The Wisconsin Flyers are an American minor league basketball team.
Contents |
Killian Spanbauer, the owner of a sporting good chain based in Oshkosh, had publicly stated as early as 1981 that he wanted to form a minor league basketball circuit with 6-8 teams across Wisconsin. [1] Nothing more appeared in the media until the winter of 1981-1982 when Spanbauer announced he was seeking a franchise in the Continental Basketball Association for Oshkosh. The area had a rich history of basketball, dating back to the All-Stars of the National Basketball League (1937-1949). At the time, Spanbauer made it quite clear that the CBA needed more than one franchise in the Midwest in order to expand. In May 1982, it happened, as the league added the Wisconsin Flyers (based in Oshkosh, Wisconsin), the Detroit Spirits, and the Ohio Mixers (based in Lima, Ohio). All three teams would be placed in the same division - the Central.
The Flyers suffered a setback immediately, when head coach Dave Wohl took an assistant's position with the New Jersey Nets before the season began. Dave Harshman was tabbed to take over the team. As an expansion team, Wisconsin never jelled, though it sent Joe Kopicki to the NBA. Steve Burks led the team in points, assists, steals and minutes played.
Most of the Western Division (Billings, Montana and Reno) folded. The two remaining teams, Albuquerque (who had moved from Las Vegas during the season) and Wyoming, were placed in a new Western Division with Wisconsin, Detroit, Ohio and Louisville (an expansion team). In the East, Rochester folded, while Maine moved to Bay State. The Bombardiers joined Albany and Lancaster - holdovers from the Eastern Division - and three expansion teams, Sarasota, Toronto and Puerto Rico.
Gene "Torchy" Clark, who had been coaching collegiate basketball in Florida, was named the third head coach of the Flyers in the off-season. Clark had ties to the area as a successful high school coach in the 1960s and 1970s and he took a one-year sabbatical from his duties at Central Florida University to take the Flyers job, but he never coached an actual game for Wisconsin. A few weeks before training camp, Clark and owner Killian Spanbauer had a falling-out. The rumors were over certain player signings, but the facts were never revealed in the local media. The only answers available are from a November 30, 1983 article in the Appleton Post Crescent by John L. Paustain, who had interviewed Clark about his resignation. According to that article, Clark needed and wanted an assistant coach and had assumed that John Spanbauer, the son of owner Killian Spanbauer, would be available to help. When Clark's assumption proved false Killian offered to make player Joe Mertens Clark's assistant. Clark did not want this, but had another in mind for the job to whom Clark had previous ties. Killian refused Clark's request, and Clark quit. Clark summed it up saying "I just thought if we disagree about this, it could get worse." Clark's relationship with Killian had been troubled prior to this, and apparently Clark decided this was enough. Bill Klucas, who was CBA coach of the year with Anchorage in 1979–1980, was available and came on board. The 1983–84 Flyers featured an exciting cast of players - Jose Slaughter, Greg Jones (CBA Rookie of the Year), Steve Lingenfelter (CBA Newcomer of the Year), and Kevin Graham. Graham was named to the CBA Second-Team and the First-Team All-Defense. Slaughter was named to the Second-Team All-Defense. Wisconsin started out sluggish, then turned red hot down the stretch and held off the defending champion Detroit Spirits for the Western Division title.
Wisconsin (27-17) defeated the Ohio Mixers (23-21) in five games to win the Western Division semi-final series. The Mixers would announce they were moving to Cincinnati, as the Slammers, shortly afterwards. In the Western finals, Wyoming (23-21) shocked the Flyers by winning three of four. The Wildcatters would go on to lose to Albany and head coach Phil Jackson in the CBA finals.
Ohio became the Cincinnati Slammers and stayed in the Western Division, which welcomed the Evansville Thunder (who had Jerry Sloan as their first head coach). The Tampa Bay Thrillers joined the East.
For the first time, there were rumblings that the Flyers could be moving to greener pastures if attendance did not improve. They still played a majority of their games at Oshkosh North Fieldhouse. Bill Klucas returned, as did Jose Slaughter (24.0 PPG). Slaugher was named to the CBA All-League team and the All-Defensive team. Greg Jones was lost to Evansville in the expansion draft and would lead the Thunder to the playoffs. Dale Wilkinson would add to the offensive firepower before being called to the Clippers. His loss would send the Flyers from the top of the West to a battle for a playoff spot. Wisconsin would manage to hold off Louisville for the fourth and final berth. Another factor which hurt the Flyers down the stretch - in addition to Wilkinson being called up - was Killian Spanbauer announcing the franchise was up for sale in February. The remainder of the season would be played under the shadow of who was going to buy the team and where they would be in 1985-1986.
Wisconsin (21-27) faced the Western Division champion Wyoming Wildcatters (24-24). The 'Catters won the first two games in Wyoming, before the series swung back to Oshkosh. The Flyers won Game Three and then made it interesting with a Game Four win, which included a bench-clearing brawl which involved the fans. With a heavy police presence, Wisconsin crushed Wyoming in Game Five, 98-84. The Detroit Spirits (23-25) were rested after dowing Evansville (23-25) in four games. Detroit would crush Wisconsin in three games to win the Western Division title, but would lose the CBA title to the expansion Tampa Bay Thrillers in seven games. It would be the last playoff appearance in Wisconsin history, and the last of Bill Klucas. He would replace Jack Schalow in Wyoming, after he could not agree on a contact extension with Spanbauer.
Albuquerque would fold, but not before claiming Jose Slaugher in a complicated transaction with Wisconsin. Most of the Silvers' players would be dispersed to Kansas City, where the Sizzlers joined the league after the Kings moved to Sacramento. Elsewhere, Louisville moved to the La Crosse Catbirds (eliminating one possible site for Wisconsin to relocate), the Puerto Rico Coquis (who played in an open-air arena) became the Maine Windjammers, the Lancaster Lightning moved to Baltimore, and the Sarasota Stingers became the Florida Stingers.
The Flyers appeared to be on the right track, as Killian Spanbauer added five partners after turning down offers from La Crosse and Milwaukee to buy the franchise. Dean Moede, who was president of the team's fan club, was named General Manager, and former player Joe Merten, who was 27, was named head coach. McKinley Singleton picked up the offense after the loss of Jose Slaughter, averaging 20.0 PPG. Bryan Warrick led the CBA in assists with 9.9 PPG, and set a franchise record with 24 in one game. Cozell McQueen finished in the top ten in rebounding (9.9 PPG) and blocked shots (2.1 PPG). Tommy Davis was second in the CBA with 46 three pointers. In the end, the season was a disaster. Needing 1,800-2,000 fans per game to break even, the team drew 1,492 to its home opener, and it never got any better. Season ticket sales dropped from 560 to 250. Moede resigned as GM before the season began, and was replaced by former Ohio Mixer head coach John Nillen. Merten even had to suit up for the second half of the season due to roster problems and a lack of money.
None
During the season, the Toronto Tornados (owned by former NBA owner Ted Stepien) moved to Pensacola. During the off-season, they became the Jacksonville Jets. It was a turbulent off-season in general, as the CBA shrunk to 12 teams. Evansville and Maine folded. The Bay State Bombardiers moved to Pensacola, to become the second version of the Tornados. The Florida Stingers became the Charleston Gunners, the Detroit Spirits moved to Savannah, the Kansas City Sizzlers moved to Topeka and the Baltimore Lightning moved to Rockford.
The end was in sight for the Wisconsin Flyers. Bill Klucas, who had led Wyoming to a 21-27 record in 1985-86, returned as head coach. Greg Jones also returned and led the team in scoring (21.9 PPG). He led the CBA in three-pointers - 68. Jones was third in the CBA in steals (2.2 PPG) and assists (7.3 PPG), replacing Bryan Warrick, who was sent to Rockford, as point guard. McKinley Singleton was still an offensive force (19.3 PPG). He had the best free throw percentage in the league - 87.2 percent. T. Tony Brown finished in the top ten in rebounding (10.3 PPG) and blocked shots (2.3 PPG), and was named to the second team All-Defense. In the end, all of these positives could not contribute to a winning season. Wisconsin finished 22-26, and had 153.5 standings points, eight behind Rockford for the final Western Division playoff berth. Wyoming finished fifth with a 21-27 record, but had 160.5 points.
None
Things turned bizarre in the CBA, as the Tampa Bay Thrillers, who won two titles in their two seasons in Florida, moved to Rapid City, South Dakota just prior to the playoffs. The Thrillers would lose just two post-season games and become the only franchise in CBA history to win three consecutive titles. The only other move was the Flyers. The CBA did expand back to 14 teams, with the Quad City Thunder (no relation to Evansville) and the Cedar Rapids Silver Bullets (who were the old Cincinnati Slammers, whose franchise had been inactive).
All through the 1986-87 season, it was apparent that the Wisconsin Flyers were in trouble. Killian Spanbauer and the minority owners placed the team back on the market during the season. The most serious offer came from Rochester, Minnesota. With no prospect of an arena being built in the Fox Valley, the franchise was moved for the 1987-88 season.
The Rochester Flyers would finish fifth their first season, and last in 1988-89. In 1989, the team moved again to Omaha, Nebraska.
Under head coach Mike Thibault, the Omaha Racers went 29-27 in 1989-90 and made the CBA playoffs in the National Conference, where they lost to the San Jose Jammers in the first round. It was the first post-season appearance for the franchise since Detroit swept them in the 1984-1985 Western Division final. The 1990-91 Racers would have the best record in franchise history (39-17), but lost to Quad City in the American Conference finals. Moving back to the National Conference in 1991-92, Omaha finished second in the Northern Division (37-19) to Rapid City. After defeating the Oklahoma City Cavalry in the second round of the playoffs, the Racers lost to the Thrillers in the conference finals, 3 games to 2. The 1992-93 Racers finally made it to the top, after finishing second in the Northern Division (28-28) again to Rapid City. Omaha beat the Wichita Falls Texans in the first round, then slipped past Rapid City in a five-game conference final. In the CBA championship, Omaha defeated the Grands Rapids Hoops in six games. A 106-98 win on May 1, 1993 in Grand Rapids would be the highwater mark of the franchise. Rapid City finished ahead of Omaha (30-26) in the Northern Division for the third straight year in 1993-94. Omaha made it back to the CBA finals, after defeating the Tri-City Chinook in round one and Rapid City in the conference finals. The Quad City Thunder defeated Omaha in five games to win the league title. Omaha (26-30) moved to the Southern Division in 1994-95 and finished second to Oklahoma City. They beat the Sioux Falls SkyForce in the first round, but fell to Oklahoma City in the second round. Thibault missed seven games as head coach, being replaced by Eric Chapman, as he coached the US in the 1995 Pan American games in Argentina. Omaha (28-28) moved back to the Northern Division of the National Conference in 1995-96, and finished second again, this time to Sioux Falls. The Florida Beachdogs swept the Racers out of the playoffs in round one. With the CBA shrinking to 11 teams in 1996-97, Omaha was placed in the 5-team National Conference and finished in fourth place (22-34). In one of the biggest upsets in CBA playoff history, the Racers defeated Sioux Falls (47-9) in five games, winning the clincher in South Dakota, 98-92. Oklahoma City brought them back down to earth, winning the conference finals, 3 games to 1. It proved to be the last hurrah for the franchise. With a record of 375-413, plus a 42-49 mark in the playoffs, and one CBA title (1992-1993), the Wisconsin Flyers-Rochester Flyers-Omaha Racers franchise was declared inactive in the summer of 1997. At the time, there was some faint hope that the franchise may start up again in 1998-99. The two teams who had the made the CBA finals in 1997, Oklahoma City and Florida, also folded.
SEASON | RECORD | QUARTERS WON | STANDINGS POINTS | CONFERENCE | PLAYOFFS | HEAD COACH |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1982-1983 | 14-30 | 78.0 | 120.0 | 3rd - Central Division | None | Dave Harshman |
1983-1984 | 27-17 | 101.0 | 182.0 | 1st - Western Division | Defeated Ohio 3-2
Lost to Wyoming 3-1 |
Bill Klucas |
1984-1985 | 21-27 | 91.0 | 154.0 | 4th - Western Division | Defeated Wyoming 3-2
Lost to Detroit 3-0 |
Bill Klucas |
1985-1986 | 16-32 | 79.5 | 127.5 | 7th - Western Division | None | Joe Merten |
1986-1987 | 22-26 | 87.5 | 153.5 | 6th - Western Division | None | Bill Klucas |