1948 World Professional Basketball Tournament

World Professional Basketball Tournament
1948
Tournament information
LocationChicago, Illinois
Dates8 April–11 April
VenueChicago Stadium
Teams8
Final positions
ChampionsMinneapolis Lakers
1st runner-upNew York Renaissance
2nd runner-upAnderson Duffey Packers
Tournament statistics
MVPGeorge Mikan
Top scorerGeorge Mikan

The 1948 World Professional Basketball Tournament was the tenth[1] and final edition of the World Professional Basketball Tournament. It was held in Chicago, Illinois, during the days of 8–11 April 1948[2] and featured eight teams, who by this point in time were primarily competing in the National Basketball League, with the only other professional team competing being the Wilkes-Barre Barons of the American Basketball League (who competed against what were to be the newly-established Minneapolis Lakers in the quarterfinal round) and the only two independently ran teams being the New York Renaissance and the Bridgeport Newfield Steelers, who competed against each other in the quarterfinal round.[3] Initially, there was supposed to have been a championship series between the champions of the National Basketball League (which were the Minneapolis Lakers) and the recently created Basketball Association of America (which were formerly the American Basketball League's own Baltimore Bullets, which was also the BAA's original Baltimore Bullets franchise) that year, but that ultimately never came to fruition.[4] It was won by the Minneapolis Lakers (joining the Oshkosh All-Stars and Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons as the only other professional teams to win multiple championships during the same season throughout the 1940s), who defeated the New York Renaissance 75–71 in the title game,[5] behind George Mikan's tournament record 40 points.[6] The Anderson Duffey Packers came in third after beating the Tri-Cities Blackhawks 66–44 in the third-place game.[7] Mikan led all scorers and was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.[8][9] With George Mikan winning the tournament's MVP award in both 1946 with the Chicago American Gears (despite his team not winning that year's event) and the final tournament ever held in 1948 with the Lakers, he would join Buddy Jeannette of the Detroit Eagles in 1941 and the Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons four years later in 1945 as the only other player to be named the MVP of the WPBT for multiple years (both of whom would earn the honor while being with different teams).

Following this tournament's conclusion alongside the 1948 NBL Finals and 1948 BAA Finals, the Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons (soon rebranded to just be the Fort Wayne Pistons), Indianapolis Kautskys (soon rebranded as the Indianapolis Jets), and WPBT/NBL champion Minneapolis Lakers alongside the Rochester Royals would all jump ship from the NBL to the BAA by the start of the 1948 BAA draft, which started to signify the end of the WPBT as an established tournament to help determine the best of the best basketball teams across the nation. An attempt to run a similar tournament was held in 1949 by The Indianapolis News, which would have featured the Wilkes-Barre Barons of the ABL, three teams from the NBL, three teams from the upstart Basketball Association of America, and a team from a fourth professional league of sorts that remained unidentified until seeding was supposed to have been drawn out,[10][11] but the BAA ultimately declined the invitation despite the NBL accepting the invitation themselves.[12] Months after the spiritual successor to the WPBT failed to come to fruition, the BAA and NBL agreed to merge leagues together to become the modern-day National Basketball Association (which meant the other NBL teams from this year's tournament in the Anderson Duffey Packers (later rebranded to just be the Anderson Packers) and Tri-Cities Blackhawks joined most of the other NBL teams (including a planned expansion team called the Indianapolis Olympians alongside most of the surviving BAA teams in a sort of reunion with those teams there, though the Kautskys/Jets franchise wouldn't survive the merger due to them being bankrupt a year later), which essentially put an end to the WPBT entirely for good.

Results

Bracket

 
QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
 
          
 
April 8
 
 
Minneapolis Lakers98
 
April 9
 
Wilkes-Barre Barons48
 
Minneapolis Lakers59
 
April 8
 
Anderson Duffey Packers56
 
Anderson Duffey Packers59
 
April 11
 
Indianapolis Kautskys53
 
Minneapolis Lakers75
 
April 8
 
New York Renaissance71
 
New York Renaissance67
 
April 9
 
Bridgeport Newfield Steelers51
 
New York Renaissance59
 
April 8
 
Tri-Cities Blackhawks55 Third Place
 
Tri-Cities Blackhawks57
 
April 11
 
Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons50
 
Tri-Cities Blackhawks44
 
 
Anderson Duffey Packers66
 

Third place game

April 11, 1948
Tri-Cities Blackhawks 44, Anderson Duffey Packers 66
Scoring by half: 27–27, 17–39[13][14]
Pts: W. von Nieda – 15 Pts: R. Johnson – 14
Chicago Stadium
Attendance: 16,892
Referees: Bill Downs, Dutch Kriznecky

Championship game

April 11, 1948
Minneapolis Lakers 75, New York Renaissance 71
Scoring by half: 43–35, 32–36[14]
Pts: G. Mikan – 40 Pts: N. Clifton – 24
Chicago Stadium
Attendance: 16,892

Individual awards

All-Tournament First team

All-Tournament Second team

See also

References

  1. ^ "N.Y. Rens to give Lakers tough battle". Star Tribune. April 11, 1948. p. 35. Retrieved April 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  2. ^ Sid Hartman (April 8, 1948). "Kundla wondering what a layoff might do to Lakers at Chicago". Times, the Picture Paper. p. 27. Retrieved April 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  3. ^ "Pro quints open World Title play". The Akron Beacon Journal. April 8, 1948. p. 43. Retrieved April 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  4. ^ "1947-1948". Pro Basketball Encyclopedia. Retrieved January 28, 2026.
  5. ^ Bill Carlson (April 12, 1948). "Lakers 'World Champions' now". The Minneapolis Star. p. 23. Retrieved March 15, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Closed access icon
  6. ^ Edward Prell (April 12, 1948). "Lakers defeat Rens, 75 to 71, for pro title". Chicago Tribune. p. 57. Retrieved April 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Mikan's 40 points, on 14 field goals and 12 of 15 free throws, broke the tournament individual scoring record. Open access icon
  7. ^ Russ Kiesele (April 12, 1948). "Lakers take pro tourney crown over Rens, 75-71; Mikan collects 40 points". The Dispatch. p. 19. Retrieved April 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  8. ^ "Lakers beat Rens 75-71 and cop title". Journal and Courier. April 12, 1948. p. 8. Retrieved April 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  9. ^ Sid Hartman. "Lakers dominated pro meet in all phases". Times, the Picture Paper. pp. 26–30. Retrieved April 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  10. ^ "News invites eight teams for World Pro Cage Tourney here". The Indianapolis News. March 22, 1949. p. 24. Retrieved April 6, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  11. ^ "B.A.A. ponders bid to Pro Tourney". The Indianapolis News. March 24, 1949. p. 21. Retrieved April 6, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  12. ^ Bill Kinney (March 26, 1949). "Backward step". The Rock Island Argus. p. 14. Retrieved April 6, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  13. ^ "WORLD PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 1939-48". www.apbr.org.
  14. ^ a b Nelson, Murry R. (2009). The National Basketball League: a history, 1935 - 1949. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co. p. 200. ISBN 978-0786440061.