1973–74 Cleveland Cavaliers season

The 1973–74 Cleveland Cavaliers season was the fourth season of NBA basketball in Cleveland, Ohio. The Cavaliers finished the season with a 29–53 record, finishing last in the Central Division and 7th Eastern Conference. Austin Carr was named an All-Star and set the team record for points per game. The Cavaliers played, and won, their last game in Cleveland Arena.

1973–74 Cleveland Cavaliers season
Head coachBill Fitch
ArenaCleveland Arena
Results
Record2953 (.354)
PlaceDivision: 4th (Central)
Conference: 7th (Eastern)
Playoff finishDid Not Qualify

Stats @ Basketball-Reference.com
Local media
TelevisionWEWS-TV
(Gib Shanley, Hal Lebovitz)
RadioWWWE
(Joe Tait)

Offseason

Trades

April 24: Cavaliers trade center Rick Roberson and forward John Johnson and switch positions in the first round of the 1973 NBA draft with the Portland Trail Blazers in exchange for the Trail Blazers' first round choice and four other draft choices. The Cavaliers select forward Jim Brewer with Portland's first pick.

Draft picks

Roster

Roster listing
1973–74 Cleveland Cavaliers roster
Players Coaches
Pos.No.NameHeightWeightDOB (YYYY-MM-DD)From
PF 52 Brewer, Jim 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 1951-12-03 Minnesota
G 34 Carr, Austin 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 200 lb (91 kg) Mar. 10, 1948 Notre Dame
G 35 Cleamons, Jim 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 185 lb (84 kg) Sep. 13, 1949 Ohio State
F 40 Clemens, Barry 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 210 lb (95 kg) May 1, 1943 Ohio Wesleyan
F 42 Davis, Dwight 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 220 lb (100 kg) Oct. 28, 1949 Houston
C 50 Patterson, Steve 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 225 lb (102 kg) Jun. 24, 1948 UCLA
G/F 7 Smith, Bingo 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 195 lb (88 kg) Feb. 26, 1946 Tulsa
G 11 Warren, John 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 180 lb (82 kg) Jul. 7, 1947 St. John's
G 19 Wilkens, Lenny 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 180 lb (82 kg) Oct. 28, 1937 Providence
C 44 Witte, Luke 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 230 lb (104 kg) 1950-10-19 Ohio State
Head coach

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

Regular season

Season standings

Central Division W L PCT GB Home Road Neutral Div
y-Capital Bullets 4735.57331–1015–251–014–8
Atlanta Hawks 3547.4271223–1812–250–413–9
Houston Rockets 3250.3901518–2313–251–29–13
Cleveland Cavaliers 2953.3541818–2311–280–28–14
# Eastern Conference
Team W L PCT GB
1 z-Boston Celtics5626.683
2 x-New York Knicks4933.5987
3 y-Capital Bullets4735.5739
4 x-Buffalo Braves4240.51214
5 Atlanta Hawks3547.42721
6 Houston Rockets3250.39024
7 Cleveland Cavaliers2953.35427
8 Philadelphia 76ers2557.30531


Record vs. opponents

1973–74 NBA records
Team ATL BOS BUF CAP CHI CLE DET GSW HOU KCO LAL MIL NYK PHI PHO POR SEA
Atlanta 1–52–44–41–34–30–41–35–21–34–01–31–53–31–32–24–0
Boston 5–15–22–42–24–23–13–14–23–12–22–25–27–13–14–02–2
Buffalo 4–22–53–31–35–11–31–34–22–20–41–34–46–13–13–12–2
Capital 4–44–23–31–36–12–23–14–33–12–21–33–34–22–23–12–2
Chicago 3–12–23–13–14–05–24–24–05–21–53–32–23–14–24–24–2
Cleveland 3–42–41–51–60–42–20–44–40–43–10–41–55–11–34–02–2
Detroit 4–01–33–12–22–52–25–13–14–24–23–41–32–26–05–15–1
Golden State 3–11–33–11–32–44–01–54–03–34–23–31–33–15–23–43–3
Houston 2–52–42–43–40–44–41–30–42–22–20–44–24–22–23–11–3
Kansas City-Omaha 3–11–32–21–32–54–02–43–32–21–50–71–31–34–24–22–4
Los Angeles 0–42–24–02–25–11–32–42–42–25–14–22–24–04–24–34–3
Milwaukee 3–12–23–13–13–34–04–33–34–07–02–42–24–05–16–04–2
New York 5–12–54–43–32–25–13–13–12–43–12–22–24–33–12–24–0
Philadelphia 3–31–71–62–41–31–52–21–32–43–10–40–43–43–12–20–4
Phoenix 3–11–31–32–22–43–10–62–52–22–42–41–51–31–33–34–3
Portland 2–20–41–31–32–40–41–54–31–32–43–40–62–22–23–33–3
Seattle 0–42–22–22–22–42–21–53–33–14–23–42–40–44–03–43–3

Game log

1973–74 game log
Total: 29–53 (Home: 18–23; Road: 11–28; Neutral: 0–2)
1973–74 schedule
gollark: If you're deserializing into a defined data structure instead of something more like a syntax tree, it can just reject those.
gollark: No idea. I don't think I've ever needed or seen that honestly?
gollark: If you use DD/MM/YYYY AutoBotRobot queues your reminder at midnight UTC then, if you use YYYY-MM-DD it uses the current time but the provided date.
gollark: But you do need dates fairly often, and this makes it *consistent* between implementations.
gollark: For example, as well as the time-duration-type thing ("5y2mo3w" etc) it actually supports DD/MM/YYYY as well as some weird backward thing because it uses an external library for it too.

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.