Jump to content

1976 ABA Playoffs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1976 ABA playoffs
Tournament details
DatesApril 8 – May 13, 1976
Season1975–76
Teams5
Final positions
ChampionsNew York Nets (2nd title)
Runner-upDenver Nuggets
Semifinalists
← 1975

The 1976 ABA Playoffs was the postseason tournament of the American Basketball Association's 1975–76 season. The tournament concluded with the New York Nets defeating the Denver Nuggets four games to two in the ABA Finals.

This was the final year of the ABA. The ABA-NBA merger took place on June 17, 1976. Thus the final game in ABA history was played on May 13, 1976, when the New York Nets defeated the Denver Nuggets 112–106 at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York.

As there were no divisions in the regular season, the playoffs involved five teams, with a first-round best-of-three series played between the fourth-place Kentucky Colonels and fifth-place Indiana Pacers; Kentucky won the series, 2 games to 1.

Notable events

[edit]

Julius Erving of the New York Nets was the Most Valuable Player of the ABA playoffs. He won that distinction previously in 1974 and became the only player in ABA history to repeat as the MVP of the league playoffs.

On April 28, 1976, the Kentucky Colonels lost the seventh game of their series with the Denver Nuggets. The loss marked the final game for the Colonels and the final game for any ABA team that did not proceed into the NBA with the ABA-NBA merger.

The Nuggets and the Nets met in the championship series after posting the two best regular season records in the league. The Nets' victory over the Nuggets marked the last time that a professional basketball team from the New York area won a championship title until the 2024 WNBA Finals, when the New York Liberty defeated the Minnesota Lynx in five games to win their first title.

With their 4–3 loss in their opening round matchup with the New York Nets, the San Antonio Spurs concluded their ABA tenure without ever winning a single ABA playoff series. Since joining the NBA, the Spurs have won 5 NBA championships total (starting with their 1999 victory over the #8 seed New York Knicks during lockout season before winning three more in the 2000s decade and their most recent one in 2014 against the Miami Heat), making them the first ABA team to win a championship in the NBA. In 2023, the Nuggets became the last former ABA team to make an NBA Finals (the Pacers made one Finals in 2000, and the then-New Jersey Nets made two in 2002 and 2003, with all three championship series match-ups ending in a loss by the Los Angeles Lakers twice and the Spurs once), though the Nuggets ultimately became the second ABA team to win an NBA title with their 5-game series win over the #8 seed Miami Heat in the 2023 NBA Finals.

Bracket

[edit]
Quarterfinals Semi-Finals Championship Series
         
# 1 Denver Nuggets 4
# 4 Kentucky Colonels 3
# 4 Kentucky Colonels 2
# 5 Indiana Pacers 1
# 1 Denver Nuggets 2
# 2 New York Nets 4
# 2 New York Nets 4
# 3 San Antonio Spurs 3

First Round: Kentucky Colonels vs. Indiana Pacers

[edit]

(1) Denver Nuggets, (2) New York Nets, (3) San Antonio Spurs have division Quarterfinals byes.

April 8
Indiana Pacers 109, Kentucky Colonels 120
Scoring by quarter: 20–41, 26–21, 31–31, 32–27
Pts: Billy Knight 43
Rebs: Darnell Hillman 13
Asts: Darnell Hillman 5
Pts: Artis Gilmore 25
Rebs: Artis Gilmore 17
Asts: Averitt, Dampier 10 each
Kentucky leads series, 1–0
April 10
Kentucky Colonels 95, Indiana Pacers 109
Scoring by quarter: 25–23, 18–24, 29–30, 23–32
Pts: Artis Gilmore 26
Rebs: Maurice Lucas 14
Asts: Bird Averitt 6
Pts: Billy Knight 28
Rebs: Knight, Hillman 11 each
Asts: Don Buse 12
Series tied, 1–1
April 12
Indiana Pacers 99, Kentucky Colonels 100
Scoring by quarter: 11–26, 25–22, 35–22, 28–30
Pts: Billy Knight 30
Rebs: Knight, Robisch 9 each
Asts: Don Buse 9
Pts: Artis Gilmore 27
Rebs: Artis Gilmore 16
Asts: Jan van Breda Kolff 6
Kentucky wins series, 2–1

Semifinals

[edit]
April 15
Kentucky Colonels 107, Denver Nuggets 110
Scoring by quarter: 27–28, 31–30, 21–25, 28–27
Pts: Lucas, Gilmore 26 each
Rebs: Artis Gilmore 19
Asts: Louie Dampier 8
Pts: Ralph Simpson 24
Rebs: Bobby Jones 9
Asts: Dan Issel 7
Denver leads series, 1–0
April 17
Kentucky Colonels 138, Denver Nuggets 110
Scoring by quarter: 35–39, 34–28, 33–26, 36–26
Pts: Louie Dampier 26
Rebs: Artis Gilmore 12
Asts: Bird Averitt 9
Pts: Dan Issel 24
Rebs: Dan Issel 13
Asts: Chuck Williams 5
Series tied, 1–1
April 19
Denver Nuggets 114, Kentucky Colonels 126
Scoring by quarter: 27–26, 25–29, 34–33, 28–38
Pts: David Thompson 29
Rebs: Bobby Jones 10
Asts: David Thompson 5
Pts: Bird Averitt 40
Rebs: Artis Gilmore 16
Asts: Bird Averitt 7
Kentucky leads series, 2–1
April 21
Denver Nuggets 108, Kentucky Colonels 106
Scoring by quarter: 26–35, 23–16, 29–25, 30–30
Pts: Ralph Simpson 26
Rebs: Bobby Jones 18
Asts: Bobby Jones 5
Pts: Artis Gilmore 22
Rebs: Maurice Lucas 19
Asts: Louie Dampier 6
Series tied, 2–2
April 22
Kentucky Colonels 117, Denver Nuggets 127
Scoring by quarter: 32–25, 26–29, 23–39, 36–34
Pts: Artis Gilmore 26
Rebs: Artis Gilmore 12
Asts: Louie Dampier 14
Pts: David Thompson 34
Rebs: Dan Issel 13
Asts: Ralph Simpson 6
Denver leads series 3–2
April 25
Denver Nuggets 115, Kentucky Colonels 119 (2OT)
Scoring by quarter: 24–24, 27–31, 19–23, 27–19, Overtime: 10–10, 8–12
Pts: Ralph Simpson 35
Rebs: Dan Issel 18
Asts: Ralph Simpson 6
Pts: Bird Averitt 34
Rebs: Artis Gilmore 26
Asts: Louie Dampier 11
Series tied, 3–3

This was the only ABA postseason game to last two overtimes. It was also the last Colonels game played in Kentucky.

April 28
Kentucky Colonels 110, Denver Nuggets 133
Scoring by quarter: 26–27, 30–30, 26–37, 28–39
Pts: Maurice Lucas 23
Rebs: Maurice Lucas 15
Asts: Louie Dampier 11
Pts: David Thompson 40
Rebs: Dan Issel 12
Asts: Ralph Simpson 14
Denver wins series 4–3
April 9
San Antonio Spurs 101, New York Nets 116
Scoring by quarter: 18–33, 32–37, 28–27, 23–19
Pts: George Gervin 30
Rebs: Paultz, Gale 7 each
Asts: George Karl 4
Pts: Julius Erving 31
Rebs: Tim Bassett 14
Asts: Brian Taylor 4
New York leads series, 1–0
April 11
San Antonio Spurs 105, New York Nets 79
Scoring by quarter: 20–23, 29–16, 26–21, 30–19
Pts: Larry Kenon 30
Rebs: Billy Paultz 18
Asts: Mike Gale 13
Pts: Julius Erving 27
Rebs: Skinner, Bassett, Hughes 10 each
Asts: Erving, Jones, Skinner 3 each
Series tied, 1–1
April 14
New York Nets 103, San Antonio Spurs 111
Scoring by quarter: 31–21, 22–27, 20–27, 30–36
Pts: Julius Erving 31
Rebs: Julius Erving 10
Asts: Julius Erving 8
Pts: Larry Kenon 28
Rebs: Larry Kenon 16
Asts: Mike Gale 11
San Antonio leads series, 2–1
April 18
New York Nets 110, San Antonio Spurs 108
Scoring by quarter: 24–25, 28–35, 28–28, 30–20
Pts: Julius Erving 35
Rebs: Julius Erving 14
Asts: Kim Hughes 7
Pts: Paultz, Gervin 28 each
Rebs: Billy Paultz 12
Asts: Billy Paultz 5
Series tied, 2–2
April 19
San Antonio Spurs 108, New York Nets 110
Scoring by quarter: 33–27, 24–30, 26–28, 25–25
Pts: Larry Kenon 27
Rebs: Larry Kenon 12
Asts: Mike Gale 8
Pts: Julius Erving 32
Rebs: Tim Bassett 12
Asts: Julius Erving 6
New York leads series 3–2
April 21
New York Nets 105, San Antonio Spurs 106
Scoring by quarter: 27–29, 21–23, 27–29, 30–25
Pts: Julius Erving 41
Rebs: Tim Bassett 15
Asts: Brian Taylor 6
Pts: George Gervin 37
Rebs: Larry Kenon 18
Asts: Gale, Paultz 5 each
Series tied, 3–3
April 24
San Antonio Spurs 114, New York Nets 121
Scoring by quarter: 22–24, 31–31, 28–29, 33–37
Pts: George Gervin 31
Rebs: Larry Kenon 11
Asts: Mike Gale 6
Pts: Julius Erving 28
Rebs: Julius Erving 18
Asts: Julius Erving 8
New York wins series 4–3

ABA Finals: New York Nets vs. Denver Nuggets

[edit]
May 1
New York Nets 120, Denver Nuggets 118
Scoring by quarter: 32–31, 26–27, 32–26, 30–34
Pts: Julius Erving 45
Rebs: Julius Erving 12
Asts: Brian Taylor 5
Pts: David Thompson 30
Rebs: Marvin Webster 18
Asts: Ralph Simpson 9
New York leads series, 1–0
May 4
New York Nets 121, Denver Nuggets 127
Scoring by quarter: 25–29, 25–22, 31–34, 40–42
Pts: Julius Erving 48
Rebs: Julius Erving 14
Asts: Julius Erving 8
Pts: Ralph Simpson 25
Rebs: Dan Issel 14
Asts: Ralph Simpson 9
Series tied, 1–1
May 6
Denver Nuggets 111, New York Nets 117
Scoring by quarter: 26–25, 21–25, 32–29, 32–38
Pts: David Thompson 32
Rebs: Dan Issel 13
Asts: Chuck Williams 5
Pts: Julius Erving 31
Rebs: Tim Bassett 12
Asts: Julius Erving 4
New York leads series, 2–1
May 8
Denver Nuggets 112, New York Nets 121
Scoring by quarter: 34–29, 23–32, 25–28, 30–32
Pts: Dan Issel 26
Rebs: Dan Issel 15
Asts: David Thompson 5
Pts: Julius Erving 34
Rebs: Julius Erving 15
Asts: Julius Erving 6
New York leads series, 3–1
May 11
New York Nets 110, Denver Nuggets 118
Scoring by quarter: 31–27, 22–20, 20–42, 37–29
Pts: Julius Erving 37
Rebs: Julius Erving 15
Asts: Julius Erving 5
Pts: Ralph Simpson 21
Rebs: Dan Issel 11
Asts: Chuck Williams 5
New York leads series, 3–2
May 13
Denver Nuggets 106, New York Nets 112
Scoring by quarter: 28–23, 30–22, 34–33, 14–34
Pts: David Thompson 42
Rebs: Dan Issel 20
Asts: Towe, Jones 5 each
Pts: Julius Erving 31
Rebs: Julius Erving 19
Asts: Julius Erving 5
New York wins series, 4–2

New York trailed by 22 points late in the third quarter before mounting a run by blitzing full‐court press called "Yellow" by head coach Kevin Loughery. The Nets rallied back to win, with John Williamson's jump shot with less than three minutes remaining giving New York a 106–104 lead that they held on to win the last ABA game ever played. As of 2024, it is the last championship for the franchise. The Nets would not reach another championship final of any kind until 2002 while the Nuggets did not reach a final until 2023.[1][2] With his prior championship in 1974, Kevin Loughery became the second ABA coach to win multiple championships as a coach, joining Bobby Leonard.

New York received $95,000 ($25,000 for their 2nd place finish and $70,000 for the playoffs) while Denver received $81,000. The championship trophy awarded to the Nets was the same silver trophy they won in 1974, as the new $800 silver bowl planned to be presented to the champion was stolen from league commissioner Dave DeBusschere the previous week.

Denver had three members of its team make the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame: Dan Issel (1993), David Thompson (1996),and Bobby Jones (2019), along with their head coach Larry Brown (2002), while New York saw Julius Erving inducted (1993).[3]

Statistical leaders

[edit]
Category Total Average
Player Team Total Player Team Avg. Games played
Points Julius Erving New York Nets 451 Julius Erving New York Nets 34.7 13
Rebounds George McGinnis Indiana Pacers 164 Artis Gilmore Kentucky Colonels 15.2 10
Assists Louie Dampier Kentucky Colonels 77 Don Buse Indiana Pacers 8.7 3
Steals Brian Taylor New York Nets 26 Mike Gale San Antonio Spurs 3.4 7
Blocks Artis Gilmore Kentucky Colonels 36 Artis Gilmore Kentucky Colonels 3.6 10

References

[edit]
[edit]