1971–72 Virginia Squires season

1971–72 Virginia Squires season
Head coach Al Bianchi
Arena Norfolk Scope
Hampton Coliseum
Richmond Coliseum
Roanoke Civic Center
Results
Record 4539 (.536)
Place Division: 2nd (Eastern)
Playoff finish Lost in Division Semifinals

The 1971–72 Virginia Squires season was the second season of the Virginia Squires in the American Basketball Association. This was the debut season of future Hall of Famer Julius Erving. In the first half of the season, the Squires were 26–16, with a season-high five-game losing streak and one five-game winning streak in that half. In the second half, they went 19–23. The Squires finished 2nd in points scored at 118.9 per game, but 9th in points allowed at 118.0 per game. Just before the season ended, Charlie Scott left the team. In the playoffs, the Squires swept the Floridians (with Game 2 even being broadcast on CBS), but the Squires lost to the New York Nets in the Division Finals. [1] After the season, the Squires stopped playing in Roanoke, electing to focus on Norfolk, Hampton, and Richmond only.

Roster

Final standings

Eastern Division

Team W L % GB
Kentucky Colonels 68 16 .810 -
Virginia Squires 45 39 .536 23
New York Nets 44 40 .524 24
The Floridians 36 48 .429 32
Carolina Cougars 35 49 .417 33
Pittsburgh Condors 25 59 .298 43

Playoffs

Eastern Division Semifinals[2]

Game Date Location Score Record Attendance
1 April 2 Norfolk (Virginia) 114–107 (OT) 1–0 3,770
2 April 4 Hampton (Virginia) 125–100 2–0 2,921
3 April 6 Florida 118–113 3–0 2,965
4 April 8 Florida 115–106 4–0 3,117

Squires win series, 4–0

Eastern Division Finals vs. New York Nets

Game Date Location Score Record Attendance
1 April 13 Richmond (Virginia) 138–91 1–0 5,526
2 April 15 Norfolk (Virginia) 115–106 2–0 10,410
3 April 24 New York 117–119 2–1 11,893
4 April 26 New York 107–118 2–2 11,164
5 April 29 Hampton (Virginia) 116–107 3–2 6,309
6 May 1 New York 136–146 3–3 11,152
7 May 4 Norfolk (Virginia) 88–94 3–4 10,410

Squires lose series, 4–3

Awards and honors

1972 ABA All-Star Game selections (game played on January 29, 1972)

References

External links

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