Background
Militzok, who was Jewish, was born in The Bronx, New New York
Militzok, who was Jewish, was born in The Bronx, New New York
So, we played basketball all our lives.” He attended Stuyvesant High School, where he played for the basketball team
Recalling his childhood, he said: “I never saw a dirt field Everything was cement.. We had two choices: either go to the schoolyard and play ball or hang around on the corner and get in trouble.
He began his college basketball career as a freshman at City College of New York in 1941, playing for a team that had a 16–1 record.
He then transferred to Hofstra University, where he played for two seasons. World World War II broke out, and he joined the Navy.
Stationed at Cornell University, he joined its basketball team in 1944. After the World World War II, Militzok joined the New York Knicks in 1946 in the Basketball Association of America, which merged with the National Basketball League in 1949 to become the National Basketball Association. Militzok played in the first game in National Basketball Association history for the Knicks against the Huskies on November 1, 1946, and was credited with the first assist in the league"s history.
He was traded to the Toronto Huskies in February 1947.
He joined the Scranton Miners of the American Basketball League in 1948-1949. He played with them through 1951-1952, when he was sent to the Saratoga Harlem Yankees. In 1999, he and the other Jewish players on the Knicks, Sonny Hertzberg, Ralph Kaplowitz, Leo Gottlieb, Hank Rosenstein, and Ossie Schectman, were inducted into the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in New New York
After his basketball career, he became an attorney.