1947 World Professional Basketball Tournament

World Professional Basketball Tournament
1947
Tournament information
LocationChicago, Illinois
Dates7 April–11 April
Venue(s)Chicago Stadium
Teams14
Final positions
ChampionsIndianapolis Kautskys
1st runner-upToledo Jeeps
2nd runner-upFort Wayne Zollner Pistons
MVPJulie Rivlin

The 1947 World Professional Basketball Tournament was the ninth edition of the World Professional Basketball Tournament. It was held in Chicago, Illinois, during the days of 7–11 April 1947 and featured 14 teams, with the teams competing there primarily being a mixture of independently ran teams and teams from the ever-strong National Basketball League, with there also being the inclusion of the Baltimore Bullets from the American Basketball League (at the time) and the Portland Indians of the short-lived Pacific Coast Professional Basketball League. Due to a combination of the Chicago American Gears & Rochester Royals declining their invitation to the 1947 event in order to play out the 1947 NBL Championship series they had (before the American Gears later left the NBL to try their hands with a new league of their own in the Professional Basketball League of America (which turned out to be a short-lived league of its own accord)) and the Chicago Stags playing in the 1947 BAA Finals for the inaugural season of the newly-created (yet at the time struggling) Basketball Association of America (now National Basketball Association) to rival the long-standing NBL, local interest in the tournament turned out to wane when compared to prior years (albeit not by a significant amount for the tournament's organizers).[1] However, the event would be notable for seeing the Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons failing to win their fourth straight WPBT championship due to them being upset by the Toledo Jeeps with a 61–56 win on Toledo's end. Despite the upset that Toledo caused in the semifinal match-up, the championship match would ultimately be won by the Indianapolis Kautskys (who had previously not won a single WPBT match before this year, even in the years where they participated as the Pure Oils and Oilers names during World War II), who defeated the Toledo Jeeps 62–47 in the title game.[2] The Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons came in third after beating the Oshkosh All-Stars 86–67 in the third-place game behind Ralph Hamilton's 26 points.[3] Despite his team not winning this year's event, Julie Rivlin of the Toledo Jeeps was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.[4]

Results

Bracket

Round 1 Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
        
Indianapolis Kautskys 65
Tri-Cities Blackhawks 56
Tri-Cities Blackhawks 57
Baltimore Bullets 46
Indianapolis Kautskys 59
Oshkosh All-Stars 38
Oshkosh All-Stars 60
Herkimer Mohawk Redskins 54
Oshkosh All-Stars 53
Sheboygan Red Skins 44
Sheboygan Red Skins 62
Portland Indians 48
Indianapolis Kautskys 62
Toledo Jeeps 47
Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons 52
Anderson Duffey Packers 40
Anderson Duffey Packers 59
Pittsburgh Pirates 38
Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons 56
Toledo Jeeps 61
Midland Dow Chemicals 71 Third place
Syracuse Nationals 39
Midland Dow Chemicals 55 Oshkosh All-Stars 67
Toledo Jeeps 59 Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons 86
Toledo Jeeps 62
New York Rens 59

Third place game

April 11, 1947
Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons 86, Oshkosh All-Stars 67
Scoring by quarter: 24–15, 22–18, 19–13, 21–21
Pts: R. Hamilton – 26 Pts: T. Scalissi – 16
Chicago Stadium
Referees: Bud Lowell, John Sines

Championship game

April 11, 1947
Indianapolis Kautskys 62, Toledo Jeeps 47
Scoring by quarter: 14–13, 16–16, 17–9, 15–9
Pts: L. Klier – 12 Pts: G. Sobek – 20
Chicago Stadium
Attendance: 14,413
Referees: Sam Pecararo, Dutch Kriznecky

Individual awards

All-Tournament First team

All-Tournament Second team

References

  1. ^ Nelson, Murry R. (2009). The National Basketball League: A History, 1935–1949. McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7864-4006-1., pp. 173–176
  2. ^ Angelo Angelopolous (April 11, 1947). "Kautskys win; Joy unconfined". The Indianapolis News. p. 32. Retrieved April 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  3. ^ "Kautskys rout Jeeps to take pro net title". The Star Press. April 11, 1947. p. 21. Retrieved April 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  4. ^ Wilfrid Smith (April 11, 1947). "Kautskys beat Toledo, 62-47, in Pro Final". Chicago Tribune. p. 27. Retrieved April 5, 2022. Jule Rivlin, Toledo's player coach, was voted the most valuable player to his team in the tournament