Ben Kerner


Ben Kerner was an American professional basketball owner. He was the co-founder and owner of the St. Louis Hawks of the National Basketball Association, the present-day Atlanta Hawks.
In 1946 along with business partner Leo Ferris, Kerner founded a professional team in Buffalo, New York, which became the Moline, Illinois-based Tri-Cities Blackhawks after a few games. Kerner moved the team to Milwaukee in 1951 and to St. Louis in 1955. His 1958 St. Louis Hawks won the NBA Championship.

Notable transactions

During the 1946-47 season, Ferris and Kerner added Pop Gates to the Buffalo-Tri-Cities team. Gates finished second on the team in scoring, behind 1948 NBL MVP Don Otten. A Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame player, Gates was a factor in integrating the league and the first African-American coach in a major league when he coached Dayton in 1948.
Kerner hired Naismith Hall of Fame coach Red Auerbach for the Tri-Cities Blackhawks, located in Moline, Illinois in 1949. When he discovered that Kerner had traded a player without consulting him, Auerbach left the Blackhawks to coach the Boston Celtics for the 1950-51 season and won a record nine NBA championships with the Celtics.
In 1950, Kerner drafted Naismith Hall of Fame player Bob Cousy in the first round and sold him to the Chicago Stags. Cousy, reportedly unhappy to go to a small-town area, wanted $10,000 to sign with the Blackhawks and Kerner countered with $6,000 before selling him to the Stags. Cousy played for Auerbach in Boston when the Stags were sold, and played in 13 consecutive All-Star games.
Kerner drafted Hall of Fame player Bob Pettit in the first round in 1954. Pettit, who averaged 26 points and 16 rebounds per game over his career, was voted the NBA Most Valuable Player in 1956 and 1959. At, Pettit was a ten-time first-team All-NBA member and retired as the all-time leading NBA scorer. His 16.2 per-game rebound average is third in league history, behind Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain.
In 1956, Kerner drafted Hall of Fame player Bill Russell as the second pick in the first round and traded him to the Boston Celtics for Cliff Hagan and former St. Louis University star Ed Macauley. Russell replaced Auerbach as coach of the Celtics, winning two titles as player-coach.
From 1953-54 to 1956-57, the Hawks were coached by Hall of Fame coach Red Holzman. Holzman was replaced in 1956-57 by Hall of Fame coach Alex Hannum. Holzman later won two NBA championships with the New York Knicks, and Hannum led the Hawks to the NBA championship before he was fired after the title season.
In 1960, Kerner drafted Hall of Fame player and coach Lenny Wilkens as the sixth pick of the first round. After retiring as a player, Wilkens coached for 32 NBA seasons and won over 1,300 games.

Hawks-Celtics rivalry

Kerner had a number of ties to the Boston Celtics; he had employed Celtics coach Red Auerbach, drafted Bob Cousy and Bill Russell and obtained former Celtics Cliff Hagan and Ed Macauley. By the late 1950s, the teams had met three times in the NBA finals; Kerner's Hawks were built around four Hall of Fame players: Hagan, Macauley, Med Park and Bob Pettit.
The 1957 NBA Finals went to seven games as the Hawks lost to the Celtics' Auerbach, Russell and Cousy. During the finals, Auerbach and Kerner confronted each other on the court in a dispute over the height of the basket and Auerbach punched Kerner. Although he was not ejected, Auerbach was later fined $300 for the incident.

1958 NBA championship

The next season gave Kerner and the Hawks their championship, as the Hawks and Celtics met in the 1958 NBA Finals for the second consecutive year. This time the Hawks won, defeating the Celtics four games to two. Pettit scored 50 points in the deciding game, tipping in the final basket for a 110-109 victory at home.
The Celtics, still coached by Auerbach, and the Hawks met for a third time in the 1960 NBA Finals. The finals went seven games, with the Celtics winning game seven 122-103 at the Boston Garden. Pettit averaged 25 points per game during the series.

Sale and move to Atlanta

After the 1967-68 season, Kerner sold the St. Louis Hawks to Thomas Cousins and former Georgia governor Carl Sanders. The new owners moved the team to Atlanta, where they remain as the Atlanta Hawks.

Venues

Under Kerner's ownership, the Tri-Cities Blackhawks played at Wharton Field House in Moline, Illinois. The facility is still in use today and is located at 1800 20th Avenue, Moline.
The Milwaukee Hawks played at Milwaukee Arena. Today, the arena is used by the UW-Milwaukee Panthers and has been renamed the UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena. The address is 400 West Kilbourn Avenue, Milwaukee.
The St. Louis Hawks played at Kiel Auditorium, and occasionally at the larger St. Louis Arena. The Kiel was demolished in 1992 and the St. Louis Arena was demolished in 1998.

Cultural influence

A book about the St. Louis Hawks by Greg Marecek, Full Court: The Untold Stories of the St. Louis Hawks, was published in 2006.

Awards and personal life

Ben Kerner was born to Jacob and Helen Arbesman Kerner on November 18, 1913 in Poland. Kerner died on November 22, 2000, and is buried in Mt. Sinai Cemetery in Affton, Missouri. He had one sister, Sylvia Kerner Robinson. He was married to Ima Jean Bilbrey on November 24, 1972 in Las Vegas, Clark, Nevada. He and his wife, had two sons: Ben Jr. and Kyle.
Kerner was inducted into the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame in 1992
Kerner was inducted into the St. Louis Sports Hall of Fame in 2015.