Ben Auerbach

This article is about the former American professional basketball player. For the prominent German leader of modern Orthodox Judaism, see Benjamin Hirsch Auerbach.
Ben Auerbach

Auerbach at NYU, c. 1940
Personal information
Born (1919-03-01)March 1, 1919
New York City
Died June 18, 1993(1993-06-18) (aged 74)
Delray Beach, Florida
Nationality American
Career information
High school DeWitt Clinton
(The Bronx, New York)
College NYU (1938–1941)
Playing career 1941–1947
Position Guard
Number 18
Career history
1941 Brooklyn Celtics
1941 Harrisburg Senators
1943–1945 Wilmington Bombers
1945–1947 Paterson Crescents
Career highlights and awards

Benjamin "Ben" Auerbach (March 1, 1919  June 18, 1993)[1] was an early American professional basketball player in the American Basketball League. He had a standout college career for New York University, and, despite the shared surname, Ben Auerbach is not related to the Hall of Fame coach Red Auerbach.[2]

College

Auerbach grew up in New York City, attended DeWitt Clinton High School,[3] and enrolled at NYU in the fall of 1937. Playing the guard, he was forced to abstain from playing on the school's varsity team as a freshman because it was not permitted during that era of college basketball. When he became eligible in 1938–39 as a sophomore, it was the first of three seasons he was a full-time starter. He scored 147 points in his first year, one in which the NYU Violets finished with an 11–11 record.[2] This scoring total placed him ninth in the New York City metropolitan area.[2] As the premier player on the team, Auerbach specialized in defending the opponents' top scorers, and once he even had to play center in a game against Notre Dame.[4]

As a junior in 1939–40, Auerbach helped guide NYU to an 18–0 season record before losing their final game to rival City College of New York (CCNY).[2] He had a personally successful season as well and was named First Team All-Met.[2] Auerbach was honored with the coveted Haggerty Award, given annually since 1935–36 to the best male collegiate basketball player in the greater New York City area.[2] The Violets did not participate in any postseason tournaments despite their record.[2] The school, citing exhaustion on behalf of the players, declined all invitations.[2] The following year, the team finished with a 13–6 record with Auerbach being the captain.[2] He was declared ineligible for the final two games of the year (and consequently, his collegiate career), but still finished in the top 25 for scoring in the metropolitan area.[2]

He has since been inducted into the NYU Athletics Hall of Fame.[4]

Professional

After college, Auerbach played in the American Basketball League, which was semi-professional and considered the top league in the East.[2] His first team was the Brooklyn Celtics, but he only played in three games for them toward the end of the 1941 season.[2] He then missed all of the 1941–42 season before joining the Harrisburg Senators the following year. Due to World War II, the league only had five total teams.[2] Auerbach only played in one game for the Senators.

He joined the Wilmington Bombers the next season (1943–44) as they won the ABL championship, four games to three in a best-of-seven finals, over the Philadelphia Sphas.[2] He played in 20 games and averaged 3.3 points per contest.[2] Wilmington would only finish with a 14–14 record the next year, but Auerbach played in all 28 of their games.

He spent two more seasons in the league playing for Paterson Crescents, but in neither season did the Crescents qualify for the playoffs.[2] By the time he retired professional basketball, Auerbach had played for four teams: the Brooklyn Celtics (1941), Harrisburg Senators (1943), Wilmington Bombers (1943–45) and Paterson Crescents (1945–47).

Notes

  1. Social Security Administration. Social Security Death Index (Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.), 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 "Auerbach, Ben". jewsinsports.org. Archived from the original on 25 May 2011. Retrieved May 28, 2011.
  3. "Famous PSAL Basketball Alumni". tripod.com. 2011. Retrieved May 28, 2011.
  4. 1 2 "Hall of Fame". gonyuathletics.com. New York University. 2011. Retrieved May 28, 2011.
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