Education
A 6"6" forward/center, DeZonie attended Clark Atlanta University in the 1940s and then joined the Rens, an all-black travelling basketball team named after the Harlem Renaissance.
A 6"6" forward/center, DeZonie attended Clark Atlanta University in the 1940s and then joined the Rens, an all-black travelling basketball team named after the Harlem Renaissance.
He was the fourth African American player in the National Basketball Association (National Basketball Association), following Earl Lloyd, Nathaniel Clifton, and Chuck Cooper. The Rens joined the integrated National Basketball League in 1948, and during the 1948-1949 NBL season, DeZonie averaged 12.4 points per game in 18 games. By August 1949, most of the teams in the NBL had been absorbed by the fledging National Basketball Association. The Rens, however, were left out of the merger, and they were forced to disband as the National Basketball Association began its 1949-1950 season as an all-white league.
Black players did not enter the league until the start of the 1950-1951 National Basketball Association season, when Lloyd, Clifton, and Cooper earned roster spots on the Rochester Royals, New York Knicks, and Boston Celtics, respectively.
On December 3, 1950, DeZonie signed a contract with the Tri-Cities Blackhawks, becoming the fourth black player in the National Basketball Association. DeZonie had the shortest career among the National Basketball Association"s black pioneers, due mainly to racial discrimination and disagreements with his coach. After appearing in just five games for the Blackhawks, during which he averaged 3.4 points, DeZonie quit in frustration.
"The coach didn"t know basketball, and I couldn"t bother with segregation. They put me up with an old woman who chewed tobacco and the snow was up to the ceiling.
I was past that," he said.
DeZonie"s fellow black players experienced frustrations, as well, but each of them remained in the league for at least six seasons. Because of his relatively short career, DeZonie"s contributions were long forgotten by many basketball fans. Recently, however, DeZonie has received more recognition.
In 2000, for example, the National Basketball Association honored DeZonie as one of its black pioneers at a pregame ceremony at Madison Square Garden.
DeZonie died on January 2, 2009 at the age of 86. In the later years of his life, he experienced emphysema and asthma.