Here are some basic blurbs about some of the players on the rosters during those years:
• Martell Webster - Webster’s mother, Cora McGuirk, disappeared in 1990, when he was four years old. Although her body was never found, Gary Ridgway, known as the “Green River Killer”, a serial killer who murdered dozens of women and girls in Washington during the 1980s and 1990s, is thought to be responsible for killing her.
In 2015, Webster co-founded EYRST, an independent record label focusing on hip hop, based in Portland, Oregon. He released his first mixtape, ARTT, on July 14, 2016, and his first EP on August 12, 2016, entitled Emerald District, which was produced by Seattle hip hop producer Jake One
• Arvydas Sabonis - According to his son, Domantas, Arvydas is a huge fan of the Boston Celtics, his favorite basketball player is Larry Bird and his favorite color is green
• Steve Kerr - married Margot Brennan, his college sweetheart, in 1990. They have three children: Nick, Maddy, and Matthew. He is a keen soccer fan and an avid supporter of Liverpool F.C. In 2023, Kerr bought a minority stake in La Liga club RCD Mallorca.
Kerr has voiced support for the Black Lives Matter movements across the United States, praising the efforts of peaceful protests and hopes that more people will take action to stand up to systemic racial injustice to black people
• Chris Dudley - He was the recipient of the NBA’s J. Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award in 1996,[6] and USA Today’s Most Caring Athlete Award in 1997.
• Wesley Person - According to Complex Sports, Person is the 13th greatest three-point shooter of all time. Person was also the only person to set a net on fire, as made popular by the arcade game NBA Jam
• Theo Ratliff - In 2020, Ratliff wrote and published Theo The Hero, a children’s book on how to deal with bullying
• Dan Dickau - currently works as an on-air broadcaster for ESPN, the Pac-12 Network, CBS Sports Network and Westwood One. He is also a co-host of the Dickau and Slim Show on Spokane’s 700 ESPN with Sean “Slim” Widmer
• Shareef Abdur-Rahim - the president of the NBA G League. Nicknamed Reef, he previously served as the director of player personnel for the Sacramento Kings of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and the general manager of the Reno Bighorns, the Kings’ minor-league affiliate.
Abdur-Rahim has started his own foundation, the Future Foundation, which provides after-school and other support services for youth at-risk in Atlanta. He is also referenced in the Latyrx song “The Quickening (The Wreckoning Part II)”, from their 1997 album The Album
• Ruben Boumtje-Boumtje - Boumtje-Boumtje speaks three languages - a native Cameroonian language, French and English. At Georgetown he was a pre-med, as well as a mathematics and biology double major. He was named Big East Scholar-Athlete of the Year in 2001, an honor often reserved for athletes in non-televised sports, and used the occasion to restate his intention to attend medical school if he were not drafted by the NBA. In 2014, Ruben earned a master’s degree in Applied Mathematics and Statistics from Georgetown University. He recently interned at Elder Research
• Juan Dixon - Dating since 1996, Dixon married his high-school sweetheart, Robyn Bragg, in July 2005. She works in the public relations field and is a cast member in the Bravo reality television show The Real Housewives of Potomac.
TL;DR: I don’t have time to look up: Rasheed Wallace, Ruben Patterson, Damon Stoudamire, Shawn Kemp, Zach Randolph, Qyntel Woods, Darius Miles, and Bonzi Wells. But I am sure there’s nothing repulsive.