The 1974–75 Golden State Warriors season was the 29th season in the franchise's history, its 13th in California and the fourth playing in Oakland. After four seasons of second-place division finishes, the Warriors made various changes. Nate Thurmond was traded to the Chicago Bulls for Clifford Ray, a young defensive center. The club drafted Keith Wilkes (later known as Jamaal Wilkes), whose nickname was "Silk". Cazzie Russell had played out his option and joined the Los Angeles Lakers, leaving Rick Barry as the team's leader. Coach Al Attles implemented a team-oriented system that drew on the contributions of as many as ten players during a game. Barry scored 30.6 points per game, led the NBA in free throw percentage and steals per game, and was sixth in the league in assists per game. The Warriors captured the Pacific Division title with a 48–34 record. This was the Warriors’ third championship, and first since they were in Philadelphia in 1956.

In the playoffs, the Warriors got to the Western Conference Finals by beating the Seattle SuperSonics in six games. In the Western Finals, the Warriors looked like they were about to lose to former teammate Nate Thurmond. The Warriors found themselves down against the Chicago Bulls 3 games to 2. The Warriors rallied to win Game 6 in Chicago and took the series with an 83–79 Game 7 triumph in Oakland. In the NBA Finals, the Warriors faced off against the Washington Bullets. The Warriors took the series in four straight games, including 1-point wins in Games 2 and 4. Rick Barry was named the series MVP.

The Warriors wouldn't make another NBA Finals appearance again until 2015, where the team faced off against the Cleveland Cavaliers and won its fourth league title. They would also go on to defeat the Cavaliers and Boston Celtics in 2017, 2018 and 2022, respectively.

Offseason

Draft picks

Roster

Regular season

Season standings

Record vs. opponents

Playoffs

Awards and honors

  • Rick Barry, NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award
  • Rick Barry, All-NBA First Team
  • Rick Barry, NBA All-Star Game
  • Jamaal Wilkes, NBA Rookie of the Year Award
  • Jamaal Wilkes, NBA All-Rookie Team 1st Team
  • Dick Vertlieb, NBA Executive of the Year Award

References

  • Warriors on Basketball Reference

Golden State Warriors 75th Anniversary Dyqani Sportiv

Season Review 197475

197475 WARRIORS

197475 Warriors like current team’s chances The Mercury News

Golden State Warriors 197475 Season Recap