1937–38 National Basketball League (United States) season
1937-38 NBL season | |
---|---|
League | Whiting Ciesar All-Americans |
Finals | |
Champions | Akron Goodyear Wingfoots |
Runners-up | Oshkosh All-Stars |
The 1937–38 NBL season was the inaugural season of the
Midwest Basketball Conference, a league that had a duration of two years before becoming the NBL. The league launched with nine franchises, it was irregular because the teams were the ones that had to choose the day and the hour of the match, even the duration (four quarters of 10 minutes or three parts of 15 minutes) was chosen by the local team before the match. The season ended with the Akron Goodyear Wingfoots
becoming the NBL's first championship team.
Standings
Eastern Division
Pos. | Eastern Division | Wins | Losses | Win % |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Akron Firestone Non-Skids | 14 | 4 | .778 |
2 | Akron Goodyear Wingfoots | 13 | 5 | .722 |
3 | Pittsburgh Pirates | 8 | 5 | .615 |
4 | Buffalo Bisons |
3 | 6 | .333 |
5 | Warren Penns | 3 | 9 | .250 |
6 | Columbus Athletic Supply | 1 | 12 | .091 |
Western Division
Pos | Team | Wins | Losses | Win % |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Oshkosh All-Stars | 12 | 2 | .857 |
2 | Whiting Ciesar All-Americans |
12 | 3 | .800 |
3 | Fort Wayne General Electrics | 13 | 7 | .650 |
4 | Indianapolis Kautskys |
4 | 9 | .308 |
5 | Richmond King Clothiers | 3 | 7 | .300 |
6 | Kankakee Gallagher Trojans | 3 | 11 | .214 |
7 | Dayton Metropolitans | 2 | 11 | .154 |
Awards
- MVP: Leroy Edwards (Oshkosh)[1]
- Coach of the Year: Lefty Byers (Akron Goodyear)
- Rookie of the Year: Indianapolis)
NBL-All First Team
- Leroy Edwards, Oshkosh All-Stars
- Scott Armstrong, Fort Wayne General Electrics
- Whiting Ciesar All-Americans
- Charlie Shipp, Akron Goodyear Wingfoots
- Chuck Bloedorn, Akron Goodyear Wingfoots
NBL-All Second Team
- Soup Cable, Akron Firestone Non-Skids
- Jack Ozburn, Akron Firestone Non-Skids
- Indianapolis Kautskys
- Vince McGowan, Whiting Ciesar All-Americans<
- Bart Quinn, Fort Wayne General Electrics
References
- ^ "Yahoo | Mail, Weather, Search, Politics, News, Finance, Sports & Videos". Archived from the original on August 18, 2005.