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===1946β1963: Syracuse Nationals=== {{multiple image | align = right | direction = horizontal | width = 150 | total_width = 300 | footer = [[Billy Gabor]] joined the Syracuse Nationals in 1948. [[Dolph Schayes]] joined the team in 1949. Both men spent their entire careers with the team, and won a championship together in 1955. | footer_align = left | caption_align = left | image1 = Billy Gabor.jpeg | caption1 = | image2 = Dolph Schayes.jpeg | caption2 = }} [[File:1958β59 Syracuse Nationals.jpeg|thumb|The 1958β59 Syracuse Nationals]] [[File:Hal Greer 1969.jpeg|thumb|[[Hal Greer]] joined the Nationals in 1958 and spent his entire 15-season career with the franchise; he won a championship with the team in 1967.]] In 1946, Italian immigrant [[Danny Biasone]] established the Syracuse Nationals of the [[National Basketball League (United States)|National Basketball League]] (NBL) in [[Syracuse, New York]], for $5,000.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Nats |last=Ramsey |first=David |year=1995 |publisher=Pine Tree Publishers.}}</ref> While in the NBL with teams largely consisting of small Midwestern towns, the Nationals put together a 21β23 record, finishing in fourth place. In the playoffs, the Nationals were beaten by the [[Rochester Royals]] in four games. In their second season, [[1947β48 BAA season|1947β48]], the Nationals struggled, finishing in fifth place with a 24β36 record. Despite their record, they made the playoffs, and were swept by the [[Anderson Duffey Packers]] in three straight games. Prior to the 1948β49 season, four teams left the NBL for the BAA as the foundation for a merger was laid.<ref name="wp-2022-01-02">{{cite news |author1=Curtis Harris |title=How the NBA's 75th anniversary sweeps away its early history |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2022/01/21/nba-history-nbl-baa/ |access-date=25 June 2024 |newspaper=[[The Washington Post]] |date=21 January 2022}}</ref> The Nationals "recipe for success" began by recruiting [[Leo Ferris]].<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xY12CQAAQBAJ&q=nationals+recipe+for+success+leo+ferris&pg=PT39|title=Basketball History in Syracuse: Hoops Roots|last=Baker|first=Mark Allen|date=October 25, 2010|publisher=Arcadia Publishing|isbn=9781614236450|access-date=November 18, 2020|archive-date=February 10, 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240210113407/https://books.google.com/books?id=xY12CQAAQBAJ&q=nationals+recipe+for+success+leo+ferris&pg=PT39#v=snippet&q=nationals%20recipe%20for%20success%20leo%20ferris&f=false|url-status=live}}</ref> Staying in the NBL, Ferris signed [[Al Cervi]] to be player-coach and outbid the New York Knicks for the services of [[Dolph Schayes]] who made his professional debut,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://dailyorange.com/2012/11/local-legend-schayes-reflects-on-hall-of-fame-career-as-face-of-syracuse-nationals/|title=Local legend: Schayes reflects on Hall of Fame career as the face of Syracuse Nationals|website=dailyorange.com|date=November 2012|access-date=January 24, 2017|archive-date=February 2, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170202024348/http://dailyorange.com/2012/11/local-legend-schayes-reflects-on-hall-of-fame-career-as-face-of-syracuse-nationals/|url-status=live}}</ref> leading the Nationals to a winning record for the first time with a record of 40β23. In the playoffs the Nationals defeated the [[Hammond Calumet Buccaneers]], winning the series in two straight games. In the semifinals, the Nationals lost to the Anderson Duffey Packers for the second straight season in four games. In 1949, when the NBL and the BAA merged into the [[NBA]], the Nationals were one of seven NBL teams that were brought into the NBA. From 1949 to 1956, the team would wear gold on their "Nats" home jersey while wearing gold "Syracuse" jerseys from 1953 to 1956. The Nationals were an instant success in the NBA, winning the Eastern Division in the [[1949β50 NBA season|1949β50 season]], with a league-best record of [[List of National Basketball Association teams by single season win pct|51β13]]. In the playoffs the Nationals continued to play solid basketball, beating the [[Philadelphia Warriors]] in two games. Moving on to the Eastern Finals, the Nationals battled the [[New York Knickerbockers]], beating their big-city rivals in a three-game series. In the NBA Finals, the Nationals faced a fellow NBL alum in the [[Minneapolis Lakers]]. In Game 1 of the Finals the Nationals lost just their second home game of the season, 68β66. The Nationals did not recover, as they fell behind 3β1 before falling in six games. Despite several teams leaving the NBA for the [[National Professional Basketball League (1950β51)|National Professional Basketball League]] before the 1950β51 season, the Nationals decided to stay put. In their second NBA season, [[1950β51 NBA season|1950β51]], the Nationals played mediocre basketball all season, finishing in fourth place with a record of 32β34. In the playoffs the Nationals played their best basketball of the season as they stunned the first-place Warriors in two straight, taking Game 1 on the road in overtime 91β89. In the Eastern Finals, the Nationals were beaten by the New York Knickerbockers in a hard-fought five-game series, losing the finale by just two points. Cervi, playing less and coaching more, emphasized a patient offense and a scrappy defense, which led the league in the [[1951β52 NBA season|1951β52 season]] by yielding a stingy 79.5 points per game as the Nationals won the Eastern Division with a solid 40β26 record. In the playoffs, the Nationals knocked off the Warriors again in a three-game series. In the Eastern Finals, the Nationals fell to the Knickerbockers again, dropping the series in four games. The Nationals finished in second place in a hard-fought 3-way battle for first place in the Eastern Division for the [[1952β53 NBA season|1952β53 season]], with a record of 47β24. In the playoffs, the Nationals faced the [[Boston Celtics]], dropping Game 1 at home 87β81. Needing a win in Boston to keep their hopes alive, the Nationals took the Celtics deep into overtime before losing in quadruple OT 111β105, in what remains the longest playoff game in NBA history.<ref name=bbdigest>{{citation | title = A March Marathon β Flashback: 1953's Four-OT Thriller β Boston Celtics vs. Syracuse Nationals| magazine=Basketball Digest |date = March 2003 | url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCJ/is_5_30/ai_97615973| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060330051016/http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCJ/is_5_30/ai_97615973| url-status=dead| archive-date=March 30, 2006}}</ref> The Nationals acquired [[Alex Groza]], and [[Ralph Beard]] as the [[Indianapolis Olympians]] folded leaving the NBA with just 9 teams for the [[1953β54 NBA season|1953β54 season]]. Once again the Nationals battled for the Division title, falling two games short with a 42β30 record. In the playoffs, the Nationals won all four games of a round-robin tournament involving the three playoff teams from the East. In the Eastern Finals, the Nationals beat the Celtics in two straight games. In the NBA Finals, the Nationals lost to the Lakers in a hard-fought seven-game series where the two teams alternated wins throughout. With the NBA struggling financially and down to just 8 teams during the [[1954β55 NBA season|1954β55 season]], Nationals owner Biasone suggested the league limit the amount of time that could be taken for a shot, thus speeding up a game that often ended with long periods of teams just holding the ball and playing keep away. Biasone and Nationals' general manager Ferris calculated a 24-second [[shot clock]] would allow at least 30 shots per quarter, speeding up the game and increasing scoring. The shot clock was an instant success as scoring was up 14 points per game league-wide. In the first season of the shot clock, the Nationals would take first place in the East with a 43β29 record. After a first-round bye the Nationals would beat the Celtics in four games to reach the NBA Finals for the second straight season. In the finals the Nationals would get off to a fast start, led by forward Schayes, taking the first two games at home against the [[Fort Wayne Pistons]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nba.com/history/legends/dolph-schayes/index.html |title=NBA.com: Teams β Legends profile: Dolph Schayes |website=[[NBA.com]] |access-date=January 29, 2012 |archive-date=January 30, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120130155307/http://www.nba.com/history/legends/dolph-schayes/index.html |url-status=live }}</ref> As the series moved to Fort Wayne the Pistons would spark back to life taking all three games to take a 3β2 series lead. Back in Syracuse for Game 6 on, the Nationals kept their championship hopes alive by beating the Pistons 109β104 to force a seventh game at home. Game 7 would be as tight as the series as [[George King (basketball, born 1928)|George King]] sank a free throw to give the Nationals a 92β91 lead in the final seconds. King then stole the inbound pass to clinch the NBA Championship for the Nationals. Coming off their NBA Championship the Nationals struggled during the [[1955β56 NBA season|1955β56 season]], needing a tiebreaker over the Knickerbockers to avoid finishing in last place and make the playoffs with a 35β37 record. In the playoffs, the Nationals stunned the Celtics by winning the first-round series in three games, taking the final two. In the Eastern Finals, the Nationals played solid basketball again as they pushed the Warriors to a decisive fifth game. The Nationals' reign as defending champions ended with a 109β104 loss in [[Philadelphia]]. After the season, the team dropped gold from their uniforms, wearing just red and blue for the remainder of their tenure. The Nationals got off to a slow start as coach Cervi was fired and replaced by [[Paul Seymour (basketball)|Paul Seymour]]. Under Seymour, the Nationals rebounded and finished the [[1956β57 NBA season|1956β57 season]] in second place with a record of 38β34. In the playoffs, the Nationals had trouble knocking off the defending champion Warriors but advanced to the Eastern Finals with two straight wins. The Nationals were swept in three games by the eventual champions, the Celtics. Fort Wayne and Rochester had moved on to Detroit and Cincinnati for the [[1957β58 NBA season|1957β58 season]], leaving the Syracuse Nationals as the last small-town team in the big city NBA. Regardless, they still finished in second place with a 41β31 record. In the playoffs, the Nationals fell in the first round as they lost a three-game series to the Philadelphia Warriors. Despite a mediocre 35β37 record for the [[1958β59 NBA season|1958β59 season]] the Nationals made the playoffs again by finishing in third place. In the playoffs, the Nationals swept the Knickerbockers in two straight to reach the Eastern Finals, where they lost to the eventual champion Celtics, alternating wins before losing by 5 points in Game 7. Playing in a league now dominated by superstars like [[Bill Russell]] of the Celtics, [[Wilt Chamberlain]] of the Warriors, [[Bob Pettit]] of the [[St. Louis Hawks]] and [[Elgin Baylor]] of the Lakers, the Nationals held their own, posting a solid 45β30 record, while finishing in third place after the 1959β60 regular season. In the playoffs, the Nationals lost a three-game series to Chamberlain and the Warriors. With the Lakers relocating from [[Minneapolis]] to Los Angeles before the [[1960β61 NBA season|1960β61 season]], the Syracuse Nationals became the last old NBL team to still be playing in their original city in the NBA. The Nationals went on to make the playoffs again by finishing in third place with a 38β41 record. The Nationals were dangerous in the playoffs as they stunned the Warriors in three straight games. In the Eastern Finals, the Nationals lost once again to the eventual champion Celtics in five games. Schayes missed 24 games during the [[1961β62 NBA season|1961β62 season]] and failed to lead the team in scoring for the first time in 14 years, as Hal Greer led the way with 22.8 points per game. The Nationals finished in third place again with a 41β39 record. In the playoffs, the Nationals lost their first two games to the Warriors on the road. Facing elimination, the Nationals won the next two games to force a fifth game in Philadelphia. In Game 5 the Warriors ended the Nationals' season with a 121β104 victory. With an aging team, the Nationals were expected to fade; however, with the scrappy play of [[Johnny Kerr]], the Nationals remained a strong contender, finishing in second place for the [[1962β63 NBA season|1962β63 season]], with a record of 48β32. In the playoffs the Nationals faced the [[Cincinnati Royals]], getting off to a 2β1 series lead. Needing one win to advance to the Eastern Finals again the Nationals lost two straight, dropping the decisive fifth game at home in overtime 131β127.
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