The 1970–71 NBA season was the 25th season of the National Basketball Association. The season ended with the Milwaukee Bucks winning the NBA Championship, beating the Baltimore Bullets 4 games to 0 in the NBA Finals.[1] Three new teams made their debut: the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Portland Trail Blazers, and the Buffalo Braves.
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- The NBA expanded to 17 teams as the Portland Trail Blazers, Buffalo Braves, and Cleveland Cavaliers began play.[2] For the first time, the league was divided into Conferences (East and West), each with two divisions. The Detroit Pistons and Milwaukee Bucks were shifted from the old Eastern Division to the Western Conference's Midwest Division, and the Atlanta Hawks were switched from the Western Division to the Eastern Conference's Central Division.
- Before the season, on June 18, 1970, the NBA owners voted 13–4, to seek approval from Congress for a merger with the 11-team American Basketball Association into a 28-team league that would retain the NBA name.[3] The NBA players opposed the merger, and Oscar Robertson filed an antitrust lawsuit that prevented further proceedings.
- The 1971 NBA All-Star Game was played at the San Diego Sports Arena in San Diego, California, with the West beating the East 108–107. Lenny Wilkens of the Seattle SuperSonics won the game's MVP award.
- The Rookie of the Year award was shared by two players for the first time in league history. They were Dave Cowens of the Boston Celtics and Geoff Petrie of the Portland Trail Blazers.[4]
- In only their third year of existence, the Bucks won the NBA Championship, sweeping the Baltimore Bullets in four straight games. This was the first NBA finals to feature none of the NBA's foundation franchises; the Bullets franchise had joined the NBA as the Chicago Packers in 1961, and the Bucks franchise had joined in 1968. It was also the first NBA finals since 1956 to feature neither Bill Russell or Wilt Chamberlain.
- Among those who retired this season include Al Attles, Bob Boozer, Connie Dierking, Bailey Howell, Tom Meschery and Adrian Smith.
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1970-71 National Basketball Association |
Eastern Conference |
Division | Team | City | Arena | Capacity |
Atlantic |
Boston Celtics |
Boston, Massachusetts |
Boston Garden |
13,909 |
Buffalo Braves * |
Buffalo, New York |
Buffalo Memorial Auditorium |
15,280 |
New York Knicks |
New York, New York |
Madison Square Garden |
19,812 |
Philadelphia 76ers |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
The Spectrum |
18,176 |
Central |
Atlanta Hawks |
Atlanta, Georgia |
Alexander Memorial Coliseum |
9,191 |
Baltimore Bullets |
Baltimore, Maryland |
Baltimore Civic Center |
11,271 |
Cincinnati Royals |
Cincinnati, Ohio |
Cincinnati Gardens |
11,000 |
Cleveland Cavaliers * |
Cleveland, Ohio |
Cleveland Arena |
10,000 |
Western Conference |
Midwest |
Chicago Bulls |
Chicago, Illinois |
Chicago Stadium |
18,676 |
Detroit Pistons |
Detroit, Michigan |
Cobo Arena |
12,191 |
Milwaukee Bucks |
Milwaukee, Wisconsin |
Milwaukee Arena |
10,783 |
Phoenix Suns |
Phoenix, Arizona |
Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum |
14,870 |
Pacific |
Los Angeles Lakers |
Inglewood, California |
The Forum |
17,505 |
Portland Trail Blazers * |
Portland, Oregon |
Memorial Coliseum |
12,888 |
San Diego Rockets |
San Diego, California |
San Diego Sports Arena |
14,500 |
San Francisco Warriors |
Daly City, California |
Cow Palace |
12,953 |
Seattle SuperSonics |
Seattle, Washington |
Seattle Center Coliseum |
17,072 |
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Atlantic Division
Central Division
Midwest Division
Pacific Division
By division
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By conference
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Notes
- z, y – division champions
- x – clinched playoff spot
- * Division winner
- Bold Series winner
- Italic Team with home-court advantage
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