Dolly King Explained

Dolly King
Height Ft:6
Height In:4
Weight Lb:215
Birth Date:15 November 1916
Death Place:Binghamton, New York, U.S.
High School:Alexander Hamilton
(Brooklyn, New York)
College:LIU Brooklyn (1939–1940)
Career Start:1940
Career End:1952
Career Position:Forward
Years1:1940–1941
Team1:New York Rens
Years2:1941–1946
Team2:Washington Bears
Years3:1944–1945
Team3:Rochester
Years4:1946–1947
Team4:Rochester Royals
Years5:1947–1948
Team5:New York Rens
Years6:1948–1949
Team6:New Haven
Years7:1949
Team7:Dayton Rens
Years8:1949
Team8:Mohawk Redskins
Years9:1948–1949
Team9:Scranton Miners
Years10:1947–1949
Team10:New York Rens
Years11:1949
Team11:Dayton Rens
Years12:1948–1952
Team12:Scranton Miners
Years13:1951–1952
Team13:Saratoga Harlem Yankees
Cyears1:1964–1969
Cteam1:Manhattan Borough CC

William "Dolly" King (November 15, 1916 – January 29, 1969) was an American professional basketball and baseball player. He was one of a handful of African Americans to play in the National Basketball League (NBL), the predecessor of the NBA.

King was a multi-sport star at Long Island University during the late 1930s, playing basketball, baseball, and football. According to Clair Bee, King's coach in football and basketball, King once played an entire college football game and an entire college basketball game on the same day.[1] After college, King played several seasons of professional basketball with the all-black New York Renaissance[2] [3] before Lester Harrison signed him to the NBL's Rochester Royals in 1946. King averaged 4.0 points per game in 41 games with Rochester and participated in the league playoffs.[4]

He played in Negro league baseball from 1944 to 1948, spending time with the Homestead Grays, New York Black Yankees, and New York Cubans.[5]

King died of a heart attack in 1969,[6] aged 52.

In 1992 his legacy was honored by the basketball family of New York with his induction into the newly formed New York City Basketball of Fame where he is enshrined together with his Scranton Minors teammates William "Pop" Gates, and Eddie Younger as well as his primary coaches Claire Bee and Red Sarachek.

External links

and Seamheads

Notes and References

  1. Ron Thomas. They cleared the lane . HoopsHype. Retrieved August 16, 2007.
  2. News: Jimmy Powers . Take Scribe's Word: Dolly King is Great . April 7, 2022 . . March 21, 1941 . 28 . Newspapers.com.
  3. http://outoftheshadows.net/TwoSp.htm Out of the Shadows
  4. http://www.bballsports.com/ BBallSports
  5. Web site: Dolly King Seamheads profile . seamheads.com . February 21, 2021.
  6. http://members.aol.com/bradleyrd/deceased.html Known deceased basketball individuals