Barney Sedran

From Hoopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Barney Sedran (January 28, 1891 – January 14, 1964) was one of the great early pro basketball players in the 1910s and 1920s.

Contents

Nicknamed "Mighty Mite", the New York City native who grew up on the Lower East Side, Sedran (shortened from Sedransky) was a member of the well-known New York Whirlwinds and Cleveland Rosenblums, among many other teams in New York as well as in Carbondale, Pennsylvania. Occasionally he teamed with Marty Friedman, forming one of the finest backcourt duos in basketball history.

Sedran played for the Lower East Side's University Settlement House because he was too small to make his DeWitt Clinton High School (Bronx, New York) team. The Settlement team won the 115-pound division championship in 1905-06, and the Metropolitan AAU title 1906-07.

At City College of New York (CCNY) Sedran was the school’s leading scorer for three consecutive seasons, 1909-11, and was named to various college all-star teams.

The smallest player enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, “The Mighty Might of Basketball” turned pro after leaving CCNY, teaming successfully and often with 5’ 7” Hall of Famer Max Friedman. They were known as the “Heavenly Twins”. In an era of barnstorming, short-lived leagues, and schedules that often called for as many as three games a day, Sedran is said to have been pro basketball’s highest paid star.


Teams as a Player

Among Sedran’s court highlights: He led Newburgh in 1912, Utica 1913-15, Carbondale, PA in 1917, Easthampton 1920-21, and Albany in 1921 to League championships. After his Utica club won the 1913-14 New York State League title, the Utes defeated Trenton, champions of the Eastern League, to claim the World Professional Championship. Sedran once scored 34 points on a court without backboards; another time, 34 points shooting at rims without a net. He averaged 7.3 points per game during his career, with a single season high 13.2 ppg in 1917.

Sedran’s New York Whirlwind team of 1919-21 is considered by many to have been the greatest professional basketball team of the first half of the 20th century.

Fellow Hall of Famer Nat Holman, considered by many experts to be the greatest player of the 1920s, said, “Barney Sedran, in my humble opinion, was the greatest little man who ever played the game. He could do everything. A great outside and inside shooter, smart passer, great ball handler, and very fast. He was always in motion, setting up play situations which resulted in baskets. He used his mind at all times and for a little man withstood the punishment that was characteristic of the rough and tumble contact game of the pros in the early days of the sport. He could do everything. He was the most complete player of his time. He was afraid of none and dared all."

Teams as a Coach

All of these teams played in the American Basketball League (ABL), the top pro league in the East during this era. The Kate Smith Celtics won 1939 and 1940 ABL championships. Wilmington won ABL titles 1941-42 and 1943-44. (NOTE: Depending upon the league, basketball seasons often lap over from one year to another. Other times a season begins and ends in the same calendar year.)

Halls of Fame

In 1962, 5 ft. 4 in. Barney Sedran was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a player, becoming the shortest player in the Hall.

He is enshrined in the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, the New York City Basketball Hall of Fame, and the CCNY Athletic Hall of Fame.

See Also

External Links

Personal tools