List of defunct NBA teams

Source From Wikipedia English.

The National Basketball Association (NBA) is a professional men's basketball league, consisting of thirty teams in North America (twenty-nine in the United States and one in Canada). The NBA was founded in New York City on June 6, 1946, as the Basketball Association of America (BAA). It adopted the name National Basketball Association at the start of the 1949–50 season when it absorbed the National Basketball League (NBL). The NBA is an active member of USA Basketball, which is recognized by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) as the National Governing Body (NGB) for basketball in the country. The league is considered to be one of the four major professional sports leagues of North America.

The entrance of a concrete building behind a front lawn and a flag pole
The Sheboygan Municipal Auditorium and Armory was the home arena for the Sheboygan Redskins.

There have been 15 defunct NBA franchises, of which nine played in only one NBA season. The Anderson Packers, the original Denver Nuggets, the Indianapolis Jets, the Sheboygan Red Skins, and the Waterloo Hawks had played in the NBL before joining the NBA, while the original Baltimore Bullets had played in the American Basketball League and NBL before joining the NBA. The Packers, Red Skins, and Waterloo Hawks left the NBA for the National Professional Basketball League, and are the only defunct teams to have ceased to exist in a league other than the NBA. The original Bullets were the last defunct team to leave the NBA, having folded during the 1954–55 season, and are the only defunct team to have won an NBA championship. The Chicago Stags, the Indianapolis Olympians, the Cleveland Rebels, the Packers, and the Red Skins qualified for the playoffs in every year they were active in the league.

Among cities that have hosted defunct NBA franchises, Chicago, Cleveland, Denver, Detroit, Indianapolis, Toronto, and Washington, D.C. all currently have an NBA team, while Providence, Anderson and Sheboygan are all close to an hour away from a market with an NBA franchise and Pittsburgh is two hours away from an NBA franchise. St. Louis and Buffalo would receive replacement franchises that would later relocate.

Defunct teams

* Denotes team that won a championship
Team City Years active
in NBA
Seasons
in NBA
Win–loss
record
Winning
percentage
Playoff
appearances
Reference
Anderson Packers[a] Anderson, Indiana 1949–1950 1 37–27 57.8% 1
Baltimore Bullets*[b] Baltimore, Maryland 1947–1954[e] 8 158–292 35.1% 3
Buffalo Buffalo, New York Never played 0 0–0 N/A 0
Chicago Stags Chicago, Illinois 1946–1950 4 145–92 61.2% 4
Cleveland Rebels Cleveland, Ohio 1946–1947 1 30–30 50.0% 1
Denver Nuggets[c] Denver, Colorado 1949–1950 1 11–51 17.7% 0
Detroit Falcons Detroit, Michigan 1946–1947 1 20–40 33.3% 0
Indianapolis Indianapolis, Indiana Never played 0 0–0 N/A 0
Indianapolis Jets 1948–1949 1 18–42 30.0% 0
Indianapolis Olympians 1949–1953 4 132–137 49.1% 4
Pittsburgh Ironmen Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1946–1947 1 15–45 25.0% 0
Providence Steamrollers Providence, Rhode Island 1946–1949 3 46–122 27.4% 0
Sheboygan Red Skins[g] Sheboygan, Wisconsin 1949–1950 1 22–40 35.5% 1
St. Louis Bombers St. Louis, Missouri 1946–1950 4 122–115 51.5% 3
Toronto Huskies Toronto, Ontario 1946–1947 1 22–38 36.7% 0
Washington Capitols[h] Washington, D.C. 1946–1951[f] 5 157–114 57.9% 4
Waterloo Hawks[d] Waterloo, Iowa 1949–1950 1 19–43 30.6% 0

BAA Buffalo

BAA Buffalo was a planned basketball team in the BAA (Basketball Association of America), a forerunner of the NBA (National Basketball Association), based in Buffalo New York. The franchise which was granted on June 6, 1946, never played a game and was cancelled by the BAA on May 10, 1948.

See also

Notes

References

General
  • "Team Index". basketball-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved July 7, 2009.
Specific