Van Arsdale was selected 11th overall by the
Detroit Pistons in the
1965 NBA draft. He was named to the
NBA All-Rookie Team for the
1965–66 season, together with Dick. He played in the
National Basketball Association (NBA) for 12 seasons; with the Pistons,
Cincinnati Royals/
Kansas City–Omaha Kings,
Philadelphia 76ers,
Atlanta Hawks, and
Phoenix Suns. A consecutive three-time
NBA All-Star starting in 1970, Van Arsdale's play peaked as the Royals lost star
Oscar Robertson to the
Milwaukee Bucks. In 1970 and 1971, he averaged scoring totals of 22.8 and 22.9 points per game, the latter of which was a career high. On February 13, 1972, Van Arsdale scored a career-high 44 points in a 112–111 loss to the
Houston Rockets. He retired as player in 1977. Despite Robertson's departure from Cincinnati in 1970 being somewhat countered by the arrival of another All-Star guard in
Tiny Archibald in the
1970 NBA draft, the Royals continued to finish below .500. Even after being traded himself, Van Arsdale never was on a team that made the postseason. He still holds the NBA record for most career games played (929) and most career points scored (14,232) without a playoff appearance. == Legacy ==