1946–47 Chicago Stags season
NBA professional basketball team season
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The 1946–47 Chicago Stags season was the first season of the Chicago Stags of the Basketball Association of America (BAA/NBA).[1] Before this season even began, the Chicago Stags were originally meant to start out as the Chicago Atomics, to the point of even playing an exhibition game against the New York Knicks under that moniker before they later played as the Chicago Basketball Club, Inc. for one more exhibition game before they officially became the Chicago Stags for the rest of their existence onward.[2] Despite the tumultuous start with the team name in mind, the Stags would still finish with the best record in the Western Division with a 39–22 record (which was good enough for the second-best record in the BAA that season behind only the Washington Capitols in the Eastern Division), later reaching as far as the inaugural BAA/NBA Finals series, where they would ultimately lose to the Philadelphia Warriors (now known as the Golden State Warriors) 4–1. Despite their successful results as a team, they were initially undecided about whether they would play for another season or not due to their failure to gain any profits and traction over competing championship basketball events going on at around the same time as the 1947 BAA playoffs and 1947 BAA Finals within the city of Chicago with the Chicago American Gears of the rivaling National Basketball League (NBL) competing against the Rochester Royals (now Sacramento Kings) in the 1947 NBL Finals (which the American Gears later won 3–1) and the 1947 World Professional Basketball Tournament (WPBT) (which ended with the NBL's Indianapolis Kautskys (later Indianapolis Jets of the BAA) stunning everyone in the entire event that year after many years of failing to win a single game in the WPBT) despite initially thinking the Stags could at least co-exist with the American Gears akin to the Cubs and White Sox co-existing in the MLB,[3] though they ultimately would decide to stay in the BAA once they heard that the inner city rivaling Chicago American Gears were leaving the NBL to create a short-lived, yet very ambitious rivaling league of their own called the Professional Basketball League of America (with that decision also causing issues for the WPBT in what later became its final year of tournament play as well). The Stags ultimately stayed in the BAA/NBA for four years before later suddenly folding operations with little warning on September 25, 1950 due to new ownership and monetary issues; the Stags are currently one of three BAA/NBA teams that folded operations to have made it to a BAA/NBA Finals championship series alongside the original Baltimore Bullets ABL/BAA/NBA franchise in 1948 and the Washington Capitols in 1949. Greater details on their first season would be explored in Charley Rosen's book called "The First Tip-Off: The Incredible Story of the Birth of the NBA", with an entire chapter dedicated to the Stags' first season in the BAA alongside the various highs and lows (mostly highs) that would eventually lead them to their eventual downfall as a franchise.[4]
| 1946–47 Chicago Stags season | |
|---|---|
Division champions | |
| Head coach | Harold Olsen |
| Owner | Arthur Wirtz |
| Arena | Chicago Stadium |
| Results | |
| Record | 39–22 (.639) |
| Place | Division: 1st (Western) |
| Playoff finish | Lost BAA Finals to Warriors 1–4 |
| Local media | |
| Television | WBKB |
| Radio | WIND (AM) |
Roster
Due to this being the first season in the franchise's history, the BAA didn't utilize a draft system like they would in future seasons of the BAA/NBA and instead relied upon some combination of the head coach and the general manager of the team finding and signing players in time to start out their training camp period for the season.[5] For the Stags, head coach Harold Olsen and team owner Arthur Wirtz agreed to utilize a college basketball style of game play for their team, with quickness and finesse being utilized over brute force, an up-tempo game-plan being preferable to a grind-it-out pace of game, and fresh faces with young legs being more valuable than stubborn, jaded veteran players.[6] Because of that agreed upon philosophy in mind, Olsen would recruit a mixture of local and nearby talents for fans to grab onto (like Mickey Rottner and Wibs Kautz from Loyola University Chicago and Don Carlson and Tony Jaros from the nearby University of Minnesota), talented West coast military basketball players (Jim Seminoff from the University of Southern California, Chet Carlisle from the University of California, and Chuck Gilmur from the University of Washington), and other players that would interest Olsen for one reason or another (Bill Davis from the University of Notre Dame, Doyle Parrack from the 1945 NCAA champion University of Oklahoma A&M team, Chick Halbert from West Texas State Teachers College, and Max Zaslofsky from St. John's University) in order to open up their first ever season of play.[7]
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Head coach
Assistant(s)
Legend
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Regular season
Season standings
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Game log
| 1946–47 game log Total: 39–22 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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November
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December
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January
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February
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March
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1947 BAA Playoffs
BAA Semifinals
(E1) Washington Capitols vs. (W1) Chicago Stags: Stags win series 4-2
- Game 1 @ Washington (April 2): Chicago 81, Washington 65
- Game 2 @ Washington (April 3): Chicago 69, Washington 53
- Game 3 @ Chicago (April 8): Chicago 67, Washington 55
- Game 4 @ Washington (April 10): Washington 76, Chicago 69
- Game 5 @ Chicago (April 12): Washington 67, Chicago 55
- Game 6 @ Chicago (April 13): Chicago 66, Washington 61
BAA Finals
Despite the Stags looking like they should have home court advantage this series due to them having the better record this series, they would not end up having it due to their home venue hosting a circus at the time, with later venue scheduling issues causing them to lose out on the rest of the potential home games they might have had after Game 4 was played.[8] (E2) Philadelphia Warriors vs. (W1) Chicago Stags: Warriors win series 4-1
- Game 1 @ Philadelphia (April 16): Philadelphia 84, Chicago 71
- Game 2 @ Philadelphia (April 17): Philadelphia 85, Chicago 74
- Game 3 @ Chicago (April 19): Philadelphia 75, Chicago 72
- Game 4 @ Chicago (April 20): Chicago 74, Philadelphia 73
- Game 5 @ Philadelphia (April 22): Philadelphia 83, Chicago 80
Season losses
Throughout this season, the Chicago Stags only had an average total of 2,346 paid attendees per game, with net receipts totaling up to $93,951 for the season and estimated losses totaling up to around $160,000 for this season.[9] However, because of the uncertain future involved with the BAA between the high amount of teams with lost revenue this season and the high amount of competition the Stags had to deal with during their playoff run between the rivaling National Basketball League's Chicago American Gears and the 1947 World Professional Basketball Tournament both competing and operating at the same time as the Stags during their run in the 1947 BAA playoffs, the Stags would join the Toronto Huskies as one of two teams to become undecided on whether they would end up playing for another season or not.[10] With that being said, unlike the Huskies, who ended up folding alongside the Pittsburgh Ironmen following their entries in the inaugural 1947 BAA draft, the Stags would continue playing for a few more seasons following the reveal that the Chicago American Gears would create their own rivaling (albeit short-lived) professional basketball league called the Professional Basketball League of America (thus getting rid of a significant rivaling source of income for the Stags in future seasons), including the first official season of the National Basketball Association when the BAA merged operations with the older NBL to become the NBA, before folding operations for good by the 1950 offseason period due to ownership and monetary issues after the new team owner, Abe Saperstein, planned on renaming the team to the Chicago Bruins for the 1950–51 NBA season. Chicago would be the last BAA team to fold operations during the offseason period, though not the last BAA team to fold operations entirely due to the Washington Capitols folding operations while playing in the 1950–51 NBA season.