April 22, 1947, 75 years ago: The Basketball Association of America, the league that became the National Basketball Association 2 years later, crowns its first Champions.
The Philadelphia Warriors won the Eastern Division Playoffs, while the Chicago Stags won the Western Division Playoffs. The Finals got underway at the Philadelphia Arena, at 4530 Market Street in West Philadelphia, adjacent to the 46th Street station on the Market Street Elevated line, now known as SEPTA's Market-Frankford Line.
In those pre-24-second-shot-clock days, the Warriors won Game 1, 84-71. Joe Fulks, the league's 1st-ever scoring champion, scored 37 points.
(In a 1996 ESPN special about picking the greatest NBA team of all time, Bob Ryan of The Boston Globe, born 14 months before this 1st NBA Finals in nearby Trenton, New Jersey, suggested that the 1954 institution of the shot clock was a demarcation line, and, before that, no team, and no player, could be taken seriously among the all-time greats, because the game was just too different. He singled out Fulks: "I'm not going to kid you: I don't think Jumpin' Joe Fulks makes it in today's NBA, except maybe as a 12th man." In other words, the last man on the bench.)
The Warriors also won Game 2, 85-74, even though their leading scorer in this game scored only 18. This was Howie Dallmar, who had led Stanford University to the 1942 NCAA Tournament title.
The series moved out to the Chicago Stadium for Game 3. But only 2,209 fans came out, leaving about 20,000 empty seats. The days when a team going for a professional basketball league's championship meant everything to Chicago were far off into the future. The Warriors won this one, too, 75-72.
The Stags managed to avoid a sweep, by winning Game 4, 74-73, led by 20 points from Max Zaslofsky. But back in Philadelphia, on April 22, in front of a full house of 8,221, the Warriors finished the Stags off, 83-80. Fulks scored 34. Color footage survives, even though the accompanying music sounds more like the 1920s than the 1940s.
The team's head coach, general manager and owner was Eddie Gottlieb, born in 1898 in Kyiv, Ukraine, but grew up in South Philadelphia. He founded the South Philadelphia Hebrew Association team, or the Philadelphia SPHAs, the top pro basketball team in the Northeast in the 1930s and early 1940s. It's been suggested that the Warriors can be traced to this team, and some players did move from the SPHAs to the Warriors. However, the SPHAs continued in the minor American Basketball League for a few years. Gottlieb died in 1979.
Hail the Champions:
* 5, guard Angelo Musi, from West Philadelphia and the city's Temple University, born in 1918, died in 2009.
* 6, guard Jerry Fleishman, from Brooklyn and New York University (NYU), 1922-2007.
* 7, guard Jerry Rullo, from Southwest Philadelphia and Temple, 1922-2016, the last survivor of this team.
* 8, guard, George Senesky, from South Philadelphia and the city's St. Joseph's University, 1922-2001.
* 9, guard, Ralph Kaplowitz, from The Bronx and NYU, 1919-2009.
* 10, Joe Fulks, from Kuttawa, Kentucky and Murray State, 1921-1976.
* 12, forward Howie Dallmar, from San Francisco and Stanford, 1922-1991.
* 14, forward Matt Guokas, from West Philadelphia and St. Joseph's, 1915-1993. He later served as the public address announcer for the Philadelphia Eagles.
* 15, guard Pete Rosenberg, from South Philadelphia and, despite being Jewish, St. Joseph's, 1918-1997.
* 16, center Art Hillhouse, from Rutherford, New Jersey, and Long Island University in Brooklyn, 1916-1980.
The following season, the Warriors reached the Finals again, but lost to the original version of the Baltimore Bullets. They would win the NBA Championship again in 1956, coached by Senesky, and led by former Philadelphia collegiate stars Tom Gola of La Salle and Paul Arizin of Villanova.
Starting in 1952, the Warriors began playing more games at the Convention Hall of the Philadelphia Civic Center. The Philadelphia Arena burned down in 1983.
In 1962, the Warriors were bought and moved to San Francisco, taking the name Golden State Warriors in 1971. In 1963, the Syracuse Nationals were moved to become the Philadelphia 76ers. In 1967, led by Wilt Chamberlain, they won the NBA Championship. Also among their players was Matt Guokas Jr., making him and Matt Sr. the 1st father-son combination to both win NBA titles. Also among their players was Billy Cunningham, who coached the 76ers to the 1983 NBA Championship. They've been to just 1 NBA Finals since, in 2001.
The Stags weren't even that lucky. They made the Playoffs every year they were in the NBA, but they were only in it 4 years, folding in 1950. The Chicago Bulls arrived in 1966, but didn't win their 1st title until 1991, with Michael Jordan.
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