Since its beginning over a century ago, basketball has evolved from a simple form of exercise with only a few rules to a highly competitive and complex national sport. Basketball was invented by James Naismith at a YMCA in Springfield, Massachusetts, in 1891 (Fox 11-13). It began as an activity for the “‘ball-game’ void” months of winter (Hanson 65), and Naismith had five standards for the game. He wanted a ball that could be handled by a player’s hands; no one was to run with the ball, and anyone could grab the ball from another player as long as the ball was in play. There was to be no personal contact, and the goal was to be raised from the ground. He created the idea and standards for basketball by combining certain aspects of American…
Throughout the book, D’Orso hints how much basketball means to the native Alaskans. One would usually assume that playing a sport is to become more fit or let time pass by. But that’s not how the Fort Yukon natives played. They played with passion for the sport and to help live on the dream for the players and the town of winning seven state championships in a row. Although it was a challenge and a major responsibility, the team dared to accept the challenge.…
Naismith came up with an idea. He got two peach baskets and nailed one to each…
James Naismith was the creator of basketball. He created it in 1891 to condition young athletes in the winter. The “hoop” was a peach basket and the ball was a soccer styled ball. There were many rules for the new game. He created it in a YMCA gym in Springfield, Massachusetts. His team of eighteen was divided into two teams of nine and then the peach baskets were nailed above their heads. Every time one would score a basket, the game was stopped for the janitor to get up on a ladder and retrieve the ball. Later on, the bottoms of the “hoops” were taken out and they became a (sort of) real basket.…
Dr. Daniel Hale Williams was considered a pioneer in radical heart surgery and in the establishment of Provident Hospital in Chicago.…
As a child, James H. Clark was a troublemaker. His single mother supported him and his two siblings on only $225 per month. He was constantly getting into trouble with his teachers, and after his second suspension, he quit high school to join the navy at 16. He got his high school equivalency degree while with the navy, and started to get interested in engineering at the time.…
MEN WANTED FOR COASTAL DEFENCE WORK. The headline could be found on newspapers everywhere around Sydney. It was January 1941, when James Gall and a group of workmates first saw the call to action. “What do you reckon, boys?” James didn’t answer, but made his decision quickly, barely considering his father, Frank James Gall who had fought in World War I, left with nothing but wounds and horrors from his time in the service. Nonetheless, after a quick brekky of vegemite on toast, James hopped aboard trains and trams, leaving Watson’s Bay to go to the Victoria Barracks to seek enlistment.…
The sport of basketball was invented by Dr. James Naismith in 1891. As the sport developed, players came and went, but a few legends remained. Of those legends, Michael Jordan is one who will always be remembered.…
If there’s one name synonymous to United States of America’s National Basketball Association, or the illustrious NBA, it would definitely be Michael Jordan. People who haven’t heard his name of known his story is either living under a rock or have no sense of appreciation whatsoever. Many sports analysts have commented that Jordan’s journey as a basketball hero in NBA is incomparable and despite the many number of youngsters who have shown greatness on their chosen path, MJ would definitely float above the rest. With the right mindset, proper conditioning and undeniable skills inside the court, Michael Jordan transcended the normal idea of how the sport should be played, and while he’s all retired now from playing, his legacy lives on as if he just last played yesterday. With this article, we’re reliving the impressive stats and feats that Jordan displayed during his career, and while we’re having a difficult time compressing the longish list of achievements, the revered player would still be put on a bright light.…
On Thursday night, the Golden State Warriors lost against the Chicago Bulls, without Kevin Durant. This story also relates to globalization, because of the fact that the sport that these American teams are playing, basketball, was created by a Canadian-born man in the United…
We do have memories to recall from our past – good and bad. From these memories brings a part of who we are in a diverse nation and a lesson that changes our lives forever. This is evident to Regelio Gomez' article entitled “Foul Shots”, that shares his memorable experience in playing basketball during his teenage years as both being his ghost and his teacher for almost 2 decades. His narration is a consequence of anyone who describes winning in the name of game or losing in the name of race.…
After Naismith thought about his future, he decided that the only real satisfaction that would derive from life was to help his fellow man. 1883 Naismith left Almont for McGill University where he earned a degree in theology. Naismith was now in search for a new game that could be played inside during the winter months. This job was one of the hardest and was given to Naismith and a class that was completely uninterested in the routine exercises. There had been three previous instructors that have gone down in defeat trying to rouse enthusiasm in that group of young men. Naismith had a long fought struggle with the class of young men with no success. “I had pinned my hopes on these two games and when they failed me, there seemed little chance of success,” Said Naismith (McCuaig). He tried to modify both football and soccer with no luck he then turned to lacrosse a game that he learned in Almont thinking this would work seeing how there were a few members of the group that were from Canada and knew how to play the game but still had no luck getting the group to want to participate (“Basketball in America”).…
The movie Hoop Dreams traced a poor young talented African American named Arthur Agee from grade eight to college. Arthur hoped to play professional basketball in the future to help his family to escape poverty. Despite the fact that his family background and the neighborhood he lived in, disadvantaged him to pursue his goal in many ways. Firstly, Arthur is determined to play professional basketball, in order to help out his family. Secondly, his ability to adapt difficult circumstances played a significant role toward his success in basketball. Thirdly, his education value hoping that playing basketball could lead him to a college education. For Author playing basketball, it is not only a fun activity for him, but it also acted as a tool to…
Right now, the NBA is considered an urban, inner-city sport dominated by African Americans. This perception is enforced by the media’s constant attention to players who defy what white Americans consider, “normal.” This image broke through during the early 1990s when here at the University of Michigan, a brash and flashy group of five freshman debuted. They were dubbed The Fab Five.…
Basketball was invented in December 1891 by the Canadian clergyman, educator, and physician James Naismith. Naismith introduced the game when we were an instructor at the Young Men's Christian Association Training School (now Springfield College) in Springfield, Massachusetts. At the request of his superior, Dr. Luther H. Gulick, he organized a vigorous recreation suitable for indoor winter play. The game involved elements of American football, soccer, and hockey, and the first ball used was a soccer ball. Teams had nine players, and the goals were wooden peach baskets affixed to the walls. By 1897-1898, teams of five became standard. The game rapidly spread nationwide and to Canada and other parts of the world, played by both women and men; it also became a popular informal outdoor game. U.S. servicemen in World War II (1939-1945) popularized the sport in many other countries.…