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1977 NBA Finals
Team Coach Wins
Portland Trail Blazers Jack Ramsay 4
Philadelphia 76ers Gene Shue 2
Dates: May 22–June 5
MVP: Bill Walton
(Portland Trail Blazers)
Eastern Finals: 76ers defeated Rockets,
4–2
Western Finals: Trail Blazers defeated Lakers, 4–0
NBA Finals
1976
1978

The 1977 NBA World Championship Series was the championship round of the 1976-77 NBA season.

The Portland Trail Blazers of the Western Conference played against the Philadelphia 76ers of the Eastern Conference, with the 76ers holding home-court advantage. Their 4 regular season meetings had been split evenly, 2-2, with neither side winning away from home. The series was played under a best-of-seven format, so the first team to win four games would win the series and become the league champions.

The 1976-77 NBA season started with the ABA-NBA merger. Portland had benefited from the resulting ABA dispersal draft as they acquired Spirits of St. Louis power forward Maurice Lucas to partner with Bill Walton, and Philadelphia had signed ABA All-Star and 3-time ABA MVP Julius "Dr. J" Erving, who had taken the New York Nets to the ABA title the previous year. In the 1977 NBA Finals, five of the ten starting players were former ABA players.[1] (Those five starters from the ABA were Julius Erving, Caldwell Jones, George McGinnis, Dave Twardzik and Maurice Lucas.)[1]

While it was no surprise that Philadelphia had made it to the championship series, having posted the best record in the east (50-32, #1), Portland's appearance in the finals was a mild surprise. Portland, a team that was founded only seven years earlier, was not only making its playoffs debut with its first winning season (49-33, #3), but amazingly it was also making its finals debut after sweeping the mighty Los Angeles Lakers and league legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 4-0 in the Western Conference Finals.

The series quickly went 2-0 in favor of Philadelphia, but over the next four games, Portland mounted an unheard-of series comeback that has rarely been seen in professional sports.

1977 NBA Playoffs[]

Portland Trail Blazers (Western Conference Champion) Philadelphia 76ers (Eastern Conference Champion)
49–33 (.598)

2nd Pacific, 3rd West, 5th Overall

Regular season 44–29 (.603)

1st Atlantic, 1st East, 2nd Overall

Defeated the (6) Chicago Bulls, 2–1 First Round Earned first-round bye
Defeated the (2) Denver Nuggets, 4–2 Conference Semifinals Defeated the (4) Boston Celtics, 4–3
Defeated the (1) Los Angeles Lakers,
4–0
Conference Finals Defeated the (2) Houston Rockets, 4–2

Playoff rosters[]

Portland Trail Blazers
1977 Finals Roster
Head Coach: Jack Ramsay (77*)
F 10 United States of America Corky Calhoun (Penn)
G 16 United States of America Johnny Davis (Dayton)
G 3 United States of America Herm Gilliam (Purdue)
F 30* United States of America Bob Gross (Long Beach)
G 14* United States of America Lionel Hollins (Arizona St.)
C 34 United States of America Robin Jones (St. Louis)
F 20* United States of America Maurice Lucas (Marquette)
F 36* United States of America Lloyd Neal (Tenn St.)
F/G 15* United States of America Larry Steele (Kentucky)
G 13* United States of America Dave Twardzik (Old Dom)
F 42 United States of America Wally Walker (Virginia)
C 32* United States of America Bill Walton (UCLA)
(*) - Number later retired by Blazers


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Philadelphia 76ers
1977 Finals Roster
Head Coach: Gene Shue
G 14 United States of America Henry Bibby (UCLA)
F/C 23 United States of America Joe Bryant (La Salle)
C/F 42 United States of America Harvey Catchings (Hardin-Simmons)
G/F 20 United States of America Doug Collins (Illinois State)
C 53 United States of America Darryl Dawkins (Maynard Evans HS,
Orlando, FL)
G 10 United States of America Mike Dunleavy (South Carolina)
F/G 6* United States of America Julius Erving (UMass)
G 21 United States of America Lloyd Free (Guilford College)
G/F 25 United States of America Terry Furlow (Michigan St.)
C/F 11 United States of America Caldwell Jones (Albany State)
F/C 30 United States of America George McGinnis (Indiana)
F 50 United States of America Steve Mix (Toledo)
(*) - Number later retired by 76ers

|}

Series summary[]

Game Date Winning Team – Score Losing Team – Score Site
1 Sun. May 22 Philadelphia 76ers – 107 Portland Trail Blazers – 101 at The Spectrum
2 Thu. May 26 Philadelphia 76ers – 107 Portland Trail Blazers – 89 at The Spectrum
3 Sun. May 29 Portland Trail Blazers – 129 Philadelphia 76ers – 107 at Memorial Coliseum
4 Tue. May 31 Portland Trail Blazers – 130 Philadelphia 76ers – 98 at Memorial Coliseum
5 Fri. June 3 Portland Trail Blazers – 110 Philadelphia 76ers – 104 at The Spectrum
6 Sun. June 5 Portland Trail Blazers – 109 Philadelphia 76ers – 107 at Memorial Coliseum

Trail Blazers win series 4–2

Game 1[]

Game 1 started with a Dr. J windmill slam dunk off the opening tip, and never got much better for the Blazers, who committed 34 turnovers. Erving scored 33 points and Doug Collins had 30, as the 76ers won 107–101. Walton finished with 28 points and 20 rebounds.

Game 2[]

Game 2 was an easy win for the 76ers at 107–89, who at one point scored 14 points in under 3 minutes. In the final 5 minutes, however, Philadelphia's Darryl Dawkins and Portland's Bob Gross both went up for a rebound and wrestled each other to the floor. Dawkins and Gross squared off and both benches cleared, including the coaches. In the middle of the fray, Maurice Lucas, in an act of team unity and in support of Gross, slapped Dawkins from behind and challenged him. Dawkins and Lucas were ejected, and Doug Collins needed four stitches after he caught a punch from Dawkins that had missed its target. Dawkins and Lucas were each fined $2,500. This brawl is commonly looked upon as the turning point in this series, as the Blazers unified and showed the Sixers that they wouldn't be humiliated.

Game 3[]

The series moved to Portland for the next two games, and game 3 got underway following a few tense moments as Lucas approached the Philadelphia bench before the game and offered his hand in friendship to Dawkins and the 76ers. The Blazers offense took charge of the game, and posted a 42-point fourth quarter to win 129–107. The turning point came late in the third when Walton tipped in an alley-oop pass from Bob Gross over Darryl Dawkins, who knocked him to the floor. Dave Twardzik then stole the Sixers' ensuing inbounds pass and found Walton, who quickly leaped to his feet, for an alley-oop dunk. Lucas had 27 points and 12 rebounds, and Walton contributed 20 points, 18 rebounds, and 9 assists.

Game 4[]

Philadelphia attempted to use George McGinnis and Caldwell Jones on the inside for Game 4, but Walton had other ideas, going on a shot-blocking frenzy. Portland quickly led the game by 17 points and never looked back, scoring 41 points in the third quarter and winning 130–98, the largest margin of victory in a game 4 in NBA history.

Game 5[]

Game 5 returned to Philadelphia with the series tied 2–2. Philadelphia spent much of the first half fouling the Blazers, racking up 22 personal fouls and sending the half-time score into the 40s. The Blazers added another 40 points to their total in the third quarter, and with a little over 8 minutes left in the game, Portland led 91–69. Erving rallied his team late in the fourth, scoring 37 points himself, but ultimately lost 110–104. Portland set numerous rebounding records for its team, 59 (48 defensive, team record) in all which stood until 1985, 24 (20 defensive, another team record) of which belonged to Walton alone, whose team record still stands.

Game 6[]

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Portland, now leading the series 3–2, arrived back home for Game 6 in the middle of the night to a crowd of 5,000 fans waiting at the airport. With just 48 minutes separating the Blazers from their first championship, "Blazermania" had gripped the city. Philadelphia kept the game close throughout the first quarter, but were down by 15 at halftime after the Blazers netted 40 points in the second quarter. Erving tried in vain to force a game 7 for his team, scoring 40 points, but Bill Walton's 23 rebounds and 8 blocks kept the game in Portland's hands, as Philadelphia's George McGinnis missed the game-tying shot with seconds left sent for a heart-stopping 109–107 Portland win.

Bill Walton was named finals MVP and was called "an inspiration" by the defeated Julius Erving. Maurice Lucas later said of Walton's post-game thrown jersey that was sent into the rushing crowd of fans, "if I had caught the shirt, I would have eaten it. Bill's my hero."

Portland was awarded two trophies for winning the NBA Championship: The Walter A. Brown Trophy, which was kept by the winning team for only a year until the next NBA Finals; and a newly designed trophy later to be known as the Larry O'Brien Trophy which was now to be kept by the winning team with a new one produced at every NBA Finals since. The Walter A. Brown Trophy was retired shortly after this game.

The 76ers' loss began a losing streak of championships by Philadelphia sports teams during presidential inaugural years, which is still active as of 2009.

See also[]

  • 1977 NBA Playoffs

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Template:Cite book

External links[]

Further reading[]

Template:Cite book

Template:NBA on CBS

Preceded by
1976
NBA Finals
1977
Succeeded by
1978
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