What's in an NBA Nick-Name? Part IV, E-H - Part V, I-L
Team
Names in the NBA- How They Got
That Way
By
Harvey Frommer
(From
the Vault)
With
the NBA play-offs in full
swing, the names of teams are there for all to see and read and talk
about. How
they got that way is always a source of interest. What follows is just
a small
sampling of team nick-names and how and why they came to be.
The
Knicks and the Celtics are the only teams still playing in the National
Basketball Association in their original cities. The name
Knickerbockers dates
back to when New York was New Amsterdam, and the city's Dutch settlers
wore
trousers bunched up at the knee known as "knickers."
The
name Celtics was given to Boston in 1946 by Walter Brown, the founder
of the
franchise. "We'll call them the Boston Celtics," he said. "The
name has a great basketball tradition, especially when you think of the
original 'Celtics' team. Boston is full of Irishmen; so we'll put the
players
in green uniforms and call them the Boston Celtics after their Celtic
ancestors."
The
Atlanta Hawks were once the St. Louis Hawks, and before that they were
the
Milwaukee Hawks. Even before that in 1948, they were the Tri-Cities
Blackhawks.
The three cities referred to Moline, Illinois; Rock Island, Illinois;
and
Davenport, Iowa. Way back in 1831, the Blackhawk War was fought in that
tri-cities area, and that's how the original Blackhawk's nickname,
later
shortened to Hawks, came to be.
The
Rochester Royals played in the
NBA for nine seasons and then transferred to Cincinnati. The name
Royals was
kept. In 1972, the franchise moved to Kansas City, Missouri, and the
name was
dropped to avoid confusion in the Kansas City area as the Kansas City
and the
Omaha baseball teams both used the name Royals. The new name for the
NBA basketball
franchise became the Kansas City-Omaha Kings and, in 1975, simply the
Kansas
City Kings. A decade later, when the team moved to California, they
became the
Sacramento Kings.
Not
many people realize that the Denver Nuggets were charter members of the
NBA.
But that team only lasted one season. When the Denver Rockets of the
American
Basketball Association came into the NBA, they had to change their name
because
the Houston Rockets already existed. So the Denver franchise took the
"Nuggets" name of the original franchise, which
was appropriate for an area with a history of gold and silver mining of
nuggets.
Charlotte,
Miami, Minnesota and
Orlando all have interesting "name" stories. Originally, the
Charlotte team was named the Spirit, but that didn't go over too well.
It was
soon dropped, and a contest was launched among fans to come up with a
new name.
Runner-up names included: the Charlotte Gold, the Charlotte Knights,
and
incredibly the original name - the Charlotte Spirit. As every NBA fan
knows,
the winning name was the Charlotte Hornets.
Miami
also held a name-the-team contest and received more than 5,000 entries.
Some of
the names that didn't make it included such choices as Palm Trees,
Beaches,
Suntan, and Shade. Heat beat them all out. As one clever official
explained,
"When you think of Miami, heat is what comes to mind."
Over
6,000 entries were part of the quest for the Minnesota team name. The
choice
came down to Timberwolves vs. Polars. Timberwolves easily won. That
animal is
native to Minnesota, and no other professional sports team ever thought
to use
the name.
The
Orlando Sentinel sponsored a
name-the-team contest in that Florida city. As with Minnesota, the
competition
came down to two names: Magic and Juice. Orlando general manager Pat
Williams
explained why Magic won out: "Magic is synonymous with the Orlando
area.
We have the Magic Kingdom in Disneyworld, and the tourism slogan here
is 'Come
to the Magic.'"
What’s
in an NBA name? Quite a lot!