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1955–56 Philadelphia Warriors season

Professional basketball team season (won NBA championship)


Professional basketball team season (won NBA championship)

(Bill Campbell) The 1955–56 Philadelphia Warriors season George Senesky took over for Eddie Gottlieb as coach, the Warriors had a strong start by winning 12 of their first 16 games. Paul Arizin and Neil Johnston were among the league's scoring leaders as the Warriors won the Eastern Division with a 45–27 record. The addition of rookie Tom Gola made the difference. In his first season Gola averaged 9.1 rebounds and 5.9 assists per game. In the Eastern Division Finals the Warriors beat the Syracuse Nationals in 5 games. In the NBA Finals, the Warriors won their 2nd Championship by beating the Fort Wayne Pistons 4 games to 1. The Warriors' 1956 championship marked the first NBA Finals championship won by a team that was established in the National Basketball Association itself (or in this case, the Basketball Association of America precursor) since the Warriors' 1947 BAA Finals championship during the league's inaugural season after the BAA/NBA's prior champions up until this point were won by the American Basketball League's original rendition of the Baltimore Bullets (who have since gone defunct) and the National Basketball League's Minneapolis Lakers, Rochester Royals, and Syracuse Nationals. HoopsHype would later rank this championship squad as tied with the 1956–57 Boston Celtics from a season later team as the team with the second-easiest path to the NBA Finals ever in 2024 due to them being one of three total championship teams who had playoff opponents that averaged around an average overall record or less during their championship run.

Roster

  • George Senesky

Regular season

Season standings

Game log

1955–56 Game log
**#**
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72

Playoffs

|- | 1 | March 23 | Syracuse | W 109–87 | Paul Arizin (29) | Neil Johnston (24) | Gola, Beck (5) | Philadelphia Civic Center

1–0
2
March 25
@ Syracuse
L 112–118
Neil Johnston (43)
Neil Johnston (16)
Neil Johnston (7)
Onondaga War Memorial
1–1
-
3
March 27
Syracuse
W 119–96
Joe Graboski (20)
Neil Johnston (18)
Tom Gola (10)
Philadelphia Civic Center
2–1
-
4
March 28
@ Syracuse
L 104–108
Neil Johnston (35)
Neil Johnston (12)
Neil Johnston (7)
Onondaga War Memorial
2–2
-
5
March 29
Syracuse
W 109–104
Paul Arizin (35)
Neil Johnston (18)
Neil Johnston (8)
Philadelphia Civic Center
3–2
-
-
1
March 31
Fort Wayne
W 98–94
Paul Arizin (28)
Neil Johnston (14)
Tom Gola (10)
Philadelphia Civic Center
4,128
1–0
-
2
April 1
@ Fort Wayne
L 83–84
Paul Arizin (27)
Arizin, Johnston (9)
Ernie Beck (6)
War Memorial Coliseum
6,976
1–1
-
3
April 3
Fort Wayne
W 100–96
Paul Arizin (27)
Neil Johnston (14)
Tom Gola (8)
Philadelphia Civic Center
11,698
2–1
-
4
April 5
@ Fort Wayne
W 107–105
Paul Arizin (30)
Tom Gola (9)
Joe Graboski (7)
War Memorial Coliseum
7,852
3–1
-
5
April 7
Fort Wayne
W 99–88
Joe Graboski (29)
Joe Graboski (16)
Jack George (10)
Philadelphia Civic Center
11,194
4–1
-

Awards and honors

  • Paul Arizin, NBA All-Star Game
  • Neil Johnston, NBA All-Star Game
  • Neil Johnston, All-NBA First Team
  • Paul Arizin, All-NBA First Team
  • Jack George, All-NBA Second Team

References

References

  1. [http://www.sportsecyclopedia.com/nba/pwar/phlwarriors.html Philadelphia Warriors (1946–1962)]
  2. Nelson, Murry R.. (2009). "The National Basketball League: A History, 1935–1949". McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers.
  3. Urbina, Frank. (2024-06-17). "Ranking the easiest paths to an NBA title ever".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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