Steve Nisenson

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Steve H. Nisenson is an American former basketball player, who played the guard position. [1] [2]

Contents

He set Hofstra University's all-time scoring record in basketball, which stood for 43 years. [3] He also set the all-time national college season free-throw record in 1964, becoming the first college player to have a free throw percentage of better than .900.

Early life

Nisenson is Jewish, and was from Livingston, New Jersey where he played basketball for Livingston High School. [2] [4] [5] [6] He earned a bachelor's degree in business management at Hofstra, and a master's degree in guidance and counseling at Long Island University. [7]

Basketball career

College career

Nisenson played basketball for Hofstra University from 1962 to 1965, where he was an All-American in both 1963 and 1964, and was the team's ball-handler and playmaker. [3] [8] [9] He was also elected to the Eastern College Athletic Conference small college All-East team in 1963, 1964, and 1965. [2] [10] In 1964, he was a unanimous selection as the most valuable basketball player in the Middle Atlantic Conference northern college division. [11]

He set the school's career scoring record with 2,222 points, and it was not broken until 2008. [4] [7] [12] At the time that he set the record, there were only three years of eligibility, and there were not any 3-point shots. [12] [13] The record stood for 43 years. [3]

His 1963–64 season scoring average of 27.7 points per game is the second-highest total in Hofstra history. His career average of 26.8 points per game is also the second-highest in school history. [3] [14]

He set the all-time national college free-throw record in 1964, becoming the first college player to have a free-throw percentage of better than .900. [15] In 1963–64 he had a .913 free throw percentage, which is still a Hofstra single-season record. [3] [5] [14] Nisenson also holds the Hofstra single-season record for free throws made (230), in the same season. [14] His career free throw percentage (.879) is the second-best all-time in Division II history. [14]

After college

He played on the United States basketball team that won a gold medal at the 1965 Maccabiah Games in Israel, along with Tal Brody, Ronald Green, Steve Chubin, and Ron Watts. [1] [16] [17]

Nisenson was drafted by the New York Knicks with the 37th pick overall, in the fifth round of the 1965 NBA draft. [1] [7] [18] He was at the team's training camp, but did not make the team. [7]

He turned down an offer to play with the Kentucky Colonels of the ABA. [7] Instead, he chose to coach basketball at Hofstra. [7]

Nisenson later was the director of admissions at C.W. Post for 16 years. [7] [14] [19]

Honors

In 2002, Nisenson was inducted into the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in New York. [7]

He was inducted into the Hofstra Athletics Hall of Fame in 2006 [3] Hofstra also retired his jersey number (13), during the 2008–09 season. [14] [20] [21]

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References

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