Wat Misaka: the Japanese American star who broke the NBA's color barrier
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/article/2024/may/28/wat-misaka-the-japanese-american-star-who-broke-the-nbas-color-barrier
Wat Misaka: the Japanese American star who broke the NBAs color barrier
The 5ft 7in point guards career took him from Utah to New York City and a national title. But he was the last person to boast about his achievements
Jacob Uitti
Tue 28 May 2024 05.00 EDT
On 24 March 1947, Wataru Wat Misaka, a Japanese American walk-on with the University of Utah mens basketball team, held one of the nations best players, Kentuckys Ralph Beard, to a single point during the NIT championship at Madison Square Garden. Thanks to that performance, Misakas team won the tournament 49-45, cementing the 5ft 7in guards folk hero status, both in his home state and in the Big Apple. But that wasnt even the most significant basketball accomplishment on Misakas lengthy resume that year. Just a few months later on 1 July, after seeing the talent he displayed at the NIT, Misaka was drafted by the New York Knicks into the fledgling NBA, then known as the BAA. In the process, he broke the NBAs color barrier the same year that Jackie Robinson did so in Major League Baseball an achievement Misaka had never strived for (there were other pro leagues in the US at the time, including the PBL, which employed players of color, such as William Dolly King).
That was never something that he aspired to, says Nancy Misaka of her fathers ambitions. He never said, Oh, I want to be the first whatever. He just enjoyed playing. He wanted to play with friends. I would say it was the team relationships that meant more to him than any kind of accomplishment.
Misaka himself agreed: I dont think anyone, especially me, even compared that with what Robinson had done, he told NPR in 2012. I never did think of myself as being a pioneer of any sort.
Born in Ogden, Utah, on 21 December 1923, Misaka grew up in a poor area of town, the son of Japanese immigrants. His family lived in the basement of his parents barbershop, and he played basketball and other sports in an alley behind their home. Despite the discrimination he experienced he was not allowed in many of the towns restaurants Misaka was modest, humble and an exceptionally talented athlete.
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