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1947–48 New York Knicks season
Season of National Basketball Association team the New York Knicks
Season of National Basketball Association team the New York Knicks
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| team | New York Knicks |
| league | BAA |
| end_year | 1948 |
| wins | 26 |
| losses | 22 |
| division_place | 2nd |
| conf_place | 2nd |
| coach | Joe Lapchick |
| gm | Ned Irish |
| arena | Madison Square Garden |
| television | WJZ-TV |
| radio | WHN |
| playoffs | [BAA Quarterfinals](1948-baa-playoffs-bracket) |
| (lost to [Bullets](1947-48-baltimore-bullets-season) 1–2) |
(lost to Bullets 1–2)
The 1947–48 New York Knicks season was the second season for the team in the Basketball Association of America (BAA), which later merged with the National Basketball League to become the National Basketball Association. The Knicks finished in second place in the Eastern Division with a 26–22 record and qualified for the BAA Playoffs. In the first round, New York was eliminated by the Baltimore Bullets in a best-of-three series, two games to one. Carl Braun was the team's scoring leader during the season.
At the 1947 BAA draft, the Knicks selected Dick Holub in the first round, with the fifth overall pick. The Knicks also selected Wataru Misaka, who made the team's final roster and became "the first person of color to play in modern professional basketball", just months after the Major League Baseball color line had been broken by the Brooklyn Dodgers' Jackie Robinson. Misaka was cut after playing only three games with the team. The 1947–48 season was the first as New York's head coach for Joe Lapchick, who had previously held the same position for college basketball's St. John's; he had been hired in March 1947. The Knicks had a 13–13 record in the first 26 games of the season before going on an eight-game winning streak from January 28 to February 11. However, New York won only four of its final 12 regular season contests.
In game one of the first round of the playoffs, held in Baltimore, the Bullets defeated the Knicks 85–81 behind a 34-point performance by Connie Simmons. The Knicks evened the series at one victory apiece by winning the second game 79–69 in New York, as four players scored more than 10 points. The win forced a decisive third game back in Baltimore, which the Knicks lost 84–77. Simmons led the Bullets with 22 points, while Chick Reiser added 21. The Bullets went on to win the 1948 BAA Finals.
Draft
Main article: 1947 BAA draft
| Round | Pick | Player | Position | Nationality | School/Club team |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 5 | Dick Holub | C | United States | Long Island |
| – | – | Andy Duncan | F/C | United States | William & Mary |
| – | – | Ray Evans | – | United States | Kansas |
| – | – | Ed Golub | – | United States | – |
| – | – | Garland Head | – | United States | Texas Tech |
| – | – | Ron Livingston | – | United States | Saint Mary's |
| – | – | Dan Miller | – | United States | Saint Louis |
| – | – | Wataru Misaka | G | United States | Utah |
| – | – | Carl Reichert | – | United States | Findlay |
| – | – | Tom Tomlinson | – | United States | Southern Methodist |
Roster
Regular season
Season standings
Game log
| 48 | March 20 | @ [Washington](1947-48-washington-capitols-season) | L 82–103 | Bud Palmer (23) | 26–22 |
|---|
Playoffs
|- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc" | 1 | March 27 | @ Baltimore | L 81–85 | Bud Palmer (21) | Baltimore Coliseum | 0–1 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ccffcc" | 2 | March 28 | Baltimore | W 79–69 | Bud Palmer (18) | Madison Square Garden III | 1–1 |- align="center" bgcolor="#ffcccc" | 3 | April 1 | @ Baltimore | L 77–84 | Sid Tanenbaum (18) | Baltimore Coliseum
| 1–2 |
|---|
Awards and records
- Carl Braun, All-BAA Second Team
Transactions
Main article: List of 1947–48 BAA season transactions
Free agency
Additions
| New York Knicks}}" width="10%" | Player | New York Knicks}}" width="10%" | Signed | New York Knicks}}" width="10%" | Former team |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carl Braun | — | Colgate Raiders | |||
| Ray Kuka | — | Montana State Bobcats | |||
| Paul Noel | — | Kentucky Wildcats | |||
| Sid Tanenbaum | — | NYU Violets |
Subtractions
| New York Knicks}}" width="10%" | Player | New York Knicks}}" width="10%" | Reason left | New York Knicks}}" width="10%" | New team |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aud Brindley | — | — | |||
| Bob Cluggish | — | — | |||
| Bob Fitzgerald | Signed contract | Syracuse Nationals | |||
| Frido Frey | Signed contract | Paterson Crescents | |||
| Frank Mangiapane | Signed contract | Paterson Crescents | |||
| Ossie Schectman | Signed contract | Paterson Crescents |
References
References
- "1947–48 New York Knickerbockers Roster and Statistics". Basketball-Reference.
- (2003). "The Fourth Estate". New York Knicks.
- Jaker, Bill. (2008). "The Airwaves of New York: Illustrated Histories of 156 AM Stations in the Metropolitan Area, 1921–1996". McFarland & Company.
- "New York Knicks". Basketball-Reference.
- (November 16, 2009). "August 3: NBA is born". History.
- "1947 BAA Draft". Basketball-Reference.
- Wertheim, Jon. (February 11, 2012). "Decades before Lin's rise, Misaka made history for Asian-Americans".
- Goldstein, Richard. (November 26, 2019). "Wat Misaka, 95, First Nonwhite in Modern Pro Basketball, Dies". The New York Times.
- Vecsey, George. (August 10, 2009). "Pioneering Knick Returns to Garden". The New York Times.
- Kroessler, Jeffrey A.. (2010). "The Greater New York Sports Chronology". Columbia University Press.
- "1947–48 New York Knicks Schedule and Results". Basketball-Reference.
- "New York Knicks at Baltimore Bullets Box Score, March 27, 1948". Basketball-Reference.
- "Baltimore Bullets at New York Knicks Box Score, March 28, 1948". Basketball-Reference.
- "New York Knicks at Baltimore Bullets Box Score, April 1, 1948". Basketball-Reference.
- "1947–48 BAA Season Summary". Basketball-Reference.
- "All-NBA & All-ABA Teams". Basketball-Reference.
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