AAU Basketball in the 1950s
The Buchan Bakers were one of a handful of amateur basketball powers during the 1950s that included the Phillips 66ers, the Peoria Caterpillars, the Akron Goodyears, and the Wichita Vickers. These teams played a full schedule each season, topping 30 games a year and traveling throughout the country. Some of these teams also helped introduce the American style of basketball to foreign players.
In
1956, the Buchan Bakers played games in Japan, the Philippines, France, Austria,
Italy, Czechoslovakia, Poland and Spain. During the 1950s, the rosters of
the top amateur teams were filled with former college stars, many of whom
had been drafted by the NBA, which was still in its formative years. The amateur
teams sometimes offered more money than the pro teams as well as the security
of full-time employment. AAU basketball was particularly strong in the Midwest,
Southwest and West Coast, where the NBA had not yet established a presence.
The top teams played in the National Industrial Basketball League, which began
play in the 1947-48 season, two years before the establishment of the National
Basketball Association.
The NIBL had as many as eleven teams for the 1951-52 season and had nine teams
during its next to last season in 1959-60. The Phillips 66ers won the NIBL
title 11 of the league's 14 years of existence. But the goal for all these
teams was winning the National AAU Tournament, held each year in Denver. The
tournament field was determined by play in regional AAU tournaments, and included
the top industrial teams, armed services teams, and often teams just put together
for the tournament.
Between
1943 and 1963, the Phillips 66ers won the tournament 10 times and the Peoria
Caterpillars won five times. But there was always a chance for a surprise
team to slip past the favorites just as the Buchan Bakers had in 1956. Other
one-time winners included the Oakland Bittners, led by Don Barksdale, in 1949
and Stewart Chevrolet, led by George Yardley, in 1951. The appeal of AAU basketball
began to decline in the early 1960s as the NBA gained prominence with the
arrival of such players as Wilt Chamberlain, Elgin Baylor, Oscar Robertson
and Jerry West.
The formation of a second professional league in 1961, the short-lived American
Basketball League, helped put the National Industrial Basketball League out
of business. With expansion of the NBA and the formation of the American Basketball
Association in the late 1960s, the annual National AAU Tournament faded from
prominence and eventually the AAU dropped its adult basketball programs in
favor of junior programs.
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