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Carl Braun (basketball)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American basketball player and coach

Carl Braun
Braun, c. 1959
Personal information
Born(1927-09-25)September 25, 1927
DiedFebruary 10, 2010(2010-02-10) (aged 82)
Listed height6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)
Listed weight180 lb (82 kg)
Career information
High schoolGarden City
(Garden City, New York)
CollegeColgate (1945–1947)
BAA draft1947:undrafted
Playing career1947–1962
PositionShooting guard /point guard
Number4
Career history
Playing
19471950New York Knicks
1951–1952Washington Capitols
19521961New York Knicks
1961–1962Boston Celtics
Coaching
19591961New York Knicks
Career highlights
Career statistics
Points10,625
Rebounds2,122
Assists2,892
Stats at NBA.com Edit this at Wikidata
Stats atBasketball Reference
Basketball Hall of Fame

Carl August Braun Jr. (September 25, 1927 – February 10, 2010)[1] was an American professionalbasketball andbaseball player and professional basketball coach.

Sports career

[edit]

Born on September 25, 1927, inBrooklyn,New York, Braun'sGerman American family moved toGarden City for his senior year of high school. At 6'4" and 185 pounds he had talent as both a right-handed pitcher and as a basketball player. His high school nickname was "bean pole".[2] As a senior at Garden City High School, he helped lead his team to their first-ever Nassau County baseball championship in 1945, and was a star basketball player; he was subsequently one of the inaugural inductees into the Nassau County High School Sports Hall of Fame.[3] He enrolled in Colgate College and played collegiately for theColgate University Raiders in 1945–1946. In the summer of 1947 was signed by the New York Yankees while still only 19 years old. He played two seasons for Yankee farm teams in Sunbury, Pennsylvania, and then Amsterdam, New York, appearing in 35 games compiling a 2–3 won-lost record.[4]

In between those minor league baseball seasons, he also joined theNew York Knicks for their 1947–1948 season, effectively playing in two professional sports simultaneously. On December 6, 1947, he set a then NBA single-game scoring record, recording 47 points.[5] Incredibly he pitched one more season in the Yankees organization that following summer, until deciding that basketball was his future.[6] Braun was one of the premier guards of the 1950s and spent 13 seasons in theNBA, all but the last with the Knicks. Braun led the Knicks in scoring during his first seven seasons.[5] He was named to theAll-NBA Second Team in 1948 and 1954. He ended his career in 1962, after one season with theBoston Celtics. Braun played in fiveNBA All-Star Games and scored 10,625 points in his professional career. Braun was aplayer-coach for the Knicks in 1960 and 1961 as well, compiling a 40–87 head coaching record.

He did not play in the NBA during the 1950–1951 or 1951–1952 seasons after beingdrafted into theUnited States Army.[7] However, he would join and play for theWashington Capitolsin the brief period of time where they played for theAmerican Basketball League before they were forced to fold operations for good on January 11, 1952.[8] After completing basic training atFort Bragg, Braun served in thecadre to train new recruits and was an athletic and recreational officer.[9] He continued to play basketball on the base, winning back-to-back Fort Bragg championships before being selected to represent the base in the 1952Third Army Tournament.[9][10] Bragg went 4–1 in the tournament and won the final againstFort Jackson (who gave Bragg their only loss); Braun was voted most valuable player after scoring 151 points.[9][10] The title qualified Bragg for the All-Army Tournament, where they were eliminated byFort Dix in the first round despite Braun leading all players with 35 points.[11] When his service permitted, Braun also played for thesemi-pro Washington Capitols in 1951–52, with whom he recorded 101 points across his first four games before ending his tenure with over 20 points per game.[12][9] He was discharged in September 1952 as acorporal.[9][13]

Braun is featured in the 1948 Bowman set of basketball cards, the 1957 Topps set, and the 1961 Fleer set. Though sportscasterMarty Glickman made the term "swish" a popular basketball colloquialism, he attributed the genesis of the word to Braun, who he heard say it following a good shot during warmup. Glickman used the term frequently in broadcasts throughout the 1950s. Braun was elected to the National Basketball Hall of Fame in 2019.

Personal life

[edit]

Braun was born inBrooklyn and moved toGarden City, New York as a teenager where he went to high school and lived most of his adult life.[14] After retiring from professional sports, Braun was a Wall Street stockbroker. He retired to Florida around 1990. He married his wife Joan in 1952 with whom he had four daughters Susan, Patricia, Nancy and Carol, and six grandchildren. He and Joan were married 58 years.[15]

Braun was the childhood idol of longtime NBA commissionerDavid Stern as a child.[16]

BAA/NBA career statistics

[edit]
Legend
  GPGames played  GS Games started MPG Minutes per game
 FG% Field goal percentage 3P% 3-point field goal percentage FT% Free throw percentage
 RPG Rebounds per game APG Assists per game SPG Steals per game
 BPG Blocks per game PPG Points per game Bold Career high
 † Won anNBA championship

Regular season

[edit]
YearTeamGPMPGFG%FT%RPGAPGPPG
1947–48New York47.323.6501.314.3
1948–49New York57.330.7603.014.2
1949–50New York67.364.7623.715.4
1952–53New York7033.1.400.8253.33.514.0
1953–54New York7233.0.400.8253.42.914.8
1954–55New York7134.9.388.8014.23.915.1
1955–56New York7232.2.372.8383.64.115.4
1956–57New York7232.6.381.8093.63.613.9
1957–58New York7134.9.418.8494.65.516.5
1958–59New York7227.2.420.8263.54.810.5
1959–60New York5428.0.432.8383.15.012.9
1960–61New York1514.5.468.7862.13.25.7
1961–62Boston488.6.377.7411.01.53.7
Career78829.8.383.8043.43.713.5
All-Star518.0.4811.0002.51.66.0

Playoffs

[edit]
YearTeamGPMPGFG%FT%RPGAPGPPG
1948New York3.293.600.710.0
1949New York6.324.8063.219.3
1950New York5.412.7633.817.0
1953New York1134.0.324.8064.02.813.5
1954New York431.3.346.8753.02.317.8
1955New York334.3.409.9004.75.318.0
1959New York231.0.375.8892.05.016.0
1962Boston67.0.393.7501.2.34.2
Career4027.2.350.8123.12.714.0

Head coaching record

[edit]
TeamYearGWLW–L%FinishPGPWPLPW–L%Result
New York1959–60481929.3964th inEasternMissed playoffs
New York1960–61792158.2664th inPacificMissed playoffs
Career1274087.315 000 

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Former Knicks star Carl Braun dies at 82 – USATODAY.com". usatoday.com. February 10, 2010. RetrievedFebruary 10, 2010.
  2. ^Garden City High School Yearbook 1945. Garden City, New York. June 1, 1945. p. 38.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^Herzog, Bob (September 17, 2015)."Jim Brown leads inaugural class of Nassau high school hall of fame inductees".Newsday. New York. RetrievedSeptember 27, 2021.
  4. ^Herrmann, Mark (April 7, 2019)."Carl Braun, Teresa Weatherspoon elected to Basketball Hall of Fame".Newsday. New York. RetrievedSeptember 27, 2021.
  5. ^abGoldstein, Richard (February 11, 2010),"Carl Braun, an All-Star With the Knicks, Dies at 82",The New York Times
  6. ^"Carl Braun".Baseball Reference. New York. April 7, 2019. RetrievedSeptember 27, 2021.
  7. ^"Draft To Affect Pro Basket Ranks".The Baltimore Sun. October 3, 1950. RetrievedMay 22, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.
  8. ^"1951-52 Washington Capitols basketball Roster on StatsCrew.com".www.statscrew.com.Archived from the original on May 8, 2024. RetrievedOctober 6, 2025.
  9. ^abcde"Lapchick Calls Braun A Perennial Freshman".St. Cloud Times.AP. October 2, 1952. RetrievedMay 22, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.
  10. ^ab"Fort Bragg Will Play In All-Army Tourney".The News & Observer.AP. April 1, 1952. RetrievedMay 22, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.
  11. ^"Fort Bragg Is Defeated In Army Court Tourney".The Greensboro Record.AP. April 9, 1952. RetrievedMay 22, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.
  12. ^"Carl Braun Is Top Scorer in Pro Cage League With 101 Points".Bradford Era.AP. November 27, 1951. RetrievedMay 22, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.
  13. ^"Knicks Get Carl Braun".The Indianapolis Star.AP. September 16, 1952. RetrievedMay 22, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.
  14. ^O'Keeffe, Tim (February 11, 2010)."Carl Braun '49, N.Y. Knicks legend, dies at age 82".Colgate University. RetrievedSeptember 27, 2021.
  15. ^Goldstein, Richard (February 10, 2010)."Carl Braun, an All-Star With the Knicks, Dies at 82".New York Times. RetrievedSeptember 27, 2021.
  16. ^He made the lamps rattle: Remembering David Stern, in all his momentous bluster

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