27th NBA season
Sports season
The
1972?73 NBA season
was the 27th season of the
National Basketball Association
. The season ended with the
New York Knicks
winning the NBA Championship, beating the
Los Angeles Lakers
4 games to 1 in the
NBA Finals
. This would be
Wilt Chamberlain
's final season playing in the NBA.
Notable occurrences
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- The
Cincinnati Royals
relocated and became the
Kansas City-Omaha Kings
, splitting home games between
Kansas City, Missouri
and
Omaha, Nebraska
.
- The relocated Kings were moved from the Central Division of the Eastern Conference to the Midwest Division of the Western Conference. The
Phoenix Suns
were moved from the Midwest Division to the Pacific Division, and the
Houston Rockets
were moved to the Central Division in the spot formerly occupied by the Royals, despite being farther west than all four teams (Kansas City-Omaha,
Chicago Bulls
,
Detroit Pistons
and
Milwaukee Bucks
) in the Midwest.
- Nate "Tiny" Archibald
of the Kings became the first NBA player to officially lead the league in both points and assists during the same season.
Oscar Robertson
had led the league in
average
points and assists in the
1967?68 season
, but at that time statistical leaders were based on
totals
, not averages. Therefore, Robertson did not officially lead the league due to missing 17 regular season games.
- The
1973 NBA All-Star Game
was played at
Chicago Stadium
in
Chicago
, with the East beating the West 104?84.
Dave Cowens
of the
Boston Celtics
won the game's MVP award.
- The
Atlanta Hawks
played their inaugural season in the
Omni Coliseum
.
- The Baltimore Bullets played their final season in Baltimore, before relocating to the Washington, D.C. suburb of
Landover, Maryland
as the
Capital Bullets
for the
following season
. The Bullets would return to Baltimore for a few home games each season from
1989
?
1997
.
- This was the final season of the
NBA on ABC
. However, the network would regain NBA coverage starting in the
2002?03 season
.
- The
Philadelphia 76ers
finished with a 9?73 record. Their 0.110 winning percentage was the all-time worst mark in the NBA until the
2011?12
Charlotte Bobcats
finished a
shortened season
with a 0.106 winning percentage. It remains the worst record for an 82-game season. The 76ers also became the first team to lose 70 games in a season and the only team to win fewer than 10 games in an 82-game season.
- This was
Wilt Chamberlain
's final NBA season. Leading the league in both rebounds per game and field goal percentage, he remains the only NBA player in league history to lead the league in a major statistical category in every eligible season of his career. In addition, his field goal percentage of .727 was an NBA single-season record until the
2019?20 season
, when
Mitchell Robinson
was approximately 1.5% more accurate while attempting 245 fewer field goals than Chamberlain.
- It was also the final season for
Hal Greer
,
Gus Johnson
,
Tom Sanders
, and
Kevin Loughery
who would later become the head coach for the
New York Nets
of the
American Basketball Association
.
- At the end of three quarters of their game at the Boston Gardens on October 20, 1972, the
Boston Celtics
led the
Buffalo Braves
103?60. The Braves then recorded an incredible turnaround, scoring 58 points in the last quarter to lose the game by just 8 points, 126?118. The 58 points scored by the Braves is still the NBA record for the most points scored by one team in any quarter of any game.
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Season recap
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Setting the scene
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This season began in the wake of the remarkable victory of the Los Angeles Lakers, who ended an agonizing decade of runner-up finishes with their first NBA title on the West Coast. It was also the first Laker title since George Mikan over fifteen years previous.
The '71?'72 title
had come after a tremendous Western Conference Finals with Milwaukee and their superstar center,
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
, the former title-winning Lew Alcindor. A Laker and Bucks rematch in the playoffs figured to decide the next championship just as it had the last two. The East, clearly the dominant half of the league for so long, looked to be the weaker half again at the start of this season as they had the last two years.
Eastern Conference
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It was the East that provided the season's top record. The
Boston Celtics
won 68 of 82 NBA games, one of the greatest records in history, two more than Milwaukee two years before, and just one less than Los Angeles the previous year. The new Celtics were a year older, with young star
Dave Cowens
at center and
Jo Jo White
as point guard. Cowens was the team's anchor at center, third in the league in both rebounds and minutes played while scoring 20.5 points per game. A physical, active defender as well, Cowens made NBA observers marvel at his energy level and intensity. At 6' 9, he cast a huge presence for his team. Longtime star
John Havlicek
was still the team's leader, leading the team in scoring, assists and steals. Along with Cowens up front, Boston had tabbed
Paul Silas
from Phoenix to take the load off of
"Hondo"
inside. The results included more shots tried and made, more rebounds and more assists than any other NBA team this season.
In the East, Boston drew an Atlanta team with 46 wins, led by high scorers Lou Hudson and Pete Maravich, who scored 29.7 and 26.2 points per game respectively.
Richie Guerin
was again the head coach with the small rotation of minutes. Boston jumped on them big early on to win the series four games to two.
Just under the radar was another tough New York ? Baltimore matchup. Both teams had over 50 wins and looked very comparable. Baltimore had added big man
Elvin Hayes
to help
Wes Unseld
on the boards and
Archie Clark
in the scoring column. Yet the Knicks, with 57 wins, did not play around with the Bullets, winning the series 4?1. The Knicks, with three key big men well past age 30, were supporting All-NBA guard
Walt Frazier
this year in hopes of one last shot at the top themselves. They again had the league's top defense. Now another hotly debated Boston-New York matchup loomed in the East final.
Boston was again the favorite over New York, though many still remembered New York's underdog romp the year before. Leaving little to chance, Boston pounded them 134?109 at home in Game One. New York repaid the favor in Game Two, 129?96. Then, the Knicks stole one in Boston before a double-overtime contest in Game Four at
Madison Square Garden
. New York hung on to win that as well. New York was up 3?1, but coach Tom Heinsohn's team rallied to win a one-pointer in Game Five, and then Game Six to force a
seventh game
. But
John Havlicek
had a badly injured shoulder, playing with a sling and was now shooting left-handed. Because of Havlicek's injury, New York easily handled Boston to complete the series victory, becoming the 1st NBA road team to win
Game 7
after leading series 3?1. It was a tough break for Havlicek, who would burn to return the following year, while New York was back in the NBA Finals for the third time in four years.
Western Conference
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The Lakers got another rebounding title from
Wilt Chamberlain
, the eleventh of his colossal career. Wilt also sank an unreal 72.7% of his shots, though he continued to shoot less and less. Chamberlain averaged 13.2 points per game, a far cry from his 50 points per game twelve years before. However, Wilt knew he was part of a team concept that was a proven winner. Jerry West and Gail Goodrich were the scorers again, with Jim McMillian the ready third threat. The Lakers lost key rebounder
Happy Hairston
after 28 games, but brought over rebounding legend
Bill Bridges
from crumbling Philadelphia. The Lakers eventually won 60 games.
Milwaukee got another huge year from Abdul-Jabbar, who looked again to be the NBA's top player. His 30.2 points per game were second in the league, and he was fourth in rebounds. Only one player, Kansas City's
Nate Archibald
, scored more points. Only two, Archibald and Seattle's Spencer Haywood, tried more shots. But Abdul-Jabbar sank 55% of his shots, tops among high-scoring NBA shooters, and likely again blocked more shots than any big man in the league. The seven footer also added five assists per game. A balanced cast of Bucks supported Abdul-Jabbar en route to another 60-win campaign, their third straight. But both teams were showing some gray streaks as West, Chamberlain, and Oscar Robertson, all all-time greats, were each clearly approaching the end of remarkable careers.
The three 60-win monsters drew most of the attention as playoff time arrived, which again rigidly followed the NBA's four divisions. All of the NBA's eight winning teams neatly made the field.
Los Angeles would again turn away a solid
Dick Motta
coached Chicago club. The series went the full seven games, which showed the Lakers had clearly dropped a couple notches. Game one had been an overtime affair, while LA needed their fourth home game to win Game Seven 95?92. Chicago, like Baltimore and Atlanta, had become the solid second-tier team that could not get past the giants.
Milwaukee looked to be that fourth giant as they met the 47-win Golden State Warriors. Nate Thurmond wanted to prove he could defend the league's best center and he surely did, dropping Abdul-Jabbar's scoring by eight points and shooting by 12% in the series. Rick Barry had finally rejoined his NBA team from five years ago also, and Clyde Lee starred as well helping Thurmond to a 4?2 series win that wasn't really very close. Game Six ended 100?86. Milwaukee's Robertson saw a solid series fall short.
Meanwhile, Los Angeles was resting, having used three 20-point scorers and Chamberlain's dominance inside to brush off Golden State 4?1. Al Attles' Warriors may still have been celebrating their win over Milwaukee. Game Three was a huge 126?70 Laker win in Oakland. The Warriors won Game Four, but all it did was force the series back to Southern California, where the Lakers clinched in Game Five.
The NBA Finals
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The NBA had their third New York ? Los Angeles matchup in four years, which marked this remarkable period in media attention. Chamberlain was the giant favorite again at age 36, a role which rarely suited him. Meanwhile, New York used a tandem at center. Thick
Willis Reed
, sore knees and all, had been kept fresh for the playoffs thanks to Jerry Lucas, primarily a center once again. The two had come to be known as 'Willis Lucas' averaging 22 points and 15 rebounds a game combined during the year. Neither were great shot blockers but both were smart, tough and unselfish, a trait also shared by forward Dave DeBusschere, who was still a very key part of the Knicks success.
Like Robertson,
Jerry West
reached for the greatness of years past and found some of it gone forever. Earl Monroe eagerly gave Gail Goodrich a better match this time as well. Chamberlain chose not to shoot again, scoring just 10.4 per game in the playoffs for another enigmatic performance that again gave his opponents their opening.
Los Angeles edged out a win in Game One at home. After that, the team concept of New York took over to win the remaining four games. It was clearly revenge for the year before. In a year highlighted by the graying of some of the game's greatest players, New York's three big men had keyed an impressive title run past tough rivals and two 60-win teams to cap impressive careers.
For Chamberlain and West, it was one more runner-up finish for the road.
Final standings
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By division
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By conference
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Notes
- z
,
y
? division champions
- x
? clinched playoff spot
Playoffs
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- * Division winner
- Bold
Series winner
- Italic
Team with home-court advantage
Statistics leaders
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NBA awards
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See also
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References
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