1965–66 NBA season explained

1965–66 NBA season
League:National Basketball Association
Sport:Basketball
Duration:October 15, 1965 – March 22, 1966
March 23 – April 15, 1966 (Playoffs)
April 17–28, 1966 (Finals)
No Of Teams:9
No Of Games:80
Tv:ABC
Draft:Draft
Draft Link:1965 NBA draft
Top Pick Link:List of first overall NBA draft picks
Top Pick:Fred Hetzel
Picked By:San Francisco Warriors
Season:Regular season
Top Seed:Philadelphia 76ers
Mvp:Wilt Chamberlain (Philadelphia)
Mvp Link:NBA MVP
Top Scorer:Wilt Chamberlain (Philadelphia)
Playoffs:Playoffs
Playoffs Link:1966 NBA playoffs
Conf1:Eastern
Conf1 Link:Eastern Division (NBA)
Conf1 Champ:Boston Celtics
Conf1 Runner-Up:Philadelphia 76ers
Conf2:Western
Conf2 Link:Western Division (NBA)
Conf2 Champ:Los Angeles Lakers
Conf2 Runner-Up:St. Louis Hawks
Finals:Finals
Finals Link:1966 NBA Finals
Finals Champ:Boston Celtics
Finals Runner-Up:Los Angeles Lakers
Seasonslist:List of NBA seasons
Seasonslistnames:NBA
Prevseason Link:1964–65 NBA season
Prevseason Year:1964–65
Nextseason Link:1966–67 NBA season
Nextseason Year:1966–67

The 1965–66 NBA season was the 20th season of the National Basketball Association. The season ended with the Boston Celtics winning an unprecedented 8th straight NBA Championship, beating the Los Angeles Lakers 4 games to 3 in the 1966 NBA Finals.

Teams

1965-66 National Basketball Association
Division Team City Arena Capacity
EasternBoston CelticsBoston, MassachusettsBoston Garden13,909
Cincinnati RoyalsCincinnati, OhioCincinnati Gardens11,000
New York KnicksNew York, New YorkMadison Square Garden18,496
Philadelphia 76ersPhiladelphia, PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia Arena
Municipal Auditorium
7,000
12,000
WesternBaltimore BulletsBaltimore, MarylandBaltimore Civic Center11,271
Detroit PistonsDetroit, MichiganCobo Arena12,191
Los Angeles LakersLos Angeles, CaliforniaLos Angeles Memorial Sports Arena16,161
San Francisco WarriorsSan Francisco, CaliforniaSan Francisco Civic Auditorium7,000
St. Louis HawksSt. Louis, MissouriKiel Auditorium9,300

Map of teams

Season recap

Leading teams

Sixers

The season started out looking good for Philadelphia 76ers star Wilt Chamberlain, as he had a full year with his new team after half a season the year before. The Sixers came together behind him and won the NBA East with 55 wins in 80 NBA games, the top record in the league.

Yet again, Chamberlain himself was a dominant force. His 1074 field goals were more than 250 ahead of the next top shooting scorer in the league. His 976 free throws tried were second most in the league, helping his NBA-high scoring average even with all the misses at the foul line. He also led the league in shooting accuracy, rebounds and minutes played. He also was 7th in assists.

Celtics

One game behind in the East, and the league, were the defending champions, the Boston Celtics. The team again featured seven ten-point scorers in Red Auerbach's balanced juggernaut, plus defender/point guard K.C. Jones. Bill Russell again led the defense from the middle. The much anticipated Boston-Philly matchup was the focus of the league all season.

Also-rans

After the two contenders, the nine-team NBA also featured two strong also-rans.The Los Angeles Lakers won 45 of 80 games to capture the West Division of the NBA, which produced no league champion 1959–1970. The Lakers were led by superstar Jerry West, whose 818 field goals made were tied for second most in the NBA. He also tried and made the most free throws in the league as he carried the Laker load, going 840 of 977 for an 86% clip. The Lakers' mediocre center play and more limping from Elgin Baylor held back the club's advancement.

The Cincinnati Royals won 45 games also, but were still stuck in the East Division behind the 76ers and Celtics while the Baltimore Bullets remained in the NBA West. The Royals were led again by Oscar Robertson and Jerry Lucas. Robertson matched West's 818 field goals made while also leading the NBA in assists. Robertson got a few more assists than West because he had Lucas to pass to. The Royals forward averaged 22 points and 21 rebounds per game for the season.West, Robertson, and Lucas accomplished their feats without the benefit of a three-point line.

Playoffs

Six of the NBA's nine teams made the playoffs, with the second and third place teams in each division meeting in the first round, and the East and West Division winners getting a first round bye, then meeting the first round winners in the second round.

In the East, Boston got another scare from Cincinnati, who jumped to a 2–1 series lead behind Robertson and Lucas, but the Celtics were able to recover and won the next two games to advance.

In the West, the injury-riddled Baltimore Bullets, led by Don Ohl, were swept by the St. Louis Hawks and player/coach Richie Guerin.

Boston met Philadelphia in the much-watched East Final. Wilt Chamberlain averaged 28 points and 30 rebounds for the series, but the Celtics won four of five games and featured dominant performances from Bill Russell, Sam Jones and John Havlicek all starred. The 114–110 overtime win in Game Four proved the turning point in the matchup. Chamberlain hit 28 of 68 free throws in the series, just a 41% clip.Los Angeles outlasted St. Louis in the West Final four games to three while Boston rested. The Lakers won three of the first four to set the tone of the series. Baylor had returned to lead a more-balanced cast in support of West.

Finals

Another Boston-L.A. Finals went the full seven games this time as the Lakers made a real run at the better Boston roster. West and Baylor were more of a high-performance tandem in this series, but Boston's three 20-point scorers had just a little more, winning Game 7 at Boston Garden 95–93. Defense and rebounding had prevailed again and Bill Russell dominated in those categories. Red Auerbach, exhausted from two close series plus the scare from Wilt Chamberlain's Sixers, took his victory cigar to the front office after this year. His 8-straight NBA titles, with 9 in 10 seasons, set an early standard with his many innovations and acquisitions that NBA leaders are still chasing to this day.

Notable occurrences

Offseason
Team1964–65 coach1965–66 coach
Baltimore BulletsBuddy JeannettePaul Seymour
New York KnicksHarry GallatinDick McGuire
In-season
TeamOutgoing coachIncoming coach
N/A

Final standings

Western Division

x – clinched playoff spot

Playoff bracket

See main article: 1966 NBA playoffs.

Statistics leaders

Category Player Team Stat
Points 2,649
Rebounds 1,943
Assists 847
FG% .540
FT% .881

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

NBA awards

Rick Barry, San Francisco Warriors

Dolph Schayes, Philadelphia 76ers

See also

References