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Akron Wingfoots

Akron Wingfoots
Leagues
  • Independent 1918–22
  • Amateur Athletic Union 1923–30
  • National Basketball League 1932–33
  • Midwest Basketball Conference 1936–37
  • NBL 1937–42
  • Suspended due to World War II 1942–46
  • NIBL 1946–61
  • National AAU Basketball League 1966–70
  • Independent 1973–80
  • AAU Elite: 1980–present
Founded 1918
Arena Akron Goodyear Hall (4.000)
Team colors White, Yellow, & Blue
              
Championships 1 National Basketball League Championships (1938)
3 Intercontinental Cup (1967, 1968, 1969)
1 MC (1936)
1 National Industrial League (1932)
2 AAU National Tournament (1964,1967)
3 National AAU Basketball League (1967, 1968, 1969)

The Akron Wingfoots are one of the oldest basketball teams in the United States. They were founded in 1918 by the workers at the Goodyear Tire Company in Akron, Ohio. The teams, while giving workers recreation, also helped to promote one of the first canvas/rubber based shoes made specifically for athletics, the wingfoot.

The Wingfoots joined the National Basketball League for the 1932-1933 season playing against strong teams like Indianapolis Kautskys and Akron Firestones (the latter were crowned champions). They moved to the Midwest Basketball Conference in 1936 (Chicago Duffy Florals were the reigning champions) facing teams such as Indianapolis Kautskys, Harlem Globetrotters, Sheboygan Red Skinshad and the New York Renaissance. They won the league title in 1937 defeating Fort Wayne in a best of three games series sweep.

In the late 1930s, Goodyear, Firestone, General Electric, and other companies with similar Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) Elite teams decided to form the National Basketball League (NBL) to showcase their teams (it was actually the MBC changed names to the NBL). The Wingfoots won the first NBL title in 1938. During the 1938–1939 season, the Akron Goodyear Wingfoots finished second in the National Basketball League's Eastern Division. The team finished behind the Akron Firestone Non-Skids, another team from Akron, each season. However, the Wingfoots did capture the league's first championship after an impressive playoff run. During the 1939–1940 season, the Wingfoots finished third in the Eastern Division, winning exactly fifty percent of the team's games. During the next season, the squad finished next to last in the National Basketball League. During the 1941–1942 season, the Akron Goodyear Wingfoots experienced a turnaround, finishing third in the National Basketball League. The team, however, lost in the first round of the playoffs. The team began the 1942–1943 season, but poor performance on the court and a declining number of men available to play due to World War II caused the Akron Goodyear Wingfoots to cease operation before the season's end.


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