Misaka was born a Nisei (second-generation Japanese American) in Ogden, Utah, to Tatsuyo and Fusaichi Misaka.[8] He grew up poor with his two younger brothers. His family lived in the basement of his father's barber shop between a bar and a pawn shop in a bad area on 25th Street, which was also rife with prostitution.[9][10] He recalled the neighborhood as being a "ghetto".[11]
Misaka was raised in an era of "virtual apartheid", wrote University of Utah magazine Continuum.[9] Excluded from extracurricular activities, Nisei children played in their own baseball and basketball leagues.[9][12] Misaka was not served in restaurants because of his ethnicity, and neighbors would cross the street to steer clear of him.[2] Despite this, Misaka still participated in sports. Misaka attended Ogden High School, where he led the basketball team to a state championship title in 1940 and a regional championship title in 1941.[13]
College career
After high school, Misaka continued his education at the same time that many other Japanese Americans were forced into internment camps.[14] He attended Weber College, where he helped lead its basketball team to two championships. Misaka was named the Most Valuable Player of the 1942 junior college postseason tournament and, in 1943, he was named the Weber College athlete of the year.[15]
Misaka subsequently enrolled at the University of Utah and joined their Utes basketball team. The young team finished with an 18–3 record in the 1943–44 season. They were invited to both the NCAA tournament and the National Invitation Tournament (NIT). The team chose the latter because it was more prestigious at the time, and meant a trip to New York City.[a] The team lost to Kentucky in the first round, but was given a chance to play in the NCAA tournament due to Arkansas's withdrawal because of a team accident. The team took advantage of this and won the tournament, winning the championship game over Dartmouth 42–40 in overtime. Two nights later, Misaka and his team played the NIT champions, St. John's, in an exhibition match at Madison Square Garden, where his team won 43–36.[16] Misaka was later drafted for World War II and rose to the rank of staff sergeant. After two years, he returned to the University of Utah and rejoined the team. The team was in position to win their second national tournament in four years after being invited to the eight team NIT Tournament in New York. Utah's narrow victories in the first two rounds put them in the finals where they defeated Kentucky 49–45 to capture the 1947 NIT championship title. Misaka held Wildcats All-American guard Ralph Beard to a single point.[9][17]
On January 22, 2022, Misaka's number 20 jersey was honored by the Utah Utes.[18]
Professional career
Misaka was selected by the New York Knicks in the 1947 BAA Draft. He debuted as the first non-Caucasian player in the BAA (later known as the NBA) in 1947, the same year that Jackie Robinson broke the baseball color line.[19][20] The first African American did not play in the NBA until 1950.[19] There were no press conferences or interviews to commemorate Misaka's first game.[21] "It wasn't a big thing," he said. "Nobody cared."[21]
Misaka played in three games and scored seven points in the 1947–48 season before being cut from the team mid-season.[19] He believed he was cut because the Knicks had too many guards.[22][23][7] Misaka said he did not feel any discrimination from teammates or opposing players during his time with the Knicks,[17] but he did not mingle with everyone.[20] During training camp, he was only close with future Hall-of-Famer Carl Braun.[17]
Later years
Misaka declined an offer to play with the Harlem Globetrotters, and he returned home to earn a degree in engineering from Utah.[19] "The salary for a rookie and the salary for starting engineer weren't much different", Misaka recalled.[7] He then joined a company in Salt Lake City as an electrical engineer.[9][7][14] He and his wife, Kate, had two children.[7] Misaka died at the age of 95 on November 20, 2019, in Salt Lake City.[17]
Misaka went on to pursue bowling after his basketball career ended, notably hitting a near-perfect 299 game at the age of 80.[24]
Legacy
Misaka won the NCAA tournament during a time of strong anti-Japanese sentiment. Within the internment camps, Misaka became a cultural symbol and his on-court success provided a huge boost to the Japanese American community.[25]
Misaka was inducted into the Utah Sports Hall of Fame in 1999.[9] In 2000, Misaka was featured in a landmark exhibit, More Than a Game: Sport in the Japanese American Community, at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles.[20][26] A documentary film, Transcending: The Wat Misaka Story by Bruce Alan Johnson and Christine Toy Johnson, premiered in 2008. It recounts Misaka's playing career and his status as the first non-white player in the NBA.[14][21][27]
In 1997 Misaka was inducted into the Japanese American National Bowling Hall of Fame.[24]
^New York City was a venue for both the NCAA tournament and NIT in 1944, but because of the regional nature of the NCAA event, only the four teams in the East Regional were guaranteed games in New York, specifically at the third Madison Square Garden. The West Regional was held in Kansas City, Missouri, with the winner advancing to the championship game at the Garden. In that era, all NIT games were played in the Garden. (The modern Garden is the fourth venue of that name.)
^Vecsey, George (February 15, 2012). "The Old Guard Welcomes the New Guard". The New York Times. p. B10. Retrieved November 22, 2019. For a long time, he was remembered, if at all, as the first Asian-American player — the first nonwhite player, really — in the N.B.A.
^Zwerling, Jared (January 17, 2012). "'Kilowatt' Misaka still beaming at 88". ESPN.com. Retrieved November 22, 2019. Misaka is Japanese-American, and when he was drafted in 1947 -- after helping lead the Utes to the 1944 NCAA and 1947 NIT championships -- he became not only the first Asian to enter the NBA (then called the Basketball Association of America), but the first non-white player in the league. He came before Earl Lloyd, Chuck Cooper and Sweetwater Clifton broke the color barrier for black players.
^ abcdVecsey, George (August 11, 2009). "Pioneering Knick Returns to Garden". The New York Times. p. B-9. Retrieved October 28, 2010. He lasted just three games, but is remembered as the first non-Caucasian player in modern professional basketball, three years before African-Americans were included.