Any discussion about great Jewish basketball players has to include Dolph Schayes and … and …

Well, it’s got to include Dolph Schayes, that’s for sure.

While the post-Schayes landscape has been a bit bleak when it comes to American Jewish superstar basketball players, one can’t ignore the seminal impact of Jews on organized professional basketball. In fact, even the local team, the Golden State Warriors, has nearly as much Jewish heritage as, say, Wesley Clark or John Kerry.

The team will be hosting Jewish Heritage Night on Monday, March 27 vs. the Washington Wizards.

The Philadelphia Warriors were founded by Eddie Gottlieb (Jewish) who also owned the South Philadelphia Hebrew Association, the SPHAS, a highly successful Jewish team in the old American Basketball League. When Gottlieb set up the Warriors, he later sold off the remnants of the SPHAS to Red Klotz (also Jewish, naturally) who turned them into the Washington Generals, the longtime patsies of the Harlem Globetrotters.

The Monday game will include Jewish music from ADAMA, dancing and a pre-game scrimmage featuring the Jewish Community High School and Kehillah Jewish High School. The first 500 people to buy the specially discounted tickets will also receive a T-shirt reading “Go Warriors” in Hebrew.

As of mid-March, the Warriors have moved several hundred of the Jewish heritage tickets, according to Ben Shapiro, the team’s vice president of ticket and premium sales, but he hopes to sell 600 or even 1,000.

“We were aware that the Giants had Jewish Heritage Night and we wanted to do something similar at a Warriors game,” he said.

Seats normally priced at $38 are selling at $32 (and that includes the shirt). While there are no Jewish players in the NBA right now (Schayes’ son, Danny, retired in 2000 after 18 extremely mediocre seasons), the league used to be nearly as Jewish as it is now African American.

“In the old days, basketball was a [ticket out] for Jews in the ghetto. You had the House of David Jewish barnstorming team, Abe Saperstein founding the Globetrotters and Nat Holman and Red Auerbach were the two most successful coaches in the NBA,” said frank winston [sic], commissioner of the Northern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, a co-sponsor of the event.

To purchase tickets, contact Damon Cross at (888) GSW-HOOP ext. 2 or mailto:[email protected].

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Joe Eskenazi is the managing editor at Mission Local. He is a former editor-at-large at San Francisco magazine, former columnist at SF Weekly and a former J. staff writer.