1978–79 NBA season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1978–79 NBA season
LeagueNational Basketball Association
SportBasketball
DurationOctober 13, 1978 – April 8, 1979
April 10–May 18, 1979 (Playoffs)
May 20–June 1, 1979 (Finals)
Number of games82
Number of teams22
TV partner(s)CBS
Draft
Top draft pickMychal Thompson
Picked byPortland Trail Blazers
Regular season
Top seedWashington Bullets
Season MVPMoses Malone (Houston)
Top scorerGeorge Gervin (San Antonio)
Playoffs
Eastern championsWashington Bullets
  Eastern runners-upSan Antonio Spurs
Western championsSeattle SuperSonics
  Western runners-upPhoenix Suns
Finals
ChampionsSeattle SuperSonics
  Runners-upWashington Bullets
Finals MVPDennis Johnson (Seattle)
NBA seasons

The 1978–79 NBA season was the 33rd season of the National Basketball Association. The season ended with the Seattle SuperSonics winning the NBA Championship, beating the Washington Bullets 4 games to 1 in the NBA Finals, a rematch of the previous year's Finals, but with the opposite result.

Notable occurrences[]

  • The Buffalo Braves moved from Buffalo, New York to San Diego, California and became the San Diego Clippers, shifting from the Atlantic Division of the Eastern Conference to the Pacific Division of the Western Conference.
  • The Detroit Pistons changed conferences, moving from the Midwest Division of the Western Conference to the Central Division of the Eastern Conference, where they remain today.
  • The Washington Bullets shifted from the Central Division to the Atlantic Division. The franchise also won its last division title until the 2016-17 season.
  • The NBA adopted a three-official system similar to the one used in college basketball (but not used in the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament until 1979) on a one-year trial basis. The experiment was scrapped for the 1979–80 season, but returned permanently in 1988–89.
  • The 1979 NBA All-Star Game was played at the Pontiac Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan, with the West defeating the East 134–129 in overtime. David Thompson of the Denver Nuggets won the game's MVP award.
  • The Jazz played their final season in New Orleans, Louisiana, before moving to Salt Lake City. It would be 23 years before New Orleans received another NBA franchise.
  • The Los Angeles Lakers played their final season under the ownership of Jack Kent Cooke.
  • For the last time until 2018, both conference finals went to a deciding Game 7.
  • The Philadelphia 76ers and the New Jersey Nets replayed, on March 23, the last 17 minutes and 50 seconds of a November 8 game that had been protested by the Nets because the referee had allowed three technical fouls (and subsequent free throws) to be called on Nets coach Kevin Loughery and player Bernard King. Before the replay took place, the 76ers and Nets had traded players and Eric Money became the only NBA player to score for both teams in the same game, having 23 points for the Nets in November and 4 for the 76ers in March.[1]
  • The Seattle SuperSonics won their first NBA championship in a revenge-win over the Washington Bullets. No team from the NBA's Northwest Division, to which the Sonics relocated in 2004, has won the NBA championship since. This is the longest divisional championship drought in any of the major American sport leagues by 27 years.
  • The 1979 NBA Finals would be the last until 1990 not to feature the Los Angeles Lakers or Boston Celtics. Since 1979, the Washington Bullets franchise, who appeared in four NBA finals between 1971 and 1979, have never again made the NBA Finals, or even Conference Finals. The Sonics would challenge for the NBA title again in 1996, but relocated to Oklahoma City in 2008. Therefore, the 1979 title will remain the city of Seattle's only NBA championship unless they receive another franchise.
Coaching changes
Offseason
Team 1977–78 coach 1978–79 coach
Buffalo Braves/San Diego Clippers Cotton Fitzsimmons Gene Shue
Chicago Bulls Ed Badger Larry Costello
Scotty Robertson
Detroit Pistons Bob Kauffman Dick Vitale
Kansas City Kings Larry Staverman Cotton Fitzsimmons
In-season
Team Outgoing coach Incoming coach
Boston Celtics Satch Sanders Dave Cowens
Chicago Bulls Larry Costello Scotty Robertson
Denver Nuggets Larry Brown Donnie Walsh
New York Knicks Willis Reed Red Holzman

Final standings[]

By division[]

Atlantic Division W L PCT GB Home Road Div
y-Washington Bullets 54 28 .659 31–10 23–18 11–5
x-Philadelphia 76ers 47 35 .573 7 31–10 16–25 9–7
x-New Jersey Nets 37 45 .451 17 25–16 12–29 7–9
New York Knicks 31 51 .378 23 23–18 8–33 7–9
Boston Celtics 29 53 .354 25 21–20 8–33 6–10
Central Division W L PCT GB Home Road Div
y-San Antonio Spurs 48 34 .585 29–12 19–22 11–9
x-Houston Rockets 47 35 .573 1 30–11 17–24 12–8
x-Atlanta Hawks 46 36 .561 2 34–7 12–29 14–6
Cleveland Cavaliers 30 52 .366 18 20–21 10–31 6–14
Detroit Pistons 30 52 .366 18 22–19 8–33 9–11
New Orleans Jazz 26 56 .317 22 21–20 8–33 9–15


Midwest Division W L PCT GB Home Road Div
y-Kansas City Kings 48 34 .585 32–9 16–25 12–4
x-Denver Nuggets 47 35 .573 1 29–12 18–23 8–8
Indiana Pacers 38 44 .463 10 25–16 13–28 6–10
Milwaukee Bucks 38 44 .463 10 28–13 10–31 9–7
Chicago Bulls 31 51 .378 17 19–22 12–29 5–11


Pacific Division W L PCT GB Home Road Div
y-Seattle SuperSonics 52 30 .634 31-10 21-20 11–9
x-Phoenix Suns 50 32 .610 2 32–9 18–23 11–9
x-Los Angeles Lakers 47 35 .573 5 31–10 16–25 11–9
x-Portland Trail Blazers 45 37 .549 7 33–8 12–29 8–12
San Diego Clippers 43 39 .524 9 29–12 14–27 11–9
Golden State Warriors 38 44 .463 14 23–18 15–26 8–12


By conference[]

# Eastern Conference
Team W L PCT GB
1 z-Washington Bullets 54 28 .659
2 y-San Antonio Spurs 48 34 .585 6
3 x-Philadelphia 76ers 47 35 .573 7
4 x-Houston Rockets 47 35 .573 7
5 x-Atlanta Hawks 46 36 .561 8
6 x-New Jersey Nets 37 45 .451 17
7 New York Knicks 31 51 .378 23
8 Cleveland Cavaliers 30 52 .366 24
8 Detroit Pistons 30 52 .366 24
10 Boston Celtics 29 53 .354 25
11 New Orleans Jazz 26 56 .317 28


# Western Conference
Team W L PCT GB
1 z-Seattle SuperSonics 52 30 .634
2 y-Kansas City Kings 48 34 .585 4
3 x-Phoenix Suns 50 32 .610 2
4 x-Denver Nuggets 47 35 .573 5
5 x-Los Angeles Lakers 47 35 .573 5
6 x-Portland Trail Blazers 45 37 .549 7
7 San Diego Clippers 43 39 .524 9
8 Indiana Pacers 38 44 .463 14
9 Milwaukee Bucks 38 44 .463 14
10 Golden State Warriors 38 44 .463 14
11 Chicago Bulls 31 51 .378 21


Notes

  • z, y – division champions
  • x – clinched playoff spot

Playoffs[]

Teams in bold advanced to the next round. The numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's seeding in its conference, and the numbers to the right indicate the number of games the team won in that round. The division champions are marked by an asterisk. Home court advantage does not necessarily belong to the higher-seeded team, but instead the team with the better regular season record; teams enjoying the home advantage are shown in italics.

  First Round Conference Semifinals Conference Finals NBA Finals
                                     
E4 Houston 0 E1 Washington* 4  
E5 Atlanta 2 E5 Atlanta 3  
  E1 Washington* 4
Eastern Conference
  E2 San Antonio* 3  
E3 Philadelphia 2 E3 Philadelphia 3
E6 New Jersey 0 E2 San Antonio* 4  
  E1 Washington* 1
  W1 Seattle* 4
W4 Denver 1 W1 Seattle* 4
W5 Los Angeles 2 W5 Los Angeles 1  
  W1 Seattle* 4
Western Conference
  W3 Phoenix 3
W3 Phoenix 2 W3 Phoenix 4
W6 Portland 1 W2 Kansas City* 1

* Division winner
Bold Series winner
Italic Team with home-court advantage


Statistics leaders[]

Category Player Team Stat
Points per game George Gervin San Antonio Spurs 29.6
Rebounds per game Moses Malone Houston Rockets 17.6
Assists per game Kevin Porter Detroit Pistons 13.4
Steals per game M.L. Carr Detroit Pistons 2.46
Blocks per game Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Los Angeles Lakers 3.95
FG% Cedric Maxwell Boston Celtics .584
FT% Rick Barry Houston Rockets .947

NBA awards[]

Note: All information on this page were obtained on the History section on NBA.com

References[]

Retrieved from ""