ABA Finals: New York Nets vs. Denver Nuggets
Behind a record crowd for a playoff game in league history (19,034), the Nets managed to outrebound the Nuggets and score with Erving ready to pounce, as he scored 18 of New York's final 24 points in the last 7:24 of the game. After
Marvin Webster had managed to tie the game at 118 on a putback with four seconds remaining, the Nets went to Erving to try and get a shot, and while he wanted the baseline to drive to the hoop, he was cut off by Denver defender
Bobby Jones into trying a shot from 20-feet out that he stated was one where he "just let it fly" that went into the net at the buzzer to give New York the win. It was the last ever buzzer-beater shot ever recorded in the ABA. A new record for ABA crowds was set with 19,107 watching as the Nuggets struck back with a busy fourth quarter to hold off New York, with Denver seeing a 12-point lead shrivel to four with 1:26 to go before Denver pulled away at the end; each team shot over 60% in the final quarter and scored 82 combined points, a pro playoff record.
Ralph Simpson led the scoring for Denver while playing all but two minutes due to a lack of bench with 25 points on the day. Julius Erving scored 48 points, which included 25 in the final quarter, which was reported at the time as the most point scored by one player in a quarter for a pro basketball playoff game (his 37 points scored in the second half is believed to also have been a record at the time).
Julius Erving scored eight points in the final two minutes of the game, starting by giving the Nets a 111–108 lead before
David Thompson soon tied the game. Erving scored a backhand layup with 31 seconds to go before a key foul changed the course of the game when Thompson was charged with an offensive foul by referee John Vanak with 23 seconds remaining and Rich Jones trying to defend Thompson. Erving sealed the game up with two subsequent free throws and then scored the last points of the game with a dunk following a Nets steal that gave him 31 points on the night as the Nets took the lead in the series; Thompson was quoted as saying this was the first time he broke down in a locker room following a game. A dominant Erving, combined with 23 points from
Brian Taylor to get out of a slump, helped the Nets dominate the Nuggets after a slow first quarter while Jim Eakins came off the bench to score 13 of his 17 points in the second half, where at one point New York led by over 15 with three minutes to go. Earlier in the day, the
Virginia Squires had folded operations due to them making a failed pay assessment of $75,000 to the ABA alongside them failing to reimburse their own players with $120,000 in back pay, thus leaving the ABA with only six competing teams left by the end of the playoffs. However, since the Squires didn't even play in the ABA Playoffs that year, the ABA resumed their championship series as planned. The Nets, being poised to clinch the championship, led by 16 points with five minutes left to go in the second quarter, but Denver utilized a late push to narrow it to a six-point deficit at halftime before outshooting and outscoring the Nets with accurate shooting (13-of-19) to score 42 points in the third quarter; Chuck Williams and David Thompson scored 19 combined points in the quarter as Denver forced a Game 6 back in Uniondale. New York trailed by 22 points late in the third quarter with 5:07 remaining in the third quarter. However, with the efforts of mounting a run by blitzing full‐court press called "Yellow" by head coach
Kevin Loughery, the Nets rallied all the way back.
John Williamson at one point scored 11 points straight that saw the deficit go to 96–92 with eight minutes remaining in the game. With Denver still leading 104–97, New York made their push with an 11–0 run in just over two minutes. Williamson scored 16 points in the fourth quarter, which included his jump shot to give New York the lead at last. With his prior championship in 1974,
Kevin Loughery became the second ABA coach to win multiple championships as a coach, joining
Bobby Leonard. New York received $95,000 ($25,000 for their 2nd-place finish and $70,000 for the playoffs) while Denver received $81,000. The championship trophy awarded to the Nets was the same silver trophy they won in 1974, as the new $800 silver bowl planned to be presented to the champion was stolen from league commissioner
Dave DeBusschere the previous week. Denver had three members of its team make the
Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame:
Dan Issel (1993),
David Thompson (1996), and
Bobby Jones (2019), along with their head coach
Larry Brown (2002), while New York saw
Julius Erving inducted (1993). ==Statistical leaders==