5 stadiums were used during the 1940 NBL season. Isolated games and short term temporary home fields are not necessarily included.
While the ABL was shrinking in numbers and atrophying from a lack of new talent, the National Basketball League was aggressively upgrading its fortunes with new big-city teams and a liberal influx of college stars. George Halas took a second fling at pro basketball with a new team in Chicago. He signed hometown favorites Mike Novak and Wibs Kautz from Loyola of Chicago to lay the foundation of his new team. Meanwhile, the moribund Cleveland franchise was transferred to Detroit and staffed with an impressive collection of big-time college talent. The stars on the Detroit Eagles’ roster included Laddie Gale and Slim Wintermuite from NCAA champion Oregon University, Irv Torgoff from NIT champion LIU, and All-American Bernie Opper from Kentucky.
The young Eagles jumped off to a big early season lead, but gradually wore down under pressure from the defending champion Firestone club. They had to settle for second place in the Eastern division behind the Akron-based club. In the Western Division, Halas’ new Chicago team battled the veteran Oshkosh and Sheboygan clubs until the last week of the season, but just missed out on the post-season playoffs, finishing a single game behind the Wisconsin clubs who ended in a first-place tie.
In the playoffs, Firestone eliminated Detroit, which was handicapped by an injury to center Slim Wintermuite, while Oshkosh nipped Sheboygan in a closely contested series. In a rematch of last year’s finals, the league’s two highest scoring teams moved on to the championship round. Oshkosh’s attack was built around the NBL’s strongest offensive player Leroy Edwards, who won his third consecutive scoring title with his accurate hook shooting. Firestone countered with a well-balanced blue-collar work force that included Johnny Moir, Jerry Bush, Soup Cable and Jack Ozburn. Oshkosh opened the best-of-five game finals with two lopsided homecourt victories over Firestone. The All-Stars traveled to Akron needing only one win in the next three games to take the title. Oshkosh was throttled in game three 35-22, but fought back hard in the next two games only to suffer frustrating 41-40 and 61-60 losses and watch the Firestones claim their second straight NBL title.
The championship of the Chicago World Pro Tournament became a hometown affair when the fourteen-team field was narrowed to just two teams, the Chicago Bruins and the Harlem Globetrotters. The Trotters had earlier eliminated the defending champion New York Rens by one point, while the Bruins had disposed of NBL champion Oshkosh by two points. Sonny Boswell had an outstanding shooting night to lead the Trotters to a 31-29 win and the title.
5 stadiums were used during the 1940 NBL season. Isolated games and short term temporary home fields are not necessarily included.
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I sincerely appreciate the research work, and the information being shared. It is important and interesting history.