Houston Angels Women's Basketball League

Houston Angels

Women’s Professional Basketball League (1978-1980)

Tombstone

Born: 1978 – WPBL founding franchise
Folded: Postseason 1980

First Game: December 15, 1978 (W 90-82 @ Dayton Rockettes)
Last Game
: March 22, 1980 (L 98-95 vs. San Francisco Pioneers)

WPBL Champions: 1979

Arenas

Marketing

Team Colors: Powder Blue & Dark Blue

Ownership

Owner: Hugh Sweeney

 

Background

Trivia question: what city won the first ever championship for women’s professional basketball in the United States?

Answer: Houston, Texas, where the Houston Angels captured the league title during the inaugural season of the Women’s Professional Basketball League in April of 1979.  The WPBL was the first attempt to create a fully-fledged pro league for women. It lasted three seasons from 1978 to 1981.  The Angels managed to hang in there for the first two only.

Building a Champion

At the WPBL’s inaugural draft at Essex House in Manhattan in July 1978, the Angels selected UCLA star Ann Meyers with the #1 overall pick. But Meyers declined to sign with the league, preferring to remain an amateur for the 1980 Moscow Olympics (which the U.S. subsequently boycotted).  Meyers would later join the WPBL’s New Jersey Gems for the league’s second season in 1979-80.

Despite losing out on Meyers, the Angels raced out to the WPBL’s best regular season record (26-8) under Head Coach Don Knodel.  Top performers Belinda Candler (19.9 PPG) and Paula Mayo (15.9 PPG) were both named All-Pro. The Angels met the Iowa Cornets in the WPBL Championship Series. The best-of-five series went the distance, with the deciding Game 5 held at the University of Houston’s Hofheinz Pavilion before a crowd of 5,976. The Angels bested the Cornets 111-104, thanks to a 36 point, 22 rebound performance by Mayo.

1979 Sale Hoax

Angels owner Hugh Sweeney was a Houston-area tennis promoter and former professional player. He gained minor notoriety as the last man to compete in pro tennis wearing long pants during the 1950’s.  Sweeney was not an especially wealthy owner and midway through the Angels second season, he and the team fell prey to a bizarre hoax.  In December 1979 Sweeney announced the sale of the team to an organization called Sports Resources International, Inc. for the sum of $1 million.  It was an eye-opening figure, as Sweeney and the other initial investors paid just $50,000 for their franchises when the WPBL formed in early 1978.

The press covered the sale announcement, but something seemed off. The principal investor of Sports Resources International was a fellow named Richard E. Klingler.  Klingler presented himself to the team at a practice session and behaved strangely. He barely raised his voice above an inaudible murmur in his remarks to the team, according to Karra Porter in her WPBL history Mad Seasons: The Story of the First Women’s Professional Basketball League.  Klingler, it turned out, was a blue collar laborer seeking media attention.

“He was like a machinist in a machine shop, and didn’t any more have a million dollars than you or me,” former Angels assistant coach Greg Williams told Porter.

Final Season

Once the hoax came to light, it seemed to knock the wind out of the Angels organization.  Sweeney was out of money and needed the sale.  Shortly after Klingler evaporated in January 1980, Sweeney fell behind on rent payments to Hofheinz Pavilion to the tune of $8,800. The debt forced the postponement of a scheduled game against the Dallas Diamonds.

The Angels remained competitive on the court and the team managed to complete the season. Houston won the Western Division with a 19-14 record.  Paula Mayo and Belinda Candler were named to the All-Star team again.  The San Francisco Pioneers eliminated the Angels in the playoff quarterfinals, ending Houston’s run as league champions.

The team folded after the 1979-80 season, with the official announcement of the team’s demise coming in October 1980.

 

Houston Angels Shop

Editor's Pick

mad seasons

The Story of the First Women’s Professional Basketball League, 1978-1981

by Karra Porter

As the popularity of women’s basketball burgeons, Karra Porter reminds us in Mad Seasons that today’s Women’s National Basketball Association, or WNBA, had its origins in a ragtag league twenty years earlier. Porter tells the story of the Women’s Professional Basketball League WBL, which pioneered a new era of women’s sports.
 
Karra Porter brings to life the pioneers of the WBL: “Machine Gun” Molly Bolin, who set lasting scoring records—then faced an historic custody battle because of her basketball career; Connie Kunzmann, a popular player whose murder rocked the league; Liz Silcott, whose remarkable talents masked deeper problems off the court; Ann Meyers, who went from an NBA tryout to the league she had rebuffed; Nancy Lieberman, whose flashy play and marketing savvy were unlike anything the women’s game had ever seen.
 
When you make a purchase through an affiliate link like this one, Fun While It Lasted earns a commission at no additional cost to you. Thanks for your support!

 

Houston Angels Video

Former Iowa Cornets star Molly Bolin dug up this rare local TV footage of the Angels playing the Cornets at Drake University in 1979 and posted it to her YouTube channel.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SrtWCWjPTRY

 

In Memoriam

Former Angels owner Hugh Sweeney passed away in September 2008 at the age of 79.

 

Downloads

December 22, 1978 Houston Angels Inaugural Home Game Program

12-22-1978 Houston Angels vs Chicago Hustle Program

 

1978-79 Women’s Professional Basketball League Brochure

1978-79 Houston Angels Season Ticket Brochure

1979-80 Houston Angels Season Ticket Brochure

 

Links

Women’s Professional Basketball League Media Guides

 

Women’s Basketball League Programs

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