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Mack Calvin

American basketball player (born 1947)


Summary

American basketball player (born 1947)

FieldValue
nameMack Calvin
imageMack Calvin.jpg
captionCalvin with the Los Angeles Lakers, 1976
height_ft6
height_in0
weight_lb165
birth_date
birth_placeFort Worth, Texas, U.S.
high_schoolLong Beach Polytechnic
(Long Beach, California)
draft_year1969
draft_round14
draft_pick187
draft_teamLos Angeles Lakers
career_start1969
career_end1981
career_number20, 21, 24, 33
career_positionPoint guard
coach_start1975, 1987
coach_end1992
years11969–1970
team1Los Angeles Stars
years219701972
team2The Floridians
years319721974
team3Carolina Cougars
years41974–1975
team4Denver Nuggets
years51975–1976
team5Virginia Squires
years6
team6Los Angeles Lakers
years7
team7San Antonio Spurs
years8
team8Denver Nuggets
years9
team9Utah Jazz
years10
team10Cleveland Cavaliers
cyears11975
cteam1Virginia Squires
cyears2
cteam2Milwaukee Bucks (assistant)
cyears3
cteam3Los Angeles Clippers (assistant)
cyears4
cteam4Los Angeles Clippers (interim)
stats_leagueABA and NBA
stat1labelPoints
stat1value12,172 (16.1 ppg)
stat2labelRebounds
stat2value1,923 (2.5 rpg)
stat3labelAssists
stat3value3,617 (4.8 apg)

(Long Beach, California)

  • Long Beach CC (1965–1967)
  • USC (1967–1969)
  • 5× ABA All-Star (19711975)
  • 3x All-ABA First Team (1971, 1974, 1975)
  • All-ABA Second Team (1973)
  • ABA All-Rookie First Team (1970)
  • ABA All-Time Team
  • First-team All-Pac-8 (1969) Mack Calvin (born July 27, 1947) is an American former basketball player.

Calvin excelled in his final season in the collegiate level for USC but was only selected in the 14th round of the NBA draft in 1969. He elected to play in the area for the upstart Los Angeles Stars of the American Basketball Association. Despite reaching the ABA Finals in his one season with the team, he was traded to The Floridians, where he played for the next two seasons. Calvin would play for five different ABA teams in seven seasons while also being named an All-Star five times. His 3,067 assists were the second most in ABA history. He played for five further teams after the ABA-NBA merger, closing his career out in 1981 with the Cleveland Cavaliers.

One of nine players to be named to the ABA All-Star Game five times, Calvin was selected to the ABA All-Time Team in 1997.

High school career

Calvin was born in Fort Worth, Texas and attended Long Beach Poly in California.

College career

A 6'0" point guard from Long Beach City College and the University of Southern California, Calvin was a 14th-round draft pick of the NBA's Los Angeles Lakers in 1969.

In his final college season, Calvin and his Trojans defeated the UCLA Bruins, 46–44, in Pauley Pavilion, ending several of the Bruins' consecutive win streaks: 17 straight over USC, 41 in a row overall, 45 consecutive in Pacific-8 Conference play, and 51 straight at Pauley.

Professional career

He played seven seasons (1969–1976) in the now-defunct American Basketball Association (ABA) and four seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA).

Calvin began his professional career with the ABA's Los Angeles Stars, averaging 16.8 points per game in his first regular season to make the ABA All-Rookie Team. Despite finishing 43–41, in the 1970 ABA Playoffs Calvin, George Stone, and Craig Raymond, helped the Stars make an unexpected trip to the ABA Finals. On the way there, during a win over the Dallas Chaparrals in the division semifinals, Mack scored a postseason career high 44 points, while adding 16 assists. In the finals, Calvin averaged 15.8 points and 5 assists per game during a 4–2 series loss to Roger Brown and the Indiana Pacers. The following season, he averaged a career-high 27.2 points for The Floridians, in the process setting the ABA records for most free throws made (696) and most free throws attempted (805) in one season. During the 1974-75 ABA season, Calvin helped the Nuggets to a 65–19 record by averaging 7.7 assists per game, both of which were best in the league. However, in the Western Division Finals, Denver was eliminated by Indiana in a seven-game series. In 1976, Calvin was traded to the Virginia Squires (alongside Jan van Breda Kolff and Mike Green) and $250,000 for George Irvine and David Thompson. Wracked with a knee injury that meant he couldn't play with a team disintegrating, he was asked to coach the Squires, which he did for six games. In total during his ABA career, Calvin tallied 10,620 points and 3,067 assists (second in ABA history behind only Louie Dampier's 4,044) and appeared in 5 All-Star games.

Calvin joined the Lakers for the 1976–77 NBA season but saw a sharp decline in playing time. He was able to match the same level of production per minute he reached while in the ABA, though. He spent his four seasons in the NBA with five teams—the Lakers, the San Antonio Spurs, the Denver Nuggets (which had joined the NBA in 1976), the Utah Jazz, and the Cleveland Cavaliers. In the 1978 NBA Playoffs, during his second Denver tenure, Calvin and the Nuggets made it to the Western Conference Finals, before being eliminated by the Seattle SuperSonics. Calvin retired in 1981 with an NBA career scoring-average of 7.0 points per game.

Legacy

In 1997, Calvin was selected as one of thirty players to the ABA All-Time Team, as voted on by a 50-person panel including ABA media, referees, owners and front-office executives. He received 41 votes, putting him 10th, behind nine members of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame.

Calvin has made a push for being inducted into the Hall in recent years, although it has not been successful as of 2025.

Coaching career

He coached Virginia Squires in the ABA (1975–76) for six games and Los Angeles Clippers in the NBA (1991–92, as an interim head coach in February 1992 for two games).

Head coaching record

ABA

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NBA

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References

References

  1. Crowe, Jerry. (2009-02-02). "His USC team stood around and waited to beat UCLA".
  2. "1969-70 Los Angeles Stars Roster and Stats".
  3. "Mack Calvin Playoffs Game Highs".
  4. "1970 ABA Western Division Semifinals Game 4: Dallas Chaparrals at Los Angeles Stars".
  5. "1970 ABA Finals Stars vs. Pacers".
  6. (1994). "The Official NBA Basketball Encyclopedia". Villard Books.
  7. "1974-75 ABA Season Summary".
  8. "1975 ABA Western Division Finals Pacers vs. Nuggets".
  9. Pluto, Terry. (1990). "Loose Balls". Simon & Schuster.
  10. "1977-78 Denver Nuggets Roster and Stats".
  11. (February 9, 2016). "ABA Star Mack Calvin Makes Pitch for Hall of Fame".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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