had 18 points in Game 1, 20 points in Games 2 and 3 and playoff-highs of 21 points and 9 rebounds in Game 4.
1995-96:
Wallace appeared in 65 games as a rookie and made 51 starts at forward while also seeing playing time at center. He averaged 10.1 points and 4.7 rebounds in 27.5 minutes per game, shooting .487 from the field and even hitting 27 three-pointers. As a starter he averaged |