Due to the unique circumstances relating to this draft, it can be accurate to say that the ABA had four different #1 picks for the different drafts they utilized instead of just one standardized #1 pick like the NBA did for the
1973 NBA draft (which was also the former fourth round (presumed #30) ABA pick
Doug Collins from
Illinois State University from the
1972 ABA draft alongside the fourth pick of the Senior Draft for this year's ABA draft). For the #1 pick of the Special Circumstances Draft,
Mike Bantom from
St. Joseph's University was selected as the first pick of that draft by the
Denver Rockets due to them having the worst record by that period of time (with him also being the 8th pick of the 1973 NBA draft by the
Phoenix Suns). Meanwhile, the #1 pick that's considered the consensus #1 pick of the 1973 ABA draft due to him being that for the ABA's senior draft was
Bo Lamar of the newly created
San Diego Conquistadors expansion franchise (who was drafted 44th in the 1973 NBA draft by comparison). For the undergraduate draft that came right after the senior draft, that particular draft's #1 pick (which officially is referred to as the 101st pick of that particular day's draft since the senior and undergraduate drafts were back to back with each other) was
Bill Walton (who was previously selected by the
Dallas Chaparrals in the fourth round as the presumed 33rd pick of the 1972 ABA draft) from
UCLA by the
San Diego Conquistadors. Finally, for the Supplemental Draft that came by in May, the presumed #1 pick of that specific draft was Larry Moore from the
University of Texas in Arlington by the
San Diego Conquistadors due to them being the holders of the #1 pick in the previous two drafts, though he not only wouldn't be drafted by the NBA, but none of the players selected in the first round from that specific draft would play professionally at all whatsoever (though
Craig Littlepage from the
University of Pennsylvania by the
San Antonio Spurs would eventually be a college basketball head coach and later
athletic director after being a long-time assistant coach following his draft selection). Meanwhile, Bo Lamar would be named a member of the All-ABA Rookie Team in his first season in the ABA before fizzling out of his professional basketball career, Mike Bantom would be a part of the All-NBA Rookie Team in his career before having a more sustainable professional basketball career by comparison to Bo Lamar, Doug Collins would later become a four-time
NBA All-Star before coaching in the NBA later in his career, and Bill Walton ultimately would make it to the
Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame for his overall career. From the Special Circumstances Draft, three players from that specific draft would be a part of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. Freshman #8 pick
Robert Parish from
Centenary College, former
Eastern Michigan University sophomore (and at the time
original Continental Basketball Association's Pontiac Chaparrals (no relation to the
Dallas Chaparrals franchise that later became the
San Antonio Spurs)) #10 pick
George Gervin, and junior #11 pick
Bobby Jones from the
University of North Carolina would all make it to the Hall of Fame, with Gervin and Jones both playing in the ABA during their careers. For the Senior Draft, it'd also recently see three players inducted into the Hall of Fame by as recently as 2026 in #3 pick
Mike D'Antoni from
Marshall University (as a contributor), #40 pick
Krešimir Ćosić from
Brigham Young University (as a foreign player), and #51 pick
George Karl from the University of North Carolina (as a head coach), with only D'Antoni playing in the ABA from that group. The only other interesting notable player from the senior draft was #58 pick
Dave Winfield, who was the only player to get drafted in all four of the ABA,
NBA,
NFL, and
MLB, with Winfield choosing to play in the MLB's
San Diego Padres and later went into the
Baseball Hall of Fame for his efforts with that league. Finally, the Undergraduate Draft would not just see the aforementioned #101 pick in junior Bill Walton from UCLA, but also sophomore #102 pick
David Thompson from
North Carolina State University make it to the Hall of Fame for their professional careers at hand. After that point, the Supplemental Draft would see nobody from this specific draft make it to the Hall of Fame (with this particular draft seeing scant few successes playing either in the ABA or NBA altogether), though the last pick from that draft in junior
Harvey Catchings from
Hardin–Simmons University (who was also drafted by the
Utah Stars in
the previous year's draft) would be the father of Hall of Fame
WNBA star player
Tamika Catchings. A few of the Hall of Famers from this year's draft would also play in the
ABA All-Star Game at least once as well. Of the 92 overall ABA All-Stars, only eight total players would make it to at least one
ABA All-Star Game during the league's final seasons of existence, with two of them making it to all three of the league's final All-Star Games (none of them being from the Supplemental Draft). From the Special Circumstances Draft, four players from this specific draft would be in the ABA All-Star Game, with #2 pick
Mike Green being an All-Star in 1975 after being a member of the ABA All-Rookie Team in 1974, #4 pick
Larry Kenon being one of two three-time ABA All-Stars from this draft alongside an ABA All-Rookie Team member and champion in 1974, #10 pick
George Gervin being the other three-time ABA All-Star from this draft that was a late ABA All-Rookie Team member for 1973 due to his prior semi-professional status at the
original Continental Basketball Association making him eligible for early ABA play and a two-time All-ABA Second Team member in the league's final two seasons of play for a worthwhile
ABA All-Time Team spot and a later number retirement for the
San Antonio Spurs, and #11 pick
Bobby Jones being an ABA All-Star and an All-ABA Second Team member in the league's final season of play after being named a member of the ABA All-Rookie Team in 1975 due to him joining the ABA during the following season instead, as well as one of seven ABA players to join the ABA All-Defensive Team only two times throughout one's playing career there. For the Senior Draft, only #25 pick
Caldwell Jones would play well enough to make it to the ABA All-Star Game out of everyone that was from that specific draft, with him making it in 1975 due in part to leading the league in blocks for two straight seasons in a row in both 1974 and 1975. Finally, with regards to the Undergraduate Draft that came right after the Senior Draft, that draft saw three players selected that would be ABA All-Stars, with the technical #102 pick
David Thompson being a part of the
ABA All-Time Team despite only one season of play in the ABA's final season of existence with him earning not just the final year's All-Star Game spot, but also the final ABA All-Star Game MVP Award; the final ABA Rookie of the Year Award alongside one of the final ABA All-Rookie Team spots, and even one of the final All-ABA Second Team spots in his only season of play with the ABA; the technical #106 pick
Marvin Barnes also being a part of the
ABA All-Time Team in only two seasons of play with two ABA All-Star Game appearances alongside him winning the ABA's Rookie of the Year Award in 1975 and appearing in both the ABA All-Rookie Team and All-ABA Second Team in that same first year of ABA play; and the technical #110 pick
Maurice Lucas was the fourth overall player from this year's draft (third player from this specific draft in question) to also be named a member of the
ABA All-Time Team while playing in only two seasons despite having only one ABA All-Star appearance in the league's final season of play (being named as such by replacing one of three players representing the
Denver Nuggets, the modern-day rendition of the
Denver Rockets that year, with most of his notable achievements as a player coming from after the
ABA-NBA merger). Due in part to the high amount of drafted players the ABA had this season combined with the overall amount of seasons the ABA had left to actually play, there would actually be no undrafted ABA All-Stars for the first time ever (at least, if you exclude
Swen Nater as a previously drafted player that returned to college for his senior year, especially since he already had his player rights acquired by the
Virginia Squires at the time). ==Historic draft notes==