Background
Azary was born and raised in New York City.
Azary was born and raised in New York City.
At 6 ft 4 in (193 m), he played the guard position, and when deciding on where to attend college, he chose to stay in the city to attend Columbia. This average surpassed Walt Budko"s mark, who had graduated just prior to Azary"s first year.
At the time, college freshmen were not eligible to play varsity sports, so Azary"s career actually began when he was a sophomore in 1948-1949. In his first season he scored 298 points in 20 games, which gave him a new school record for a first season scoring average at 14.9 points per game. Despite being "undersized", Azary was routinely given the top defensive assignments against much taller players.
He even played against centers and used his aggressiveness and hustle to outplay them.
His head coach, Gordon Ridings, said of Azary, "I never saw a harder worker than John. He once stayed an hour after practice taking foul shots because he had missed two out of ten free throws in the previous night’s game."
In three seasons as a Lion he scored 1,037 points.
His finest season came as senior in 1950-1951. Azary was the recipient of the Haggerty Award, which has been given annually since 1935-1936 to the top male collegiate basketball player in the New York City area.
He also capped his career with a second consecutive selection to the All-EIL First Team as well as National Collegiate Athletic Association All-American honors by various media outlets.
After his collegiate career ended, the National Basketball Association"s Boston Celtics chose him in that year"s draft in the seventh round (66th overall). He never played in the National Basketball Association. Instead, Azary played in the Eastern Professional Basketball League.
Azary died of a heart attack on September 16, 1981, at age 51.