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The Wizards began playing as the Chicago Packers in 1961, as the NBA's first expansion team, an expansion prompted by Abe Saperstein's American Basketball League. Rookie Walt Bellamy was the team's star, averaging 31.6 points per game, 19.0 rebounds per game, and leading the NBA in field goal percentage. During the All-Star Game, Bellamy ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Washington Wizards lists (4 P) Pages in category "Chicago Packers"
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Washington Wizards NBA G League ... (4 C, 1 P) Chicago Packers (4 C, 1 P) Chicago Zephyrs (4 C) D ...
Chicago Packers / Zephyrs regular season record (1961–1963) 43 117 .269 Baltimore Bullets regular season record (1963–1973) 401 412 .493 Capital / Washington Bullets regular season record (1973–1997) 934 1,034 .475 Washington Wizards regular season record (1997–present) 937 1,369 .406 All-time regular season record 2,272 2,815.447
0–9. 1961–62 Chicago Packers season; 1962–63 Chicago Zephyrs season; 1963–64 Baltimore Bullets season; 1964–65 Baltimore Bullets season; 1965–66 Baltimore Bullets season
The 1961–62 NBA season was the Packers' 1st season in the NBA. [1] It would also be their only season for the franchise under that name. They would be renamed the Chicago Zephyrs for the 1962–1963 season.
The Chicago Packers entered the league, bringing the number of teams to nine. The NBA schedule was expanded for the third consecutive season. This time it went from 79 games per team, to 80. The Philadelphia Warriors played their final season before their transcontinental relocation to San Francisco for the following season.
The draft was held on April 26, 1961, so that the newly founded Chicago Packers could acquire players for the upcoming 1961–62 season. The Packers were the second NBA team from Chicago, after the Chicago Stags, which folded in 1950. [1] The Packers later underwent several name changes and relocations before moving to Washington, D.C..