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The Coin Toss That Changed Basketball History

by Len Werle
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In the world of sports, few moments are as serendipitous as the coin toss that led Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, then known as Lew Alcindor, to join the Milwaukee Bucks. It was a twist of fate that would not only shape the career of one of the greatest basketball players of all time but also the destiny of the Bucks franchise.

In 1969, the NBA was on the brink of a transformative event. Two teams, the Milwaukee Bucks and the Phoenix Suns, were neck and neck for the first pick in the upcoming draft. At stake was the chance to select Abdul-Jabbar, a towering figure from UCLA who had already made waves with his extraordinary talent and three consecutive national championships.

On March 19, 1969, exactly 55 years ago today, the decision came down to a coin flip—a 50/50 chance that would echo through the annals of basketball history. The Suns called heads, but the coin landed on tails, and the rest, as they say, is history. The Bucks won the toss and, with it, the right to draft Abdul-Jabbar.

Abdul-Jabbar’s impact was immediate and profound. In his rookie season, he led the Bucks to second place in their division, a stark contrast to their last-place finish the previous year. His presence boosted attendance, with gate receipts more than doubling and the Bucks’ stock price soaring. Within just three years, Abdul-Jabbar propelled the team to its first NBA title.

But the story of the coin flip doesn’t end with Abdul-Jabbar’s success on the court. It’s a tale of what-ifs and might-have-beens. What if the coin had landed differently? Would the Suns have risen to glory? Would the Bucks have found another path to success?

Abdul-Jabbar’s journey with the Bucks is a reminder of the razor-thin margins that can define careers and franchises. For the Bucks, that coin flip was the moment their fortunes turned, all thanks to the gravity-defying flip of a silver dollar.

 

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