Question #150046. Asked by
psnz.
Last updated Oct 31 2023.
Originally posted Oct 30 2023 8:15 PM.
The 2015–16 Golden State Warriors season was the 70th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), and its 54th in the San Francisco Bay Area.[2] The Warriors entered the season as the defending NBA champions and they set the best ever regular-season record of 73–9, breaking the 1995–96 Chicago Bulls record of 72–10.[3] Golden State broke over twenty-five NBA records and more than ten franchise records that season, including most wins ever recorded in a season (regular-season and postseason combined); with 88.[4][5][6][7][8] However, they were defeated in the NBA Finals by the Cleveland Cavaliers in seven games, having lost the series after leading 3–1.[9]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2015%E2%80%9316_Golden_State_Warriors_season
The Warriors began the 2015–16 season by winning their first 24 games, eclipsing the previous best start in NBA history, set by the 1993–94 Houston Rockets and the 1948–49 Washington Capitols at 15–0.[3][10] Their record-setting start ended when they were defeated by the Milwaukee Bucks on December 12, 2015.[11] The Warriors broke a 131-year-old record of 20–0 set by the 1884 St. Louis Maroons baseball team, to claim the best start to a season in all of the major professional sports in America. They also won 28 consecutive regular-season games dating back to the 2014–15 season, eclipsing the 2012–13 Miami Heat for the second longest winning streak in NBA history.[3] The team set an NBA record 54-straight regular-season home-game winning streak, which spanned from January 31, 2015, to March 29, 2016. The previous record of 44 was held by the 1995–96 Chicago Bulls.[12] Golden State broke their franchise record of 28 road wins in a season which they set in 2014–15; they ended the season with 34, passing the same mid-1990s Chicago Bulls team led by Michael Jordan for the most road wins in NBA history.[4] The team became the first in NBA history to go the entire regular season without back-to-back losses and without losing to the same team twice.
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