1970-71 Milwaukee Bucks season

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1970-71 Milwaukee Bucks season
Head Coach Larry Costello
Arena Milwaukee Arena
Results
Record 66–16
(.805)
Place Division: 1st
Conference: 1st
Playoff Finish NBA Champions

The 1970-71 Milwaukee Bucks season was be the 3rd season for the Bucks. Milwaukee posted a 66-16 record in only its third year of existence, and its second since getting Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. [1] A big part of the championship season was the acquisition of The Big O, Oscar Robertson. Other role players on the Bucks included players such as Bob Dandridge (18.4 ppg) and Jon McGlocklin (15.8 ppg), power forward Greg Smith and key reserves Lucius Allen, Bob Boozer and Dick Cunningham completing the nucleus.

Contents:
OffseasonDraft picksRosterRegular seasonPlayoffsGame log
Player statsAwards and recordsTransactionsSee alsoReferences


[edit] Offseason

On April 21, 1970, the Bucks traded two young players, Flynn Robinson and Charlie Paulk, to the Cincinnati Royals for 10-year veteran guard Oscar Robertson. [2]

[edit] Draft picks

Round Player School/Club Team
1 Gary Freeman Oregon State
2 Bill Zopf Duquesne
3 Marvin Winkler SW Louisiana
4 Virgle Fredricks Drury
5 Mike Grosso Louisville
6 Willy Watson Oklahoma City
7 John Rinka Kenyon
8 Jim Samo Northwestern
9 Joe Hamilton North Texas State
10 Bob Seemer Georgia Tech

[3]

[edit] Roster

[edit] Regular season

In only his second pro season, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (then known as Lew Alcindor) led the league in scoring at 31.7 ppg, ranked second in field goal percentage at .577 and fourth in rebounding at 16.0 rpg. [4] Newly arrived Oscar Robertson turned 32 early in the 1970-71 season, and was past his prime when he came to Milwaukee, but his versatile skills and experience provided a leadership role for the Bucks. Robertson had never won a championship and his desire to win seemed to inspire Abdul-Jabbar and unite the rest of the Bucks. Robertson ranked third in the league in assists at 8.3 apg and was the Bucks' No. 2 scorer at 19.4 ppg. [5]

[edit] Season Standings

Midwest Division
Team W L PCT. GB
Milwaukee Bucks C 66 16 .805 -
Chicago Bulls 51 31 .622 15
Phoenix Suns 48 34 .585 18
Detroit Pistons 45 37 .549 21

[edit] Season Schedule

[edit] November

Game Date Opponent Score Result
1 Sat, Oct 17, 1970 @ Atlanta Hawks 107-98 Win

[6]

[edit] Player stats

Player Games Played Points Assists Field Goals Rebounds


[edit] Playoffs

  • Won NBA Western Conference Semifinals (4-1) over San Francisco Warriors [7]
  • Won NBA Western Conference Finals (4-1) over Los Angeles Lakers [8]

[edit] NBA Finals

Game Date Home Team Result Road Team
Game 1 April 21 Milwaukee 98-88 Baltimore
Game 2 April 25 Baltimore 83-102 Milwaukee
Game 3 April 28 Milwaukee 107-99 Baltimore
Game 4 April 30 Baltimore 106-118 Milwaukee

Bucks win series 4-0

[edit] Awards and Records

  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, NBA Scoring Champion
  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, NBA MVP
  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, NBA Finals MVP

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ NBA.com: All-Time Finals Challenge: 1971 Bucks
  2. ^ NBA.com: All-Time Finals Challenge: 1971 Bucks
  3. ^ Milwaukee Bucks (1968 - ) 1970 Stats, History, Awards and More
  4. ^ NBA.com: All-Time Finals Challenge: 1971 Bucks
  5. ^ NBA.com: All-Time Finals Challenge: 1971 Bucks
  6. ^ 1970-71 Milwaukee Bucks Games - Basketball-Reference.com
  7. ^ 1970-71 Milwaukee Bucks Statistics - Basketball-Reference.com
  8. ^ 1970-71 Milwaukee Bucks Statistics - Basketball-Reference.com