The 1973–74 Serie Abasketball championship was the 51st season of the Serie A, the highest professional basketball league in Italy.
The regular season ran from 4 November 1973 to 5 May 1974, with fourteen teams playing 26 games each. Defending champions Ignis Varese won the title anew (their second in succession and seventh overall) and qualified for the European Champions Cup.
Preseason
One of the major preseason transfers did not concern a player but rather a coach, as Ignis Varese replaced the successful Aca Nikolić with Sandro Gamba, formerly assistant coach at fierce rivals Simmenthal Milano.[1]
Despite the league holders losing former captain Ottorino Flaborea,[1]
their team was just as strong as they still possessed American sharpshooter Bob Morse as their foreign import and Italian giant Dino Meneghin (generally seen as the best domestic player).[2]
Their rivals from Milan also saw a major off-court change with the departure of long-time sponsor Simmenthal who were replaced by car-maker Innocenti, with a subsequent uniform change from red to blue.[3]
Regardless of the overhaul, Innocenti Milano kept their coach Cesare Rubini and most of their major Italian players such as Giulio Iellini, Renzo Bariviera, Giuseppe Brumatti and Massimo Masini.[2]
However, they had replaced fiery American Art Kenney and Italian international Giorgio Giomo (respectively by unproven compatriot George Brosterhous and promising Vittorio Ferracini).[3]
Coming off a season where they had won absolutely everything (the domestic league and cup, European cup and Intercontinental cup) Ignis were obvious favourites to retain their title.
Their challengers were also obvious; Innocenti Milano, who had lost no ambition with the sponsor change and Forst Cantù.
The ambitious Cantù counted on American center Bob Lienhard and young dynamic Italians in the vein of Pierluigi Marzorati and Carlo Recalcati to upset the more established duo,[2][4] and could afford to sell the promising Luciano Vendemini to promoted Brina Rieti for a then record 100 million lire.[5]
The other eleven teams in the league were seen as mostly evenly matched, with little hope of bothering the leading trio, though some, for example the rechristened Sinudyne Bologna coached by the brilliant Dan Peterson, hoped to.[4]
Due to league regulations mandating clubs to play in arenas holding at least 3,500 spectators, four clubs relocated for the season, with Forst Cantù, Canon Venezia, Saclà Asti and Brina Rieti respectively moving to arenas in Brescia, Vicenza, Turin and Rome.[4]
Regular season
The first meeting between the undefeated top three sides took place in the sixth round as a red hot Forst Cantù hosted a stop-start Ignis Varese.
Form proved key as Marzorati's 31 points and good playmaking helped Cantù comfortably overcome Varese 84-75 as the visitors offered little support to star Bob Morse's 35 points.
The winners were joined with a perfect record at first place by Innocenti Milano.[6]
Ignis and Innocenti met on 6 January 1974, with the latter then topping the league (Forst had lost in between).
However it was the former that would prevail, toppling Innocenti 78-67 after dominating them in both offense and defence (with 42 rebounds to 29 for example).
Though Morse (25 points) and Meneghin (23 points and 20 rebounds) stood out for the winners, it was a clinical team performance that overcame their rivals, who offered little resistance as shown by Brosterhous's poor showing (8 points).
With this win, Ignis joined Innocenti and Forst as co-leaders.[7]
The status quo didn't last long as Cantù were left behind after the Milanese beat them 80-75 later that month in the twelfth round as star player Marzorati was hampered by an ankle injury.[8]
On 17 February, Innocenti themselves were evicted from first place by a surprise 69-70 defeat to modest Brill Cagliari which left Ignis alone on top.
With an injured Brumatti missing for Innocenti, Mauro Cerioni's 26 points were not enough as Brosterhous disappointed with 10 points compared to 20 for Brill's American John Sutter.[9]
Once again the match-up between Ignis and Innocenti, this time in Milan, had aspects of a league final, with the home team needing to win to join Ignis in first place.
The Milanese managed to do just that, downing Varese 67-65 in a close-knit tie.
Though the visitors led 46-37 at half-time in large part thanks to its star duo of Morse (25 points overall) and Meneghin, they had lost playmaker Aldo Ossola to a season ending knee injury earlier in the game and could not shake off their rivals.
Innocenti put in an assured collective performance, with notable performances from Bariviera and Ferracini, clawing at Ignis' lead until Cerioni scored a long range basket with seconds left to take the game.[10]
Despite this victory, Innocenti saw the first place slip away from them in the penultimate league round as they lost 76-68 away to a competitive Forst.
Though they missed Lienhard to injury, Cantù could count on the ever reliable Marzorati to answer Barivera's 24 points.
The result virtually handed Ignis the title with only one round left to play against uncompetitive opposition and a two-point lead over Innocenti and Forst in second place.[11]
This proved to be the case as Ignis Varese had a routine 94-74 win over Brill Cagliari to win the league outright and take home their seventh title.
A more undecided competition saw Bob Morse and Brill's John Sutter face each other to determine the league's top scorer, with the first scoring 45 points to Sutter's 28 to take the crown.[12]
Innocenti Milano finished second as Forst Cantù surprisingly lost their final match against Saclà Asti to settle for third place, far ahead of the rest of the league.
At the other end of the table, three teams on the same points would face each other in relegation playoffs to avoid joining the long since relegated Maxmobili Pesaro, namely Alco Bologna, Fag Napoli and Snaidero Udine.[12]
Source: unofficial statistics compiled by the Giganti del Basket magazine (official statistics started from the 1975–76 season).[13]
Postseason
Relegation playoffs
The relegation playoffs were played on 24–26 May 1974 in Genoa.
Alco Bologna lost their two games and were relegated to the newly created Serie A2, rendering Snaidero Udine's win over Fag Napoli in the final game anecdotal.[14][15]
Holders and league champions Ignis Varese (missing both Ossola and Meneghin to injury) were upset by relegation contender Snaidero Udine 82-81 in the semi-final with Snaidero's Italian internationals Claudio Malagoli and Giorgio Giomo proving decisive (33 and 22 points respectively).[16]
The final, played in Vicenza on 12 May 1974, saw Sinudyne Bologna down Snaidero 90-74 to claim the cup (and a spot in the European Cup Winners' Cup).
In an easy win, the Bolognese were led by American sharpshooter John Fultz as he scored 28 points in his last game for them, while Malagoli (16 points) could not repeat his heroics.
In the match for third place, Ignis beat the other semi-finalist Saclà Asti 80-73 to close out their season.[17]
^ abTavarozzi, Antonio (26 July 1973). "Un mercato per i giganti" [A transfer window for giants]. ArchivoLaStampa.it (in Italian). Retrieved 27 October 2017.
^ abcTavarozzi, Antonio (23 October 1973). "Arrivano i giganti" [The giants are coming]. ArchivoLaStampa.it (in Italian). Retrieved 27 October 2017.
^ abTavarozzi, Antonio (1 August 1973). "Cambia tutto per il Simmenthal" [Everything has changed for Simmenthal]. ArchivoLaStampa.it (in Italian). Retrieved 27 October 2017.
^Tavarozzi, Antonio (7 January 1974). "Ignis in vena, Innocenti k.o." [Ignis on form, Innocenti KO]. ArchivoLaStampa.it (in Italian). Retrieved 27 October 2017.
^Tavarozzi, Antonio (8 April 1974). "Innocenti". ArchivoLaStampa.it (in Italian). Retrieved 27 October 2017.
^Tavarozzi, Antonio (29 April 1974). "Ignis, scudetto quasi certo" [Ignis, a near certain title]. ArchivoLaStampa.it (in Italian). Retrieved 27 October 2017.
^ abTavarozzi, Antonio (6 May 1974). "Ignis facile, spareggio in coda" [Easy for Ignis, playoffs at the bottom]. ArchivoLaStampa.it (in Italian). Retrieved 27 October 2017.
^Tavarozzi, Antonio (13 May 1974). "Alla Synudine coppa e futuro" [To Synudine [goes] cup and future]. ArchivoLaStampa.it (in Italian). Retrieved 27 October 2017.