1947–48 BAA season

1947–48 BAA season
League Basketball Association of America
Sport Basketball
Duration
  • November 12, 1947 – March 21, 1948
  • March 23–25, 1948 (Play-in tournaments)
  • March 23 – April 8, 1948 (Playoffs)
  • April 10–21, 1948 (Finals)
Number of games 48
Number of teams 8
Draft
Top draft pick Clifton McNeely
Picked by Pittsburgh Ironmen
Regular season
Top seed St. Louis Bombers
Top scorer Max Zaslofsky (Chicago)
Playoffs
Eastern champions Philadelphia Warriors
  Eastern runners-up St. Louis Bombers
Western champions Baltimore Bullets
  Western runners-up Chicago Stags
Finals
Champions Baltimore Bullets
  Runners-up Philadelphia Warriors

The 1947–48 BAA season was the second season of the Basketball Association of America. The 1948 BAA Playoffs ended with the Baltimore Bullets winning the BAA Championship, beating the Philadelphia Warriors in 6 games in the BAA Finals.

Although not celebrated at the time, this season was historic, with Wataru Misaka of the New York Knicks becoming the first person of color to play in modern professional basketball.

The NBA recognizes the three BAA seasons as part of its own history so the 1947–48 BAA season is considered the second NBA season.

Notable occurrences

Coaching changes
Offseason
Team 1946–47 coach 1947–48 coach
New York Knicks Neil Cohalan Joe Lapchick
Providence Steamrollers Robert Morris Albert Soar
In-season
Team Outgoing coach Incoming coach
Providence Steamrollers Albert Soar Nat Hickey

Preseason events

Cleveland, Detroit, Pittsburgh and Toronto folded before the season started, leaving the BAA with only seven teams. (All cities except Pittsburgh would get new NBA teams in future years.) The Baltimore Bullets were brought into the league from the American Basketball League to provide a more convenient number, eight.

Final standings

Eastern Division

Western Division

Playoffs

There were no byes. Western and Eastern champions St. Louis and Philadelphia immediately played a long semifinal series with St. Louis having home-court advantage. Philadelphia won the seventh game in St. Louis, 85–46, two days before Baltimore concluded its sequence of tie-breaker (not shown) and two short series with other runners-up.

First Round BAA Semifinals BAA Finals
W1 St. Louis* 3
E1 Philadelphia* 4
E1 Philadelphia* 2
W2 Baltimore 2
W2 Baltimore 4
E2 New York 1
W2 Baltimore 2
W3 Chicago 0
E3 Boston 1
W3 Chicago 2
  • * Division winner
  • Bold Series winner

Statistics leaders

Category Player Team Stat
Points Max Zaslofsky Chicago Stags 1,007
Assists Howie Dallmar Philadelphia Warriors 120
FG% Bob Feerick Washington Capitols .340
FT% Bob Feerick Washington Capitols .788

Note: Prior to the 1969–70 season, league leaders in points and assists were determined by totals rather than averages.

BAA awards