Cleveland Cavaliers (1986–1994) Daugherty was taken as the first overall pick by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the
1986 NBA draft. Cleveland had obtained the rights to the first pick in a trade with the
Philadelphia 76ers for
Roy Hinson and cash. The Cavaliers also drafted
Ron Harper with the eighth pick in the 1986 draft and obtained the rights to
Mark Price (in a trade with the Dallas Mavericks) the 25th pick (second round). Harper, Price and Daugherty, along with fellow rookie
John "Hot Rod" Williams immediately began to pay dividends for Cleveland. Daugherty, Williams, and Harper were all named to the
1986–87 All-Rookie team. Daugherty averaged nineteen points and ten rebounds per game over eight seasons in the NBA and retired as the Cavaliers all-time leading scorer (10,389 points) and rebounder (5,227). Daugherty's all time-leading scorer record stood until March 21, 2008, when
LeBron James broke the point record against the
Toronto Raptors. His leading rebounder record stood until December 9, 2008, when
Žydrūnas Ilgauskas broke the rebound record, again against the Raptors. He played in 41 postseason games and led the Cavaliers as far as the Eastern Conference Finals in 1992. He was a five time All-Star (1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993). As part of the Cavaliers' 30th anniversary in
1999–2000, Daugherty was a unanimous selection to the All-Time Cleveland Cavalier team. Daugherty's career in the NBA was cut short at the age of 28 because of recurring back troubles. He never played another game after the
1993–94 season, though he did make one appearance in uniform for the
Whoopi Goldberg movie
Eddie along with teammates
Hot Rod Williams,
John Battle,
Terrell Brandon, and
Bobby Phills. After two consecutive seasons of inactivity, he announced his retirement after the
1995–96 season. His #43 jersey, a number he picked as a tribute to NASCAR legend
Richard Petty (whom Daugherty lists as his favorite sportsman) was retired by the Cavaliers on March 1, 1997. ==Career statistics==