1979–80 Los Angeles Lakers season

The 1979-80 NBA season was the Lakers' 32nd season in the NBA and the 20th season in Los Angeles. It featured a 20-year old rookie Magic Johnson leading the Lakers to their seventh NBA Championship (second in Los Angeles), defeating the Philadelphia 76ers led by Julius Erving in six games in the NBA Finals, which was the first NBA Finals with a three-point line. This was also the team's first season under the ownership of Jerry Buss. Magic's season represented the birth of the Showtime Lakers.

1979–80 Los Angeles Lakers season
NBA champions
Conference champions
Division champions
Head coach
General managerBill Sharman
Owner(s)Jerry Buss
ArenaThe Forum
Results
Record60–22 (.732)
PlaceDivision: 1st (Pacific)
Conference: 1st (Western)
Playoff finishNBA Champions
(Defeated 76ers 4–2)

Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Local media
TelevisionKHJ-TV
RadioKLAC
< 1978–79 1980–81 >
Magic Johnson at the Lakers championship rally, June 1980

Only 13 games into his tenure, coach Jack McKinney suffered a near-fatal bicycling accident November 8. General manager Bill Sharman elevated assistant Paul Westhead to head coach and hired former Laker Pat Riley as assistant coach.

Offseason

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NBA draft

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RoundPickPlayerPositionNationalitySchool/Club Team
11Magic JohnsonGuard  United StatesMichigan State
114Brad HollandGuard  United StatesUCLA

Roster

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1979–80 Los Angeles Lakers roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.NameHeightWeightDOBFrom
C33Abdul-Jabbar, Kareem7 ft 2 in (2.18 m)225 lb (102 kg)1947-04-16UCLA
F7Byrnes, Marty6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)215 lb (98 kg)1956-04-30Syracuse
C9Chones, Jim6 ft 11 in (2.11 m)220 lb (100 kg)1949-11-30Marquette
G21Cooper, Michael6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)170 lb (77 kg)1956-04-15New Mexico
F31Haywood, Spencer6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)225 lb (102 kg)1949-04-22Detroit Mercy
G14Holland, Brad6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)180 lb (82 kg)1956-12-06UCLA
G32Johnson, Magic6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)215 lb (98 kg)1959-08-14Michigan State
C54Landsberger, Mark6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)215 lb (98 kg)1955-05-21Arizona State
G15Lee, Butch6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)185 lb (84 kg)1956-12-05Marquette
G10Nixon, Norm6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)170 lb (77 kg)1955-10-11Duquesne
F52Wilkes, Jamaal6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)190 lb (86 kg)1953-05-02UCLA
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • Injured

Roster
Last transaction: February 15, 1980

Regular season

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Season standings

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W L PCT GB Home Road Div
y-Los Angeles Lakers6022.73237–423–1819–11
x-Seattle SuperSonics5626.683433–823–1818–12
x-Phoenix Suns5527.671537–518–2219–11
x-Portland Trail Blazers3844.4632226–1512–2913–17
San Diego Clippers3547.4272524–1711–3013–17
Golden State Warriors2458.2933615–269–328–22
#
Team W L PCT GB
1c-Los Angeles Lakers6022.732
2y-Milwaukee Bucks4933.59811
3x-Seattle SuperSonics5626.6834
4x-Phoenix Suns5527.6715
5x-Kansas City Kings4735.57313
6x-Portland Trail Blazers3844.46322
7San Diego Clippers3547.42725
8Chicago Bulls3052.36630
9Denver Nuggets3052.36630
10Utah Jazz2458.29336
11Golden State Warriors2458.29336

Record vs. opponents

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1979–80 NBA Records
TeamATLBOSCHICLEDENDETGSWHOUINDKCKLALMILNJNNYKPHIPHOPORSASSDCSEAUTAWAS
Atlanta2–41–14–21–16–02–02–44–20–21–11–14–24–24–21–12–05–11–10–22–03–3
Boston4–22–04–22–06–02–06–04–21–10–22–05–15–13–31–12–04–22–00–22–04–2
Chicago1–10–22–02–41–14–21–10–23–31–51–51–10–21–11–53–30–24–22–42–40–2
Cleveland2–42–40–21–16–02–02–42–42–01–10–23–33–31–51–10–24–21–10–21–13–3
Denver1–10–24–21–11–13–31–11–10–61–53–31–11–10–21–52–41–13–31–53–31–1
Detroit0–60–61–10–61–11–11–51–50–20–21–12–42–41–50–20–22–40–20–21–12–4
Golden State0–20–22–40–23–31–11–11–13–31–50–62–00–20–22–42–40–23–30–63–30–2
Houston4–20–61–14–21–15–11–14–20–20–21–13–33–32–41–11–13–32–01–12–02–4
Indiana2–42–42–04–21–15–11–12–41–10–20–22–44–21–50–22–02–41–10–21–14–2
Kansas City2–01–13–30–26–02–03–32–01–12–43–31–11–11–11–51–51–15–13–36–02–0
Los Angeles1–12–05–11–15–12–05–12–02–04–23–32–02–01–13–32–42–05–14–26–01–1
Milwaukee1–10–25–12–03–31–16–01–12–03–33–31–11–10–24–25–10–24–22–44–21–1
New Jersey2–41–51–13–31–14–20–23–34–21–10–21–12–41–51–10–23–31–11–11–13–3
New York2–41–52–03–31–14–22–03–32–41–10–21–14–20–62–02–04–21–10–21–13–3
Philadelphia2–43–31–15–12–05–12–04–25–11–11–12–05–16–01–12–04–21–11–11–15–1
Phoenix1–11–15–11–15–12–04–21–12–05–13–32–41–10–21–16–01–12–44–26–02–0
Portland0–20–23–32–04–22–04–21–10–25–14–21–52–00–20–20–61–14–21–53–31–1
San Antonio1–52–42–02–41–14–22–03–34–21–10–22–03–32–42–41–11–12–01–11–14–2
San Diego1–10–22–41–13–32–03–30–21–11–51–52–41–11–11–14–22–40–23–35–11–1
Seattle2–02–04–22–05–12–06–01–12–03–32–44–21–12–01–12–45–11–13–35–11–1
Utah0–20–24–21–13–31–13–30–21–10–60–62–41–11–11–10–63–31–11–51–50–2
Washington3–32–42–03–31–14–22–04–22–40–21–11–13–33–31–50–21–12–41–11–12–0

Game log

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Regular season

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1979–80 game log
Total: 60-22 (Home: 37-4; Road: 23-18)
October: 7–3 (home: 5–1; road: 2–2)
November: 9–6 (home: 6–1; road: 3–5)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
11November 2PhoenixW 112-110Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (26)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (15)Magic Johnson (10)The Forum8–3
12November 6San DiegoW 127-112Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (26)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (14)Norm Nixon (9)The Forum9–3
13November 7@ Golden StateL 109-126Jamaal Wilkes (18)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (8)Magic Johnson (6)Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena9–4
14November 9DenverW 126-122 (OT)Magic Johnson (31)Spencer Haywood (12)Norm Nixon (9)The Forum10–4
15November 11ClevelandW 140-126Jamaal Wilkes (25)Magic Johnson (16)Magic Johnson (12)The Forum11–4
16November 13@ San DiegoW 137-91Magic Johnson (22)Ford & Haywood (8)Abdul-Jabbar & Johnson (6)San Diego Sports Arena12–4
17November 15@ Kansas CityL 108-114Jamaal Wilkes (28)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (12)Magic Johnson (7)Municipal Auditorium12–5
18November 16@ DenverW 135-128 (OT)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (28)Jamaal Wilkes (12)Johnson & Nixon (11)McNichols Sports Arena13–5
19November 18IndianaW 127-104Jamaal Wilkes (21)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (12)Norm Nixon (10)The Forum14–5
20November 20@ PortlandL 99-114Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (24)Magic Johnson (11)Norm Nixon (6)Memorial Coliseum14–6
21November 21@ SeattleL 110-119Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (31)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (13)Norm Nixon (11)Kingdome14–7
22November 23@ PhoenixL 112-126Magic Johnson (25)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (11)Magic Johnson (6)Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum14–8
23November 25Kansas CityW 111-110Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (25)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (15)Magic Johnson (9)The Forum15–8
24November 27@ UtahW 122-118Jamaal Wilkes (29)Magic Johnson (8)Magic Johnson (8)Salt Palace16–8
25November 30ChicagoL 100-107Norm Nixon (30)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (19)Norm Nixon (8)The Forum16–9
December: 12–4 (home: 8–1; road: 4–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
26December 2MilwaukeeW 116-103Norm Nixon (25)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (14)Magic Johnson (13)The Forum17–9
27December 4@ San AntonioW 127-121Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (29)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (11)Johnson & Wilkes (9)HemisFair Arena18–9
28December 5@ HoustonW 116-114Norm Nixon (26)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (15)Norm Nixon (10)The Summit19–9
29December 7San DiegoL 108-116Magic Johnson (31)Magic Johnson (13)Norm Nixon (11)The Forum19–10
30December 9DenverW 131-118Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (31)Abdul-Jabbar & Chones (9)Magic Johnson (11)The Forum20–10
31December 14DetroitW 138-122Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (31)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (11)Magic Johnson (9)The Forum21–10
32December 16San AntonioW 121-119Nixon & Wilkes (27)Jim Chones (11)Norm Nixon (9)The Forum22–10
33December 18@ ChicagoW 129-118Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (39)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (16)Magic Johnson (13)Chicago Stadium23–10
34December 19@ AtlantaL 112-119Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (29)Abdul-Jabbar & Chones (8)Norm Nixon (10)Omni Coliseum23–11
35December 21Golden StateW 114-108Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (29)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (8)Magic Johnson (10)The Forum24–11
36December 22@ DenverL 128-130Jamaal Wilkes (24)Jim Chones (8)Magic Johnson (9)McNichols Sports Arena24–12
37December 23SeattleW 102-97Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (32)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (14)Magic Johnson (10)The Forum25–12
38December 26@ Kansas CityL 111-118Johnson & Wilkes (24)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (15)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (9)Municipal Auditorium25–13
39December 27@ UtahW 124-116Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (31)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (10)Magic Johnson (11)Salt Palace26–13
40December 28BostonW 123-105Magic Johnson (23)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (18)Norm Nixon (8)The Forum
17,505
27–13
41December 30PhoenixW 113-105Jamaal Wilkes (30)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (14)Norm Nixon (8)The Forum28–13
January: 10–4 (home: 5–0; road: 5–4)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
42January 2@ IndianaW 127-120Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (32)Abdul-Jabbar & Haywood (7)Jamaal Wilkes (8)Market Square Arena29–13
43January 6@ MilwaukeeL 103-113Jamaal Wilkes (24)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (12)Norm Nixon (8)MECCA Arena29–14
44January 9@ WashingtonL 101-103Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (24)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (11)Norm Nixon (6)Capital Centre29–15
45January 11@ DetroitW 123-100Jamaal Wilkes (27)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (14)Magic Johnson (7)Pontiac Silverdome30–15
46January 13@ BostonW 100-98Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (33)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (12)Norm Nixon (9)Boston Garden31–15
47January 15UtahW 112-99Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (24)Jamaal Wilkes (10)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (7)The Forum32–15
48January 16@ Golden StateW 97-96Jamaal Wilkes (27)Spencer Haywood (11)Norm Nixon (9)Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena33–15
49January 18AtlantaW 108-102Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (28)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (15)Norm Nixon (12)The Forum34–15
50January 21New YorkW 132-114Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (25)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (14)Norm Nixon (9)The Forum35–15
51January 24@ PortlandL 103-111Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (30)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (16)Norm Nixon (7)Memorial Coliseum35–16
52January 25PhiladelphiaW 124-103Jamaal Wilkes (30)Michael Cooper (13)Norm Nixon (11)The Forum36–16
53January 27MilwaukeeW 112-102Magic Johnson (25)Jim Chones (12)Norm Nixon (8)The Forum37–16
54January 29@ ClevelandL 153-154 (4 OT)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (42)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (17)Magic Johnson (8)Richfield Coliseum37–17
55January 31@ ChicagoW 107-97Jamaal Wilkes (28)Jim Chones (12)Magic Johnson (11)Chicago Stadium38–17
March: 13–3 (home: 7–0; road: 6–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
67March 2@ PhoenixL 115-123Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (26)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (13)Norm Nixon (9)Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum47–20
68March 4@ MilwaukeeW 127-124Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (28)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (10)Norm Nixon (11)MECCA Arena48–20
69March 5@ Kansas CityW 117-101Magic Johnson (28)Magic Johnson (16)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (7)Kemper Arena49–20
70March 7ChicagoW 101-99Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (31)Magic Johnson (18)Magic Johnson (9)The Forum50–20
71March 9@ PortlandL 121-142Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (26)Magic Johnson (12)Magic Johnson (8)Memorial Coliseum50–21
72March 11@ San DiegoW 123-106Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (28)Abdul-Jabbar & Johnson (12)Magic Johnson (8)San Diego Sports Arena51–21
73March 12PortlandW 102-94Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (30)Magic Johnson (16)Norm Nixon (9)The Forum52–21
74March 14DenverW 132-126Jamaal Wilkes (27)Mark Landsberger (16)Michael Cooper (8)The Forum53–21
75March 16PhoenixW 128-106Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (30)Magic Johnson (13)Magic Johnson (13)The Forum54–21
76March 18Golden StateW 118-100Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (23)Jamaal Wilkes (11)Norm Nixon (8)The Forum55–21
77March 19@ PhoenixL 108-112Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (29)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (14)Norm Nixon (9)Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum55–22
78March 22@ SeattleW 97-92Norm Nixon (23)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (9)Norm Nixon (10)Kingdome56–22
79March 23UtahW 101-96Jamaal Wilkes (22)Jamaal Wilkes (11)Norm Nixon (12)The Forum57–22
80March 27@ UtahW 97-95Jamaal Wilkes (21)Abdul-Jabbar & Johnson (11)Norm Nixon (7)Salt Palace58–22
81March 28San DiegoW 126-88Magic Johnson (22)Mark Landsberger (10)3 players tied (5)The Forum59–22
82March 30@ Golden StateW 95-93Norm Nixon (18)Magic Johnson (12)Magic Johnson (10)Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena60–22
1979–80 schedule

Playoffs

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1980 playoff game log
Total: 12–4 (Home: 7–2; Road: 5–2)
Conference Semifinals: 4–1 (home: 3–0; road: 1–1)
Conference Finals: 4–1 (home: 2–1; road: 2–0)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1April 22SeattleL 107–108Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (26)3 players tied (8)Norm Nixon (11)The Forum
17,505
0–1
2April 23SeattleW 108–99Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (31)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (16)Norm Nixon (12)The Forum
17,505
1–1
3April 25@ SeattleW 104–100Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (33)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (13)Cooper & Johnson (10)Hec Edmundson Pavilion
8,524
2–1
4April 27@ SeattleW 98–93Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (25)Johnson & Wilkes (13)Norm Nixon (8)Hec Edmundson Pavilion
8,524
3–1
5April 30SeattleW 111–105Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (38)Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (11)Magic Johnson (10)The Forum
17,505
4–1
NBA Finals: 4–2 (home: 2–1; road: 2–1)
1980 schedule

Magic Johnson

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Having won everything possible at the college level, Johnson decided to leave college two years early and declared himself eligible for the 1979 NBA draft. The New Orleans Jazz originally had the first draft pick, but they had traded the pick to the Los Angeles Lakers in exchange for NBA star Gail Goodrich. As a result, the Lakers drafted Johnson with the first overall pick,[2] signing him for a sizable salary of US$600,000 a year.[3]

Johnson joined a franchise which had gone through major changes. The Lakers featured a new coach in Jack McKinney, a new owner in Jerry Buss, and several new players. However, Johnson was most excited about the prospect of playing with his personal idol, the 7–2 center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who would go on to become the second leading scorer in NBA history.[3] From the first game, Johnson displayed his trademark enthusiasm for the game. When Abdul-Jabbar hit a last-second free throw line hook shot to win against the San Diego Clippers, Johnson ran around the court, high-fiving and hugging everybody, causing concern that the "Buck" (as Johnson was called by Lakers announcer Chick Hearn for his youth) would burn himself out. However, in that 1979–80 NBA season, the rookie proved them wrong. Johnson introduced an uptempo style of basketball which the NBA described as a mix of "no-look passes off the fastbreak, pinpoint alley-oops from halfcourt, spinning feeds and overhand bullets under the basket through triple teams".[2] Fellow Lakers guard Michael Cooper even stated that: "There have been times when he [Johnson] has thrown passes and I wasn't sure where he was going. Then one of our guys catches the ball and scores, and I run back up the floor convinced that he must've thrown it through somebody."[2] This style of basketball became known as "Showtime". Given Johnson was also a prolific scorer and rebounder, he soon led the league in triple-doubles, racking up 10-points-10-rebounds-10-assists games in a rate only second to NBA Hall-of-Famer Oscar Robertson.[2] In addition, he expressed a raw, childlike enthusiasm which further endeared him to the fans.[4]

Johnson's average of 18.0 points, 7.7 rebounds and 7.3 assists per game was enough to make the All-Rookie Team and become a starter on the All-Star Team, even though the NBA Rookie of the Year Award went to his rival Larry Bird, who had joined the Boston Celtics.[5] The Lakers compiled a 60–22 win–loss record, and with Paul Westhead replacing coach McKinney as a coach after a serious bicycle accident 13 games into the season, the Lakers reached the 1980 NBA Finals against the Philadelphia 76ers. Against the fierce resistance of Sixers Hall-of-Fame forward Julius "Doctor J" Erving and Darryl Dawkins, the Lakers took a 3–2 lead before Abdul-Jabbar went down with a sprained ankle. Coach Westhead decided to put point guard Johnson at pivot instead, and on the Sixers' home court, the rookie dominated with 42 points, 15 rebounds, seven assists and three steals, lifting the Lakers to a 123–107 win and winning the NBA Finals MVP award. The NBA regards Johnson's clutch performance as one of the finest individual games ever.[6] Although only twenty years old, he had already won every trophy at the high school, college and professional levels. Johnson also became one of only four players to win NCAA and NBA championships in consecutive years.

Player statistics

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Regular season

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PlayerGPMPGFG%3FG%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar8238.3.604.000.76510.84.51.03.424.8
Ron Boone617.7.350NA.8571.81.20.80.05.7
Marty Byrnes326.1.500NA.8670.80.40.20.02.0
Kenny Carr617.7.438NA1.0003.40.20.40.23.2
Jim Chones8229.2.489.000.7406.91.80.70.810.6
Michael Cooper8224.1.524.250.7762.82.71.00.58.8
Don Ford5211.2.508.000.8211.90.70.20.33.0
Spencer Haywood7620.3.487.250.7724.61.20.50.89.7
Brad Holland385.2.423.200.9380.40.60.40.02.8
Magic Johnson7736.3.530.226.8107.77.32.40.518.0
Mark Landsberger*2316.3.482NA.5187.10.60.40.27.0
Butch Lee*112.8.308NA.8570.70.80.10.01.3
Ollie Mack275.7.420.000.5000.80.70.10.01.9
Norm Nixon8239.3.516.125.7792.87.81.80.217.6
Jamaal Wilkes8237.9.535.176.8086.43.01.60.320.0

*Stats after being traded to the Lakers.
†Stats before being traded from the Lakers.

Playoffs

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PlayerGPMPGFG%3FG%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar1541.2.572NA.79012.13.11.13.931.9
Marty Byrnes42.0.333NA.6670.30.30.00.01.5
Jim Chones1627.4.407NA.6766.51.80.50.47.4
Michael Cooper1629.0.407.000.8613.73.61.50.79.1
Spencer Haywood1113.2.472.000.8132.40.40.00.55.7
Brad Holland93.6.500.0001.0000.60.30.60.01.6
Magic Johnson1641.1.518.250.80210.59.43.00.418.3
Mark Landsberger1612.2.362.000.8334.30.10.20.13.4
Butch Lee32.0NANA1.0000.30.00.00.00.7
Norm Nixon1640.5.477.200.8043.57.82.00.216.9
Jamaal Wilkes1640.8.535.176.8158.03.01.50.320.3

Awards and records

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References

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  1. ^ "1979-80 Los Angeles Lakers Roster and Stats".
  2. ^ a b c d "Earvin "Magic" Johnson". NBA Encyclopedia: Playoff Edition. Archived from the original on December 14, 2007. Retrieved December 22, 2007.
  3. ^ a b Bork (1994), pp. 56-66
  4. ^ Schwartz, Larry. "Magic made Showtime a show". ESPN.com. Retrieved December 22, 2007.
  5. ^ "Magic Johnson Statistics". Basketball-Reference.com. Archived from the original on December 21, 2007. Retrieved December 22, 2007.
  6. ^ "NBA's Greatest Moments: Magic Fills in at Center". NBA Encyclopedia: Playoff Edition. Archived from the original on February 10, 2012. Retrieved September 13, 2007.