Cleveland Pipers

{{infobox basketball club

| name = Cleveland Pipers

| color1 = #FFFFFF

| color2 = #CC0033

| color3 = #000099

| logo = Cleveland Pipers logo.PNG

| nickname =

| leagues = NIBL 1959–1961
ABL 1961–1962

| founded = 1950s

| folded = 1962

| arena = Cleveland Arena

| colors = Red, white and blue
{{color box|red}} {{color box|white}} {{color box|#1034A6}}|

}}

The Cleveland Pipers were an American industrial basketball team based in Cleveland, Ohio, in the 1950s and early 1960s. The Pipers are mostly known for having played in the short-lived American Basketball League (1961-1962). They were also a power in the day's Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) basketball and the National Industrial Basketball League (NIBL) which peaked in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

History

The team was first owned and run by Ed Sweeny, a shareholder in a company which handled plumbing, heating and air conditioning services for a number of companies and buildings in Cleveland. Sweeny handled sponsorship for a number of Cleveland recreational sports teams and leagues, including what became Cleveland Pipers. The team was purchased by the ambitious young George Steinbrenner, then a 30-year-old son of a Cleveland trading company owner, as his first entry into pro sports ownership. The team's precarious financial situation was such that its home games took place in eight different arenas and gyms. These ranged from the team's primary homes at either Cleveland Public Hall or the Cleveland Arena, to local colleges such as Baldwin-Wallace College in Berea, Ohio, to high school facilities in Ohio: Ashtabula, Lorain and Sandusky, and as far south as Columbus.

General Manager Mike Cleary later hired John McLendon, the first African American head coach in professional basketball, to lead the squad. Upon his hiring, McClendon was able to convince a former college player he had coached, Dick Barnett, to relocate from the NBA's Syracuse Nationals to the Pipers. After the team's first season, Steinbrenner signed Ohio State University All-American Jerry Lucas. In the latter case, the signing enraged the rival National Basketball Association (NBA), which attempted to lure Steinbrenner and the Pipers into changing leagues. Under McLendon, and later coach Bill Sharman, the team won the league's 1961–62 championship, the only full-season title in the league's short history.

Steinbrenner was considered meddlesome and irrepressible. Basketball lore indicates that at the November 22, 1961 game against the Hawaii Chiefs, he sold player Grady McCollum to the Chiefs at halftime.{{cite book| title= Steinbrenner: The Last Lion of Baseball| page= 39| first= Bill| last= Madden| publisher= Harper Collins| place= New York| year= 2010 |isbn= 978-0-06-169031-0}} Mounting debts and costs of that move proved too much for Steinbrenner, who folded the team just months later.

Industrial league

{{unreferenced section|date=January 2019}}

The team sponsored by Ed Sweeny Co started in the Industrial A League. Opponents included Cleveland Twist Drill, East Ohio Gas and White Motors in this small eight-team division.{{citation needed|date=January 2019}}

AAU and industrial basketball were popular in Cleveland then, as the city was not a college basketball hotbed, and professional basketball, such as the then-struggling NBA, was not yet strong in the city. The city's various sponsored industrial teams and local high school action therefore dominated then.

In 1958, the Sweeny Pipers won their league and they were then invited to join the nine-team Greater Cleveland Muny League, the top league in the city, for the 1958–59 season. Opponents included Bruscino Construction, Carney Auditors, Blepp-Coombs, and Cotton Club Beverage. The Sweeny team went 28–0 to win the league in 1959.{{citation needed|date=January 2019}}

The team had strong local connections, with Cleary, coach Tom Nolan (a former star player at Cleveland area John Carroll University), and guard John Hollis. Their first big star was {{cvt|6|ft|6|in}} Cornelius "Corney" Freeman, a former top scorer on Xavier University's 1957 National Invitational Tournament (NIT) team.

Sweeny also hosted several national industrial powers during the 58–59 season including Wichita Vickers, Akron Goodyear and the Seattle Buchan Bakers. His Pipers lost them all, a briefly discouraging fact. That Spring, with the college basketball season concluding, a number of college players were immediately available to be signed by industrial teams, which was common then. Sweeny signed several including future New York Knick Johnny Green and Kansas State All-American Bob Boozer. He also signed Tennessee State small college champion coach McLendon to lead the Pipers and his star Dick Barnett. On April 5, 1959, this revamped Pipers team hosted the Denver-Chicago Truckers at Cleveland Arena and won the game. The Truckers, like the above mentioned industrial teams, were part of the NIBL, and the Pipers were soon asked to join that circuit as their eighth team for the 1959–60 season.

==NIBL/AAU==

{{unreferenced section|date=January 2019}}

The Ed Sweeny Cleveland Pipers went 16–16 in the 1959–60 NIBL campaign, which was won again by the league's long-running power, the Phillips 66ers of Bartlesville, OK. They also hosted and played in a number of exhibitions including a visiting Soviet Union team, The U.S. Pan American Games team, and the Saint Bonaventure University college team. New stars included Kentucky's Johnny Cox, 6'9" Gene Tormohlen, and Tennessee Staters John Barnhill and Ben Warley. All later played in the NBA. They were edged 84–82 by eventual AAU champion Peoria, and their signee Boozer, and finished the season in a sea of debt. Sweeny allowed Steinbrenner to take over the team in April, 1960. Steinbrenner had been a longtime AAU backer.

For the NIBL 1960–61 campaign, Steinbrenner's first big signing was Dan Swartz, the NIBL's leading scorer from Wichita. The Pipers went 24-10 in the now six-team league to win the NIBL title, the league's last. They then also won the 1961 AAU national tournament in Denver.

ABL

The American Basketball League played one full season, 19611962, and part of the next season until the league folded on December 31, 1962. The ABL was the first basketball league to have a three point shot for baskets scored far away from the goal. Other rules that set the league apart were a 30-second shooting clock and a wider free throw lane, 18 feet instead of the standard 12.

The American Basketball League was formed when Abe Saperstein did not get the Los Angeles National Basketball Association (NBA) franchise he sought. His Harlem Globetrotters had strong NBA ties. When Minneapolis Lakers owner Bob Short was permitted to move the Lakers to Los Angeles, Saperstein reacted by convincing National Alliance of Basketball Leagues (NABL) team owner Paul Cohen (Tuck Tapers) and Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) National Champion Cleveland Pipers owner George Steinbrenner to take the top NABL and AAU teams and players and form a rival league.{{cite web|url=http://www.apbr.org/ablhist.html|title=History of the American Basketball League|website=www.apbr.org}}

League franchises were: the Chicago Majors (1961–1963); Cleveland Pipers (1961–1962); Kansas City Steers (1961–63); Long Beach Chiefs (1961–1963), as Hawaii Chiefs in 1961–62; Los Angeles Jets (1961–62, disbanded during season); Oakland Oaks (1961–1963, as San Francisco Saints in 1961–1962; Philadelphia Tapers 1961–1963, as Washington Tapers in 1961–62; moved to New York during 1961–62 season; as New York Tapers in 1961–62 and the Pittsburgh Rens (1961–1963).

On March 27, 1961, the Pipers announced that they would be joining the American Basketball League that would begin play that fall, with former Ohio State basketball star Jimmy Hull, a friend of Steinbrenner's joining the team two days later as a major stockholder in the franchise.

The Pipers had played their previous two years at the Cleveland Arena, but sought a new home to reduce the $750 per game cost to rent the facility. They signed an agreement with the city of Cleveland to play 27 games at Public Hall at $400 per game or 15 percent of the gross receipts. However, in early August 1961, Cleveland mayor Anthony Celebrezze asked to renegotiate the deal, asking for the same $750 per game that the Pipers had paid at the Arena. Steinbrenner refused and threatened to move the team to Columbus.

On September 14, Ben Flieger of the Cleveland Press was named the team's new general manager. He replaced Cleary, who had left the position for the rival Kansas City Steers.

The Barnett Affair

{{unreferenced section|date=January 2019}}

Prior to the start of the facility controversy continued, McClendon signed his former Tennessee State star, Dick Barnett, on August 16 to a one-year contract for $13,000. Barnett had completed his second year with the NBA's Syracuse Nationals and had been offered a new contract worth $11,500 for the season, but his signing led to another legal dispute. On September 25, the same day that the Pipers began their preseason training camp, the Nationals announced plans to file a temporary restraining order to prevent Barnett from playing for the Pipers.

Syracuse cited the fact that the contract gave the team the legal option to maintain Barnett's rights, while Cleveland's legal team focused on the case of another ABL player, Kenny Sears. He had played for the Los Angeles Lakers of the NBA, but then signed a deal to play for the ABL's San Francisco Saints. The Nationals obtained that temporary restraining order on October 23, less than two weeks before the start of the regular season.

The situation remained unresolved for the next two months, with Barnett unable to either play or practice with the Pipers. Eventually, the Nationals won a permanent injunction, but agreed to release Barnett from their deal after a handshake agreement between Steinbrenner and Syracuse general manager Dick Biasone.

Jerry Lucas

After a strong recruiting pitch that lasted for more than a month, Steinbrenner officially signed Ohio State University All-American Jerry Lucas to a player-management contract on May 16, 1962. Lucas announced the signing in a bylined article in Sports Illustrated. His two-year deal was to pay him a yearly salary of $10,000 with another $40,000 part of an investment portfolio.Steinbrenner: The Last Lion of Baseball, p.42, Bill Madden, Harper Collins Publishing, New York, 2010, {{ISBN|978-0-06-169031-0}}

At the time of the signing, Lucas indicated that while the Pipers' offer amounted to less than the three-year deal worth $100,000 that was offered by the NBA's Cincinnati Royals, it addressed his interest in finishing work on his degree at Ohio State and his intent to attend graduate school. In addition, a portion of the investments had indicated that they would be willing to hire him once his basketball career had ended.

According to Bill Madden's Steinbrenner: The Last Lion of Baseball, Steinbrenner made plans in 1963 to acquire the Kansas City Steers, from the recently failed ABL, as part of an application to bring the Cleveland Pipers into the NBA, and a schedule had, supposedly, been printed for the 1963-64 NBA season with the Pipers playing the New York Knicks in the first game. Steinbrenner and partner George McKean fell behind in payments to the NBA and the deal was cancelled.

NBA petition

After Steinbrenner unsuccessfully petitioned to get the National Basketball Association to accept his team the following year, the Pipers disbanded. After the ABL folded, Steinbrenner had $125,000 in debts and personal losses of $2 million.Steinbrenner: The Last Lion of Baseball, p.43, Bill Madden, Harper Collins Publishing, New York, 2010, {{ISBN|978-0-06-169031-0}}

Notable alumni

=Basketball Hall of Famers=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
colspan="5" style="background:#CC0033; color:white;"|Cleveland Pipers Hall of Famers
colspan="5" style="text-align:center; background:#000099; color:#FFFFFF;"|Players
No. || Name || Position || Tenure || Inducted
5/12Dick BarnettSG1961–19622024
colspan="5" style="text-align:center; background:#000099; color:#FFFFFF;"|Coaches
colspan=2|Name || Position || Tenure || Inducted
colspan=2|Bill SharmanHead coach19622004
colspan=2|John McLendonHead coach1959–19622007

Year-by-year

class="wikitable"

!Year

!League

!Reg. Season

!Playoffs

1961/62

|ABL

|bgcolor="B3B7FF"|1st, Eastern

|bgcolor="FFEBAD"|Champion

Game log

FIRST HALF

=November=

Record: 10-5; Home: 5-1; Road: 4-4; Neutral: 1-1

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! style="background:#dddddd;" | #

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Date

! style="background:#dddddd;" | H/A/N

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Opponent

! style="background:#dddddd;" | W/L

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Score

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Record

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Attendance

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Site

align="center" bgcolor=""

| 1

November 5APittsburgh RensL82-870-16,236Civic Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 2

November 6AKansas City SteersW110-1061-13,107Municipal Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 3

November 8AKansas City SteersL100-1011-21,035Municipal Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 4

November 9ASan Francisco SaintsW103-1002-26,744Cow Palace
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 5

November 10ASan Francisco SaintsW97-883-27,192Cow Palace
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 6

November 13ALos Angeles JetsL99-1083-33,176Olympic Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 7

November 14ALos Angeles JetsL90-1063-42,630Olympic Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 8

November 17APittsburgh RensW111-944-43,437Civic Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 9

November 18Nvs. Pittsburgh RensW88-875-41,775Washington Coliseum
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 10

November 21HHawaii ChiefsW91-746-43,318Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 11

November 22HHawaii ChiefsW97-967-43,569Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 12

November 25HPittsburgh RensL91-977-52,843Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 13

November 26HPittsburgh RensW137-948-57,000 (EST)Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 14

November 28HKansas City SteersW99-979-52,215Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 15

November 30HKansas City SteersW109-10210-51,200 (EST)Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

=December=

Record: 9-12; Home: 5-4; Road: 3-5; Neutral: 1-3

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! style="background:#dddddd;" | #

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Date

! style="background:#dddddd;" | H/A/N

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Opponent

! style="background:#dddddd;" | W/L

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Score

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Record

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Attendance

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Site

align="center" bgcolor=""

| 16

December 1Hvs. Los Angeles JetsW113-9211-52,201Columbus Fairgrounds Coliseum
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 17

December 2HLos Angeles JetsL109-11611-63,254Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 18

December 5Nvs. Chicago MajorsL97-11011-72,300 (EST)Milwaukee Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 19

December 6AChicago MajorsL93-10111-82.678Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 20

December 7Nvs. Chicago MajorsW107-8812-82,432Civic Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 21

December 9HPittsburgh RensL113-13412-9300 (EST)Baldwin Wallace College
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 22

December 10APittsburgh RensW107-10213-96,213Civic Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 23

December 13HChicago MajorsW117-9514-92,500 (EST)Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 24

December 14Nvs. Kansas City SteersL104-11214-103,692Civic Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 25

December 15AWashington TapersL100-10814-11Washington Coliseum
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 26

December 16AWashington TapersW99-8415-115,745Washington Coliseum
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 27

December 17Nvs. Washington TapersL88-9015-126,293Civic Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 28

December 19AChicago MajorsW99-9416-12900 (EST)at Rockford, IL (Boyland Central Catholic High School)
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 29

December 20AChicago MajorsL94-9816-131,872Chicago Stadium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 30

December 21HChicago MajorsL112-11316-143,453Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 31

December 23HPittsburgh RensW132-11717-143,218Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 32

December 25HPittsburgh RensL106-10817-152,315Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 33

December 26AWashington TapersL108-10917-161,110Washington Coliseum
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 34

December 28AWashington TapersL106-12317-171,197Washington Coliseum
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 35

December 29HWashington TapersW124-9818-173,518Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 36

December 30HWashington TapersW118-10419-177,218Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

=January=

Record: 7-8; Home: 4-2; Road: 2-5; Neutral: 1-1

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! style="background:#dddddd;" | #

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Date

! style="background:#dddddd;" | H/A/N

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Opponent

! style="background:#dddddd;" | W/L

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Score

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Record

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Attendance

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Site

align="center" bgcolor=""

| 37

January 1NChicago MajorsW117-9920-171,600 (EST)University of Akron Memorial Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 38

January 3HChicago MajorsW114-10421-172,338Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 39

January 6HSan Francisco SaintsL93-10321-184,220Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 40

January 7HSan Francisco SaintsW140-10722-18Columbus Fairgrounds Coliseum
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 41

January 9HNew York TapersW141-12423-182,114Admiral King High School
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 42

January 10Nvs. Kansas City SteersW115-110 (OT)24-182,223Chicago Stadium
align="center" bgcolor=""

ABL FIRST HALF PLAYOFFS

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Date

! style="background:#dddddd;" | H/A/N

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Opponent

! style="background:#dddddd;" | W/L

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Score

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Attendance

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Site

align="center" bgcolor=""

| January 12

AKansas City SteersL93-1065,286Municipal Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| January 13

HKansas City SteersW98-874,276Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| January 14

AKansas City SteersL120-1042,313Municipal Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

SECOND HALF

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! style="background:#dddddd;" | #

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Date

! style="background:#dddddd;" | H/A/N

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Opponent

! style="background:#dddddd;" | W/L

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Score

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Record

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Attendance

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Site

align="center" bgcolor=""

| 43

January 15APittsburgh RensW110-1081-03,482Civic Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 44

January 16Nvs. Kansas City SteersL110-1181-11,600 (EST)Long Island Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 45

January 17HPittsburgh RensL97-1071-22,143Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 46

January 20AKansas City SteersL114-1151-33,018Municipal Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 47

January 21AKansas City SteersL120-1321-42,296Municipal Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 48

January 23AHawaii ChiefsL100-1061-52,819Civic Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 49

January 25AHawaii ChiefsW114-1132-51,940Bloch Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 50

January 26AHawaii ChiefsL114-1212-63,339Civic Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 51

January 27AHawaii ChiefsL94-1062-73,531Civic Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

=February=

Record: 9-6; Home: 5-3; Road: 1-3; Neutral: 3-0

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! style="background:#dddddd;" | #

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Date

! style="background:#dddddd;" | H/A/N

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Opponent

! style="background:#dddddd;" | W/L

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Score

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Record

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Attendance

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Site

align="center" bgcolor=""

| 52

February 3HChicago MajorsW120-1143-72,338Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 53

February 4HNew York TapersL109-1123-81,523Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 54

February 6HSan Francisco SaintsL123-1263-91,750Sandusky High School
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 55

February 7HSan Francisco SaintsW144-1154-91,738Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 56

February 8Nvs. San Francisco SaintsW129-1185-93,917Civic Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 57

February 10HPittsburgh RensW125-1146-91,911Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 58

February 11APittsburgh RensW105-1037-93,875Civic Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 59

February 12HHawaii ChiefsL136-137 (2 OT)7-106,090Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 60

February 14Nvs. Hawaii ChiefsW115-1038-101,240New Castle High School
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 61

February 15Nvs. Hawaii ChiefsW112-1089-103,784Civic Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 62

February 17AChicago MajorsL106-1159-113,115Chicago Stadium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 63

February 23HNew York TapersW138-12110-113,417Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 64

February 25HKansas City SteersW111-10911-112,048Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 65

February 27ANew York TapersL90-10111-122,369Long Island Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 66

February 28ANew York TapersL86-10211-131,353Long Island Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

=March=

Record: 10-5; Home: 8-0; Road: 1-4; Neutral: 1-1

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! style="background:#dddddd;" | #

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Date

! style="background:#dddddd;" | H/A/N

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Opponent

! style="background:#dddddd;" | W/L

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Score

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Record

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Attendance

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Site

align="center" bgcolor=""

| 67

March 3AChicago MajorsL111-11511-14Chicago Stadium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 68

March 5HKansas City SteersW104-9212-141,396Canton Memorial Civic Center
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 69

March 7ASan Francisco SaintsL101-10312-151,142Civic Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 70

March 8ASan Francisco SaintsW100-9813-15853Civic Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 71

March 9ASan Francisco SaintsL104-106 (OT)13-161,140Civic Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 72

March 13HChicago MajorsW110-10114-161,300 (EST)Ashtabula High School
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 73

March 14HChicago MajorsW124-12215-162,310Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 74

March 15HKansas City SteersW116-10116-161,519Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 75

March 17HHawaii ChiefsW107-10017-16Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 76

March 18HChicago MajorsW111-10218-163,215Public Hall
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 77

March 21HPittsburgh RensW124-10219-162,338Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 78

March 22Nvs. New York TapersL98-10019-173,943Civic Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 79

March 23APittsburgh RensL124-13519-185,153Civic Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 80

March 24HPittsburgh RensW136-12620-18975 (EST)Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| 81

March 25Nvs. Pittsburgh RensW114-10621-183,441War Memorial
align="center" bgcolor=""

ABL QUARTERFINALS

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Date

! style="background:#dddddd;" | H/A/N

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Opponent

! style="background:#dddddd;" | W/L

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Score

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Attendance

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Site

align="center" bgcolor=""

| March 30

HSan Francisco SaintsW124-1021,500 (EST)Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| March 31

Nvs. New York TapersW98-100300Municipal Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

ABL FINALS

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Date

! style="background:#dddddd;" | H/A/N

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Opponent

! style="background:#dddddd;" | W/L

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Score

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Attendance

! style="background:#dddddd;" | Site

align="center" bgcolor=""

| April 1

AKansas City SteersL101-1263,246Municipal Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| April 3

AKansas City SteersL118-824,101Municipal Auditorium
align="center" bgcolor=""

| April 4

HKansas City SteersW130-1147,624Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| April 7

HKansas City SteersW100-984,115Cleveland Arena
align="center" bgcolor=""

| April 9

AKansas City SteersW106-1023,000 (EST)Rockhurst College
align="center" bgcolor="" align="center" bgcolor=""

References

{{Reflist}}