Golden State Warriors
Series Flow
4
Wins
0
Losses
Regular Season
48–34
Win–Loss
Playoff Record
12–5
Win–Loss
Finals
4–0
vs Washington Bullets
Finals MVP
Barry
Rick
Golden State Warriors
48–34Washington Bullets
60–22The 1974-75 Washington Bullets were heavily favored entering the Finals with a 60-win season and the most physical frontcourt in basketball in Elvin Hayes and Wes Unseld. The sweep at the hands of a 48-win Warriors team led by Rick Barry remains one of the most shocking results in Finals history — a team that was genuinely and comprehensively outplayed by an opponent it had badly underestimated.

Finals MVP
Rick Barry
#24 · Small Forward
29.5
PPG
5.5
RPG
5.0
APG
2.5
SPG
51.0
FG%
Rick Barry delivered one of the most complete Finals performances in NBA history — 29.5 points, 5.5 rebounds, and 5.0 assists per game in a four-game sweep of the 60-win Washington Bullets. His combination of shooting, playmaking, and defensive awareness made the Warriors' sweep feel like a systematic dissection rather than an upset. Barry's underhanded free throw technique — mocked for years — converted at a near-perfect rate throughout the series, eliminating the one reliable way teams could neutralize his scoring.
Led the Warriors in a sweep of the 60-win Washington Bullets — one of the greatest upsets in NBA Finals history
Averaged 29.5 PPG, 5.5 RPG, and 5.0 APG — one of the most complete Finals stat lines of the decade
NBA Finals MVP in the Warriors' first championship on the West Coast
His performance silenced years of criticism that he was too difficult to play with to win championships
101
GSW
95
WAS
The Warriors arrived in Washington as 12-point underdogs and immediately served notice that the Bullets had badly underestimated them. Rick Barry was devastating from the opening tip — driving, shooting from the perimeter, and distributing the ball with a completeness that Washington had not prepared for. Al Attles's defense smothered Elvin Hayes and Wes Unseld all night, forcing the Bullets into difficult shots and keeping their transition game contained. The 101-95 road win set the tone: this would not be a coronation for Washington.
Golden State Warriors
Rick Barry
28 pts · 6 reb · 5 astControlled the game from start to finish with a combination of scoring and playmaking that Washington had no single answer for.
Jamaal Wilkes
16 pts · 9 rebThe rookie provided the Warriors with a second offensive option and held his own on the boards against the Bullets' powerful frontcourt.
WAS
Elvin Hayes
22 pts · 11 rebLed the Bullets in scoring but could not overcome the Warriors' team defense and Barry's offensive dominance.
92
GSW
91
WAS
One of the most dramatic games of the series — a one-point Warriors victory on the road that gave Golden State a 2-0 series lead and left Washington's home crowd stunned. The Bullets fought back from a double-digit deficit to tie the game late, but Rick Barry made the critical plays in the final minutes and the Warriors held on. Back-to-back road wins over a 60-win team sent shockwaves through the NBA: this was not a fluke.
Golden State Warriors
Rick Barry
36 pts · 5 astCarried the Warriors in the clutch, making every critical shot and decision down the stretch to preserve the one-point road victory.
Phil Smith
14 pts · 4 astProvided key buckets in the second half when the Bullets made their comeback run, keeping Golden State's lead intact.
WAS
Wes Unseld
12 pts · 16 rebThe Bullets' physical anchor dominated the glass but could not convert enough second-chance opportunities to overcome Barry's offensive brilliance.
109
GSW
101
WAS
The series returned to Oakland with the Warriors leading 2-0, and the home crowd delivered the kind of electric atmosphere that Al Attles' team had been building toward all season. The Bullets came out determined to avoid elimination but found the same problems: Rick Barry was unguardable, the Warriors's defense was disciplined, and Golden State's pace was too fast for Washington to match. A nine-point Warriors victory that had Washington's coaching staff scrambling for adjustments that never materialized.
Golden State Warriors
Rick Barry
26 pts · 6 reb · 7 astDistributed beautifully when Washington doubled him, finding open teammates for easy scores and finishing with a near triple-double.
Clifford Ray
12 pts · 13 rebThe center's physical rebounding against Unseld and Hayes kept Washington off the offensive glass and sparked Golden State's transition game.
WAS
Elvin Hayes
28 pts · 9 rebThe Bullets' most dangerous player refused to go quietly, generating volume scoring that still could not overcome the Warriors' balanced attack.
96
GSW
95
WAS
The sweep was completed in a nail-biter that required every ounce of the Warriors' championship resolve. Washington fought until the final buzzer, pulling within one point in the closing seconds before Golden State held on. Rick Barry made the decisive plays, Al Attles made the decisive adjustments, and when the final horn sounded, the Golden State Warriors — a 48-win team that had been installed as 12-point underdogs to open the series — were NBA champions. The arena shook. The city of Oakland celebrated. And the 60-win Bullets were left to wonder how a team with 12 fewer wins had just handed them the most complete postseason loss of their franchise history.
Golden State Warriors
Rick Barry
29 pts · 5 reb · 4 astFinals MVP with a championship-clinching performance — his scoring, leadership, and clutch execution defined the entire series.
Jamaal Wilkes
20 pts · 8 rebThe Rookie of the Year closed out the sweep with his best game, proving that his championship contribution was no accident.
WAS
Wes Unseld
10 pts · 14 rebThe Bullets' heart fought to the final buzzer, but Washington's offense could not generate enough quality looks to overcome the one-point deficit.
16.5
PPG
8.8
RPG
Then playing as Keith Wilkes in his rookie season, Jamaal Wilkes provided the Warriors with a second offensive option who could score efficiently and rebound from the forward position. His fluid athleticism and smooth offensive game were the foundation of a long NBA career that would include three more championships.
Named NBA Rookie of the Year in 1974-75 and immediately contributed to a championship team
His versatility at forward gave Al Attles lineup flexibility that repeatedly confused Washington's defense
13.0
PPG
3.5
APG
Smith provided the Warriors with a reliable scoring guard who could attack the basket when defenses loaded up on Barry. His second-season growth complemented Barry's star performance throughout the Finals.
Key secondary scorer who kept Washington's defense from committing entirely to stopping Rick Barry
The 1974-75 Washington Bullets were heavily favored entering the Finals with a 60-win season and the most physical frontcourt in basketball in Elvin Hayes and Wes Unseld. The sweep at the hands of a 48-win Warriors team led by Rick Barry remains one of the most shocking results in Finals history — a team that was genuinely and comprehensively outplayed by an opponent it had badly underestimated.
Elvin Hayes
#11 · Power Forward
22.0
PPG
12.0
RPG
The Big E averaged 22 points and 12 rebounds per game across the four Finals losses — production that would have been enough to win any other series, but could not overcome Rick Barry's total dominance.
Wes Unseld
#41 · Center
10.5
PPG
13.5
RPG
The physical anchor who had won Finals MVP himself in 1978 would do so again three years later — but in 1975, his rebounding dominance was neutralized by the Warriors' collective effort on the glass.
Golden State Warriors
Swept the 60-win Washington Bullets 4-0 — one of the greatest upsets in NBA Finals history, achieved by a team that had 12 fewer regular-season wins.
Rick Barry
Finals MVP with 29.5 PPG, 5.5 RPG, and 5.0 APG — one of the most complete individual Finals performances of the decade.
Al Attles
Became the first Black head coach to win an NBA championship in the post-merger era.
Jamaal Wilkes
Won a championship in his rookie season while also winning NBA Rookie of the Year — a rare dual achievement in the same calendar year.
Golden State Warriors
Delivered the franchise's first championship on the West Coast, bringing an NBA title to the Bay Area for the first time.
Al Attles becoming the championship-winning coach made him one of the first Black head coaches to lead an NBA title team — a milestone that has not received the historical recognition it deserves. Attles was also a franchise institution who had played for the Warriors in the 1960s and built his entire adult life around the organization.
The 1975 championship is frequently cited by basketball historians as one of the ten greatest upsets in NBA Finals history. A 48-win team sweeping a 60-win team — the Bullets had beaten Golden State four times during the regular season — defied every statistical prediction and scouting report.
Rick Barry's complex relationship with the Warriors organization — he had left for the ABA, sued the team to gain his freedom, and spent years in legal battles before returning — made his championship vindication particularly meaningful. Whatever one thought of his business decisions, his basketball performance in the 1975 Finals was unimpeachable.
Nobody gave them a chance. The Washington Bullets had won 60 games. Elvin Hayes and Wes Unseld were the most physically dominant frontcourt in basketball. The Golden State Warriors had won 48 games and been installed as 12-point underdogs — a spread that made veteran sports bettors laugh.
Rick Barry did not care. In four games across the nation's capital and the Oakland Coliseum Arena, Barry played the complete game of his career — not just scoring at 29.5 points per game but distributing, defending, and doing everything a championship team needed from its best player. He was the Finals MVP before that award had a formal definition, the difference-maker in every game-winning moment.
Al Attles' coaching was the series' underappreciated story. He deployed his roster with a flexibility and pace that the Bullets' physical style could not match. Washington wanted to slow the game, grind in the post, and wear opponents down. The Warriors ran, pushed the pace, and took every shot on the second possession that the game's flow allowed. By the time Washington's coaches adjusted, the series was over.
The four-game sweep remains one of the most complete dominations in Finals history. Not close games where the Warriors got lucky, but four contests where — despite the final scores being tight — Golden State was always in control. The championship brought the Bay Area its first NBA title and established the Warriors as a franchise worthy of the national conversation. The next chapter would not arrive for forty years — but when it did, it arrived in force.
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