Paul Arizin wrested the league scoring title from George Mikan. |
Meanwhile, for the first time in several years, all 10 NBA teams played 66 games, and all 10 teams that started the season finished it. The NBA was mining the best college talent, with Mikan, Arizin, Ed Macauley, and Bob Cousy all making the All-NBA First Team, with the fifth spot shared by Bob Davies and Dolph Schayes. For the second straight season New York overcame a third-place finish to reach the Finals, while Minneapolis reasserted itself by defeating Rochester in the West. Another seven-game NBA Finals resulted, and the Lakers put the home-court advantage to good use, winning Game 7 easily, 82-65.
MIKAN USES NEW LANE TO HIS ADVANTAGE
Mikan had healed from an ankle that had been fractured the year before, only to find a new challenge: the 12-foot lane, designed to keep the big man from setting up close to the basket. Rather than let it bother him, he used it to his advantage.
"Actually, it opened up the lane and made it more difficult for them to defense me," Mikan said. "Opposing teams couldn't deter our cutters going through the lane. It moved me out and gave me more shot selection instead of just short pivots and hooks. I was able to dribble across the lane and use a lot more freedom setting my shot up."


