The original ABA was founded in 1967, competing with the well-established National Basketball Association,
until the ABA–NBA merger in 1976. According to one of the owners of the
Indiana Pacers, its goal was to force a merger with the more
established league. Potential investors were told that they could get an
ABA team for half of what it cost to get an NBA expansion team at the
time. When the merger occurred, ABA officials said their investment
would more than double.[1]
Four ABA teams were absorbed into the older league: the New York Nets, Denver Nuggets, Indiana Pacers, and San Antonio Spurs. Two other clubs, the Kentucky Colonels, and the Spirits of St. Louis, were disbanded upon the merger. A third, the Virginia Squires, had folded less than a month earlier, missing out on the opportunities that a merger might have provided.
The ABA distinguished itself from its older counterpart with a more
wide-open, flashy style of offensive play, as well as differences in
rules—a 30-second shot clock
(as opposed to the NBA's 24-second clock, though the ABA did switch to
the 24 second shot clock for the 1975–76 season) and use of a three-point field goal arc.
Also, the ABA used a colorful red, white and blue ball, instead of the
NBA's traditional orange ball. The ABA also had several "regional"
franchises, such as the Virginia Squires and Carolina Cougars, that played "home" games in several cities.
The ABA also went after four of the best referees in the NBA: Earl Strom, John Vanak, Norm Drucker and Joe Gushue, getting them to "jump" leagues by offering them far more in money and benefits. In Earl Strom's memoir Calling the Shots,
Strom conveys both the heady sense of being courted by a rival league
with money to burn—and also the depression that set in the next year
when he began refereeing in the ABA, with less prominent players
performing in inadequate arenas, in front of very small crowds.
Nevertheless, the emergence of the ABA boosted the salaries of referees
just as it did the salaries of players.
The freewheeling style of the ABA eventually caught on with fans, but the lack of a national television
contract and protracted financial losses would spell doom for the ABA
as an independent circuit. In 1976, its last year of existence, the ABA
pioneered the now-popular slam dunk contest at its all-star game in Denver.
One of the more significant long-term contributions of the ABA to
professional basketball was to tap into markets in the southeast that
had been collegiate basketball hotbeds (including North Carolina,
Virginia, and Kentucky). The NBA was focused on the urban areas of the
Northeast, Midwest and West Coast. At the time, it showed no interest in
placing a team south of Washington, D.C.
Commissioners
- George Mikan 1967–1969
- James Carson Gardner 1969
- Jack Dolph 1969–1972
- Bob Carlson 1972–1973
- Mike Storen 1973–74
- Tedd Munchak 1974–75
- Dave DeBusschere 1975–76
NBA great George Mikan was the first commissioner of the ABA, where he introduced both the 3-point line and the league's trademark red, white and blue basketball.[3] Mikan resigned in 1969. Dave DeBusschere,
one of the stars of the New York Knicks championship teams, moved from
his job as Vice President and GM of the ABA's New York Nets in 1975 to
become the last commissioner of the ABA and facilitate the ABA–NBA
merger in 1976.[4]
Teams
Of the original 11 teams, only the Kentucky Colonels and Indiana Pacers remained for all nine seasons without relocating, changing team names, or folding. However, the Denver Larks/Rockets/Nuggets, a team that had been assigned to Kansas City, Missouri, moved to Denver
without playing a game in Kansas City due to the lack of a suitable
arena. In addition to the four surviving ABA teams, eight current NBA
markets have ABA heritage: Utah, Dallas, Houston, Miami, Minnesota, New
Orleans, Memphis, and Charlotte all had an ABA team before the NBA
arrived. The Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana market, former home of the ABA
Kentucky Colonels, is considered a top contender for the next NBA
expansion or relocation, and in fact the then Vancouver Grizzlies had Louisville as one of its four "finalists" for a new home before choosing Memphis
in 2001. The Colonels led the ABA in attendance five of the ABA's nine
seasons, with regular sellouts of 16,600+ fans at Louisville's Freedom Hall, since replaced by the 22,000-seat KFC Yum! Center
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Basketball_Association