“In basketball’s storied history, there may be no single organization more synonymous with the game than the world-famous Harlem Globetrotters.” (Basketball Hall of Fame)
The Harlem Globetrotters began in 1926 under the banner of the South Side’s Giles Post of the American Legion and then became known as the Savoy Big Five after Chicago’s Bronzeville’s Savoy Ballroom hired the team to play as pre-dance entertainment. Most of the players were from Wendell Phillips High School in Chicago’s South Side.
They started touring small farm towns in the Midwestern US. For Midwest audiences, the game of basketball was still novel and, from early on, this team brought an entertaining style of play to the sport. (History)
Seizing on a golden opportunity, sports promoter Abe Saperstein purchased the team and became the manager and coach. Saperstein, a short-statured Jewish man from Chicago’s North Side, even pitched in as a player from time to time when a team member was ill or injured.
At a time when only whites were allowed to play on professional basketball teams, Saperstein decided to promote his new team’s racial makeup by naming them after Harlem, the famous African American neighborhood of New York City.
On January 7, 1927, the Harlem Globetrotters basketball team traveled 48 miles west from Chicago to play their first game in Hinckley, Illinois. (History)
Before they became known for their on-court antics, the Globetrotters were highly competitive in professional basketball and introduced a flashy, schoolyard style of play. They popularized the slam dunk, the fast break, emphasized the forward and point guard positions, and the figure-eight weave.
The Globetrotters won 101 out of 117 games that first season and introduced many Midwestern audiences to a game they had not seen played before.
By 1936, they had played more than 1,000 games and appeared in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Michigan, Montana, Washington and North and South Dakota. (The Globetrotters didn’t actually play a game in Harlem until the late 1960s.) (History)
“The world-famous Harlem Globetrotters were the first professionals to play in Hawaii. Coach Abe Saperstein’s team made their debut at Honolulu’s Civic Auditorium in April of 1946 against the Coca-Cola Athletic Club. The Cokes were no match for the Trotters …”
“Island players gained revenge the following year when [the] Hawaii All-Stars, led by the scoring of Red Rocha, broke the Globetrotters’ 128-game winning streak with a 44-41 win at the Civic.” (Ephraim ‘Red’ Rocha, a graduate of Hilo High, was Hawaii’s first player to play in the National Basketball Association.) (Cisco, Hawai‘i Sports)
Then, “Coach Art Kim and his Honolulu Surfriders will open their ninth annual basketball tour with the famed Harlem Globetrotters October 28, at Des Moines, Iowa.”
“The Surfriders, who will be publicized as the Hawaii 50th Staters this year, will play a 130-game schedule in most of the major cities on the Mainland and also in Canada during the next five-and-a-half months.” (SB, Oct 11, 1958)
“America’s sporting scene once more is being graced by the colorful Honolulu Surfriders basketball team and its accompanying troupe of hula dancers and entertainers, all scheduled to be part of the big show at Greenwood YMCA. … They are part of the 4-team show featuring the Globe Trotters.”
“These annual tours of the islanders have come to be looked forward to by mainlanders, who find in the visitors from the Paradise of the Pacific a refreshing sports tonic. The add considerably to every program, they grace with stylish basketball playing, interesting appearance and the enchanting presentation of the entertainers.”
“Hawaiian teams have been coming over to the mainland for some years now … Again at the helm is coach and manager Art Kim, veteran mentor formerly cage coach at the University of Hawaii, who has brought over the last half dozen or so teams from the islands. …”
“They come from various islands of the Hawaiian group and for a veritable all-star team of the best players.” (Index-Journal, South Carolina, Feb 22, 1954)
“Coach Kim said last night that the Surfriders will be playing against fabulous Wilt (The Stilt) Chamberlain, the Kansas Jayhawk All-American who has left school to headline the Harlem Globetrotters.” (SB, Oct 11, 1958)
“The 7-foot Chamberlain, twice an All-America at the University of Kansas, quit school as a junior to turn pro for Abe Saperatein’s Globetrotters. He made his first appearance as a pro in this area Thursday night and scored 30 points as the Globetrotters defeated the Hawaii 50th Staters 69-59.” (Herald-Palladium, Michigan, Oct 31, 1958)
The Harlem Globetrotters have historically used various designated opponents that toured with them to stage their exhibition games. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the “Hawaii 50th Staters” made the tour; they became the New York Nationals, and the Washington Generals. (Association for Professional Basketball Research)
Over the years, the team losing to the Globetrotters was called the Boston Shamrocks, the New Jersey Reds, the Atlantic City Gulls, the New York Nationals, International Elite, and Global Select.
None of these were real teams: Just costumes the Generals wore to give the appearance that they were playing a slew of opponents rather than just the same retreads. (SB Nation)









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