About The Book:
(This unique journey takes a historic trek back to a rarely if ever visited (one will be mentioned) origin of the style of the street roots originating from the inner city parks and recreation centers and had just like baseball and the negro leagues, black barnstorming leagues of the 1920’s and 30’s that almost simultaniously infused life into both the NCAA and the NBA in that historic year of 1966 in one defining game being played on the floor in college and a newly defining professional league being born in a corporate board room both in many ways were affected by this birth of a new vision for what those who shoulders they stand on once dreamed would come to pass..before the NBA and ABA…to play there own way… its there DNA…we see today)
“The ABA DNA” is a definitive exploration of the American Basketball Association and its lasting influence on the modern game. Set against the social and cultural upheaval of the late 1960s and 1970s, this book examines how a short-lived league reshaped basketball through innovation, personality, and fearless competition. Its impact was immediate. In the first NBA season following the merger, ten of the twenty-four players selected for the NBA All-Star Game, forty-two percent of the roster, were former ABA players, a clear signal that ABA DNA had already been injected into the heart of the NBA.
From the introduction of the three-point line and the slam dunk contest to pregame and halftime entertainment, the ABA challenged established norms and redefined what professional basketball could be. Legendary teams such as the Indiana Pacers, the New York Nets, the Denver Nuggets, and the San Antonio Spurs showcased talent, risk, and creativity that left a permanent mark on the sport. Packed gyms and half-empty arenas alike came alive with a faster, more expressive style of play, capturing the raw energy of a league driven by ambition rather than polish.
