Drew Henderson

Drew Henderson (born March 19, 1971) is an American retired professional basketball player and coach and a current university administrator. He has played and coached internationally and also had a brief career in the NBA. Henderson has also been a member of the Dutch National Basketball Team[1].

Early life

Henderson was born in New York. A 6'7" multi-sport athlete as a child and excelled at basketball, football and boxing. At the age of 15, Henderson moved to Rochester, New York and attended McQuaid Jesuit High School and played basketball on the varsity basketball team, where he won the New York State Basketball Championship his junior year. He then earned a basketball scholarship to Fairfield University in CT.

College career

After his freshman year at Fairfield University, Henderson was chosen as a member of the All Rookie Team of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC). Henderson led the MAAC in rebounding during his junior and senior seasons (1992,1993) and was in the top 10 of the country in this category in both seasons (1992, 1993). He was also chosen to the MAAC first team during these seasons (1992,1993). He became the first player in Fairfield history to compile over 1,500 points, 1000 rebounds, and 100 blocked shots. Henderson still holds the rebounding record at Fairfield (1,080). Henderson also holds the record for most assists in a single game at Fairfield (20). In 2017, Henderson was inducted into the Fairfield University Hall of Fame.

Professional career

Henderson began his professional career with the USBL after being drafted in the first round and being coached by NBA Hall of Fame member Nate "Tiny" Archibald. This led to a 10-day contract with the Boston Celtics in 1994. After this, Drew went on to Europe and played professionally in seven countries over an 11-year career. In 2000, Henderson played 1 game for the Dutch National Basketball Team.

Personal life

Henderson transferred to the field of Higher Education upon retiring from basketball due to a car accident that injured his knee and is currently an experienced university professor and administrator in the Netherlands. Henderson earned his master's degree in the Netherlands during his basketball career, and he is currently obtaining his PhD in Higher Education.

References

    • "NEDERLANDS TEAM". basketball.vuurwerk.nl. Retrieved 2016-01-02.
  • https://web.archive.org/web/20150529024833/http://nmnathletics.com//pdf9/2985075.pdf?DB_OEM_ID=32500
  • NCAA (3 November 2010). "2010-11 NCAA Men's Basketball Records - Division I Records" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-01-02.
  • "Emmen Eagles naar tweede ronde - RTV Drenthe". rtvdrenthe.nl. Retrieved 2016-01-02.
  • "Leadership and Change Management - Stenden Hogeschool". stenden.com. Retrieved 2017-09-28.
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