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1971–72 Virginia Squires season


1971–72 Virginia Squires season
Al Bianchi
Norfolk ScopeHampton ColiseumRichmond ColiseumRoanoke Civic Center
45–39 (.536)
Division: 2nd (Eastern)
Lost in Division Finals

The 1971–72 Virginia Squires season was the second season of the Virginia Squires in the American Basketball Association, as well as the fifth season of the franchise after previously playing as the Oakland Oaks and Washington Caps. This was the debut season of future Hall of Famer and ABA All-Time MVP Julius Erving, who the team acquired over the New York Nets (the only other ABA team to seriously inquire over his undrafted player rights as a junior college player from the University of Massachusetts) some time after the 1971 ABA draft ended. During the first half of the season, the Squires were 26–16, with a season-high five-game losing streak and a five-game winning streak mixed together in that half. However, in the second half of the season, they went 19–23, with some of those losses relating to them suddenly losing their key co-star, Charlie Scott for the rest of the season through him playing with the rivaling NBA. Just before the season ended, Charlie Scott left the team and joined the NBA's Phoenix Suns due to them completing a trade with the Boston Celtics (who held his original draft rights) for Paul Silas. The Squires finished the season as a team that was second in points scored at 118.9 per game (behind only the Pittsburgh Condors), but ninth in points allowed at 118.0 per game. Scott set the all-time ABA individual single-season scoring record by averaging 34.6 points per game. Despite them being without Charlie Scott as a key co-star to Julius Erving to end the season, in the 1972 ABA Playoffs, the Squires swept "The Floridians" franchise in what turned out to be that franchise's final games ever played (with Game 2 even being broadcast nationally on CBS), but the Squires lost to the New York Nets (who had previously upset a 68–16 Kentucky Colonels in the first round) in the Eastern Division Finals in seven games. After this season ended, the Squires stopped playing in Roanoke, electing to focus on the cities of Norfolk, Hampton, and Richmond only.

This draft was the first ABA draft to have a properly recorded historical note of every round in their draft available.

RoundPickPlayerPosition(s)NationalityCollege / Club
17Willie SojournerPF/CUnited StatesWeber State College
110Dana LewisCUnited StatesTulsa
323Austin CarrSGUnited StatesNotre Dame
441Dana PagettGUnited StatesUSC
552Tom RikerPF/CUnited StatesSouth Carolina
663Barry ParkhillSGUnited StatesVirginia
774Clifford RayPF/CUnited StatesOklahoma
885Bill GerryFUnited StatesVirginia
996Jim ChonesPF/CUnited StatesMarquette
10107Gil McGregorPFUnited StatesWake Forest
11118Héctor BlondetFPuerto RicoMurray State
12128Luis GrilloPGUnited StatesSunbury Mercuries (EBA)

This draft would be notable for the Squires for multiple reasons. First, Virginia would join the Denver Rockets as the only other ABA team to have multiple first round draft picks (despite Virginia trading one of the first round picks they first had to Denver) due to Virginia not just keeping their own first round pick at the end of the first round, but also acquiring a first round pick from the Indiana Pacers by a trade with the Kentucky Colonels back when the Squires were originally known as the Washington Caps with deals involving Warren Jabali. Second, the selections of Tom Riker, Barry Parkhill, and Jim Chones were all later considered to be ineligible draft picks by the ABA due to them being college underclassmen at the time of their selections (which was a stipulation that was held by the NBA in order for the originally planned ABA-NBA merger of 1971 to occur that year instead of by 1976 when it actually did happen), with only Parkhill being re-selected by the Squires in a later draft year. (Tom Riker would later get selected by the Carolina Cougars as the #2 pick of the 1972 ABA draft, while Jim Chones would ironically sign up with the New York Nets months after the draft ended, though they ended up losing a first round pick in the process the following year afterward.) Third, Héctor Blondet would be the only known foreign-born draft pick in the 1971 ABA draft to play in the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, as well as win a silver medal in the 1971 Pan American Games. Fourth, Luis Grillo would be the only player of the ABA draft to be drafted from a different basketball club in the Eastern Basketball Association (now Continental Basketball Association) by the Sunbury Mercuries instead of a regular college or university like every other player in the draft. Finally, the Squires would notably exit the draft months later with the inclusion of junior college underclassman Julius Erving from the University of Massachusetts on their roster, acquiring the future Hall of Famer and ABA All-Time MVP over the New York Nets (the only other team that had serious interest in obtaining him at the time) in exchange for them losing their first round pick in the following year's draft.

TeamWL%GB
Kentucky Colonels6816.810
Virginia Squires4539.53623
New York Nets4440.52424
The Floridians3648.42932
Carolina Cougars3549.41733
Pittsburgh Condors2559.29843

Eastern Division Semifinals

Column 1Column 2Column 3Column 4Column 5Column 6
GameDateLocationScoreRecordAttendance
1April 2Norfolk (Virginia)114–107 (OT)1–03,770
2April 4Hampton (Virginia)125–1002–02,921
3April 6Miami-Dade (Florida)118–1133–02,965
4April 8Miami-Dade (Florida)115–1064–03,117

Squires win series, 4–0

Eastern Division Finals vs. New York Nets

Column 1Column 2Column 3Column 4Column 5Column 6
GameDateLocationScoreRecordAttendance
1April 13Richmond (Virginia)138–911–05,526
2April 15Norfolk (Virginia)115–1062–010,410
3April 24New York117–1192–111,893
4April 26New York107–1182–211,164
5April 29Hampton (Virginia)116–1073–26,309
6May 1New York136–1463–311,152
7May 4Norfolk (Virginia)88–943–410,410

Squires lose series, 4–3

1972 ABA All-Star Game selections (game played on January 29, 1972)

  • Julius Erving

  • Charlie Scott

  • Squires on Basketball Reference

  • RememberTheABA.com 1971–72 regular season and playoff results

  • Virginia Squires page

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