The 1968–69 Indiana Pacers season was Indiana's second season in the ABA and second as a team.
1968–69 Indiana Pacers season | |
---|---|
Division champions | |
Head coach | |
Arena | Indiana State Fair Coliseum |
Results | |
Record | 44–34 (.564) |
Place | Division: 1st (Eastern) |
Playoff finish | ABA Finals (lost to Oaks 1–4) |
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com | |
1968 ABA Draft
editPlayer | School/Club Team |
---|---|
Don Dee | St. Mary of the Plains |
Mike Lewis | Duke |
Don May | Dayton |
Bob Quick | Xavier |
Phil Wagner | Georgia Tech |
Dave Benedict | Central Washington |
Rudy Bogad | St. John's |
Jerry Newsom | Indiana State |
Rich Niemann | St. Louis |
Jack Thompson | South Carolina |
Greg Cisson | Rider |
Bob Hooper | Dayton |
Butch Joyner | Indiana |
Tom Niemier | Evansville[1] |
Roster
editNumber | Name | Position | Height | Weight | Birth date | Experience (years) | College |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
35 | Roger Brown | SF | 6-5 | 205 | May 22, 1942 | 1 | University of Dayton |
20 | Stephen Chubin | SG | 6-2 | 200 | February 8, 1944 | 1 | University of Rhode Island |
34 | Mel Daniels | C | 6-9 | 220 | July 20, 1944 | 1 | University of New Mexico |
40 | Donald Dee | PF | 6-8 | 210 | August 9, 1943 | R | Saint Mary of the Plains College |
30 | John Fairchild | SF | 6-8 | 205 | April 28, 1943 | 2 | Brigham Young University |
15 | Jerry Harkness | PG | 6-2 | 175 | May 7, 1940 | 2 | Loyola University of Chicago |
12-20 | Bobby Hooper | PG | 6-0 | 180 | December 22, 1946 | R | University of Dayton |
Butch Joyner | F | 6-5 | 200 | April 26, 1945 | R | Indiana University | |
14 | Freddie Lewis | SG | 6-0 | 175 | July 1, 1943 | 2 | Arizona State University |
42 | Mike Lewis | C | 6-8 | 225 | March 18, 1946 | R | Duke University |
32 | Jay Miller | SF | 6-5 | 205 | July 19, 1943 | 1 | University of Notre Dame |
24 | Bob Netolicky | PF | 6-9 | 220 | August 2, 1942 | 1 | Drake University |
43 | George Peeples | C | 6-7 | 190 | October 30, 1943 | 1 | University of Iowa |
44 | Ron Perry | SG | 6-3 | 190 | December 29, 1943 | 1 | Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University |
23 | Jimmy Rayl | PG | 6-2 | 175 | June 21, 1941 | 1 | Indiana University |
11 | Tom Thacker | PG | 6-2 | 170 | November 2, 1939 | 4 | University of Cincinnati |
12 | Jack Thompson | G | 6-1 | 185 | March 26, 1946 | R | University of South Carolina |
11 | Phillip Wagner | G | 6-2 | 190 | December 18, 1945 | R | Georgia Institute of Technology[2] |
Season standings
editEastern Division
editTeam | Wins | Loses | Pct. |
---|---|---|---|
Indiana Pacers | 44 | 34 | .564 |
Miami Floridians | 43 | 35 | .551 |
Kentucky Colonels | 42 | 36 | .538 |
Minnesota Pipers | 36 | 42 | .462 |
New York Nets | 17 | 61 | .218 |
Western Division
editTeam | Wins | Loses | Pct. |
---|---|---|---|
Oakland Oaks | 60 | 18 | .769 |
New Orleans Buccaneers | 46 | 32 | .590 |
Denver Rockets | 44 | 34 | .564 |
Dallas Chaparrals | 41 | 37 | .526 |
Los Angeles Stars | 33 | 45 | .423 |
Houston Mavericks | 23 | 55 | .295 |
Awards, records, and honors
edit- Mel Daniels won the 1969 ABA All-Star Game MVP along with the 1968-69 ABA MVP award.
ABA All-Stars
editTeam leaders
editStat | Player | Average per game |
---|---|---|
Points | Mel Daniels | 24.0 |
Rebounds | Mel Daniels | 16.5 (11.5 defensive and 5.0 offensive rebounds) |
Assists | Stephen Chubin | 5.2 |
Minutes | Freddie Lewis | 39.2 |
FG% | Bob Netolicky | .509 |
Playoffs
editEastern Division semifinals vs. Kentucky Colonels[3]
Game | Date | Location | Score | Record | Attendance |
1 | April 8 | Indiana | 118–128 | 0–1 | 6,319 |
2 | April 9 | Indiana | 120–115 | 1–1 | 6,789 |
3 | April 10 | Kentucky | 111–130 | 1–2 | 4,235 |
4 | April 13 | Kentucky | 104–105 (OT) | 1–3 | 3,079 |
5 | April 14 | Indiana | 116–97 | 2–3 | 5,612 |
6 | April 15 | Kentucky | 107–89 | 3–3 | 4,633 |
7 | April 17 | Indiana | 120–111 | 4–3 | 11,005 |
Pacers win series, 4–3
Eastern Division finals vs Miami Floridians
Game | Date | Location | Result | Record | Attendance |
1 | April 20 | Indiana | 126–110 | 1–0 | 8,721 |
2 | April 22 | Indiana | 131–116 | 2–0 | 7,243 |
3 | April 23 | Miami | 119–105 | 3–0 | 2,112 |
4 | April 25 | Miami | 110–114 | 3–1 | 2,846 |
5 | April 26 | Indiana | 127–105 | 4–1 | 3,528 |
Pacers win series, 4–1
ABA Finals vs. Oakland Oaks[3]
Game | Date | Location | Score | Record | Attendance |
1 | April 30 | Oakland | 114–123 | 0–1 | 3,290 |
2 | May 2 | Oakland | 150–122 | 1–1 | 4,171 |
3 | May 3 | Indiana | 126–134 (OT) | 1–2 | 8,467 |
4 | May 5 | Indiana | 117–144 | 1–3 | 7,133 |
5 | May 7 | Oakland | 131–135 (OT) | 1–4 | 6,340 |
Pacers lose series 4–1
References
edit- ^ 1968 ABA Draft on dataBasketball.com Archived 2014-05-24 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ 1968-69 Indiana Pacers Roster and Stats
- ^ a b "1968-69 ABA Regular Season Standings". Remembertheaba.com. Archived from the original on October 17, 2007. Retrieved July 3, 2016.