1961-62 Los Angeles Jets program from the American Basketball League

Los Angeles Jets

American Basketball League (1961-1962)

Tombstone

Born: April 21, 1960 – ABL founding franchise
Folded: January 18, 1962

First Game: October 27, 1961 (L 99-96 @ San Francisco Saints)
Last Game: January 10, 1962 (W 123-122 vs. Hawaii Chiefs @ San Franciso, CA)

ABL Championships: None

Arena

Olympic Auditorium
Opened: 1925
Closed: 2005

Marketing

Team Colors:

Ownership

 

Background

The Los Angeles Jets were one of six original franchises in Abe Saperstein’s American Basketball League, which planned to debut in the fall of 1960 and take on the National Basketball Association for bragging rights as the country’s premier pro basketball circuit.  Saperstein was the founder and promoter of the Harlem Globetrotters.  His Los Angeles investors were Vito Guarino and his stepson Len Corbosiero.

Guarino promoted the first NBA game in Los Angeles, a 1959 exhibition game between the Philadelphia Warriors and the St. Louis Hawks which also happened to be Wilt Chamberlain’s NBA debut.  But Guarino’s dream of securing an NBA franchise for L.A. faltered when Minneapolis Lakers owner Bob Short gained approval to move his franchise to the city in the fall of 1960. Guarino ended up with the Jets franchise in Saperstein’s new league instead, but found himself shut out of L.A.’s new Memorial Sports Arena by the transplanted Lakers.  The Jets considered a move to Long Beach for the 1960-61 season, but instead the ABL decided to postpone its debut for a year as other cities also struggled to secure arena agreements.

Sharman vs. Celtics

When the ABL finally tipped off in the autumn of 1961, the Jets were still in Los Angeles and struck a deal to play at the city’s Grand Olympic Auditorium on Grand Avenue.   The Jets’ big name was player-coach Bill Sharman, the perennial All-Star guard for the Boston Celtics who left the NBA because he did not want to be exposed to the league’s expansion draft. Celtics owner Walter Brown vowed to prevent Sharman from playing for the ABL. But Sharman defied the Celtics’ intimidation and Brown gave up his crusade in November 1961.

Sharman’s reprieve in L.A. didn’t last long.  The Jets made their home debut on November 6, 1961 against the San Francisco Saints.  In a bad omen, only 1,634 souls showed up at Olympic Auditorium for the opener. Those present enjoyed a close contest (won by the Saints 116-113) with the bonus of a first half brawl sparked by NBA veterans George Yardley of the Jets and Whitey Bell of the Saints.

Midseason Fold Up

The ABL split its 1961-62 season into two halves.  The Jets played their final game of the first half on January 10, 1962. A 123-122 victory over the Hawaii Chiefs in San Francisco ran the Jets’ record to 24-15.  But despite the winning record, the Jets’ owners were out of money or hope (or both). They elected not to continue with the season’s second half.  The Jets became the first ABL franchise to fold on January 17, 1962.  At the time, the league claimed the team was just taking the rest of the season off to re-organize and would likely re-appear in Long Beach for the 1962-63.  The ABL would have a team in Long Beach the following autumn. But it was to be the relocated the Hawaii Chiefs rather than the Jets, who were never heard from again.

The ABL itself folded midway through its second season on December 31, 1962.  The role of chief antagonist and rival to the National Basketball Association would fall to the far more successful American Basketball Association, which launched five years later in 1967 and ultimately forced a partial merger in 1976.

Bill Sharman would later win championships as a coach in both the American Basketball Association and the NBA.  He would enter the Basketball Hall of Fame twice, enshrined as both a player (1976) and a coach (2004).

 

In Memoriam

Jets owner Vito Guarino died on July 24, 1991 at age 77.

Jets player and NBA veteran George Yardley passed away at age 75 on August 12, 2004.

Player-coach Bill Sharman passed away October 25, 2013.  The Hall-of-Famer was 87 years old. New York Times obituary.

 

Links

American Basketball League Programs

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Comments

3 Responses

  1. I was recruited to play a few games for the L,A, Jets in 1962 and for several games they gave me another players name. I had played ay Wayne State University in 1960-61 and HPJC in 1957 and 1958 where I made an All American Team. I went on to coach at Saline High School in Michigan and Washtenaw Community College in Michigan also. I would typically get a call telling me that they bought a ticket for me to take a plane to L.A. on a Saturday or Sunday. I then played Class A basketball in Ann Arbor Michigan for almost 20 years.
    Dr. Dallas Garrett

  2. Back then I bought shares in the LA Jets as a young teenager- $15 for ten shares. They came with two tickets to a game at the Olympic Auditorium. Made my dad drive from Palm Springs to use the tickets!

    When we got there, they had the first ever 3-point line painted on the court.

    They folded, but I figured I got my $15 worth anyhow. But the following year I received in the mail something signed by Bill Sharman himself.

    It was a check – for $15.

    Mike
    Now in Las Vegas

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