Denver Nuggets (1975–1982) , January 27, 1976 Thompson was the No. 1 draft pick of both the
American Basketball Association (
Virginia Squires) and the
National Basketball Association (
Atlanta Hawks) in the 1975 drafts of both leagues. He eventually signed with the ABA's
Denver Nuggets. He finished runner-up to
Julius Erving in the first-ever
Slam-Dunk Competition, held at the
1976 ABA All-Star Game in Denver, but was named MVP of the ABA All-Star Game. As a prize, he received a credenza television set. That season, the Nuggets finished 60–24, and beat the
Kentucky Colonels in a hard-fought seven-game series to advance to the
1976 ABA Finals. In the finals, the Nuggets faced Erving and the
New York Nets, and Thompson averaged 28.3 points and 6.3 rebounds per game in a tightly contested 4–2 series loss, including an almost-heroic 42 point effort to lead all scorers in a narrow 112–106 Game 6 loss. After the season ended, Thompson was awarded the 1976
ABA Rookie of the Year award. When
Alvan Adams accepted the 1976
NBA Rookie of the Year Award, he thanked David Thompson for choosing to play in the ABA. Following the 1976
ABA–NBA merger, Thompson continued with the Nuggets. He went on to make the
NBA All-Star Game four times. On April 9, 1978, the last day of that year's regular season, Thompson scored 73 points against the
Detroit Pistons in an effort to win the NBA scoring title, which he lost by less than 0.1 points per game to the
San Antonio Spurs'
George Gervin, who scored 63 points in a game played later that same day. After the 1977–78 season, Thompson signed a then-record After a foot injury caused him to miss the final 36 games of the 1979–80 season, he returned to average 25.5 points in 77 games the next year.
Seattle SuperSonics (1982–1984) However, after he dipped to 14.9 points in 1981–82, the Nuggets traded him to the
Seattle SuperSonics on June 17, 1982, for
Bill Hanzlik and a draft pick. Thompson experienced somewhat of a career revival during his first year in Seattle, making the 1982–83 All-Star game after averaging 15.9 points, 3.6 rebounds, and 3 assists, which were comparatively low totals when contrasted with the stats from his prime in Denver. During that year's playoffs, in his last postseason appearance, Thompson averaged just 12 points in a two-game series loss to the
Portland Trail Blazers. The next year, Thompson missed nearly all of the 1983–84 season due to drug rehabilitation. Following his release, the Sonics resigned him for the remaining nineteen games of the
1983–84 season, in which he averaged a career low of 12.6 points before an off-court 1984 knee injury forced him into retirement. ==Drug addiction==