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Miami Floridians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American Basketball Association franchise
Miami Floridians
The Floridians
Miami Floridians The Floridians logo
ConferenceNone
DivisionEastern Division
Founded1967
HistoryMinnesota Muskies
1967–1968
Miami Floridians
1968–1970
The Floridians
1970–1972
ArenaMiami Beach Convention Center,Dade County Junior College,Dinner Key Auditorium,Curtis Hixon Hall,Bayfront Center,Jacksonville Coliseum
LocationMiami, Florida
Tampa, Florida (1970–1972)
St. Petersburg, Florida (1970–1972)
Jacksonville, Florida (1970–1972)
Team colorsOrange andBlue
   (1968–70)
Black,Magenta andOrange
    (1970–72)
Team managerDennis Murphy
Head coachJim Pollard
1968–1969
Jim Pollard &Harold Blitman
1969–1970
OwnershipL.P. Shields & Fred Jefferson
1968–1969
Ned Doyle
1970–1972

TheMiami Floridians, later in their history known simply asThe Floridians, were a professional basketball franchise in the original, now-defunctAmerican Basketball Association (ABA). The Miami Floridians played in the ABA from1968 through1970 when they became simply The Floridians. The team had two color schemes: their original red, blue, and white, and their later black, magenta, and orange.

The Miami Floridians began as theMinnesota Muskies, a charter ABA franchise who played inBloomington, Minnesota, at theMetropolitan Sports Center and wore blue and gold. The Muskies finished with the league's second-best record, but wretched attendance figures (officially 2,800 per game, a figure that was likely padded) led owner Larry Shields to conclude that the team could not be viable in the Twin Cities. He sold minority shares to a group of Florida businessmen and moved the team to Miami. However, in order to pay leftover debts in Minnesota, Shields sold Rookie of the YearMel Daniels to theIndiana Pacers, a deal now reckoned as the most lopsided trade in ABA history.

Move to Miami

[edit]

The Floridians never attracted a large following, despite numerous promotions—including ballgirls wearing white bikinis and go-go boots. However, the team did manage to make the playoffs three out of the four years of their existence. The Floridians' first homes were theMiami Beach Convention Center and the Convention Center Annex.[1] Coached by formerMinneapolis Lakers greatJim Pollard, the1968–69 season was the most successful for the Miami Floridians by far, finishing their first season in Florida with a 43–35 record and defeating the defending championMinnesota Pipers (who played in the city the Floridians had just abandoned) in the Eastern Division semifinals 4 games to 3, before losing in the divisional finals to the Pacers 4 games to 1.

The1969–70 season was largely forgettable for the Floridians. They split their home games betweenDinner Key Auditorium andMiami-Dade Junior College's North Campus gym. Dinner Key, a formeraircraft hangar, was perhaps the most infamous building in ABA history. It had no air conditioning and would often get quite hot inside, forcing management to throw open the doors; players would then have to adjust their shots by the ocean breezes that whistled onto the court. The Floridians dismissed Pollard during the season and namedHal Blitman of Cheyney State College as their head coach.[2] The minority partners began taking a greater role in team operations, often trading players without Blitman's knowledge. Not surprisingly, given the constant turnover on the roster, the Floridians finished 23-61 and missed the playoffs. The team's original owners, Shields and Fred Jefferson, sold the Floridians at the end of the season.

The Floridians

[edit]

Following the 1969–70 season, new ownerNed Doyle dropped "Miami" from the team's name and made it a "regional" franchise, scheduling games in Miami (back at the Miami Beach Convention Center), in theTampa Bay area atCurtis Hixon Hall andBayfront Center, inJacksonville at theJacksonville Memorial Coliseum, and inWest Palm Beach at theWest Palm Beach Auditorium.[1] In an unprecedented move, Doyle "fired" the entire team (all players were either traded or released prior to the start of their new season) and kept the coach.[3] The team replaced Blitman after an 18–30 start withBob Bass.[4] Bass was able to turn the team around and the Floridians finished fourth in the Eastern Division with a record of 37–47. The Floridians made the playoffs, but lost their series to theKentucky Colonels, 4–2.

For the 1971–72 season, the Floridians split their home games between Miami and Tampa. They again finished in fourth place in the Eastern Division, with a record of 36–48. Once again the team made the playoffs and once again they lost their series, this time to theVirginia Squires, 4–0.[1]

The Floridians had to use the gymnasium ofDade County Junior College for their two playoff games, reportedly because the Convention Center had booked other events not thinking the team would make the playoffs.[5] The dreadful attendance for their two home playoff games against the Squires convinced Doyle that the team could not be viable inSouth Florida. After a deal to relocate toCincinnati fell through, attempts to find a bigger market inAlbuquerque,San Diego,Montreal, andOmaha also turned up nil for different reasons. By June of 1972, rumblings of a potential merger between the ABA and theNational Basketball Association (NBA) led to speculation that any attempt of it happening would leave the Floridians out, as they were listed as among the weak franchises in the league, alongside thePittsburgh Condors and theMemphis Pros. On June 13, 1972, Commissioner Jack Dolph announced that the Condors and Floridians would be disbanded.[6][7] Ironically, San Diego would end up getting their own ABA expansion team in theSan Diego Conquistadors in what essentially became a replacement for both The Floridians and thePittsburgh Condors (who also considered San Diego as an option to move their franchise before shutting down operations) months later. Big-time basketball wouldn't return to Florida until an NBA expansion team, theMiami Heat, played their first season in 1988. TheOrlando Magic followed suit a year later.

The Heat franchise paid tribute to the Floridians franchise in recent years by wearing near replicas (the jerseys instead had "Miami" on the front to go along with a smaller "Floridians" wordmark on the shorts) of the 1970–71 (and 1971–72) Floridians home and away uniforms for several games in the 2005–06 and 2011–12 seasons as part of the NBA's "Hardwood Classics Night" program.[8][9]

Basketball Hall of Famers

[edit]
Hall of FamerJim Pollard was the team's head coach
Miami Floridians Hall of Famers
Coaches
NamePositionTenureInducted
Jim Pollard1Head Coach1968–19691978

Notes:

  • 1 Inducted as a player.

Season-by-season

[edit]
Playoff berth
SeasonLeagueDivisionFinishWLWin%PlayoffsAwards
Minnesota Muskies
1967–68ABAEastern2nd5028.641WonDivision Semifinals (Colonels) 3–2
LostDivision Finals (Pipers) 1–4
Mel Daniels (ROY)
Miami Floridians
1968–69ABAEastern2nd4335.551WonDivision Semifinals (Pipers) 4–3
LostDivision Finals (Pacers) 1–4
1969–70ABAEastern6th2361.274
The Floridians
1970–71ABAEastern4th3747.440LostDivision Semifinals (Colonels) 2–4
1971–72ABAEastern4th3648.429LostDivision Semifinals (Squires) 0–4
StatisticWinsLossesWin%
Regular season record189219.463
Postseason record1121.344
Regular and postseason record200240.455

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Remember the ABA: The Floridians".
  2. ^"Floridians Dismiss Pollard and then Lose to Pipers with Blitman as Coach; PITTSBURGH WINS AT MIAMI, 101-91".The New York Times. 30 November 1969.
  3. ^"Daytona Beach Morning Journal - Google News Archive Search".
  4. ^"Gettysburg Times - Google News Archive Search".
  5. ^"Remember the ABA: Floridians Fan Memories (Page 1)".
  6. ^"Findlay Republican Courier Archives, Jun 12, 1972, p. 15". 12 June 1972.
  7. ^"Abilene Reporter News Archives, Jun 14, 1972, p. 48". 14 June 1972.
  8. ^"The Floridians".
  9. ^"The Floridians 1970-1972 Away Jersey".

External links

[edit]
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