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Western Basketball Association

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Western Basketball Association
Founded1978
Ceased1979
No. of teams7
CountryUnited States United States

The Western Basketball Association was formed in 1978 and played for one season during 1978–79. Organized by Larry Cregar, a former assistant coach in the National Basketball Association (NBA) and American Basketball Association (ABA), and real estate developer Neil Christianson.

Format

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The team rosters were limited to 11 players with a nine-man travel squad and a $10,000 standard player salary and $82,000 roster maximum. The completed schedule was 48 games.[1]

Teams

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The seven-team league comprised the Fresno Stars, Montana Sky (Great Falls, Montana), Las Vegas Dealers, Reno Bighorns, Salt Lake City Prospectors, Tucson Gunners, and Washington (Tri-City) Lumberjacks.

Players and results

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Tucson, coached by Herb Brown, went 32–16 during the regular season to finish first in the league's only season. Washington (29–19) and Reno (28–20) rounded out the top three.

In the finals, Brown's Gunners defeated Reno, which was coached by Bill Musselman, four games to three. Future Boston Celtic Gerald Henderson won the Most Valuable Player award for the playoffs.[2]

Washington's Jeff Cook earned the Most Valuable Player award for the league. Al Smith, Walt Jordon, Cook, Del Beshore, and Willie Smith earned first-team all-league honors. Randy Ayers, Jackie Robinson, Major Jones, Brad Davis, and Jim Boylan were named to the second team.

Standings

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1978–1979[3]

Team Won Lost Pct. Games
Back
Tucson Gunners 32 16 .667 -
Washington Lumberjacks 29 19 .604 3
Reno Bighorns 28 20 .583 4
Fresno Stars 25 23 .521 7
Las Vegas Dealers 24 24 .500 8
Salt Lake City Prospectors 19 29 .396 13
Montana Sky 11 37 .229 21

Championship series

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Tucson defeated Reno 4 games to 3, winning the deciding game 104-90.[4]

Notable events

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On November 10, 1979 the league had its first game with Las Vegas playing at Reno. New York Yankees manager Billy Martin was on hand for a promotional appearance. At the bar inside Reno's Centennial Coliseum, there was an altercation between Martin and Reno Reporter Ray Hagar, leaving Hagar with a black eye and chipped teeth. News of the event and photos of Hagar made the national papers the next day. Later, a $7,500 settlement was paid by Reno to Hagar for medical expenses.[5][6]

On January 18, 1980, the scheduled All-Star Game in Salt Lake City was canceled, due to lack of funding.[3]

Proposed merger with the Continental Basketball Association

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The league merged with the more established Continental Basketball Association, but when none of the former Western Basketball Association teams filed the required financial letter of credit, their franchises were revoked and the Continental Basketball Association continued play without adding teams.

References

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  1. ^ Kirkpatrick, Curry. "Taking a Gamble on the Future". Vault.
  2. ^ "The Handle Podcast – Gerald Henderson Sr. 01/21/16". 22 January 2016.
  3. ^ a b "Western Basketball Association". www.apbr.org.
  4. ^ "1978-79 Tucson Gunners". funwhileitlasted.net. 22 March 2017. Retrieved 2019-07-06.
  5. ^ "Western Basketball Association (1978-1979) • Fun While It Lasted".
  6. ^ Crossley, Drew (12 January 2018). "1978-1979 Reno Bighorns • Fun While It Lasted".