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1971 ABA Playoffs

Postseason tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1971 ABA Playoffs was the postseason tournament of the American Basketball Association's 1970–71 season. The tournament concluded with the Western Division champion Utah Stars defeating the Eastern Division champion Kentucky Colonels, four games to three in the ABA finals.

Quick Facts Tournament details, Dates ...
1971 ABA playoffs
Tournament details
DatesApril 2 – May 18, 1971
Season1970–71
Teams8
Final positions
ChampionsUtah Stars (1st title)
Runner-upKentucky Colonels
Semifinalists
 1970
1972 
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Notable events

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There was a one-game playoff for fourth place in the Western Division because the Texas Chaparrals and Denver Rockets had tied with regular season records of 30–54. The game was played on April 1 and the Chaparrals won 115–109.

This was the first season in ABA history in which the team with the best regular season record did not win the ABA championship. The Indiana Pacers had the league's best record during this season at 58–26 (.690), putting them one game ahead of the eventual league champion Utah Stars in the Western Division.

This was the first season in ABA history in which neither regular season division champion made it to the ABA finals. The second place Utah Stars represented the West while the Kentucky Colonels, second place in the East behind the Virginia Squires, met them in the finals.

Game 3 of the Eastern Finals saw 287 total points scored. This was the most points scored in any ABA playoff game, and would be the most points scored in a playoff game in either the NBA or ABA until 1992.

In the Finals, the home team won every game. 13,260 fans attended the decisive Game 7 of the ABA championship series between the Utah Stars and Kentucky Colonels at the Salt Palace in Salt Lake City, Utah on May 18, 1971. After the Stars won 131-121, the fans stormed the floor and mobbed the court for twenty minutes. Willie Wise and Zelmo Beaty rode off the floor carried upon the shoulders of Utah fans.[1]

Zelmo Beaty was named Most Valuable Player of the ABA playoffs.

Bracket

Division semifinals Division finals ABA finals
         
1 Indiana Pacers 4
3 Memphis Pros 0
1 Indiana Pacers 3
Western Division
2 Utah Stars 4
4 Texas Chaparrals 0
2 Utah Stars 4
W2 Utah Stars 4
E2 Kentucky Colonels 3
1 Virginia Squires 4
3 New York Nets 2
1 Virginia Squires 2
Eastern Division
2 Kentucky Colonels 4
4 The Floridians 2
2 Kentucky Colonels 4

Western Division Tiebreaker Game

April 1
Texas Chaparrals 115, Denver Rockets 109
Scoring by quarter: 30–18, 18–32, 31–29, 36–30
Pts: Donnie Freeman 33
Rebs: Gene Moore 16
Asts: Donnie Freeman 6
Pts: Larry Cannon 18
Rebs: Julius Keye 23
Asts: John Barnhill 6
Texas wins tiebreaker

Both teams won their regular season finales to set up a game for the fourth and final playoff spot in the Western Division; Denver had beaten Texas seven of twelve times in the regular season.[2]

The Chaparrals shot out to an early lead that went to 14 three times in the first quarter, but Denver fought back to lead by two at halftime. In the second half, the Rockets led by 5 at one point before Texas overcame their troubles on the scoring of Donnie Freeman (33) and Gene Moore (28). The two teams battled and were tied multiple times in the final six minutes before Freeman scored a layup with a foul shot to give the Chapparals a 107-104 lead with 3:32 left that they would never relinquish.[3]

Division Semifinals

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Perspective

Western Division Semifinals

(1) Indiana Pacers vs. (3) Memphis Pros

April 2
Memphis Pros 98, Indiana Pacers 114
Scoring by quarter: 24–28, 31–27, 19–30, 24–29
Pts: Jones, Williams 24 each
Rebs: Wil Jones 14
Asts: Wil Jones 6
Pts: Roger Brown 26
Rebs: Mel Daniels 18
Asts: Billy Keller 8
Indiana leads series, 1–0
April 3
Memphis Pros 104, Indiana Pacers 106
Scoring by quarter: 25–22, 28–28, 29–25, 22–31
Pts: Steve "Snapper" Jones 31
Rebs: Gerald Govan 20
Asts: Govan, Ladner 6 each
Pts: Mel Daniels 31
Rebs: Mel Daniels 25
Asts: Billy Keller 7
Indiana leads series, 2–0
April 5
Indiana Pacers 91, Memphis Pros 90
Scoring by quarter: 21–24, 23–24, 23–26, 24–16
Pts: Freddie Lewis 23
Rebs: Mel Daniels 19
Asts: Brown, Lewis, Jabali 4 each
Pts: Steve "Snapper" Jones 31
Rebs: Gerald Govan 15
Asts: Govan, W. Jones, J. Jones 5 each
Indiana leads series, 3–0
April 7
Indiana Pacers 102, Memphis Pros 101 (OT)
Scoring by quarter: 22–24, 21–33, 27–18, 20–15, Overtime: 12–11
Pts: Mel Daniels 29
Rebs: Mel Daniels 20
Asts: Freddie Lewis 8
Pts: Jimmy Jones 22
Rebs: Jimmy Jones 14
Asts: Gerald Govan 8
Indiana wins series, 4–0

(2) Utah Stars vs. (4) Texas Chaparrals

April 2
Texas Chaparrals 115, Utah Stars 125
Scoring by quarter: 26–30, 34–36, 33–32, 22–27
Pts: Donnie Freeman 32
Rebs: John Beasley 11
Pts: Mervin Jackson 26
Rebs: Zelmo Beaty 18
Asts: Boone, Jackson 8 each
Utah leads series, 1–0
Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah
Attendance: 4,375
April 3
Texas Chaparrals 107, Utah Stars 137
Scoring by quarter: 26–36, 28–28, 29–31, 24–42
Pts: Donnie Freeman 23
Rebs: Croft, Moore 9 each
Pts: Glen Combs 25
Rebs: Willie Wise 15
Utah leads series, 2–0
Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah
Attendance: 6,061
April 4
Utah Stars 113, Texas Chaparrals 101
Scoring by quarter: 22–20, 35–29, 30–30, 26–22
Pts: Zelmo Beaty 32
Rebs: Zelmo Beaty 15
Pts: Donnie Freeman 30
Rebs: Gene Moore 15
Utah leads series, 3–0
April 6
Utah Stars 128, Texas Chaparrals 107
Scoring by quarter: 27–22, 27–35, 35–23, 39–27
Pts: Ron Boone 23
Rebs: Red Robbins 13
Pts: Levern Tart 31
Rebs: Gene Moore 18
Utah win series, 4–0

Eastern Division Semifinals

(1) Virginia Squires vs. (3) New York Nets

April 2
New York Nets 105, Virginia Squires 113
Scoring by quarter: 26–17, 28–36, 24–28, 27–32
Pts: Rick Barry 32
Rebs: Billy Paultz 16
Asts: Bill Melchionni 12
Pts: Mike Barrett 22
Rebs: Jim Eakins 16
Asts: Charlie Scott 10
Virginia leads series, 1–0
Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, Virginia
Attendance: 6,149
April 4
New York Nets 108, Virginia Squires 114
Scoring by quarter: 33–31, 28–35, 28–27, 19–21
Pts: Rick Barry 32
Rebs: Billy Paultz 16
Asts: Bill Melchionni 11
Pts: Charlie Scott 29
Rebs: George Carter 14
Asts: Charlie Scott 9
Virginia leads series, 2–0
Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, Virginia
Attendance: 7,143
April 6
Virginia Squires 131, New York Nets 135
Scoring by quarter: 35–23, 33–45, 31–29, 32–38
Pts: Scott, Barrett 27 each
Rebs: Jim Eakins 11
Asts: Mike Barrett 7
Pts: Rick Barry 43
Rebs: Billy Paultz 20
Asts: Bill Melchionni 9
Virginia leads series, 2–1

Due to Island Garden being booked without expecting the Nets to reach the postseason, the Nets had to play their home playoff games in different locations.[4]


April 7
Virginia Squires 127, New York Nets 130
Scoring by quarter: 36–34, 37–30, 18–35, 36–31
Pts: George Carter 35
Rebs: Jim Eakins 13
Asts: Doug Moe 6
Pts: Bill Melchionni 35
Rebs: Jim Ard 13
Asts: Bill Melchionni 14
Series tied, 2–2
April 9
New York Nets 124, Virginia Squires 127
Scoring by quarter: 30–30, 32–36, 36–34, 26–27
Pts: Rick Barry 36
Rebs: Billy Paultz 15
Asts: Paultz, DePre, Melchionni 5 each
Pts: Mike Barrett 30
Rebs: Carter, Scott 10 each
Asts: Mike Barrett 6
Virginia leads series, 3–2
Richmond Arena, Richmond, Virginia
Attendance: 4,250
April 10
Virginia Squires 118, New York Nets 114
Scoring by quarter: 34–35, 30–27, 24–27, 30–25
Pts: Charlie Scott 38
Rebs: Johnson, Carter 9 each
Asts: Charlie Scott 6
Pts: Rick Barry 45
Rebs: Rick Barry 17
Asts: Jeff Congdon 7
Virginia wins series, 4–2
Felt Forum, New York City, New York
Attendance: 3,016

(2) Kentucky Colonels vs. (4) The Floridians

April 2
The Floridians 112, Kentucky Colonels 116
Scoring by quarter: 28–25, 24–33, 32–25, 28–33
Pts: Larry Jones 25
Rebs: Ira Harge 12
Asts: Warren Davis 9
Pts: Dan Issel 26
Rebs: Jim Ligon 16
Asts: Louie Dampier 11
Kentucky leads series, 1–0
Freedom Hall, Louisville, Kentucky
Attendance: 3,182
April 4
The Floridians 110, Kentucky Colonels 120
Scoring by quarter: 31–33, 24–28, 23–29, 32–30
Pts: Mack Calvin 35
Rebs: Ira Harge 19
Pts: Louie Dampier 28
Rebs: Jim Ligon 15
Asts: Louie Dampier 8
Kentucky leads series, 2–0
Freedom Hall, Louisville, Kentucky
Attendance: 3,881
April 6
Kentucky Colonels 102, The Floridians 120
Scoring by quarter: 26–33, 26–31, 24–30, 26–26
Pts: Les Hunter 21
Rebs: Dan Issel 16
Pts: Mack Calvin 24
Rebs: Ira Harge 18
Asts: Mack Calvin 12
Kentucky leads series, 2–1
April 8
Kentucky Colonels 117, The Floridians 129
Scoring by quarter: 28–31, 22–30, 36–38, 31–30
Pts: Cincy Powell 31
Rebs: Jim Ligon 18
Pts: Mack Calvin 34
Rebs: Ira Harge 20
Asts: Mack Calvin 10
Series tied, 2–2
April 10
The Floridians 101, Kentucky Colonels 118
Scoring by quarter: 27–32, 17–17, 31–33, 26–36
Pts: Mack Calvin 29
Rebs: Ira Harge 10
Pts: Darel Carrier 31
Rebs: Jim Ligon 14
Asts: Louie Dampier 18
Kentucky leads series, 3–2
Freedom Hall, Louisville, Kentucky
Attendance: 4,996
April 12
Kentucky Colonels 112, The Floridians 103
Scoring by quarter: 28–22, 29–31, 33–20, 22–30
Pts: Dan Issel 27
Rebs: Jim Ligon 20
Pts: Calvin, Davis, Tucker 18 each
Rebs: Ira Harge 19
Kentucky wins series, 4–2

Division Finals

Western Division Finals

(1) Indiana Pacers vs. (2) Utah Stars

April 12
Utah Stars 120, Indiana Pacers 118
Scoring by quarter: 31–38, 34–31, 30–26, 25–23
Pts: Mervin Jackson 28
Rebs: Zelmo Beaty 15
Asts: Willie Wise 9
Pts: Mel Daniels 27
Rebs: Mel Daniels 15
Asts: Brown, Lewis 7 each
Utah leads series, 1–0
April 14
Utah Stars 107, Indiana Pacers 120
Scoring by quarter: 40–33, 17–25, 24–33, 26–29
Pts: Mervin Jackson 27
Rebs: Beaty, Robbins 12 each
Asts: Ron Boone 5
Pts: Billy Keller 31
Rebs: Mel Daniels 20
Asts: Brown, Jabali, Lewis 6 each
Series tied, 1–1
April 17
Indiana Pacers 108, Utah Stars 121
Scoring by quarter: 22–33, 28–32, 31–28, 27–28
Pts: Roger Brown 23
Rebs: Mel Daniels 20
Asts: Billy Keller 10
Pts: Ron Boone 27
Rebs: Zelmo Beaty 14
Asts: Ron Boone 11
Utah leads series, 2–1
Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah
Attendance: 12,711
April 20
Indiana Pacers 99, Utah Stars 126
Scoring by quarter: 13–33, 23–20, 22–37, 41–36
Pts: Billy Keller 20
Rebs: Mel Daniels 16
Asts: Jabali, Mount 4 each
Pts: Zelmo Beaty 22
Rebs: Zelmo Beaty 13
Asts: Mervin Jackson 12
Utah leads series, 3–1
Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah
Attendance: 12,761
April 22
Utah Stars 109, Indiana Pacers 127
Scoring by quarter: 30–28, 19–39, 26–26, 34–34
Pts: Willie Wise 21
Rebs: Red Robbins 14
Asts: Willie Wise 8
Pts: Bob Netolicky 29
Rebs: Mel Daniels 27
Asts: Billy Keller 9
Indiana leads series, 3–2
April 24
Indiana Pacers 105, Utah Stars 102
Scoring by quarter: 26–20, 20–28, 30–21, 29–33
Pts: Billy Keller 28
Rebs: Mel Daniels 15
Asts: Billy Keller 6
Pts: Zelmo Beaty 32
Rebs: Zelmo Beaty 20
Asts: Ron Boone 8
Series tied, 3–3
Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah
Attendance: 13,208
April 28
Utah Stars 108, Indiana Pacers 101
Scoring by quarter: 27–27, 17–24, 41–23, 23–27
Pts: Willie Wise 31
Rebs: Red Robbins 14
Asts: Mervin Jackson 10
Pts: Billy Keller 33
Rebs: Mel Daniels 17
Asts: Roger Brown 5
Utah wins series, 4–3

Eastern Division Finals

(1) Virginia Squires vs. (2) Kentucky Colonels

April 15
Kentucky Colonels 136, Virginia Squires 132
Scoring by quarter: 31–23, 36–41, 39–33, 30–35
Pts: Dan Issel 46
Rebs: Cincy Powell 18
Asts: Louie Dampier 6
Pts: Charlie Scott 35
Rebs: George Carter 16
Asts: Charlie Scott 7
Kentucky leads series, 1–0
Richmond Arena, Richmond, Virginia
Attendance: 4,250
April 17
Kentucky Colonels 122, Virginia Squires 142
Scoring by quarter: 32–32, 26–42, 28–37, 36–31
Pts: Dan Issel 32
Rebs: Dan Issel 10
Asts: Louie Dampier 7
Pts: Scott, Moe 28 each
Rebs: Charlie Scott 9
Asts: Scott, Eakins 9 each
Series tied, 1–1
April 19
Virginia Squires 150, Kentucky Colonels 137
Scoring by quarter: 34–35, 36–41, 39–30, 41–31
Pts: C. Scott, R. Scott 30 each
Rebs: Neil Johnson 11
Asts: Charlie Scott 13
Pts: Dan Issel 27
Rebs: Cincy Powell 27
Asts: Louie Dampier 9
Virginia leads series, 2–1
Freedom Hall, Louisville, Kentucky
Attendance: 4,777
April 21
Virginia Squires 110, Kentucky Colonels 128
Scoring by quarter: 35–34, 25–29, 24–35, 26–30
Pts: Charlie Scott 30
Rebs: Neil Johnson 14
Asts: Fatty Taylor 4
Pts: Dan Issel 31
Rebs: Jim Ligon 17
Asts: Louie Dampier 11
Series tied, 2–2
Freedom Hall, Louisville, Kentucky
Attendance: 5,221
April 23
Kentucky Colonels 117, Virginia Squires 105
Scoring by quarter: 28–27, 38–26, 19–27, 30–27
Pts: Dan Issel 36
Rebs: Dan Issel 21
Asts: Louie Dampier 7
Pts: Doug Moe 29
Rebs: Neil Johnson 15
Asts: Scott, Barrett 7 each
Kentucky leads series, 3–2
Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, Virginia
Attendance: 10,013
April 24
Virginia Squires 117, Kentucky Colonels 129
Scoring by quarter: 28–29, 28–36, 32–26, 29–38
Pts: Carter, Moe 25 each
Rebs: George Carter13
Asts: Charlie Scott 6
Pts: Dan Issel 31
Rebs: Jim Ligon 20
Asts: Louie Dampier 17
Kentucky wins series, 4–2
Freedom Hall, Louisville, Kentucky
Attendance: 12,822

ABA Finals: (W2) Utah Stars vs. (E2) Kentucky Colonels

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Perspective
May 3
Kentucky Colonels 117, Utah Stars 136
Scoring by quarter: 35–26, 25–50, 33–25, 24–35
Pts: Darel Carrier 36
Rebs: Cincy Powell 11
Asts: Jim Ligon 6
Pts: Beaty, Stone 26 each
Rebs: Zelmo Beaty 16
Asts: Mervin Jackson 9
Utah leads series, 1–0
Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah
Attendance: 12,051

Kentucky started the game with a rapid attack led by Dan Issel that had him score 17 points in the first 12 minutes as the Colonels led 32-19 at one point in the first quarter. Stars coach Bill Sharman decided to send in reserve George Stone into the game along with later sending in Ron Boone to get outside shooting strength that saw the two combined for 37 points as the Stars led by 16 at halftime. The Stars continued to roll with a defense and tough rebounding effort (outdoing them 59-56) as Zelmo Beaty and Stone led the Stars in scoring with 26 each. The 50 points scored in the second quarter set a league record for a playoff game.[5][6]

May 5
Kentucky Colonels 125, Utah Stars 138
Scoring by quarter: 28–37, 34–28, 29–32, 34–41
Pts: Dan Issel 40
Rebs: Dan Issel 11
Asts: Dampier, Hunter 6 each
Pts: Zelmo Beaty 40
Rebs: Willie Wise 24
Asts: Wise, Jackson 8 ach
Utah leads series, 2–0
Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah
Attendance: 13,208

In a game where both teams had a leading scorer with 40 points (Zelmo Beaty, Dan Issel), the Stars pulled a 2-0 series lead. Beaty went 18-of-23 while his teammate Willie Wise scored 26 points on 9-of-17 shooting with eight free throws to go with 24 rebounds and eight assists. Utah pulled away in the second quarter, never trailing after halftime; Utah shot 57 percent from the line while Kentucky could only muster 48 percent.[7]

May 7
Utah Stars 110, Kentucky Colonels 116
Scoring by quarter: 27–30, 28–25, 26–28, 29–33
Pts: Willie Wise 29
Rebs: Willie Wise 17
Asts: Willie Wise 5
Pts: Darel Carrier 25
Rebs: Issel, Powell, Ligon 17 each
Asts: Louie Dampier 11
Utah leads series, 2–1
Freedom Hall, Louisville, Kentucky
Attendance: 12,337

Wracked with injuries to Merv Jackson (tendonitis) and Red Robbins (intestinal flu), the Stars were trounced by the Colonels in a game where Zelmo Beaty ran into foul trouble early as the trio of Cincy Powell, Dan Issel and Jim Ligon dominated on the boards with 17 rebounds each; the Colonels outrebounded the Stars (69-57), particularly on the offensive side (23-14).[8]

May 8
Utah Stars 125, Kentucky Colonels 129 (OT)
Scoring by quarter: 24–35, 30–32, 31–30, 34–22, Overtime: 6–10
Pts: Willie Wise 34
Rebs: Willie Wise 17
Asts: Ron Boone 8
Pts: Louie Dampier 33
Rebs: Jim Ligon 17
Asts: Darel Carrier 6
Series tied, 2–2
Freedom Hall, Louisville, Kentucky
Attendance: 9,863

The Colonels ran off into a 13-point lead at halftime after the Stars shot miserably, but Utah (still with a sore Jackson and sickened Robbins) managed to narrow it down to single digits with time expiring. Zelmo Beaty fouled out with less than five minutes remaining, while Robbins missed foul shots and a jumper that would've given Utah a late lead as the two teams went into overtime. The Colonels took control from there, with Carrier and Louie Dampier scoring and playing defense that saw them outscore Utah 10-6 to tie the series. Utah shot 41.8 percent from the field while Kentucky shot 45.9%. Willie Wise had 34 points to lead Utah while Dampier had 33.[9]

May 12
Kentucky Colonels 127, Utah Stars 137
Scoring by quarter: 25–34, 31–41, 32–29, 39–33
Pts: Dan Issel 33
Rebs: Issel, Powell 16 each
Asts: Louie Dampier 11
Pts: Zelmo Beaty 32
Rebs: Zelmo Beaty 22
Asts: Glen Combs 8
Utah lead series 3–2
Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah
Attendance: 13,250
Referees: Joe Gushue, John Vanak

Utah rode a first half where they led by 19 on 53 percent shooting to coast to victory, with Zelmo Beaty scoring 32 on 11-of-21 from the field (with 10 free throws) while getting 22 rebounds and five assists. A skirmish broke out in the third quarter when Willie Wise and Cincy Powell tangled that saw both benches empty before Ron Boone managed to "bop" Powell; Boone received a technical and Powell received a personal foul as the game moved forward.[10]

May 15
Utah Stars 102, Kentucky Colonels 105
Scoring by quarter: 24–31, 25–27, 34–23, 19–24
Pts: Willie Wise 34
Rebs: Zelmo Beaty 16
Asts: Mervin Jackson 4
Pts: Cincy Powell 31
Rebs: Cincy Powell 17
Asts: Louie Dampier 10
Series tied, 3–3
Freedom Hall, Louisville, Kentucky
Attendance: 11,793

Cincy Powell openly had stated he would "get Ron Boone" in the days leading up to Game 6. As it turned out, Powell would impact the game by leading the Colonels in scoring with 31 points on 14-of-23 shooting (with three free throws) while getting 17 rebounds as the home team once again won in the Finals. Utah shot barely over 40% from the field (while missing all nine three-point attempts) and were outrebounded as late fouls plagued them; the trio of Ron Boone, Merv Jackson and Glen Combs combined for just 20. Within two hours of the box office being opened at Salt Palace for a Game 7, every ticket had been purchased.[11]

May 18
Kentucky Colonels 127, Utah Stars 131
Scoring by quarter: 32–28, 22–33, 36–37, 31–33
Pts: Dan Issel 41
Rebs: Cincy Powell 20
Asts: Louie Dampier 14
Pts: Zelmo Beaty 36
Rebs: Willie Wise 20
Asts: Mervin Jackson 7
Utah wins series 4–3
Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah
Attendance: 13,260

A sellout crowd of 13,260 watched the game despite the game being broadcast locally in Utah. The Stars scored 10 of the first eleven points in the game, but Kentucky soon got hot and led by the end of the first quarter. Their biggest lead of the night was a seven-point lead early in the second quarter, but the Stars and Colonels both would trade the lead before Glen Combs gave the Stars a 41-40 lead. The Stars never trailed after the shot. Darel Carrier had 31 points for Kentucky, with three straight three-pointers near the end of the third quarter to help narrow the deficit. With 4:29 to go, Kentucky was down by just four after being down by as much as 14, but Willie Wise scored a layup with a made free throw to go along with Zelmo Beaty making a layup to give Utah a nine point lead in just over a minute of play. The tough defense by Utah limited Kentucky to just 39 percent shooting while Beaty outrebounded Dan Issel in the battle of centers (16-12) to counteract the 41 points scored by Issel.[12]

Celebration spilled out of the 10,000-seat Salt Palace (where the fans actually swarmed the court) and into the streets of the state capital for jubilant Stars fans. It was the first professional sports championship for the state of Utah and the only one until MLS Cup 2009 by Real Salt Lake; it is still the only professional basketball championship in the state of Utah.[13][14][15]

Two members of the Stars would eventually be inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame: Zelmo Beaty (2016) and head coach Bill Sharman (2004). This was the last game coached by Sharman with the Stars, as he elected to resign to coach the Los Angeles Lakers. He was replaced by LaDell Andersen. On June 20, Frank Ramsey (who had taken over for Gene Rhodes in the middle of the season as head coach) was fired by the Colonels and replaced by former Los Angeles Lakers head coach Joe Mullaney.[16]

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