Search Results
6/28/2025, 6:03:55 AM
>>149459738
>Bob Netolicky was a fan favorite during his playing days, well known for his advocacy of mod lifestyle and his exotic pets (including a lion and an ocelot). One sportswriter called him the "Broadway Joe Namath of the ABA", since he had become a veritable sex symbol to many of Indiana's female fans.
>the San Antonio Spurs played the Indiana Pacers in a November match up. The Spurs lost the game 84–83
>the Spurs protested the loss, something to do with a malfunction in the clock or an official missing a violation committed by the Pacers.
>The game’s result was protested and the Pacers’ last-second basket to win the game was removed, and the game was scheduled to continue before December 2, 1973
>Spurs player Netolicky was bought (not traded, “bought”) by the Pacers for cash considerations & a draft pick. Then Pacers coach Bob Leonard was allowed to use Netolicky in the replay of the game. Netolicky did in fact, suit up for the Pacers, and played the final 30 seconds of regulation against his former team in the exact same game. He made a vital intercept at the last minute, stopping San Antonio’s chances of winning the game
>Netolicky was the starting center in the first game of the Pacers in franchise history (1967) and the first starting center in the first game of the San Antonio Spurs (1973).
the 70s were wild, bruh.
>Bob Netolicky was a fan favorite during his playing days, well known for his advocacy of mod lifestyle and his exotic pets (including a lion and an ocelot). One sportswriter called him the "Broadway Joe Namath of the ABA", since he had become a veritable sex symbol to many of Indiana's female fans.
>the San Antonio Spurs played the Indiana Pacers in a November match up. The Spurs lost the game 84–83
>the Spurs protested the loss, something to do with a malfunction in the clock or an official missing a violation committed by the Pacers.
>The game’s result was protested and the Pacers’ last-second basket to win the game was removed, and the game was scheduled to continue before December 2, 1973
>Spurs player Netolicky was bought (not traded, “bought”) by the Pacers for cash considerations & a draft pick. Then Pacers coach Bob Leonard was allowed to use Netolicky in the replay of the game. Netolicky did in fact, suit up for the Pacers, and played the final 30 seconds of regulation against his former team in the exact same game. He made a vital intercept at the last minute, stopping San Antonio’s chances of winning the game
>Netolicky was the starting center in the first game of the Pacers in franchise history (1967) and the first starting center in the first game of the San Antonio Spurs (1973).
the 70s were wild, bruh.
Page 1