1956-57_St._Louis_Hawks_season

1956–57 St. Louis Hawks season

1956–57 St. Louis Hawks season

NBA professional basketball team season


The 1956–57 St. Louis Hawks season was the 11th season for the franchise and eighth in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Prior to the start of the season, the Hawks made one of the biggest draft-day deals in NBA history. The Hawks sent 2nd overall pick Bill Russell to the Boston Celtics for Cliff Hagan and second-year star Ed Macauley.[1] Macauley had been a popular player at St. Louis University. The Hawks struggled for most of the season and coach Red Holzman was fired midway through the season.[1] The new head coach was Slater Martin, who led the Hawks to a 5–3 record.[1] Martin did not want the added responsibility of head coach, so Alex Hannum took over for the rest of the season. Despite a 34–38 record, the Hawks claimed the Western Division by a tiebreaker and earned a bye into the Western Finals, where the Hawks swept the Minneapolis Lakers in three straight games. The Hawks met the Boston Celtics in the NBA Finals.[1] The Hawks won Game 1 in double overtime, 125–123 in Boston.[1] The Celtics took Game 2 and the Hawks took Game 3 at home by 2 points. After losing Game 5 in Boston, the Hawks needed another victory at home to force a decisive seventh game. Game 7 in Boston went into double overtime and the Celtics emerged victorious, winning by 2 points.

Quick Facts St. Louis Hawks season, Head coach ...

Offseason

NBA draft

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Regular season

Season standings

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Record vs. opponents

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Game log

1956–57 Game log
#DateOpponentScoreHigh pointsRecord
1October 27Minneapolis75–97Bob Pettit (25)1–0
2November 3N Syracuse75–73Jack McMahon (21)1–1
3November 4@ Syracuse78–76Ed Macauley (20)2–1
4November 7New York101–107Bob Pettit (34)3–1
5November 10Fort Wayne79–86Bob Pettit (27)4–1
6November 11@ Fort Wayne81–96Bob Pettit (27)4–2
7November 13Rochester105–118Bob Pettit (49)5–2
8November 17Fort Wayne87–92Ed Macauley (23)6–2
9November 18@ New York69–102Bob Pettit (13)6–3
10November 20Syracuse81–104Bob Pettit (26)7–3
11November 21@ Rochester76–85Bob Pettit (28)7–4
12November 24Minneapolis104–102 (OT)Ed Macauley (27)7–5
13November 25@ Minneapolis95–94Ed Macauley (26)8–5
14November 27Boston102–90Bob Pettit (25)8–6
15December 1Philadelphia107–95Bob Pettit (23)8–7
16December 4N Boston107–108Bob Pettit (24)8–8
17December 6N Minneapolis96–103Bob Pettit (17)8–9
18December 7New York107–101Bob Pettit (22)8–10
19December 8N New York104–109Bob Pettit (21)8–11
20December 11@ New York137–128Bob Pettit (41)9–11
21December 12@ Philadelphia99–115Jack Coleman (25)9–12
22December 15@ Boston99–102Bob Pettit (31)9–13
23December 16@ Syracuse91–101Bob Pettit (26)9–14
24December 18N Fort Wayne95–84Bob Pettit (30)10–14
25December 22@ Boston93–95Bob Pettit (28)10–15
26December 25@ New York107–105 (OT)Bob Pettit (37)11–15
27December 27Syracuse95–102Bob Pettit (39)12–15
28December 29@ Minneapolis95–92Bob Pettit (22)13–15
29December 30Minneapolis93–100Bob Pettit (41)14–15
30January 1@ Rochester101–102 (OT)Bob Pettit (32)14–16
31January 3N Philadelphia81–82Bob Pettit (26)14–17
32January 4@ Philadelphia92–96Jack Coleman (21)14–18
33January 6Rochester93–86Bob Pettit (33)14–19
34January 10N New York84–89 (OT)Bob Pettit (38)14–20
35January 12Boston98–100Bob Pettit (39)15–20
36January 13@ Fort Wayne89–91Bob Pettit (28)15–21
37January 16@ Rochester108–106 (OT)Bob Pettit (26)16–21
38January 17N Fort Wayne106–82Slater Martin (22)17–21
39January 18@ Boston117–126Bob Pettit (38)17–22
40January 19@ Syracuse104–96Bob Pettit (30)18–22
41January 20Philadelphia102–104 (OT)Bob Pettit (23)19–22
42January 22@ Fort Wayne87–97Bob Pettit (30)19–23
43January 23N Fort Wayne101–78Bob Pettit (22)20–23
44January 24@ Philadelphia96–107Bob Pettit (30)20–24
45January 25N Rochester100–99Bob Pettit (36)21–24
46January 27Rochester83–107Bob Pettit (33)22–24
47January 29Fort Wayne91–85Bob Pettit (26)22–25
48February 2@ Minneapolis106–97Bob Pettit (37)23–25
49February 3Minneapolis85–102Bob Pettit (31)24–25
50February 5Philadelphia101–87Bob Pettit (26)24–26
51February 6@ Rochester100–103Bob Pettit (24)24–27
52February 7@ Syracuse110–112Bob Pettit (31)24–28
53February 8@ Philadelphia90–93Bob Pettit (41)24–29
54February 10Rochester93–117Bob Pettit (44)25–29
55February 11N Syracuse101–107Bob Pettit (33)26–29
56February 12N Minneapolis105–110Bob Pettit (35)26–30
57February 15Boston123–116 (2OT)Bob Pettit (31)26–31
58February 17@ Minneapolis118–115 (OT)Ed Macauley (36)27–31
59February 19Fort Wayne83–96Ed Macauley (23)28–31
60February 21@ Boston112–125Jack Coleman (33)28–32
61February 23@ Rochester86–101Ed Macauley (21)28–33
62February 24Philadelphia112–113Chuck Share (28)29–33
63February 25N Minneapolis110–94Med Park (24)30–33
64February 26@ New York76–107Jack Coleman (17)30–34
65February 27N Syracuse108–93Ed Macauley (21)30–35
66March 2New York97–94Cliff Hagan (19)30–36
67March 3@ Fort Wayne112–102Jack McMahon (27)31–36
68March 5Boston102–104Jack McMahon (21)32–36
69March 8N Rochester100–92Ed Macauley (26)33–36
70March 9Fort Wayne96–97Bob Pettit (23)34–36
71March 10@ Minneapolis104–117Ed Macauley (17)34–37
72March 13N Rochester99–104Ed Macauley (22)34–38

Playoffs

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Awards and honors


References

  1. "St. Louis Hawks – Sports Ecyclopedia".

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