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410: The NBA's Waterloo Hawks - With Tim Harwood
Manage episode 503717981 series 1405087
Long before the National Basketball Association evolved into a global spectacle, it began as an awkwardly assembled mashup featuring a hefty dollop of relatively small-market teams in places like Sheboygan, Wisconsin; Anderson, Indiana and Moline, Illinois.
Among them were the Waterloo Hawks - the only team from Iowa ever to play in the NBA. Their story is synonymous with the fragile early days of pro hoops in the US - and it’s vividly brought back to life by this week's guest, Tim Harwood - author of the essential "Ball Hawks: The Arrival and Departure of the NBA in Iowa."
Tim and Tim retrace how the Hawks rose out of the old National Basketball League, a circuit of largely factory-backed and regional clubs scattered across the Rust Belt that provided much of the foundation for the modern professional game. In 1949, when the NBL merged with its big-city rival, the Basketball Association of America, the NBA was born - and Waterloo suddenly found itself playing against the decidedly more well-resourced likes of New York, Boston, and Chicago. The Hawks’ lone NBA season was gritty, dramatic, and short-lived, ending with the league contracting and shedding smaller markets that didn’t align with its "major-market" ambitions.
Harwood explains how Waterloo tried to keep its place in the game through the short-lived National Professional Basketball League, and why the Hawks’ disappearance after 1951 symbolized the end of the small-market era in pro basketball. What remains is a remarkable story of community pride, fleeting triumph, and the overlooked role towns like Waterloo played in shaping what the NBA would become.
PLUS: The legend of Waterloo's Murray "Wizard" Wier! + + + SUPPORT THE SHOW:- Buy Us a Coffee: https://ko-fi.com/goodseatsstillavailable
- The "Good Seats" Store: https://www.teepublic.com/?ref_id=35106
- Royal Retros (10% off promo code: SEATS): https://www.503-sports.com?aff=2
- Old School Shirts.com (10% off promo code: GOODSEATS): https://oldschoolshirts.com/goodseats
- Linktree: https://linktr.ee/GoodSeatsStillAvailable
- Web: https://goodseatsstillavailable.com/
- Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/goodseatsstillavailable.com
- X/Twitter: https://twitter.com/GoodSeatsStill
- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@goodseatsstillavailable
- Threads: https://www.threads.net/@goodseatsstillavailable
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/goodseatsstillavailable/
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GoodSeatsStillAvailable/
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/good-seats-still-available/
447 episodes
Manage episode 503717981 series 1405087
Long before the National Basketball Association evolved into a global spectacle, it began as an awkwardly assembled mashup featuring a hefty dollop of relatively small-market teams in places like Sheboygan, Wisconsin; Anderson, Indiana and Moline, Illinois.
Among them were the Waterloo Hawks - the only team from Iowa ever to play in the NBA. Their story is synonymous with the fragile early days of pro hoops in the US - and it’s vividly brought back to life by this week's guest, Tim Harwood - author of the essential "Ball Hawks: The Arrival and Departure of the NBA in Iowa."
Tim and Tim retrace how the Hawks rose out of the old National Basketball League, a circuit of largely factory-backed and regional clubs scattered across the Rust Belt that provided much of the foundation for the modern professional game. In 1949, when the NBL merged with its big-city rival, the Basketball Association of America, the NBA was born - and Waterloo suddenly found itself playing against the decidedly more well-resourced likes of New York, Boston, and Chicago. The Hawks’ lone NBA season was gritty, dramatic, and short-lived, ending with the league contracting and shedding smaller markets that didn’t align with its "major-market" ambitions.
Harwood explains how Waterloo tried to keep its place in the game through the short-lived National Professional Basketball League, and why the Hawks’ disappearance after 1951 symbolized the end of the small-market era in pro basketball. What remains is a remarkable story of community pride, fleeting triumph, and the overlooked role towns like Waterloo played in shaping what the NBA would become.
PLUS: The legend of Waterloo's Murray "Wizard" Wier! + + + SUPPORT THE SHOW:- Buy Us a Coffee: https://ko-fi.com/goodseatsstillavailable
- The "Good Seats" Store: https://www.teepublic.com/?ref_id=35106
- Royal Retros (10% off promo code: SEATS): https://www.503-sports.com?aff=2
- Old School Shirts.com (10% off promo code: GOODSEATS): https://oldschoolshirts.com/goodseats
- Linktree: https://linktr.ee/GoodSeatsStillAvailable
- Web: https://goodseatsstillavailable.com/
- Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/goodseatsstillavailable.com
- X/Twitter: https://twitter.com/GoodSeatsStill
- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@goodseatsstillavailable
- Threads: https://www.threads.net/@goodseatsstillavailable
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/goodseatsstillavailable/
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GoodSeatsStillAvailable/
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/good-seats-still-available/
447 episodes
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