1974–75 Indiana Pacers season
1974–75 Indiana Pacers season | |
---|---|
Head coach | Bobby Leonard |
Arena | Market Square Arena |
Results | |
Record | 45–39 (.536) |
Place | Division: 3rd Conference: 3rd |
Playoff finish | ABA Finals (lost to Colonels 1–4) |
Stats at Basketball Reference | |
Local media | |
Television | WTTV 4 |
Radio | WIBC |
The 1974–75 Indiana Pacers season was Indiana's eighth season both as a team and in the American Basketball Association.[1] This would also become their last season with a majority of their championship core group of players remaining on their team, as the Pacers would trade Mel Daniels and Roger Brown to the Memphis Sounds before the start of the season, though they would be able to get Brown back onto the team before the end of the season through a trade with the Utah Stars. Due to their earlier trade with the Sounds, the Pacers would record a worse record this season than the previous season, though would still make it to the 1975 ABA Playoffs as a third place team in the Western Division in what turned out to be the final season to have divisions in the ABA. Despite the worst regular season finish, the Pacers would not only beat the San Antonio Spurs, but also the Denver Nuggets to reach the ABA Finals for the fifth time in seven years, though they would ultimately lose the championship round to the nearby-rivaling Kentucky Colonels 4–1.
This marked the last ABA Finals appearance for Indiana in this league. The next Finals appearance for the Pacers would be in the 2000 NBA Finals, 24 years after their establishment in that league. They would later reach the NBA Finals once again a quarter-century after that in 2025.
Player notes
Roger Brown retired after this season.
After leading the Pacers to the finals, George McGinnis decided to jump to the NBA to the Philadelphia 76ers, who held his original NBA draft rights.
ABA Draft
Round | Pick | Player | Position | Nationality | College |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 6 | Billy Knight | SG/SF | United States | Pittsburgh |
2 | 16 | Bruce King | G | United States | Pan American College |
3 | 26 | Roland Grant | C | United States | New Mexico State |
5 | 46 | Eddie Woods | C | United States | Oral Roberts |
6 | 56 | Ron deVries | C | United States | Illinois State |
7 | 66 | Alex English | SF | United States | South Carolina |
8 | 76 | Bob Florence | G | United States | UNLV |
9 | 86 | Kevin Fitzgerald | G | United States | Oklahoma State |
10 | 96 | Mark Brown | F | United States | Missouri Western State |
This draft table does not include the "ABA Draft of NBA Players" that was done immediately afterward.
ABA Draft of NBA Players
Round | Pick | Player | Position | Nationality | College | NBA Team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 6 | Clifford Ray | PF/C | United States | Oklahoma | Chicago Bulls |
2 | 16 | Bill Bradley | SF | United States | Princeton | New York Knicks |
3 | 26 | Mel Counts | PF/C | United States | Oregon State | Los Angeles Lakers |
4 | 36 | Pat Riley | SG | United States | Kentucky | Los Angeles Lakers |
5 | 46 | Jim Davis | PF/C | United States | Colorado | Detroit Pistons |
The "ABA Draft of NBA Players" that was done on April 17, 1974, happened immediately after the actual ABA Draft done for this season was concluded on that day. None of the five players drafted by the Pacers would report to the team this season. Following this draft's conclusion, both Bill Bradley and Pat Riley would eventually end up becoming members of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame, though Riley would make it more for his head coaching prowess (with a potential second induction for his work as a general manager and later executive for teams) over anything else.
Roster
Players | Coaches | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Head coach
Legend
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Regular season standings
Western Division
Team | W | L | Pct. |
---|---|---|---|
Denver Nuggets | 65 | 19 | .774 |
San Antonio Spurs | 51 | 33 | .607 |
Indiana Pacers | 45 | 39 | .536 |
Utah Stars | 38 | 46 | .452 |
San Diego Conquistadors | 31 | 53 | .369 |
Playoffs
Western Division Semifinals[2]
Game | Date | Location | Score | Record | Attendance |
1 | April 5 | San Antonio | 122–119 (OT) | 1–0 | 8,529 |
2 | April 7 | San Antonio | 98–93 | 2–0 | 7,643 |
3 | April 10 | Indiana | 103–113 | 3–0 | 12,217 |
4 | April 12 | Indiana | 109–110 | 3–1 | 17,389 |
5 | April 14 | San Antonio | 117–123 | 3–2 | 10,986 |
6 | April 16 | Indiana | 115–100 | 4–2 | 15,675 |
Pacers win series, 4–2
Western Division Finals
Game | Date | Location | Score | Record | Attendance |
1 | April 20 | Denver | 128–131 | 0–1 | 7,444 |
2 | April 22 | Denver | 131–124 | 1–1 | 7,491 |
3 | April 24 | Indiana | 118–112 | 2–1 | 15,496 |
4 | April 25 | Indiana | 109–126 | 2–2 | 17,389 |
5 | April 27 | Denver | 109–90 | 3–2 | 7,483 |
6 | April 30 | Indiana | 99–104 | 3–3 | 17,421 |
7 | May 3 | Denver | 104–96 | 4–3 | 7,401 |
Pacers win series, 4–3
ABA Finals[2]
Game | Date | Location | Score | Record | Attendance |
1 | May 13 | Kentucky | 94–120 | 0–1 | 14,368 |
2 | May 15 | Kentucky | 93–95 | 0–2 | 13,212 |
3 | May 17 | Indiana | 101–109 | 0–3 | 17,388 |
4 | May 19 | Indiana | 94–86 | 1–3 | 14,589 |
5 | May 22 | Kentucky | 95–110 | 1–4 | 16,622 |
Pacers lose championship series, 4–1
References
- ^ 1974-75 Indiana Pacers
- ^ a b "1974-75 ABA Regular Season Standings". Remembertheaba.com. Archived from the original on November 3, 2009. Retrieved July 3, 2016.