1975–76 Buffalo Braves season
Head coachJack Ramsay
ArenaBuffalo Memorial Auditorium
Results
Record4636 (.561)
PlaceDivision: 2nd (Atlantic)
Conference: 5th (Eastern)
Playoff finishEast Semifinals
(lost to Celtics 2–4)

Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Local media
TelevisionWBEN-TV
RadioWBEN

The 1975–76 Buffalo Braves season was the sixth season for the expansion Buffalo Braves franchise in the National Basketball Association and its Atlantic Division. It was the team's fourth season under head coach Jack Ramsay.[1] The team's official home arena was Buffalo Memorial Auditorium.

Bob McAdoo led the league in scoring for the third consecutive year with 31.1 points per game.[2] It was the third year in a row that the Braves made the playoffs. The Braves had a record of 46–36. In the playoffs the Braves wound up against the Philadelphia 76ers. The series went the full three games but the Braves found themselves on the road for Game 3. The Braves emerged victorious in overtime with a hard-fought 124–123 victory.[2] It was the first playoff series win for the franchise. In the second round of the playoffs, the Braves and Boston Celtics would once again battle. After four games, the series was even at two wins each.[2] Once again the Celtics would take the series in six games.

The season was marked in controversy. Ernie DiGregorio was benched and McAdoo was suspended. Following the season the Braves allowed coach Jack Ramsay to depart for the head coaching job with the Portland Trail Blazers.[2] The team did not resign its auditorium lease and went through the season without a contract. Subsequently, the team was sold, the city sued and the sale was not consummated.

Offseason

The Braves played most of their home games in the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium (dark rimmed building in front of the HSBC Arena, pictured in 2007).

NBA draft

The Braves had no selections during the first two rounds of the 1975 NBA draft and no players drafted by the team that year played for the 1975–76 Buffalo.[3] 1974 NBA draft pick Tom McMillen played for a year in Europe before joining the 1975–76 Buffalo Braves.[4] McMillen played in the Italian League for a team in Bologna, Italy and completed the first year of his Rhodes Scholarship at Oxford University. However, he reached an agreement with Oxford to complete his second year during the summer in order to begin his National Basketball Association career.[5] McMillen only played basketball in Italy on the weekends.[6]

Round Pick Player Position Nationality College
352George BucciGuard United StatesManhattan College
470Bob FleischerForward United StatesDuke
588Sam BerryForward United StatesArmstrong State
6106George JacksonGuard United StatesUNC Charlotte
7124Mike FranklinForward United StatesCincinnati
8142Allan JonesForward United StatesPepperdine
9158George RautinsGuard United StatesNiagara
10172Art AllenGuard United StatesPepperdine

Exhibition games

On October 4, 1975, the Braves opened their preseason exhibition schedule against the Indiana Pacers of the American Basketball Association. Bob McAdoo had 29 points in the contest in Indianapolis but the Pacers won, 106–105. On October 11, 15,000 fans attended the Braves' home game against the ABA's New York Nets. The Braves held New York's star Julius Erving to 16 points but the Nets prevailed 109–83. On October 14 the Braves traveled to Louisville, Kentucky, to face the ABA's Kentucky Colonels. The Colonels won, 120–116. Two nights later on October 16, 1975, the Braves hit the road to face the ABA's San Antonio Spurs. Bob McAdoo had 22 points and 16 rebounds but the Spurs won 101–90 behind 22 points each for James Silas and George Gervin. The very next night the Braves again faced the New York Nets, this time at Seton Hall University in New Jersey. Bob McAdoo scored 31 points but the Nets won 117–97. The Braves closed out their preseason exhibition schedule with a record of 0–5 against ABA teams.[7]

Roster

Buffalo Braves 1975–76 roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.#Nat.NameHt.Wt.From
F 10 United States Adams, Don 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 210 lb (95 kg) Northwestern
G 14 Trinidad and Tobago Charles, Ken 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 180 lb (82 kg) Fordham
G 15 United States DiGregorio, Ernie 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 180 lb (82 kg) Providence
G 21 United States Gibbs, Dick 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 210 lb (95 kg) UTEP
F 24 United States Heard, Gar 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 220 lb (100 kg) Oklahoma
F 22 United States Kuberski, Steve 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 215 lb (98 kg) Bradley
F 42 United States Marin, Jack 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 210 lb (95 kg) Duke
C 11 United States McAdoo, Bob 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 210 lb (95 kg) North Carolina
C 52 United States McMillen, Tom 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 215 lb (98 kg) Maryland
G 5 United States McMillian, Jim 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 220 lb (100 kg) Columbia
F 54 United States Schlueter, Dale 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 235 lb (107 kg) Colorado State
F 34 United States Shumate, John 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 235 lb (107 kg) Notre Dame
G 9 United States Smith, Randy 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 185 lb (84 kg) Buffalo State
F 12 United States Washington, Jim 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 210 lb (95 kg) Villanova
G 8 United States Weiss, Bob 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 185 lb (84 kg) Penn State
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • Injured Injured

Roster Notes

Regular season

The Braves went the entire season without a winning streak or losing streak exceeding six games.[8] The Braves attendance decreased by nearly 50,000 to 418,696 in their 41 home games, and the team fell to 11th of 18 teams.[8][9]

Shumate, who played 43 games for Phoenix and 32 for Buffalo led the NBA in field goal percentage (56.1) and earned first team All-rookie honors.[10] DiGregorio, who played 67 games posted a 91.5% (86/94) free throw percentage, which would have been second to Rick Barry's 92.3 if he had posted a qualifying number of attempts.[11] Marin, who played 12 games for the Braves before being traded, finished 9th in the NBA in free throw percentage (85.6%).[12] McMillian ranked 3rd in field goal percentage (53.6%) and 8th in free throw percentage (85.8).[13] Randy Smith, who played all 82 games for the fourth consecutive season, represented Buffalo in the 1976 NBA All-Star Game and earned 2nd team All-NBA honors. Smith ranked third in steals per game (2.5), fourth in assists per game (6.5), seventh in points per game (21.8) and ninth in minutes per game (38.6).[14] Smith's speed was a difference maker on the Braves' fast breaks.[15] McAdoo appeared in the third of five consecutive NBA All-Star games and placed second in the MVP voting despite not making the All-NBA team that included centers Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Dave Cowens.[16][17] McAdoo led the winning east team in scoring with 22 points in the All-Star game, but Dave Bing was selected as MVP.[18] Over the course of the season he made both the most field goals and most free throws in the NBA. He led the league in minutes played (42.7) and points per game (31.1) while ranking seventh in rebound average (12.4) and sixth in blocks per game (2.1).[16]

October–December

As the season began, the Braves refused to sign the lease terms for Memorial Auditorium because Braves owner Paul Snyder felt it was unfair for the Braves to be held to different terms than their co-tenant, the Buffalo Sabres. Although the Buffalo Common Council had approved a lease in July, the Braves entered the season without an agreement.[19]

During the November 14 game at Milwaukee a bench-clearing brawl erupted as a result of an incident between Bucks Gary Brokaw and Bob Dandridge and Brave Dick Gibbs.[20] The following week McAdoo broke the Cleveland Coliseum single-game scoring record by posting 50 points in a 23-point deficit come-from-behind overtime victory. He surpassed his own 49 point performance the prior year at the Coliseum; both games were against his friend Jim Chones.[21][22] On December 2, 1974, NBA Rookie of the Year DiGregorio was benched in favor of Charles for the sake of team defense.[23][24] In Charles' first start, he led the team in scoring with a career-high 24 on the way to the franchise record 37-point December 5 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers.[25] In late December, McAdoo was suspended by the team for failing to make a doctor's appointment as the Braves claimed his self-diagnosed back injury was dubious.[26]

January–February

The Braves began the new year by playing in three consecutive one-point contests, first splitting with the New York Knicks on January 2 and January 3, and then defeating the Los Angeles Lakers on January 6. All games were won by the home team.[8][27] The Braves established an all-sport all-time attendance record for Memorial Auditorium of 19,226 on January 31 when they hosted the Boston Celtics. That night, John Havlicek became the NBAs fourth leading scorer, surpassing Elgin Baylor.[28] The day before the game the Braves had reached an agreement on sharing playing dates with the Sabres and decided not to attempt to leave town.[29] On February 1 during the All-star break, the Braves dealt Heard for Shumate.[30] At the time the Braves had a 30–20 record and they would go 16–16 for the rest of the season.[8] During the February 3, 1976 NBA All-Star Game, Smith scored 8 points, while McAdoo had a game-high 22. McAdoo contributed to a key fourth quarter spurt that propelled the East to victory.[18][31][32]

March–April

As the season wound down, the Braves were battling with the Philadelphia 76ers for home court advantage in the opening round series. The Braves defeated the Celtics twice in the final two weeks to even their season series at three games a piece while winning five of their last seven games.[8][33][34] The Braves were scheduled to host the New York Knicks on April 6, but when the Buffalo Sabres qualified for the 1976 Stanley Cup playoffs, the National Hockey League scheduled the Sabres to be the home team on the same date. When the Braves set a $25,000 price tag on the date, the Sabres swapped home game dates with the St. Louis Blues and lost on St. Louis in a best of three series on that date.[35]

Season standings

W L PCT GB Home Road Div
y-Boston Celtics 5428.65931–1023–1813–8
x-Philadelphia 76ers 4636.561834–712–299–12
x-Buffalo Braves 4636.561828–1418–2210–11
New York Knicks 3844.4631624–1714–2710–11
#
Team W L PCT GB
1 z-Boston Celtics5428.659
2 y-Cleveland Cavaliers4933.5985
3 x-Washington Bullets4834.5856
4 x-Philadelphia 76ers4636.5618
5 x-Buffalo Braves4636.5618
6 Houston Rockets4042.48814
7 New York Knicks3844.46316
8 New Orleans Jazz3844.46316
9 Atlanta Hawks2953.35425

Record vs. opponents

1975–76 NBA Records
Team ATL BOS BUF CHI CLE DET GSW HOU KCK LAL MIL NOJ NYK PHI PHO POR SEA WAS
Atlanta 2–32–32–22–51–32–22–52–21–32–22–43–22–30–42–21–31–5
Boston 3–24–32–23–24–02–24–12–24–02–24–15–24–34–02–22–23–2
Buffalo 3–23–43–13–21–31–33–24–02–23–14–14–33–43–12–22–22–3
Chicago 2–22–21–30–43–41–41–31–63–23–42–20–40–42–31–42–30–4
Cleveland 5–22–32–34–02–21–32–41–32–24–04–33–23–23–14–03–14–2
Detroit 3–10–43–14–32–20–52–25–21–43–41–33–11–31–42–33–22–2
Golden State 2–22–23–14–13–15–02–24–15–25–02–24–03–14–24–24–33–1
Houston 5–21–42–33–14–22–22–22–21–32–22–43–23–20–43–12–23–4
Kansas City 2–22–20–46–13–12–51–42–22–32–51–31–31–33–20–52–31–3
Los Angeles 3–10–42–22–32–24–12–53–13–22–33–13–12–22–43–43–31–3
Milwaukee 2–22–21–34–30–44–30–52–25–23–22–22–22–23–22–32–32–2
New Orleans 4–21–41–42–23–43–12–24–23–11–32–22–31–41–33–11–34–3
New York 2–32–53–44–02–31–30–42–33–11–32–23–25–22–23–10–43–2
Philadelphia 3–23–44–34–02–33–11–32–33–12–22–24–12–53–14–02–22–3
Phoenix 4–00–41–33–21–34–12–44–02–34–22–33–12–21–35–24–30–4
Portland 2–22–22–24–10–43–22–41–35–04–33–21–31–30–42–53–32–2
Seattle 3–12–22–23–21–32–33–42–23–23–33–23–14–02–23–43–31–3
Washington 5–12–33–24–02–42–21–34–33–13–12–23–42–33–24–02–23–1

Season schedule

1975–76 game log
October: 3–0 (home: 2–0; road: 1–0)
GameDateTeamScoreRecordStreak
1October 25Golden State Warriors105–921–0Win 1
2October 28Houston Rockets124–1082–0Win 2
3October 31@ Philadelphia 76ers92–873–0Win 3
November: 6–9 (home: 3–4; road: 3–5)
GameDateTeamScoreRecordStreak
4November 1Detroit Pistons97–934–0Win 4
5November 4Philadelphia 76ers114–1214–1Loss 1
6November 5@ Boston Celtics95–1054–2Loss 2
7November 8Phoenix Suns110–1055–2Win 1
8November 11Washington Bullets90–1055–3Loss 1
9November 12@ Houston Rockets93–806–3Win 1
10November 14@ Milwaukee Bucks112–987–3Win 2
11November 15Boston Celtics110–1127–4Loss 1
12November 18Los Angeles Lakers120–1068–4Win 1
13November 20@ Cleveland Cavaliers118–115 (OT)9–4Win 2
14November 21@ Detroit Pistons94–1049–5Loss 1
15November 22Portland Trail Blazers104–1099–6Loss 2
16November 26@ Phoenix Suns106–1079–7Loss 3
17November 28@ Los Angeles Lakers105–1269–8Loss 4
18November 29@ Portland Trail Blazers115–1309–9Loss 5
December: 10–6 (home: 8–1; road: 2–5)
GameDateTeamScoreRecordStreak
19December 2New Orleans Jazz96–1089–10Loss 6
20December 5Cleveland Cavaliers125–8810–10Win 1
21December 6@ New York Knicks98–10810–11Loss 1
22December 9Kansas City Kings126–10711–11Win 1
23December 11@ Atlanta Hawks99–12211–12Loss 1
24December 12New York Knicks123–11012–12Win 1
25December 13@ Chicago Bulls103–10113–12Win 2
26December 16@ Washington Bullets94–10013–13Loss 1
27December 17Houston Rockets88–8514–13Win 1
28December 19Washington Bullets104–8815–13Win 2
29December 20@ Kansas City Kings117–11016–13Win 3
30December 23Boston Celtics101–9217–13Win 4
31December 26@ Philadelphia 76ers95–9617–14Loss 1
32December 27Philadelphia 76ers130–10518–14Win 1
33December 28@ Cleveland Cavaliers88–11118–15Loss 1
34December 30Milwaukee Bucks118–10619–15Win 1
January: 11–5 (home: 6–2; road: 5–3)
GameDateTeamScoreRecordStreak
35January 2New York Knicks106–10520–15Win 2
36January 3@ New York Knicks106–10720–16Loss 1
37January 6Los Angeles Lakers114–11321–16Win 1
38January 9Chicago Bulls100–10721–17Loss 1
39January 11@ Seattle SuperSonics125–10422–17Win 1
40January 13@ Golden State Warriors101–12722–18Loss 1
41January 15@ Phoenix Suns126–11923–18Win 1
42January 16@ Chicago Bulls110–10424–18Win 2
43January 17Seattle SuperSonics110–10125–18Win 3
44January 20Phoenix Suns112–10326–18Win 4
45January 21@ Atlanta Hawks102–9427–18Win 5
46January 23Atlanta Hawks119–10428–18Win 6
47January 25@ Boston Celtics107–13528–19Loss 1
48January 27New Orleans Jazz129–10529–19Win 1
49January 28@ New Orleans Jazz126–11230–19Win 2
50January 31Boston Celtics100–10930–20Loss 1
February: 5–6 (home: 3–4; road: 2–2)
GameDateTeamScoreRecordStreak
51February 6Milwaukee Bucks109–10431–20Win 1
52February 8@ Philadelphia 76ers97–10031–21Loss 1
53February 10Washington Bullets115–10532–21Win 1
54February 13@ Kansas City Kings101–9633–21Win 2
55February 14Cleveland Cavaliers111–11433–22Loss 1
56February 15@ Atlanta Hawks104–11233–23Loss 2
57February 17Portland Trail Blazers116–11334–23Win 1
58February 21Detroit Pistons112–11434–24Loss 1
59February 24@ New York Knicks109–10335–24Win 1
60February 25Seattle SuperSonics94–12635–25Loss 1
61February 27Houston Rockets107–11335–26Loss 2
March: 7–9 (home: 4–2; road: 3–7)
GameDateTeamScoreRecordStreak
62March 2Golden State Warriors93–10035–27Loss 3
63March 6Philadelphia 76ers105–9936–27Win 1
64March 10@ New Orleans Jazz120–10537–27Win 2
65March 12Houston Rockets100–11337–28Loss 1
66March 14@ Los Angeles Lakers109–13737–29Loss 2
67March 16@ Portland Trail Blazers112–9538–29Win 1
68March 17@ Seattle SuperSonics111–12238–30Loss 1
69March 18@ Golden State Warriors109–11038–31Loss 2
70March 20New Orleans Jazz115–10139–31Win 1
71March 21@ Detroit Pistons112–11839–32Loss 1
72March 23Chicago Bulls122–10940–32Win 1
73March 25@ Cleveland Cavaliers109–9441–32Win 2
74March 26@ Milwaukee Bucks92–12341–33Loss 1
75March 28@ Washington Bullets90–11341–34Loss 2
76March 30Boston Celtics93–8342–34Win 1
77March 31@ Philadelphia 76ers103–10742–35Loss 1
April: 4–1 (home: 2–1; road: 2–0)
GameDateTeamScoreRecordStreak
78April 2Atlanta Hawks101–9343–35Win 1
79April 4@ Boston Celtics117–11444–35Win 2
80April 6New York Knicks102–10644–36Loss 1
81April 8@ New York Knicks105–9845–36Win 1
82April 11Kansas City Kings99–9846–36Win 2
Source: www.basketball-reference.com

Playoffs

In the 1976 NBA Playoffs, McMillian boosted his 15.8 points per game to 17.2,[13] and Smith also boosted his production to 8.6 assists per game, which led the league, while contributing 22.6 points.[14] For the second year in a row, McAdoo led the league in minutes per game in the playoffs (45.1), while posting 28.0 points per game.[16]

First round

The Braves concluded the regular season tied with the Philadelphia 76ers for fourth place in the Eastern Conference with a 46–36 record.[36] The Braves lost the regular season series with the 76ers 4 games to 3 giving Philadelphia home court advantage for the three-game Eastern Conference First Round series between the conference's fourth and fifth place teams.[8] During the series, the road team won each of the three games including the final game, which Buffalo won 124–123 in overtime.[8]

In the first round, the Braves won the first game 95–89 on 36 points from McAdoo and 6 points from McMillian in the final 1:23. Although the Braves led most of the way, it took a three-point play by McAdoo with 4:37 left to give them the lead for good at 87–85.[37][38] George McGinnis posted 34 points as the 76ers evened the series with a 131–106 victory in game 2.[39] The Braved clinched game 3 in overtime as McAdoo scored two free throws to tie the game in regulation and two more with 17 seconds left in overtime as Buffalo won 124–123.[40][41] The game included clutch shots by Shumate and a strong shooting performance by Smith.[42] Philadelphia took the lead in the first quarter and did not relinquish it until the McMillian gave the Braves a 95–94 lead with 8:11 remaining in regulation. McGinnis had fouled out with 8:50 remaining. The Braves held the lead until Doug Collins scored with 41 seconds left to tie the score at 109 and Fred Carter gave Philadelphia a 111–109 lead with 6 seconds remaining. After a couple of offensive rebounds on their final possession Clyde Lee fouled McAdoo who tied the score from the line. Shumate had 11 fourth quarter points and a pair of early overtime baskets. Smith gave the Braves the lead for good with 51 seconds left in overtime.[43]

The win over Philadelphia would be the Braves' only playoff series win in Buffalo; in fact, it would be their only playoff victory in the first 35 years of the franchise, until the twice-relocated Los Angeles Clippers eliminated the Denver Nuggets in 2006.

Second round

In the second round, the Braves opposed the Eastern Conference regular season champion Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference semifinals. The first five games of the series went to the home team and then Boston won game six in Buffalo to clinch the series.[8]

Dave Cowens accumulated 30 points, 19 rebounds, 7 assists and 5 steals in leading the Celtics past the Braves by a 107–98 margin in game 1.[44] Although McAdoo scored 40 points in game 2 and the Celtics played without John Havlicek, his replacements Don Nelson and Steve Kuberski stepped up to enable the Celtics to take a 2–0 lead in the series with a 101–96 victory.[45] In game 3, the Braves won 98–93, as Smith scored 29 and McAdoo added 24, including 10 in the fourth quarter. Buffalo had fallen behind by 12 points after one quarter.[46][47] Starter-turned-reserve DiGregorio entered the game in the second quarter with the Braves behind 32–22, but he posted 8 points and 5 assists in the quarter to spark a 21–4 surge that gave the team a 43–36 lead. He finished with 10 assists.[48] In game 4, Smith made a 25-foot jump shot with three seconds remaining to give the Braves a 124–122 victory and tie the series 2–2.[49] Havlicek, who missed games 2 through 4 with a foot injury, returned to help the Celtics win game 5 as Paul Silas had 15 points and 22 rebounds and Cowens amassed 30 points and 16 rebounds. After a 32–32 tie, Cowens, who had 14 second quarter points, led the Celtics to a 46–36 halftime lead. The Braves closed to within 50–46, but the Celtics pulled away and took a 76–65 lead after three quarters. Although Charlie Scott fouled out in the fourth quarter, so did McAdoo.[50] In game 6, the Celtics led 30–27 after one quarter, but trailed 55–50 at the half and 78–77 after three quarters. At one point, 9 third quarter points by McMillian helped push Buffalo to a 9-point lead. Scott scored 13 of his game-high 31 points in the final quarter. Jo Jo White had 23 points and Cowens had 10 points and 16 rebounds in the final game as the Celtics clinched the series 4–2 with a 104–100 victory.[51]

Playoff schedule

1976 playoff game log
First Round: 2–1 (home: 0–1; road: 2–0)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 April 15 @ Philadelphia W 95–89 Bob McAdoo (36) Bob McAdoo (21) Randy Smith (13) Spectrum
14,352
1–0
2 April 16 Philadelphia L 106–131 Randy Smith (27) Bob McAdoo (13) Randy Smith (7) Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
12,049
1–1
3 April 18 @ Philadelphia W 124–123 (OT) Bob McAdoo (34) Bob McAdoo (22) Randy Smith (11) Spectrum
13,087
2–1
Conference semifinals: 2–4 (home: 2–1; road: 0–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1 April 21 @ Boston L 98–107 Randy Smith (27) Randy Smith (10) Randy Smith (12) Boston Garden
13,919
0–1
2 April 23 @ Boston L 96–101 Bob McAdoo (40) John Shumate (11) Randy Smith (7) Boston Garden
15,320
0–2
3 April 25 Boston W 98–93 Randy Smith (29) Randy Smith (14) Ernie DiGregorio (10) Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
12,079
1–2
4 April 28 Boston W 124–122 Bob McAdoo (30) Bob McAdoo (17) Randy Smith (10) Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
16,193
2–2
5 April 30 @ Boston L 88–99 Bob McAdoo (23) Bob McAdoo (14) Ernie DiGregorio (6) Boston Garden
15,320
2–3
6 May 2 Boston L 100–104 Bob McAdoo (28) John Shumate (16) Ernie DiGregorio (8) Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
16,261
2–4
1976 schedule

Source: www.basketball-reference.com

Player stats

Legend
GP Games played MPG Minutes per game FG Field-goals per game FGA Field-goals attempted per Game
FG% Field-goal percentage FT Free-throws per game FTA Free-throws attempted per Game FT% Free-throw percentage
ORPG Offensive rebounds per game DRPG Defensive rebounds per game RPG Rebounds per game APG Assists per game
SPG Steals per game BPG Blocks per game PFPG Personal fouls per game PPG Points per game
Player GP MPG FG FGA FG% FT FTA FT% ORPG DRPG RPG APG SPG BPG PFPG PPG
Bob McAdoo7842.71224.60.4877.29.40.7623.19.312.441.22.13.831.1
Randy Smith8238.68.617.30.4944.75.70.8171.33.85.15.91.903.321.8
Jim McMillian7435.36.612.40.5362.530.8581.83.55.32.81.20.21.915.8
John Shumate3232.74.67.90.57534.50.6782.67.39.821.20.62.612.2
Ken Charles8127.748.90.45622.50.7850.722.72.51.50.63.210.1
Gar Heard5030.54.19.80.4211.62.70.6072.87.510.22.51.31.13.79.9
Jack Marin1223.23.47.80.4362.32.80.8180.82.53.31.90.60.52.59.1
Ernie DiGregorio6720.42.77.10.3841.31.40.9150.21.41.740.602.46.7
Dick Gibbs72121.84.20.4291.11.30.8280.60.91.50.70.20.21.84.7
Tom McMillen5014.21.94.40.4320.81.10.7591.32.43.71.40.10.11.74.7
Bob Weiss6615.11.32.80.4860.50.70.7290.20.812.30.70.21.43.2
Don Adams5612.61.230.3940.710.7020.71.92.61.30.50.12.33.1
Dale Schlueter7110.90.91.70.50.81.10.6670.82.33.21.10.20.222.5
Steve Kuberski108.50.71.70.4120.30.310.42.12.50.30.10.211.7
Jim Washington170100010110000

Awards and honors

Transactions

On October 14, 1975, the Braves lost Lee Winfield on waivers to the Kansas City Kings.[52] Paul Ruffner did not return to play for the 1975–76 Buffalo Braves and never again played in the NBA.[53] On November 20, 1975, Steve Kuberski was waived.[54] On November 27, 1975, Jack Marin was traded to the Chicago Bulls for a 1977 NBA draft 1st round pick.[55] On February 1, 1976, Gar Heard was dealt with a 1976 NBA draft 2nd round pick to the Phoenix Suns for John Shumate.[56]

The Braves were involved in the following transactions during the 1975–76 season.

Trades

May 29, 1975 To Buffalo Braves
  • 1976 1st round draft pick
To Phoenix Suns
  • 1975 1st round draft pick (16th pick)
July 30, 1975 To Buffalo Braves
To Washington Bullets
  • 1976 1st round draft pick
November 27, 1975 To Buffalo Braves
  • 1977 1st round draft pick
To Chicago Bulls
February 1, 1976 To Buffalo Braves
To Phoenix Suns

Free agents

References

  1. "Jack Ramsay". Basketball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on March 24, 2010. Retrieved April 19, 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Buffalo Braves (1970–1978)
  3. "1975 NBA Draft". Basketball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on March 17, 2010. Retrieved June 18, 2010.
  4. "Aspiring To Higher Things: All-America, Rhodes scholar, NBA player, Tom McMillen is emulating Bill Bradley. Next, elective office". Sports Illustrated. April 5, 1982. Archived from the original on May 28, 2010. Retrieved June 18, 2010.
  5. "McMillen Finally A Brave". Toledo Blade. June 3, 1975. Retrieved August 7, 2010.
  6. "Tom McMillen signs with Buffalo". Beaver County Times. June 3, 1975. Retrieved August 7, 2010.
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