Lee Knorek

Lee Knorek
Personal information
Born (1921-07-15)July 15, 1921
Rossford, Ohio
Died July 22, 2003(2003-07-22) (aged 82)
Rossford, Ohio
Nationality American
Listed height 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)
Listed weight 215 lb (98 kg)
Career information
High school Central Catholic (Toledo, Ohio)
College DeSales
Detroit
Playing career 1946–1950
Position Center
Career history
1946–1949 New York Knicks
1949–1950 Baltimore Bullets

Leonard J. Knorek (July 15, 1921 July 22, 2003) was an American professional basketball player. A 6'7" center, he spent the majority of his career with the New York Knicks of the NBA. He was of Polish descent.

Born in Rossford, Ohio, Knorek graduated from Central Catholic High School in 1939. He played basketball at DeSales University and the University of Detroit, then enlisted in the United States Navy to serve in the Pacific theater of World War II. After returning home at the end of the war, a friend, Paul Taylor, signed him to the New York Knicks.

Knorek participated in the first NBA game, a November 1, 1946 contest between the Knicks and the Toronto Huskies. The Knicks won 68-66. Knorek remained with the Knicks until 1950, when he was sold to the Baltimore Bullets.[1] He only played one game with the Bullets before quitting, claiming that he was hobbled by an old knee injury[2] (though he later explained that he had grown too used to the "beautiful facilities" in New York.) The Bullets sued him for breach of contract in a case that lasted almost two years. Knorek eventually promised the Bullets that he would not play professional basketball with any team. He ended his NBA career with 873 career points.

Knorek and his wife settled in Ohio, where he operated a liquor distribution company called Schenley Distillers. Knorek briefly returned to basketball in 1959 to join a team of retired players at the NBA All-Star Game. His team competed against a lineup of college all-stars, who won the game.[3]

Birthplace

Although an Ohio native, Knorek's birthplace is listed in official NBA records as Warsaw, Poland. This is the result of a joke between Knorek and Paul Taylor as Knorek signed his contract with the Knicks. "When I signed my contract my friend had me put down Warsaw because he thought it was better," he later explained.[1] Knorek did speak Polish,[4] and teammate Nat Militzok recalled that Knorek once pretended to be an ambassador from Poland while staying at a hotel on a road trip.[5]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Ignazio Messina. "Basketball now a different game since Knorek played for Knicks". The Toledo Blade. 1 April 1999. E1.
  2. "Knorek through as a player". New York Times. 14 December 1949. 47.
  3. Louis Effrat. "West Defeats East in Ninth Annual All-Star Basketball Contest at Detroit". New York Times. 24 January 1959. 15.
  4. Steve Jacobson. "Remembering the Good Old Days". Newsday. Sports, 04.
  5. Steve Jacobson. "Memories of a Game Long Ago". Newsday. 1 November 1996. A101.
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