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GOLDEN STATE
WARRIORS HISTORY
Golden State
Warriors, professional basketball team and one of seven teams in the
Pacific Division of the Western Conference of the National Basketball
Association (NBA). The franchise played as the Philadelphia Warriors
until 1962. Today the Warriors play in the Arena in Oakland, California,
and wear jerseys of blue, white, and gold.
The Philadelphia Warriors won the first
championship of the Basketball Association of America (BAA), the
forerunner of the NBA, in 1947 with a team that featured high-scoring
guard Joe Fulks. In 1956 the Warriors won their first NBA title, sparked
by future Hall of Fame members Paul Arizin and Neil Johnston. A second
NBA title came in 1975 behind the high-scoring trio of Rick Barry,
Clifford Ray, and Jamaal Wilkes. While playing for the Warriors in 1962,
basketball legend Wilt Chamberlain set an NBA single-game record by
scoring 100 points.

The Philadelphia Warriors were one of the 11 charter teams of the BAA in
1946. With basketball promoter Eddie Gottlieb serving as owner, general
manager, and head coach, the team won the league’s first championship in
1947, defeating the Chicago Stags. The Warriors’ Jumpin’ Joe Fulks, a
guard/forward, won the league’s scoring title that year, averaging 23.2
points per contest. A year later the Warriors returned to the league
championship but lost to the Baltimore Bullets.
Gottlieb was influential in organizing the NBA, and the Warriors were
among its charter members in the 1949-50 season. In 1951 the club won
the Eastern Division title behind Fulks, guard/forward Paul Arizin, and
guard Andy Phillip but were upset in the playoffs and failed to capture
the league crown. The Warriors won the league crown in 1956, led by
Arizin (24.1 points per game) and center Neil Johnston (22.1), two of
the league’s top scorers. The 1956 championship team also featured
All-Star guard Jack George and rookie guard Tom Gola.
Center Wilt Chamberlain, a Philadelphia native, arrived for the 1959-60
season and won NBA rookie of the year and most valuable player (MVP)
honors that season, as well as the first of his seven consecutive
scoring titles. The matchup of Chamberlain and center Bill Russell of
the Boston Celtics, also in the Eastern Division, became one of
professional basketball’s most celebrated rivalries. While playing
against the New York Knicks on March 2, 1962, Chamberlain scored 100
points.
The Warriors relocated to San Francisco, California, in 1962, after
Gottlieb sold the club to a group of investors. With Chamberlain, guard
Guy Rogers, and center Nate Thurman, the San Francisco Warriors won the
Western Division in 1964 before falling to the Celtics in the NBA
Finals. The next season the Warriors traded Chamberlain to the
Philadelphia 76ers and finished poorly. Sharp-shooting rookie guard Rick
Barry joined the club in the 1965-66 season and led the league in
scoring, averaging 35.6 points per game. That season the Warriors again
won the Western Division, but they were defeated in the NBA Finals by
their former star Chamberlain and the 76ers.
Barry moved to the rival American Basketball Association (ABA) in 1967,
and Warriors’ attendance declined through the late 1960s. In 1971 the
team moved to Oakland and took the name Golden State Warriors. Barry
rejoined the Warriors in the 1972-73 season, and in 1975 the Warriors
won the Western Conference championship with Barry, rookie forward
Jamaal Wilkes, and center Clifford Ray. The trio of stars was guided by
head coach Alvin Attles, who emphasized a team-oriented strategy. In the
NBA Finals the Warriors defeated the Washington Bullets in an upset for
the NBA crown.
Through the remainder of the 1970s and the 1980s the Warriors failed to
advance past the first round of the NBA playoffs. Led by head coach Don
Nelson, the team put together a fast-paced attack in the late 1980s and
early 1990s, spurred by high-scoring guards Tim Hardaway and Mitch
Richmond and forward Chris Mullen. In 1989 guard Sarunas Marciulionis
joined the Warriors as the first NBA player from the former Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Forward Chris Webber emerged as an
NBA standout during the 1993-94 season. In the mid-1990s many of the
team’s stars left the Warriors, and injuries plagued the new starting
lineup. The team remained at the bottom of the Western Conference during
the mid-1990s.
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