Play begins The Braves were one of three NBA
expansion teams that began to play in the
1970–71 season (the others being the
Portland Trail Blazers and
Cleveland Cavaliers). It was originally owned by
Neuberger Loeb, a
New York City investment firm that had few ties to Buffalo. However, a series of missteps resulted in the league taking control of the team before it even played a preseason game. By opening night,
Paul Snyder, a then 33-year-old entrepreneur who had recently cashed in on the sale of his
Freezer Queen business, had bought the franchise for $4 million. (a similar strategy was employed by the
National Football League (NFL)'s
Buffalo Bills from
2008 to 2013). The NBA had two previous teams in
Upstate New York, the
Rochester Royals and the
Syracuse Nationals (who are now known as the
Sacramento Kings and
Philadelphia 76ers, respectively). As of 2026, the Braves are the last
New York State-based NBA team to be based somewhere other than
New York City, where the
New York Knicks and
Brooklyn Nets play.
Initial hiring The team's first
head coach was
Hall of Famer Dolph Schayes and the franchise's first star players were
Bob Kauffman and
Don May, who were acquired in the
1970 NBA expansion draft. However, in the
NBA draft of 1970, Buffalo passed on hometown hero
Calvin Murphy, a 5-foot-9 point guard from
Niagara University, and picked Princeton graduate
John Hummer as their first round draft pick. Murphy would eventually be inducted into the Hall of Fame. As is typical of first-year expansion teams, the Braves finished with a dismal record, 22–60, seven games ahead of the
Cleveland Cavaliers, their expansion cousins, who finished at 15–67. Kauffman, who averaged 4.3 points per game the previous year with the
Chicago Bulls, led Buffalo in scoring with 20.4 points per game and earned a spot on the 1971
NBA Eastern Conference All-Star team.
Season-by-season summary 1971–72 season The Braves repeated their 22–60 record in the 1971–72 season, but made acquisitions that would prove to improve the team. Buffalo drafted
center Elmore Smith from
Kentucky State University and local favorite
Randy Smith from
Buffalo State College.
Johnny McCarthy replaced Schayes one game into the season as the team's head coach.
1972–73 and 1973–74 seasons was named NBA Rookie of the Year in 1973–74 after leading the NBA in assists and free throw percentage. The team did slightly worse in the 1972–73 season, as it went 21–61 under new head coach
Dr. Jack Ramsay. In a showcase of the futility of the '72-'73 Braves, during the team's fifth game of the season on October 20, 1972, the team set an NBA record which still stands for most points in a single quarter with 58 in the fourth quarter against the
Boston Celtics. However the Celtics were in the process of a blowout win and had already led the Braves 103–60 at the start of the quarter. They had inserted their substitutes to play the final quarter and the reduced quality of the opponents allowed for the comeback. The Braves outscored the Celtics 58-23 but still lost 126–118. The Braves' big move that season was drafting forward/center
Bob McAdoo from
North Carolina. The team finally made its first playoff appearance in
1974, in which they faced the Celtics and lost in six games. That season, McAdoo posted averages of 30.6
points and 15.1
rebounds; this is the last time any player has averaged at least 30 points and 15 rebounds in the same NBA season. Also, that season, the Braves rookie
Ernie DiGregorio won the
NBA Rookie of the Year Award.
1974–75 and 1975–76 seasons (11) was the NBA MVP in the 1974–75 season after averaging 34.5 points per game and 14.1 rebounds per game. In
1974–75, McAdoo was awarded the
NBA Most Valuable Player Award, averaging 34.5 points, 14.1 rebounds. and 2.12 blocks per game, while shooting 51.2% from the field and 80.5% from the free-throw line. The Braves made trips to the playoffs in both 1974–75 and
1975–76, the latter of which would be their last playoff berth playing in Buffalo.
1976–77 season The Braves by this point were a modest success, both on the court and off; the team was drawing close to the league average in fans, had solid broadcasting ratings and was turning a consistent profit. Even so, by 1976 Snyder was facing severe pressure to sell the team and get it out of Buffalo. As a result of the Braves only getting the third choice of dates at the Aud, the entire NBA was unable to finalize a schedule and hammer out television contracts until the Sabres and Griffins finalized their schedules. The NBA considered this untenable, and gave Snyder five years to resolve the problem. In a 2016 interview with
The Buffalo News as part of a retrospective on the Braves, Snyder laid particular blame on Canisius president Father
James Demske for making it difficult to get good home dates at the Aud. Snyder recalled offering Demske $125,000 per game to give up some Saturday night dates to the Braves. However, Demske turned the offer down, believing that the Braves posed a threat to the
Little Three rivalry in college basketball. When the five-year deadline expired without a resolution, Snyder found himself with two options–build a new arena or sell the team. Building a new arena wasn't financially realistic at the time, leaving Snyder with no option but to sell the team. Had the dispute been resolved, the Braves would have likely been able to stay in Buffalo, especially since Canisius basketball went into what would be permanent decline in the early 1980s. At the time, Snyder's more public feuds were with the Sabres, whose owners,
Northrup and
Seymour Knox, represented Buffalo's
old money circuit while Snyder had
nouveau riche status. Years later, Snyder attributed these feuds to his own inexperience with sports ownership and now speaks in more conciliatory tones regarding his hockey competition. The June 15, 1976 issue of Buffalo's
Courier-Express blasted the headline "Braves Go to Florida, Leaving 'Hockey Town'". Snyder had a handshake deal to sell the team for $6.1 million to hotel owner Irving Cowan, who would move the Braves to the
Hollywood Sportatorium outside of
Miami. However, the city of Buffalo filed a $10 million damage suit to block the move. The sale eventually fell through and the Braves and the city signed a new 15-year Memorial Auditorium lease in July with a provision that the lease could be voided if the team did not sell 5,000 season tickets in any season. Later that summer, Snyder finally sold 50% of the franchise to businessman
John Y. Brown Jr., who had previously owned the
Kentucky Colonels of the
American Basketball Association (ABA). Brown later acquired the remaining half from Snyder sometime in the
1976–77 season with the intention of reviving the Colonels by relocating the Braves to Louisville. Unable to find a willing co-owner for such a venture, he resold the other stake to another businessman,
Harry T. Mangurian Jr. Brown and Mangurian proceeded to dismantle the Braves. Ramsay, unwilling to have his career hurt by the change in ownership, left for the
Portland Trail Blazers, who would win the NBA championship in the upcoming 1976–77 season. A provision in the team sale agreement stipulated that if Brown sold the contract of any Braves player, then the money would go to Snyder and the purchase price would be reduced. This subsequently occurred when the Braves sent McAdoo to the
New York Knicks for players and cash midway through the season. Before the first game of the season, the Braves also managed to acquire eventual Hall-of-Fame center
Moses Malone from Portland. However, after just two games in which he played a total of six minutes, he too was traded; he was sent to
Houston for two draft picks. He would finish the season in Houston averaging 13 points and 13 rebounds while only two years later winning his first of three MVP Awards. The Braves would go through four head coaches in the next two seasons:
Tates Locke,
Bob MacKinnon,
Joe Mullaney (formerly coach of the Colonels) and
Cotton Fitzsimmons. Fitzsimmons (who would find himself in a nearly identical situation seven years later when his next team the
Kansas City Kings relocated to Sacramento) jokingly took the blame for the Braves' relocation and acknowledged that the NBA had given Buffalo a "raw deal."
1977–78 season The team's poor play in its final two years (30–52 in 1976–77 and 27–55 in
1977–78) and the overt attempts to break the lease on Memorial Auditorium drove attendance down below the threshold that would have been needed to break the lease. Brown would sell off the Celtics in 1979. ==Team colors==