[1] He then played 4 years of college basketball with DePaul, and graduated as the second best scorer in program history with 1,933 total points.
[2] After going undrafted in the 1992 NBA draft, Booth started his career in France and over a 13-year span he also played in Greece, Italy, Japan, the Philippines and Venezuela.
[4] Booth gave significant contribution to the team since his sophomore season in 1986, reaching the Class AA tournament;[1] in his junior season in 1987 he averaged 17.2 points and 7.2 rebounds per game,[4] while his team had a 26–0 record before losing in overtime to Quincy, 59–61 during the Class AA tournament;[1] that year, Booth was an Honorable Mention All-State selection.
[5] In his senior season, Booth helped his team reach the Class AA tournament for the third consecutive year, losing in the semifinal game to Lincoln High School, which was led by future NBA players LaPhonso Ellis and Cuonzo Martin: Booth had 20 points and 12 rebounds in that game.
[9] Booth started the 1990–91 season as one of the main players in DePaul's rotation and he played 29 games, averaging a career-best 18.7 points along with 6.8 rebounds, 1.7 assists, 1.4 steals and 1 block per game;[7] On December 15, 1990, he scored his career high with DePaul with 40 points against UCLA.
[17] Booth decided not to sign with the Thrillers and moved instead to France, starting his professional career with Évreux in the LNB Pro B, the second tier of French basketball.
Booth then played for the Los Angeles Lakers during the Summer Pro League in Southern California and he signed a contract with the team in September;[24] he was waived on October 21, 1996, a few days before the start of the 1996–97 NBA season.
In 1997 Booth spent the preseason with the Vancouver Grizzlies of the NBA before being released in late October;[26] later on the La Crosse Bobcats, a CBA team, signed Booth: he appeared in 46 games in the 1997–98 CBA season, starting 42 and averaging 18.5 points, 5.8 rebounds, 1.4 assists, 1 steal and 1.4 blocks per game (35.4 minutes of average playing time).
[20] He then played for Aris in Greece, and later on he moved to Japan, signing with the Matsushita Electric Panasonic Super Kangaroos.