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The American Basketball Association (ABA) was a men's professional basketball major league from 1967 to 1976. The ABA merged into the National Basketball Association (NBA) in 1976, resulting in four ABA teams joining the NBA and the introduction of the NBA 3-point shot in 1979.
The San Francisco Rumble forfeited their playoff game against the Southeast Texas Mavericks, as they could not afford to travel for the contest. [ 32 ] Gilas Pilipinas , the Philippine national basketball team, competed in a series of exhibitions against ABA teams including the Clayton Showtime, Los Angeles Slam, Riverside Rainmakers, San Diego ...
San Francisco Glens SC, commonly known as SF Glens, is an American soccer club based in San Francisco that was founded in 1961. Their first team currently competes in USL League Two. Project 51O is a soccer club from Oakland, California, competing in the Southwest Division of USL League Two.
ABA championship may refer to: List of ABA champions , list of championships from defunct American professional basketball league in the 1960s and 1970s ABA championship, league title from American Basketball Association (2000–present) , an American semi-professional basketball league
The ABA Club Championship was an Asian basketball tournament for professional clubs, organised by the Asian Basketball Association (ABA) under Dr. Carl Men Ky Ching. The ABA is not to be confused with FIBA Asia which Dr. Ching had also once presided. The tournament was first held in 1992.
The FIBA Americas League was a recreation of the now defunct Pan American Club Championship, that existed from 1993 to 2000. [ 3 ] The winner of the Final Four , the culminating tournament of each season's FIBA Americas League, is crowned as the champion of all of the FIBA Americas zone region.
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In his ABA debut, he averaged a league-high 34.0 points per game and the Oaks became the first West Coast team to capture a league championship in professional basketball history. Barry also paced the league in free-throw percentage in the regular season, a feat he would repeat in the 1970–71 and 1971–72 seasons.