1975 ABA draft
The 1975 ABA draft was the ninth and final draft done by the American Basketball Association, a rivaling professional basketball league to the National Basketball Association that they would later merge with as a part of the NBA following the conclusion of the 1975–76 ABA season. This draft period would ultimately be the draft period where the lack of a proper national TV market to compete against the NBA would finally catch up to the ABA due to a significant number of its teams facing financial struggles and burdens entering this draft period. It also marked the only true time where the ABA draft would truly start after the NBA draft did, which combined with an even lower amount of rounds and draft picks available from the ABA's end marked early signs that the ABA were about to meet its own end, one way or another. That being said, the ABA would still find a scant few successes from this draft day before their final season concluded and the ABA ended up merging with the NBA with only four total teams still being active to this day, with two other teams that survived up until the merger ultimately not making it to the NBA in the end. This draft also marked the only draft that the Denver Nuggets would participate in while still in the ABA under that name, as well as the only draft that both the Memphis Sounds and Spirits of St. Louis would be involved in altogether under those names before things started to fall apart for the ABA in their final season of play.
Draftee career notes
Due to this year's draft being the final draft in ABA history before the ABA-NBA merger happened, it can be said that there's not too many notable draftees at hand this time around by comparison. However, there are still some notable aspects about this year's draft from the ABA that still stand out as a whole, such as excluding the Bonus pick of Marvin Webster by the Denver Nuggets,the technical #1 pick of the ABA draft was former technical #102 1973 undergraduate draft pick David Thompson by the Virginia Squires, who chose to play for the Nuggets alongside Webster over the Atlanta Hawks, with Thompson not only being the only draft pick from this year to be a part of the ABA All-Time Team through being the final ABA All-Star Game's MVP via the 1976 ABA All-Star Game as a member of the Denver Nuggets, but also won the final ABA Rookie of the Year Award and being a member of the All-ABA Second Team in his only ABA season before later being a two time All-NBA First Team member and four time NBA All-Star in order to not only have his #33 retired by the Nuggets, but also be inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. In addition to Thompson, he was joined by #8 pick Mark Olberding and #32 pick Luther Burden, as well as #36 pick of the 1974 ABA draft Kim Hughes and #29 pick of the 1973 ABA Senior Draft M. L. Carr as the last members of the All-ABA Rookie Team that was ever created. In addition to Thompson, #30 pick Monte Towe was the only other player drafted in this year's draft to be named an ABA All-Star, meaning this year's draft only produced two total ABA All-Stars for the 1976 ABA All-Star Game out of 92 overall ABA All-Stars. In addition to David Thompson, the only other player selected in this draft to have also made it to the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame was #48 pick Robert Parish, who would make it there due to his part with what was considered a "Big Three" and then a "Big Four" era for the Boston Celtics during the 1980s, as well as another championship while with the Chicago Bulls under Michael Jordan's own "Big Three" of sorts during Parish's final year of play in 1997, which would make him the oldest ABA associated player by that point in time. Finally, the player that can be considered the last pick of the entire ABA's history was Lou Silver from Harvard University by the defending champion Kentucky Colonels; while he would never play for either the ABA or the NBA, he would have significant success with the Maccabi Tel Aviv out in Israel by winning Israeli League championships in every single season of play for them there alongside eight Israeli Cup championships, two EuroLeague championships, and a FIBA Intercontinental Cup championship alongside a FIBA European Selection in 1981 and a silver medal for EuroBasket in 1979.Historic draft notes
This draft saw the ABA cut down the number of rounds from ten in the previous year's draft to only eight in this year's draft, excluding the bonus round draft selections given out to both the Denver Nuggets and the Spirits of St. Louis for different reasons relating to players at hand. The Nuggets were given a bonus selection alongside the picks they already got due to the Spirits of St. Louis signing Marvin Barnes away from them on July 14, 1974 back when they were still going by the Denver Rockets, while the Spirits were granted a bonus draft pick due to Billy Cunningham leaving the franchise back when they were still going under the Carolina Cougars name for the Philadelphia 76ers in the rivaling NBA due to legal court jargon, though the Spirits ultimately skipped out on using their pick by comparison to the Nuggets. This draft period's aftermath would be the breaking point of the ABA, with the league truly starting to feel the struggles of regularly competing against the NBA without having a proper national TV contract to help generate more money for it. Following the conclusion of this draft day, the Memphis Sounds would move up to Baltimore, Maryland to initially play as the Baltimore Hustlers before controversy with that team name forced them to rename the team into the Baltimore Claws instead, while the San Diego Conquistadors would rebrand themselves as the San Diego Sails entering what would become the ABA's final season. Not only that, but it was reported that both the Denver Nuggets and New York Nets were trying to sneak themselves into the NBA directly ahead of the eventual NBA–ABA merger as teams that would join in early before court orders forced them both to stay put for one last, final ABA season that, funnily enough, ultimately led to the Nets winning the final ABA championship over the Nuggets. However, the real endgame for the ABA would come during its final season of play, with the league seeing the likes of the Baltimore Claws, San Diego Sails, Utah Stars, and Virginia Squires all fold at various points throughout the season, thus leaving the ABA with only six teams left by the end of their final season and entering the ABA-NBA merger without anything else to do on their ends besides negotiating with the NBA itself by 1976, not even being allowed to participate in the 1976 NBA draft.Key
| Symbol | Meaning | Symbol | Meaning |
| ^ | Denotes player who has been inducted to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame | ‡ | Denotes player that was selected to the ABA All-Time Team |
| * | Denotes player who has been selected for at least one All-Star Game and All-ABA Team | + | Denotes player who has been selected for at least one All-Star Game |
| ~ | Denotes a player that won the ABA Rookie of the Year Award | # | Denotes player who has never appeared in either an ABA or NBA regular season or playoff game |
Draft
Notable undrafted players
These players were officially considered draft eligible for the 1975 ABA draft and went undrafted this year, yet played at least one regular season or playoff game for the ABA before the ABA-NBA merger commenced a year later.| Player | Pos. | Nationality | School |
| PG | Akron | ||
| C | United Statessortname|Skip|Wise1975 ABA dispersal draftsOn October 20, 1975, four days after being given an ultimatum by the ABA regarding survival and less than a week before starting what ultimately became the ABA's final regular season, the Baltimore Claws were forcibly closed by the ABA itself due to the team not having enough money for their ultimatum after poor preseason performances against the Virginia Squires and the NBA's Philadelphia 76ers. The ABA would create an impromptu dispersal draft involving the Claws' players that remained on the roster the following day afterward, with the now nine remaining ABA teams looking over and potentially choosing who to take for their own rosters. Not every team would choose a player from the Claws, however, as three of the ABA's teams declined entry in this dispersal draft altogether in the Kentucky Colonels, New York Nets, and San Antonio Spurs. In fact, one Claws player in George Carter would join his new ABA team in the Utah Stars only after the ABA dispersal draft involving the Claws ended, while another player named Skip Wise was skipped out on altogether due to questions involving his no-trade clause by other teams and a third player in ABA All-Time Team star player Mel Daniels was passed up on entirely due to his exorbitant contract he had with the now-defunct franchise being something that had to be picked up by other ABA teams, which led to him skipping out on the ABA entirely that season for playing in Italy instead. Not only that, this dispersal draft would also technically mark the only draft that the San Diego Sails would draft anybody at all under the short time they did anything under that new name of theirs. Still, the following Claws players would end up being selected in the first dispersal draft of the year.;Denver Nuggets
;Indiana Pacers
The third and final team to fold operations during the 1975 year was the Utah Stars, who had completed 16 games for an official 4–12 record before folding operations and essentially ending divisions altogether for the rest of the ABA's existence on December 2, 1975 due to the team's owner going broke by this time following a failed bid for the Governor of Colorado. Initially, the owners of the Spirits of St. Louis franchise actually wanted to do a merger with the Utah Stars to help save both of their franchises at the same time, but ultimately reneged on the merger literally the day before the Stars folded operations entirely. Unlike the other two teams that folded during the 1975 year, however, the ABA did not really hold a dispersal draft for the now-former Stars players involving the now seven remaining ABA teams left over. Instead, remembering that the Spirits of St. Louis franchise had discussed the idea of merging with the Utah Stars prior to the team folding operations, the ABA allowed the Spirits to acquire four of their best players in future Hall of Famer Moses Malone, future ABA All-Time Team member Ron Boone, Randy Denton, and Steve Green instead in hopes of helping their franchise out for the rest of the season, as well as giving former Stars team owner Bill Daniels a 10% minority stake interest in the Spirits of St. Louis franchise. Incidentally, another franchise that looked for help to survive during the season, the Virginia Squires, also bought one of the former Stars players that was available during that time in Jim Eakins in the hopes of somehow surviving the rest of the season themselves, which they did to the extent of completing the regular season, but not making it to the NBA–ABA merger meetings properly due to failing to make it with enough of a payment plan to at least survive until the team entered the merger period altogether. As a result, none of the Squires' players from that final season would be utilized in a dispersal draft either by the ABA or the NBA in 1976, though most of the Squires' players that season would end up playing in the NBA following this period of time anyway. |
United Statessortname|Skip|Wise