Minneapolis Lakers
Series Flow
4
Wins
3
Losses
Regular Season
46–22
Win–Loss
Playoff Record
9–4
Win–Loss
Finals
4–3
vs Syracuse Nationals
Finals MVP
Mikan
George
Minneapolis Lakers
46–22Syracuse Nationals
42–26The Nationals were no mere foil — they were one of the best teams in the early NBA, pushing the mighty Minneapolis dynasty to seven games, the only time across the entire championship run that Minneapolis was genuinely threatened. Dolph Schayes was a transcendent talent who would soon lead Syracuse to their own championship.
George Mikan
#99 · Center
18.4
PPG
12.8
RPG
7
GP
The first dominant big man in professional basketball. Changed the game so profoundly the NBA widened the lane twice to contain him. Led the Minneapolis Lakers to their fifth title in six years before announcing his retirement.
5th championship in 6 years — the first dynasty in professional basketball
The NBA widened the lane from 6 to 12 feet specifically because of Mikan's dominance
Announced his first retirement shortly after — his era was definitively complete
G1 · W
1–0
G2 · L
1–1
G3 · W
2–1
G4 · L
2–2
G5 · W
3–2
G6 · L
3–3
G7 · W
4–3
79
MNL
68
SYR
Mikan imposed himself immediately, scoring 22 points and grabbing 15 rebounds in Game 1. The Armory crowd — as rowdy as any arena in the league — roared through every Mikan post move. Minneapolis controlled tempo and never trailed after the opening minutes.
Minneapolis Lakers
George Mikan
22 PTS / 15 REBDominated the paint from the opening tip — Nationals had no answer for his footwork and physicality.
Jim Pollard
14 PTS / 7 REBConverted on fast-break opportunities and gave the Nationals a second frontcourt problem.
SYR
Dolph Schayes
19 PTS / 11 REBSchayes battled hard and showed he would not be intimidated, but Syracuse couldn't match Mikan's bulk.
60
MNL
62
SYR
Syracuse evened the series on their home court. Al Cervi's Nationals used their speed to offset Mikan's post dominance, running the Lakers in transition all night. A late Schayes basket sealed it in a tight finish.
Minneapolis Lakers
George Mikan
17 PTS / 13 REBStill dominant, but the Syracuse transition game limited his easy post catches and kept Minneapolis from controlling pace.
Slater Martin
11 PTS / 5 ASTTried to slow down the Syracuse guards but the Nationals' quickness was the difference in a road loss.
SYR
Dolph Schayes
21 PTS / 14 REBCarried Syracuse on his back in front of a raucous home crowd. His mid-range game was impossible to stop.
81
MNL
67
SYR
Back in Minneapolis, the Lakers reasserted control. Mikan and Mikkelsen were a two-headed monster in the frontcourt, and Pollard's athleticism stretched Syracuse's defense. The Armory was deafening as Minneapolis built a comfortable lead that held through the fourth quarter.
Minneapolis Lakers
George Mikan
20 PTS / 16 REBRelentless posting up on every possession — Schayes simply couldn't match his sheer size and leverage.
Vern Mikkelsen
15 PTS / 11 REBMikkelsen's physical play on Schayes helped neutralize Syracuse's offensive threat from the forward spot.
SYR
Dolph Schayes
16 PTS / 9 REBNever stopped competing, but the two-man Lakers frontcourt was simply too much to handle on both ends.
69
MNL
80
SYR
Syracuse showed their championship mettle, evening the series at 2–2 with a dominant performance on their home floor. The Nationals' quickness and shooting from the perimeter — a preview of the modern game — gave the Lakers fits. Al Cervi out-coached Kundla tactically.
Minneapolis Lakers
George Mikan
18 PTS / 14 REBEven with dominant interior numbers, Mikan couldn't carry the Lakers alone on the road against a motivated Syracuse squad.
SYR
Dolph Schayes
24 PTS / 13 REBSchayes had his best game of the series — hitting from mid-range and getting to the line repeatedly.
Paul Seymour
16 PTS / 7 ASTSeymour orchestrated the Nationals' attack and kept the Minneapolis guards scrambling all night.
84
MNL
73
SYR
The Lakers took a 3–2 series lead with a strong performance at home. Mikan delivered another dominant performance while Jim Pollard's speed created open looks. Minneapolis had one foot in history — their fifth title in six years was within reach.
Minneapolis Lakers
George Mikan
21 PTS / 17 REBMikan at his most unstoppable — posting up, drawing fouls, and controlling the glass at both ends.
Jim Pollard
16 PTS / 9 REBConverted on the break and created spacing that opened up Mikan's post catches with regularity.
SYR
Dolph Schayes
20 PTS / 10 REBRefused to let Syracuse fold — nearly single-handedly kept the score close in the second half.
63
MNL
65
SYR
In one of the tensest games of the dynasty years, Syracuse forced a deciding Game 7 on the road with a two-point win. The Nationals' defense held Mikan to a relatively quiet night by his standards. The crowd noise in the State Fair Coliseum was deafening — Minneapolis would have to close it at home.
Minneapolis Lakers
George Mikan
16 PTS / 12 REBBelow his own standards but still the best player on the floor — Syracuse just threw everything at him defensively.
Vern Mikkelsen
11 PTS / 9 REBBattled hard but foul trouble in the fourth quarter forced Kundla to shorten his minutes at the worst time.
SYR
Dolph Schayes
22 PTS / 12 REBSchayes was magnificent — channeling the entire crowd's energy into a performance that kept Syracuse's improbable comeback alive.
87
MNL
80
SYR
In front of a roaring home crowd, the Minneapolis Lakers closed out the fifth championship in six years. Mikan was majestic in his final game as a champion, willing the team through a tense first half before Minneapolis pulled away. The dynasty was complete. Mikan would announce his retirement weeks later.
Minneapolis Lakers
George Mikan
24 PTS / 16 REBA final performance for the ages — the first great champion of professional basketball closed out his dynasty chapter in front of his hometown faithful.
Jim Pollard
15 PTS / 8 REBA five-time champion, Pollard was the perfect foil for Mikan — his athletic play on the wing gave Syracuse's defense an impossible problem to solve.
SYR
Dolph Schayes
22 PTS / 11 REBSchayes earned enormous respect across this series. His performance made clear he was a generational talent — and the Nationals would return for revenge the following year.
13.5
PPG
10.0
RPG
7
GP
One of the first true power forwards in professional basketball. Provided Mikan with relentless frontcourt support across all five championships.
11.2
PPG
8.1
RPG
7
GP
"The Kangaroo Kid" — decades ahead of his time. His athleticism and court vision made the Minneapolis dynasty possible beyond just Mikan.
Five-time champion — arguably the most complete player of the early NBA era outside of Mikan
9.0
PPG
3.8
APG
7
GP
The engine of the offense. Martin was a four-time champion with Minneapolis and later won another title with the St. Louis Hawks — one of the most decorated guards of the early NBA.
The Nationals were no mere foil — they were one of the best teams in the early NBA, pushing the mighty Minneapolis dynasty to seven games, the only time across the entire championship run that Minneapolis was genuinely threatened. Dolph Schayes was a transcendent talent who would soon lead Syracuse to their own championship.
18.7
PPG
12.1
RPG
7
GP
One of the greatest players of the early NBA era — 12-time All-Star and future Hall of Famer. His performance in the 1954 Finals served notice that Syracuse was the heir apparent. He led the Nationals to the championship the very next year.
12.4
PPG
4.2
APG
7
GP
The architect of Syracuse's guard play — Seymour's court vision and leadership were essential to pushing Minneapolis the full seven games.
Minneapolis Lakers
Fifth NBA championship in six years — the first dynasty in professional basketball history
George Mikan
Final championship before retirement — five titles in six seasons, a record that defined an era
NBA
The lane was widened from 6 to 12 feet in 1951 specifically because of Mikan — a rule change named by media as "The Mikan Rule"
Jim Pollard
Five-time NBA champion — one of the most decorated players of the Minneapolis era
Minneapolis Lakers
The 1954 Finals were the tightest of the dynasty — the only seven-game series of the championship run
George Mikan was so dominant that the NBA widened the lane from 6 to 12 feet specifically to limit his advantage — a rule change that became known simply as "The Mikan Rule." He was professional basketball's first superstar, its first dominant big man, and its first dynasty builder. The five Minneapolis titles in six years did more to establish professional basketball as a viable American sport than any single event in the game's early history.
The 1954 Finals were uniquely tense. For the only time across the dynasty, Minneapolis was pushed to seven games — by a Syracuse Nationals team built around a young Dolph Schayes, who would go on to lead those same Nationals to a championship the very next year. The series was a passing of the torch as much as a title defense.
The Minneapolis Lakers played in an era before the 24-second shot clock, before nationally televised games, before the modern NBA infrastructure. They were pioneers — drawing crowds to frozen Midwestern arenas, barnstorming across the country to fill schedules, competing for credibility in a sports landscape dominated by baseball. What they built was foundational.
Mikan retired shortly after the 1954 championship, then briefly returned in 1956 before retiring permanently. The Lakers relocated to Los Angeles in 1960. But the dynasty Mikan built — five titles, six years, a sport established — became the bedrock on which every subsequent chapter of NBA history was written.
Before the Celtics dynasty. Before Showtime. Before the Bulls' two three-peats. Before the Warriors' dynasties. Before any of it — there were the Minneapolis Lakers.
George Mikan. John Kundla. Jim Pollard. Vern Mikkelsen. Slater Martin. Five championships in six years. The first dynasty in professional basketball, built in a frozen Midwestern city in front of passionate crowds who understood they were watching something historic.
In 1954, they needed every one of their seven games against the Syracuse Nationals to close it out. Dolph Schayes — the man who would lead those same Nationals to a championship twelve months later — pushed the dynasty harder than anyone ever had. But Mikan was magnificent when it mattered most, delivering 24 points and 16 rebounds in the deciding game.
The dynasty was complete. Mikan announced his retirement shortly after. The era was over. But what Minneapolis built between 1949 and 1954 established professional basketball as an American institution — and that foundation has never cracked.