Quad City Thunder

The Quad City Thunder was a Continental Basketball Association (CBA) franchise that was based in the Quad Cities of Illinois and Iowa. They played in the CBA from the 1987–88 season until the CBA folded in 2001.[1] The Thunder were successful on the court, capturing CBA championships in the 1993–94 and 1997–98 seasons, and runner-up in the 1990–91 season. The Thunder played in Moline, Illinois, first at Wharton Field House before moving to the new MARK of the Quad Cities in 1993.[2]

Quad City Thunder
Quad City Thunder logo
LeagueContinental Basketball Association (1987–2001)
Founded1987
Folded2001
HistoryQuad City Thunder
1987–2001
Arena
LocationMoline, Illinois
Team colorsnavy, orange
   
Head coachMauro Panaggio (1987–1991)
Dan Panaggio (1991–2000)
OwnershipAnne Potter DeLong (1987–1996)
Jay Gellerman Family (1996–2000)
Isiah Thomas (2000–2001)
Championships2 (1994, 1998)
Websitewww.qcthunder.com
The MARK of the Quad Cities was home to the Quad City Thunder

History

The Thunder first began play at the Wharton Field House in Moline, Illinois, (former home of the NBA's Tri-Cities Blackhawks) in the 1987–88 season, with 6,047 fans attending the first home game. The Thunder were the first professional basketball franchise in the Quad Cities since the Tri-Cities Blackhawks moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1953.[3] Initially a great success in the CBA, the Thunder struggled with attendance towards the end of their existence, especially with competition from their co-tenants at the Mark, the Quad City Mallards hockey team. During their existence, the franchise was owned by Anne Potter DeLong (1987–1997), Jay Gellerman (1997–1999), Isiah Thomas (1999–2000) and a Blind Trust (2000–2001). The Thunder folded when the CBA ceased operations following the 2000–01 season.[4]

In 1992, history was made when, for the first time in the 45-year history of U.S. professional basketball, a father and son opposed one another as head coaches. Former Thunder Coach Mauro Panaggio went head to head against son Dan Panaggio when Mauro's Rockford Lightning played Dan's Quad City Thunder.[5]

Championship seasons

1993–1994

The 1993–1994 team went 34–22 under Dan Panaggio. They swept through the playoffs. They first defeated the Rochester Renegades in overtime of a playoff play-in in Bismarck, N.D. They then defeated the Grand Rapids Hoops 4–1 in best-of-seven second round; Defeated the La Crosse Catbirds 4–0 in conference finals.

Finally, the Thunder defeated the Omaha Racers 4–1, winning last three on road to claim franchise’s first league title. The Thunder won the opener in double overtime after Tate George tied the game with last-second buckets at both the end of regulation and of the first overtime. The Thunder then lost the second game in triple overtime, but won three straight in Omaha, the last in overtime.

Chris Childs averaged 17.4 points and 8.5 assists in the playoffs, was the Finals MVP and went on to the National Basketball Association. Other key players were Harold Ellis 21.4ppg, Tate George 16.4, Bobby Martin 13.6, Barry Mitchell 13.0, Matt Fish 7.1RPG, Ashraf Amaya 6.9, and Cedric Henderson 6.1.[6]

1997–1998

The 1997–98 Thunder finished 38–18 under Dan Panaggio. In the playoffs they swept the La Crosse Catbirds in three games and defeated the Rockford Lightning in five games.

In the CBA Finals, they won a deciding seventh at home over the Sioux Falls Skyforce to capture their second CBA Championship. Key players were: Jimmy King 16.4ppg, Jeff McInnis 14.9ppg, Alvin Sims 13.6ppg, Doug Smith 12.8ppg, Willie Burton 11.6, Byron Houston 8.7Rpg, and Barry Sumpter. King won league MVP, McInnis was Newcomer of the Year, Sims became the Thunder’s first Rookie of the Year and Dan Panaggio won his second Coach of the Year award.[6]

The Thunder and their fans enjoyed a spirited rivalry with the Rockford Lightning.

The Thunder's mascot was Thor, the Norse god of thunder.

Hall of Fame player George Gervin played for the Thunder in 1989–90.

Quad City Thunder Personnel

Franchise Coaches

  • Mauro Panaggio 132–88 15–18 (1987–1991)
  • Dan Panaggio 313–191 41–30 (1991–2000)
  • Bob Thornton 8–13 (2000–2001) .[6]

Thunder CBA Most Valuable Player

Thunder NBA Callups

1988–89

1989–90

1990–91

1991–92

1992–93

1993–94

1994–95

1995–96

1996–97

1997–98

1998–99

1999-00

2000–01

Quad City Thunder All-Time Roster

References

  1. "The CBA Museum". Archived from the original on February 6, 2009. Retrieved November 12, 2009.
  2. "Quad City Thunder history, stats, career". www.basketpedya.com. Retrieved November 12, 2009.
  3. the411online.com
  4. The411online.com
  5. "Dad, Son Clash In Historic Cba Coaching Duel". tribunedigital-chicagotribune. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
  6. Qcthunder.Com
  7. Continental Basketball Association – Hoopedia
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