| 1958–59 NBA season | |
|---|---|
| League | National Basketball Association |
| Sport | Basketball |
| Duration | October 17, 1958 – March 11, 1959 March 13 – April 1, 1959 (Playoffs) April 4–9, 1959 (Finals) |
| Games | 72 |
| Teams | 8 |
| TV partner | NBC |
| Draft | |
| Top draft pick | Elgin Baylor |
| Picked by | Minneapolis Lakers |
| Regular season | |
| Top seed | Boston Celtics |
| SeasonMVP | Bob Pettit (St. Louis) |
| Top scorer | Bob Pettit (St. Louis) |
| Playoffs | |
| Eastern champions | Boston Celtics |
| Eastern runners-up | Syracuse Nationals |
| Western champions | Minneapolis Lakers |
| Western runners-up | St. Louis Hawks |
| Finals | |
| Venue | |
| Champions | Boston Celtics |
| Runners-up | Minneapolis Lakers |
| NBA seasons | |
The1958–59 NBA Season was the 13th season of theNational Basketball Association. The season ended with theBoston Celtics winning the NBA Championship (the first of what would be 8 straight), beating theMinneapolis Lakers 4 games to 0 in theNBA Finals.
| Offseason | ||
|---|---|---|
| Team | 1957–58 coach | 1958–59 coach |
| Minneapolis Lakers | George Mikan | John Kundla |
| New York Knicks | Vince Boryla | Andrew Levane |
| Philadelphia Warriors | George Senesky | Al Cervi |
| In-season | ||
| Team | Outgoing coach | Incoming coach |
| Cincinnati Royals | Bobby Wanzer | Tom Marshall |
| St. Louis Hawks | Andy Phillip | Ed Macauley |
| W | L | PCT | GB | Home | Road | Neutral | Div | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| x-Boston Celtics | 52 | 20 | .722 | – | 26–4 | 13–15 | 13–1 | 23–13 |
| x-New York Knicks | 40 | 32 | .556 | 12 | 21–9 | 15–15 | 4–8 | 19–17 |
| x-Syracuse Nationals | 35 | 37 | .486 | 17 | 17–9 | 7–24 | 8–7 | 14–22 |
| Philadelphia Warriors | 32 | 40 | .444 | 20 | 17–9 | 7–24 | 8–7 | 14–22 |
| W | L | PCT | GB | Home | Road | Neutral | Div | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| x-St. Louis Hawks | 49 | 23 | .681 | – | 28–3 | 14–15 | 7–5 | 27–9 |
| x-Minneapolis Lakers | 33 | 39 | .458 | 16 | 15–7 | 9–17 | 9–15 | 18–18 |
| x-Detroit Pistons | 28 | 44 | .389 | 21 | 13–17 | 8–20 | 7–7 | 17–19 |
| Cincinnati Royals | 19 | 53 | .264 | 30 | 9–19 | 2–25 | 8–9 | 10–26 |
x – clinched playoff spot
| Division Semifinals | Division Finals | NBA Finals | |||||||||||
| E1 | Boston* | 4 | |||||||||||
| E3 | Syracuse | 2 | E3 | Syracuse | 3 | ||||||||
| E2 | New York | 0 | E1 | Boston* | 4 | ||||||||
| W2 | Minneapolis | 0 | |||||||||||
| W1 | St. Louis* | 2 | |||||||||||
| W3 | Detroit | 1 | W2 | Minneapolis | 4 | ||||||||
| W2 | Minneapolis | 2 | |||||||||||
| Category | Player | Team | Stat |
|---|---|---|---|
| Points | Bob Pettit | St. Louis Hawks | 2,105 |
| Rebounds | Bill Russell | Boston Celtics | 1,612 |
| Assists | Bob Cousy | Boston Celtics | 557 |
| FG% | Kenny Sears | New York Knicks | .490 |
| FT% | Bill Sharman | Boston Celtics | .932 |
Note: Prior to the 1969–70 season, league leaders in points, rebounds, and assists were determined by totals rather than averages.
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