Curtis Aiken

Curtis Aiken

Class of 1983

Sport(s): Basketball

Year Inducted: 2002

Curtis Aiken was a four-year starter at point guard for Bennett. Curt was named All-High as a sophomore, and first team All Western New York after both his junior and senior years. Curt was also named a USA Parade All-American, Adidas and McDonald All-American after his senior year. The New York State Sportswriters’ Association named Curt Aiken Co-Player of the Year in New York State in 1983. After Curt’s junior year he attended the Converse All Star Camp and attained a “Five Star” rating, which led him to being one of the most highly recruited players in local basketball history.

From the team contribution standpoint, Curt led Bennett to The Buffalo News #1 small school ranking after both the ’82 and ’83 basketball seasons. Bennett participated in the state NY SPHSAA basketball tournament both years, capturing the state public school class “B” championship at Glens Falls, NY in 1983.

Curt finished his high school career with 2,162 points, setting all WNY scoring records. This was the 5th highest point total in New York State history, and was accomplished in the era before the three point shot. Curt’s 65 point effort three games into his senior season set the Yale Cup single game record. In the two post-season games allowed at the time, Curt participated in the McDonald’s All American Classic in Washington, DC and the Dapper Dan Classic in Pittsburgh, PA. Perhaps Curt’s most memorable performance was in leading the Western Zone scholastic team to its first ever medal (gold) in the 1982 Empire State Games.

Curt earned a basketball scholarship to the University of Pittsburgh. Curt graduated on time as a Communications major, and left Pitt as the #7 leading scorer in school history. He still lives in Pittsburgh and works for Coca-Cola, the firm that hired him while still a student at Pitt.

Curtis Aiken combined a charismatic personality with a crowd-pleasing style of play which made him a crowd favorite everywhere he played. His scoring touch, deft ball handling skills and tricky passes made Curt perhaps the most publicized schoolboy basketball player in WNY annals.