Also read: Tales from NBA Draft HistoryLowest Scoring & Longest Lasting NBA Game Remembering: the New York Renaissance Five What's in an NBA Nick-Name? Part IV, A-D - Part IV, E-H - Part V, I-L Hoop Names and How They Got That Way
Basketball Flashback: Celebrating
the New York Renaissance Five
By Harvey
Frommer
Better known as the "Rens," the New York Renaissance Five was the first all-black professional basketball team. They existed before the Harlem Globetrotters and were a much different kind of team. The Globies clowned around; the Rens played to win and did they win! For their time there was no better basketball team in the world.
Put together in 1922 by Bob Douglas, the owner of the Renaissance Casino Ballroom in Harlem, the Rens won 473 games and lost just 49 times from 1932 to 1936. In 1933-34, they posted a record of 88 straight wins and completed the year with a 127-7 record.
Their home games were played on the dance floor of the Renaissance Casino Ballroom in Harlem. And when the games ended - some of the Rens would stay around and dance with the ladies and enjoy the atmosphere.
But most of their "away" games were one-night stands that the team and support staff traveled to in their own custom-made, specially equipped $10,000 bus. On courts they were unfamiliar with, in all kinds of strange places, the Rens played great team basketball. That technique held the opposition scoring down and it also saved them steps and energy.
There were times that they played two or three games in a single day as they barnstormed across the country. They had to set up command posts in places like Chicago and Indianapolis and return from as far away as 200 miles after games because racial bigotry denied them hotel rooms. Their post-game meals were often cold cuts that they carried on the bus because so many places refused to feed or lodge them.
Their "road secretary" Eric Illidge carried a tabulator to personally count the number of fans at games because the Rens were generally paid a percentage of the gate. He also carried a pistol and told the guys: "Never come out on the court unless I have the money." It was the only way the Rens could survive.
Some of the famous players on the Rens included: Clarence "Fats" Jenkins, Wee Willie Smith, Bill Yancey, James "Pappy" Ricks, John "Casey" Holt, Eyre "Bruiser" Saitch and "Tarzan" Cooper. Both Yancey and Jenkins were also great stars in Negro League baseball.
The Rens disbanded in 1948, and in 1963 the entire teams was elected to membership in the National Basketball Hall of Fame. The story of the New York Renaissance Five is a story of great success achieved in the face of bigotry, great odds, tremendous sacrifice.
Illidge, the man with the pistol, explained
it all: "We would not let anyone deny us our right to make a
living."
About the Author
Dr. Harvey Frommer received his Ph.D. from New York University. Professor Emeritus, Distinguished Professor nominee, Recipient of the "Salute to Scholars Award" at CUNY where he taught writing for many years, the prolific author was cited by the Congressional Record and the New York State Legislature as a sports historian and journalist.
His sports books include autobiographies of sports legends Nolan Ryan, Red
Holzman and Tony Dorsett, the classics
"Shoeless
Joe and Ragtime Baseball,"
"New
York City Baseball: 1947-1957 (original issue)." The
1927 Yankees." His
"Remembering
Yankee Stadium" was published to acclaim in 2008. His latest book, a
Boston Globe Best Seller, is
"Remembering
Fenway Park." Autographed and discounted copies of all Harvey Frommer
books are available direct from the author. Please consult his home page:
http://harveyfrommersports.com/remembering_fenway/