1975–76 New York Nets season

ABA professional basketball team season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1975–76 New York Nets season was the ninth and final season of American Basketball Association basketball for the franchise, which saw them first play as the New Jersey Americans in their inaugural season before later playing the rest of their years in the league in Long Island as the New York Nets. Before the season began properly (specifically over a week after the 1975 ABA draft came and went), tragedy would strike with the team as beloved small forward Wendell Ladner was one of 113 fatalities (out of 124 total people) found in the Eastern Air Lines Flight 66, with him being identified by his championship ring with the Nets from the 1973–74 season as well as being the only ABA player to die during their career while in the league.[1][2][3] After the tragic event, the Nets would dedicate the upcoming season to Ladner, with them later honoring him in future years as well. Also before the season began, the Nets and Denver Nuggets attempted to jump ship from the ABA to the National Basketball Association (NBA) early (with them wanting the Kentucky Colonels to join them since they saw each other as the strongest ABA teams left over by that point in time), but the judges preceding in their case informed them to stay in the ABA for at least one more season first due to the notion that even having two ABA teams join the NBA like that would still technically count as a merger happening between leagues. By the end of the season, the Nets were the second-best team in the league behind only the Nuggets (who finished with a league-best 60–24 record), having them easily earn a spot in the 1976 ABA Playoffs, with the Nets unofficially being the final Eastern Division winners of the final ABA season in the process had the ABA not gotten rid of divisions entirely following the folding of the Utah Stars. The Nets won what would be their second and final ABA Championship by first beating the San Antonio Spurs 4–3 in the semifinal round before beating the Nuggets 4–2 in the championship round. By the end of the season, the Nets would join the Denver Nuggets, San Antonio Spurs, and Indiana Pacers as the final four surviving ABA teams from the ABA-NBA merger to make it to the NBA, though the Nets would suffer the biggest consequences of the four teams once they finally entered the NBA properly due to them encroaching up onto the New York Knicks' territory as a new nearby, almost cityside rivaling organization (with the Nets playing in the Long Island area at the time) that the Knicks' ownership group was apprehensive of for the longest time.

Record5529 (.655)
PlaceDivision: 1st
Conference: 2nd (ABA)
Quick facts New York Nets season, Head coach ...
1975–76 New York Nets season
ABA champions
Division champions
Head coachKevin Loughery
ArenaNassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum
Results
Record5529 (.655)
PlaceDivision: 1st
Conference: 2nd (ABA)
Playoff finishABA champions
(defeated Nuggets 4–2)

Stats at Basketball Reference
Local media
TelevisionWOR 9
RadioWMCA
< 1974–75 1976–77 >
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With the Nets losing their only two NBA Finals appearances in 2002 and 2003 (the latter series a loss to fellow former ABA franchise San Antonio), the 1976 ABA championship remains the Nets franchise's most recent title in any league.

ABA Draft

More information Round, Pick ...
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Roster

More information Players, Coaches ...
1975–76 New York Nets roster
Players Coaches
Pos. No. Player Height Weight DOB From
PF 21 Tim Bassett 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 225 lb (102 kg) 1951-04-01 Georgia
SG 11 George Bucci 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 1953-07-09 Manhattan
F/C 22 Jim Eakins 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1946-05-24 BYU
SF 32 Julius Erving 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 1950-02-22 UMass
C 35 Kim Hughes 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1952-06-04 Wisconsin
PF 33 Rich Jones 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1946-12-27 Memphis
SG 24 Ted McClain 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 1946-08-30 Tennessee State
PG 25 Bill Melchionni 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 165 lb (75 kg) 1944-10-19 Villanova
C 31 Swen Nater 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 240 lb (109 kg) 1950-01-14 UCLA
SF 15, 24 Billy Schaeffer 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 1951-12-11 St. John's
SG 30 Al Skinner 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 1952-06-16 UMass
PG 14 Brian Taylor 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1951-06-09 Princeton
SF 12 Chuck Terry 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1950-09-27 Long Beach State
SG 23 John Williamson 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1951-11-10 New Mexico State
Head coach

Legend
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • Injured Injured

Roster

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Exhibition Games

On October 4, 1975, the Nets played their first exhibition game of the season, facing the Washington Bullets of the NBA in the Capital Center in Landover, Maryland. Julius Erving scored 36 points to lead the Nets, but the Bullets managed a one-point victory, 109–108.

The Nets faced the New York Knicks on October 8 in Uniondale, New York. The Nets prevailed, 110–104.

On October 11 the Nets ventured to Buffalo, New York, to face the Buffalo Braves on the Braves' home court. 15,000 fans attended the game. Erving was held to 16 points, but the Nets won by a large margin, 109–83.

The Nets traveled to New Haven, Connecticut, on October 14 to play the Washington Bullets for the second time in the preseason. The Nets avenged their loss of ten days earlier, winning 122–114.

The very next day, on October 15, the Golden State Warriors took the court against the Nets in Uniondale. Erving led the Nets with 43 points but Rick Barry had 49 for Golden State as the Warriors won, 119–114.

Two days later the Nets traveled to Seton Hall for a rematch with the Buffalo Braves on October 17. The Nets won again, 117–97.

The next day, October 18, saw the Nets play their final ABA vs. NBA exhibition game as they took the court at Madison Square Garden to again face their in-state rivals from the NBA, the New York Knicks. Julius Erving scored 33 points and hit a jump shot at the buzzer to win the game for the Nets, 103–101.[4]

The Nets finished their ABA tenure with a record of 15 wins and 9 losses against NBA teams in exhibition games. The Nets went 2–0 against the NBA before the 1971–72 season, 0–3 before 1972–73, 4–1 prior to the 1973–74 campaign, 4–3 before the 1974–75 season and 5–2 before the 1975–76 season. Overall, the ABA went 79–76 in the interleague matchups, faring poorly at first but going 62–34 in the last three years of the league.[5]

Regular season

Season standings

More information Team, W ...
TeamWLPCT.GB
Denver Nuggets *6024.714
New York Nets *5529.6555
San Antonio Spurs *5034.59510
Kentucky Colonels *4638.54814
Indiana Pacers *3945.46421
Spirits of St. Louis3549.41725
Virginia Squires1568.18144
San Diego Sails38.273
Utah Stars412.250
Baltimore Claws00.000
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Asterisk (*) denotes playoff team
† did not survive the end of the season.
Bold – ABA champions[6]

Schedule

[7]

Player statistics

Note: GP= Games played; MIN= Minutes; STL= Steals; REB = Rebounds; ASST = Assists; BLK = Blocks; PTS = Points

More information Player, GP ...
Player GP MIN STL REB ASST BLK PTS
Julius Erving 84 3244 207 925 423 160 2462
John Williamson 76 2255 76 190 188 33 1233
Rich Jones 83 2427 81 428 131 21 1096
Brian Taylor 54 1733 125 162 204 22 904
Al Skinner 83 2082 91 307 280 50 865
Kim Hughes 84 2162 98 775 55 120 692
Tim Bassett 84 1790 47 531 65 41 405
Bill Melchionni 67 1191 52 88 266 8 386
Swen Nater 43 1016 18 441 19 26 376
Ted McClain 30 696 57 73 106 10 340
Chuck Terry 66 970 36 144 38 6 220
Jim Eakins 34 463 7 120 18 20 211
George Bucci 33 237 12 37 15 3 128
Billy Schaeffer 20 119 6 22 9 2 72
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[8]

Playoffs

Semifinals vs. San Antonio Spurs

GameDateLocationScoreRecordAttendance
1April 9New York116–1011–08,221
2April 11San Antonio79–1051–15,769
3April 14New York103–1111–210,009
4April 18San Antonio110–1082–29,277
5April 19New York110–1083–211,321
6April 21San Antonio105–1063–310,484
7April 24New York121–1144–315,934

Nets win series, 4–3

ABA Finals vs. Denver Nuggets

GameDateLocationScoreRecordAttendance
1May 1Denver120–1181–019,034
2May 4Denver121–1271–119,107
3May 6New York117–1112–112,243
4May 8New York121–1123–115,934
5May 11Denver110–1183–218,881
6May 13New York112–1064–215,934

Nets win series, 4–2

This is, to date, the last championship the Nets have won in professional basketball. This would also be the last playoff series ever done in the ABA.

Awards, Records and Honors

  • Julius Erving, ABA Finals MVP

References

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