Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
1971–72 Denver Rockets season
ABA professional basketball team season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The 1971–72 ABA season was the fifth season of the Denver Rockets. It would also be the final season where the team was owned by J. William Ringsby and his son Donald W. Ringsby, who both decided to help rebrand the Rockets franchise in order to separate themselves from the local Ringsby Rocket Truck Lines business association (which was starting to struggle financially by this point in time) by replacing the original team logo (which was a modification of the Ringsby Rocket Truck Lines logo) with that of a cartoony-looking rocket and changing their team colors entirely. The team finished the season with a 34–50 record, but still managed to qualify for the fourth and final playoff spot in the five-team Western Division by eight games over the Memphis Pros in what later became their final season under that team name. Denver would go the distance with the Pacers before ultimately falling short against them, with the Pacers going on to be the eventual ABA champions for the second time in three seasons. After the season ended, the father-son Ringsby duo would end up selling the Denver Rockets franchise to San Diego businessmen Frank Goldberg (who would only own the team for a few seasons following a further transformation from the original Denver Rockets team name to the modern-day Denver Nuggets namesake before leaving to purchase the San Diego Conquistadors in 1975 to have them briefly become the San Diego Sails) and Bud Fischer to help further distance the team from the original association with the Ringsby Rocket Truck Lines business in mind.
Remove ads
ABA Draft
Summarize
Perspective
This draft was the first ABA draft to have a properly recorded historical note of every round in their draft available.
The Denver Rockets would join the Memphis Pros as one of only two ABA teams to use all 20 rounds of this year's ABA draft, with both teams also having an extra draft pick in an early round for good measure (in Denver's case, they would have two first round picks). The Rockets would originally have had three first round draft picks in a row going from picks 4-6 due to them previously having trades with The Floridians and the Virginia Squires respectively to go with their own first round pick at #4, but their own first round pick was considered forfeited for the second straight year in a row due to them acquiring another college underclassman after an ABA draft period concluded (in this case, acquiring Ralph Simpson from Michigan State University after previously acquiring Spencer Haywood from the University of Detroit), leaving them with only picks #4 & #5 (with pick #4 being from "The Floridians" franchise and pick #5 belonging to the New York Nets by the Virginia Squires respectively) in the first round instead.[1]
Special Circumstances Draft
Before the regular season began for the ABA, they would host a unique little draft held in Memphis, Tennessee (home of the Memphis Pros) called the "Special Circumstances Draft" that was done in response to the NBA implementing a new mini-draft of theirs for college undergraduate players called the "Hardship Draft" during the 1971 NBA draft period. Similar to the "Hardship Draft" in the NBA, only a select few teams would actually end up participating in this specific draft (in this case, the Denver Rockets, Carolina Cougars, and New York Nets). Unlike the "Hardship Draft" for the NBA (which saw five players get selected in that specific draft), however, the "Special Circumstances Draft" that the ABA held on September 10, 1971 (the same day as the NBA's own "Hardship Draft") had only three total players (all junior players while in college) get selected in this draft, with two players get selected in the second round and one player selected in the fourth round (meaning no first round or third round draft picks were made in that draft and the second round actually held the #1 pick in this particular draft). Because of the unusual formatting done there, the Denver Rockets would technically get the #1 pick in this specific draft, with this pick below being their only selection there.
Mickey Davis would be the #1 pick of the "Special Circumstances Draft" in the unusual sense that he was the very first selection from that draft, but wasn't selected in the first round of this particular draft. That being said, despite Davis being selected by the Rockets and Davis accepting his selection in the "Special Circumstances Draft" while denying his entry into the NBA's "Hardship Draft", he would actually end up playing for the Pittsburgh Condors during what ended up becoming their final season of play as a franchise before later playing for the Milwaukee Bucks in the NBA for the rest of his career instead.
Remove ads
Roster
Summarize
Perspective
Remove ads
Season standings
Eastern Division
Western Division
Playoffs
Western Division semifinals[2]
Game | Date | Location | Score | Record | Attendance |
1 | March 31 | Indiana | 95-102 | 0-1 | 6,103 |
2 | April 1 | Indiana | 106-105 | 1-1 | 6,521 |
3 | April 4 | Denver | 120-122 (OT) | 1-2 | 5,304 |
4 | April 6 | Denver | 112-96 | 2-2 | 6,109 |
5 | April 8 | Indiana | 79-91 | 2-3 | 9,428 |
6 | April 9 | Denver | 106-99 | 3-3 | 5,815 |
7 | April 13 | Indiana | 89-91 | 3-4 | 8,643 |
Rockets lose series, 4–3
Game log
Statistics
Remove ads
Awards and honors
- All-ABA 2nd Team: Ralph Simpson
- ABA All-Stars: Ralph Simpson, Arthur Becker[4]
Transactions
![]() | This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (December 2014) |
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads