Basketball
Related: About this forumSoul Power discussion (spoilers)
I absolutely loved the first episode of Soul Power. Its on Prime (Bezos, I know, but my girlfriend has it, not me).
That was a fantastic opening episode, very educational, including not just stuff about basketball, but American history and society at the time.
Ive always known the ABA as the red, white and blue ball league. It wasnt that long ago I learned that the ABA introduced the 3-point shot, and that they had dunking when the NBA at the time did not. The NBA, as it was portrayed, was a very boring league at one point.
I guess Red Auerbach was portrayed as someone who was part of the old guard, didnt give much attention and didnt like the league.
I learned about a false accusation about Connie Hawkins a fixing scandal, thus him winning a championship with the Pittsburgh Pipers and jumping back to the NBA.
What really took me aback and didnt know of was both the Milwaukee Bucks AND New York Nets wanted Lee Alcindor (Kareem). What a generational fumble by George Mikan to not present the million dollar check to Kareem, which led to him passing up the ABA to join the Bucks. My gosh, can you imagine Kareem, of his stature, staying home in New York to play for the Nets? Basketball history wouldve changed, maybe the Bucks dont win a championship until 2021.
The episode ends with the start of the Spencer Haywood case, and will watch Episode 2 probably tomorrow, but how it shows the ABA developed the idea of drafting underclassmen.
Unbelievable. The modern NBA, heck modern basketball, isnt what it is without the ABA.
EnergizedLib
(2,994 posts)Episode Two picks up with Spencer Haywood, and I think its fitting this documentary came out during Black History Month, all the struggles of racism people like Spencer Haywood grew up with and experienced even in the 70s, when it came time for a new contract, he got lowballed by JW Ringsby of the former Denver Rockets, who resorted to a racial epithet, so Haywood went to the NBA, challenged the ruling of eligibility and won.
So, not once but twice does the ABA fumble - first with Kareem, then Spencer Haywood. Just think how much sports history changes if not for these fumbles.
Yet, even despite this, the ABA still gets legitimacy through the All Star Game the NBA barely won at the Astrodome in 1971, that the NBA starts poaching ABA talent, that Charlie Scott leaves the Virginia Squires during the playoffs to go to the NBA, and still, they go seven games with the New York Nets, brought on by Dr. J himself, but Rick Barry and Co. still win the Eastern Conference in 1972.
They cover the Pacers dynasty, and their camaraderie, which was awesome to see. I wonder why the talent all stayed together, didnt jump. I knew Rick Barry had to be ordered back to the Warriors, but find it so interesting they found a loophole in his contract, and thus, he signed long term with the Warriors. It was hard to tell from the view from that ABA Finals game if Barry dropped the pass or if it was a bad pass. Rick Barry is still as animated as ever.
Yet, the poaching of talent, the bidding wars, this drove the salaries up, yet the players for many years were against a merger. I think I forgot at one point Dr. J was part of the Atlanta Hawks, but of course, I think about the Nets just trading him to the Sixers after the merger.
If only the ABA had a deal, if only they had more coverage, national broadcasting, if only they had the exposure the NBA had, though the ABA couldnt afford things.
Thankfully, it looks like there are full ABA games on YouTube.
I do wonder, what was more significant to its respective sport, the AFL or ABA? You have the AFL beating the NFL twice, the merger, all the AFL teams into the then-new AFC, but as far as I know, football was still football between the NFL and AFL. The ABA redefined and brought in things that basketball uses today that the NBA once did not have.
Ill have to watch the final two episodes at some point, really good series so far.
EnergizedLib
(2,994 posts)One thing which really impresses me is about this documentary is how well the footage from that era has been remastered.
Dr. J, of course, was a big part of the ABA, but Im glad Episode Three did not cover Dr. J alone, because it seems to me the ABA pushed boundaries. It got into the Silna brother owning the Spirits of St. Louis at a young age and bringing in a fresh 22-year-old named Bob Costas and how he almost squandered his broadcasting career with a gaffe, but it slid. That mustve been incredible that the Spirits of St. Louis actually upset the Nets in the 1975 playoffs.
Another thing about pushing barriers? Women in leadership, as John Y. Brown and the Brown family, who owned KFC, sold the Colonels (the name makes sense, Harland Sanders was made a Kentucky Colonel, hence his nickname, plus the Brown Family owned KFC and the franchise). So, they sold, the rebought the team, John Y. Brown gets into Democratic politics, and above all else, Ellie Brown is tasked with running the team and an all-women board. The pushback, of course, is fierce, yet Ellie had some marketing genius to her, and the Hubie Brown hire capped off a dominant championship season.
I loved what Swin Cash said in that episode, that if you care more about a woman being in charge than success, that she questions business practices. If only the American electorate could learn the same thing.
I knew, obviously, the ABA and NBA merged in 76, didnt know how. So, I was shocked to see the Nuggets and Nets applied for NBA membership, despite the successes the Nets had in the ABA.
I mean, they got into the stuff of how the ABA was beating the NBA quite good in these exhibition games, and got into Bob Ryan admitting he was wrong about Billy Paultz, how he held his own against Dave Cowens. The Whopper gets overlooked.
Really, if we think about it, some of the more underrated players in the sports history played in the ABA. Artis Gilmore and Mel Daniels are criminally, historically underrated. I know the first instinct is to say Reggie Miller is the greatest Pacer of all time. In my opinion, Reggie Miller is the greatest NBA/post-merger Pacer, but I honestly think the greatest Pacer is the late Mel Daniels.
Lets see how the fourth and final episode goes. It looks like theyll cover the first dunk contest, and of course, the merger.
