Hank Luisetti
Personal information | |
---|---|
Born |
San Francisco, California | June 16, 1916
Died |
December 17, 2002 86) San Mateo, California | (aged
Nationality | American |
Listed height | 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) |
Listed weight | 185 lb (84 kg) |
Career information | |
High school | Galileo (San Francisco, California) |
College | Stanford (1935–1938) |
Position | Forward |
Number | 7 |
Career highlights and awards | |
| |
Basketball Hall of Fame as player | |
College Basketball Hall of Fame Inducted in 2006 |
Angelo-Giuseppi[1] "Hank" Luisetti (June 16, 1916 – December 17, 2002) was an American college men's basketball player and one of the great innovators of the game. In an era that featured the traditional two-handed set shot, Luisetti developed the running one-handed shot. Equipped with such an offensive weapon, Luisetti became one of the most dominant players in American college basketball history.
Biography
A graduate of Galileo High School in his native city, San Francisco, he went on to play for Stanford. He became the first player to score 50 points in a game on January 1, 1938, against Duquesne. Luisetti was named the second-best player of the mid-century (behind George Mikan) by an Associated Press poll of sportswriters and broadcasters in 1950.
Luisetti’s influence was aided by a celebrated game between Long Island University and Luisetti’s Stanford Indians.[2] Long Island, at the time of the game, had a 43-game winning streak. The game was played in the evening of December 30, 1936, in Madison Square Garden and a crowd of 17,623 was on hand to see Long Island, the nation's No. 1 team, play Stanford.
Stanford was the defending Pacific Coast Conference champion from the 1935 season and six years later would win an NCAA championship. Still, they were underdogs. The crowd, while not expecting to see their local favorites lose, were intrigued by Luisetti, then a 6-foot-2, 185-pound sophomore. They knew that he shot the ball with one hand while he hung in the air, in stark contrast to the two-handed set shots or hook shots that were commonly attempted in those days.
Although Luisetti scored only 15 points on five field goals and five free throws, Stanford ended the LIU winning streak with a 45-31 victory. The fact that this occurred in the media capital of the country, however, resulted in something more far-reaching. The publicity surrounding Luisetti's shooting style changed the game forever.
Luisetti is often credited with inventing the jump shot, although others were doing it during the 1930s as well. One possible originator was John Miller Cooper.[3] Still, Luisetti definitely popularized it.
Some have mistakenly said that Luisetti kept both feet planted on the court when taking his shots, but it seems clear that he was a jumper. "I'd get the ball, take a dribble or two and jump and shoot on the way up. I didn't jump and shoot at the height of my jump, the way they do now. I'd let the ball go right near my face; I'd push and shoot, off my fingertips."[4] Furthermore, he shot "the ball with one hand while he hung in the air, in defiance of basketball style."[2]
He was an all-around player, whose play and shooting were exciting. "Hank could take over a game like Michael Jordan if he had to," said former Stanford teammate Don Williams. "He was an absolute artist on the basketball court."[4]
Luisetti contracted spinal meningitis while serving in the Navy, ending his basketball career.[4] He never played in the NBA, but "in 1950, the nation's sportswriters voted him the second-best player in the first half of the century."[4]
Among his other accomplishments, he was a Naval Officer during World War II.
He died in San Mateo, California, in 2002.
Additional facts on Luisetti:
- Luisetti shot a two-handed set shot as well as the running one-hander. He shot his foul shots under handed, like almost everyone else of that era.[1]
- Luisetti used the running one-hander during the transition game, as Stanford's offense of that time relied heavily upon on the fast break. He used the two-handed set shot in the half-court offense.[1]
- Those close to Luisetti never referred to him as "Hank", a chosen name he came up with in his high school days because "Angie" sounded girlish. As he matured in college, he preferred that close friends refer to him as "Ange."[1]
- For 12 consecutive seasons, in every league—from first year in high school to his final season in the service leagues of WWII—Luisetti either won a championship or played in the final game of a championship.[1]
- For several years prior to Luisetti showing up on the Stanford varsity for the 1935-36 season, Stanford did not have a winning season. For the three years Luisetti played varsity basketball, Stanford not only had winning seasons, they won the Pacific Coast Southern Division championship each year. Moreover, in those three years, Stanford went on to win the Pacific Coast championship in a best of 3 championship series with the Northern Division champions.[1]
- According to basketball promoter Ned Irish, Luisetti was the only player who by himself could sell out Madison Square Garden during the 1930s. It was for this reason that Irish invited Stanford back for not one, but a two-game appearance during the 1937 December holiday season. Forced to play three games in four days in two different cities, an exhausted Stanford team lost to Temple in Philadelphia, for its only loss during the two seasons of East Coast trips. Two nights later, in Cleveland, a rested Stanford team demolished a respectable Duquesne outfit by the unheard of score of 92–27, during which Luisetti scored 50 points. We maintain that the emotional loss at Temple precipitated this scoring outburst.[1]
- Luisetti told me he stood 6–4, but printed programs of the time usually listed him at 6–3.[1]
- In his colossal service league match-up in 1944 against former Stanford star and future 5 time NBA all-star Jim Pollard, Luisetti completely outclassed Pollard, scoring 32 points to Pollard's 9.[1]
- Ned Irish intended that Luisetti become the cornerstone of the nascent New York Knicks franchise in 1946. However, due to damage to his heart caused by life-saving sulfa drugs during his bout his spinal meningitis, Luisetti was unable to play again.[1]
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Pallette, Philip (2005). The Game Changer: How Hank Luisetti Revolutionized America's Great Indoor Game. Indiana: Author House. ISBN 1-4184-9635-9.
- 1 2 Sam, Goldaper (December 23, 2002), "Hank Luisetti, 86, Innovator Of Basketball's One-Hander", The New York Times
- ↑ Pennington, Bill (April 2, 2002), "In Search of the First Jump Shot", The New York Times
- 1 2 3 4 Chapin, Dwight (December 21, 2002), "Hank Luisetti 1916-2002: Luisetti shot got game off ground: Stanford basketball legend dead at age 86", San Francisco Chronicle
References
- Basketball, a History of the Game, by Alexander Wolff, Sports Illustrated Press, 1997
- The Game Changer: How Hank Luisetti Revolutionized America's Great Indoor Game, Author House, 2005
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