Basketball inventor and his wife

  • HISTORY & CULTURE

Here's the history of basketball—from peach baskets in Springfield to global phenomenon

The first game used baskets as hoops and turned into a brawl. Soon after, basketball evolved into a pillar of American sports.

The nets used by athletes to dunk the ball and score points in the beloved game of basketball evolved from peaches, or rather the baskets used to collect peaches.

That’s what a young athletic director ultimately used on a cold day back in 1891 for a new game he created to keep his students engaged.  

James Naismith was a 31-year old graduate student teaching physical education at the   International YMCA Training School , now known as Springfield College, in Springfield, Massachusetts when students were forced to stay indoors for days due to a New England storm.   The usual winter athletic activities were marching, calisthenics, and apparatus work but they weren’t nearly as thrilling as football or lacrosse which were played during the warmer seasons.  

1899 basketball team

Naismith wanted to create a game that would be simple to understand but complex enough to be interesting. The game had to be playable indoors, and it had to accommodate several players at once. The game also needed to provide plenty of exercise for the students, yet without the physicality of football, soccer, or rugby since those would threaten more severe injuries if played in a confined space. ( See 100 years of football in pictures. )

Naismith approached the school janitor, hoping he could find two square boxes to use for goals. When the janitor came back from his search, he had two peach baskets instead. Naismith nailed the peach baskets to the lower rail of the gymnasium balcony, one on each side. The height of that lower balcony rail happened to be 10 feet. The students would play on teams to try to get the ball into their team’s basket.   A person was stationed at each end of the balcony to retrieve the ball from the basket and put it back into play.

The first game ever played between students was a complete brawl.

First basketball court in the gymnasium

“The boys began tackling, kicking and punching in the crunches, they ended up in a free for all in the middle of the gym floor before I could pull them apart,” Naismith said during a January 1939 radio program on WOR in New York City called We the People, his only known recording. “One boy was knocked out. Several of them had black eyes and one had a dislocated shoulder.” Naismith said. “After that first match, I was afraid they'd kill each other, but they kept nagging me to let them play again so I made up some more rules.”

The humble beginnings of the only professional sport to originate in the United States laid the foundation for today’s multi-billion-dollar business. The current National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) March Madness college basketball tournament includes the best 68 of more than 1,000 college teams, stadiums that seat tens of thousands of spectators and lucrative television contracts.

1891 copy of the rules of "Basket Ball"

Original rules of the game

Naismith didn’t create all of the rules at once, but continued to modify them into what are now known as the original 13 rules . Some are still part of the modern game today.   Naismith’s original rules of the game sold at auction in 2010 for $4.3 million.

In the original rules: The ball could be thrown in any direction with one or both hands, never a fist.   A player could not run with the ball but had to throw it from the spot where it was caught. Players were not allowed to push, trip or strike their opponents. The first infringement was considered a foul. A second foul would disqualify a player until the next goal was made. But if there was evidence that a player intended to injure an opponent, the player would be disqualified for the whole game.

Umpires served as judges for the game, made note of fouls and had the power to disqualify players. They decided when the ball was in bounds, to which side it belonged, and managed the time. Umpires decided when a goal had been made and kept track of the goals.

If a team made three consecutive fouls, the opposing team would be allowed a goal.

A goal was made when the ball was thrown or batted from the grounds into the basket and stayed there. If the ball rested on the edges, and the opponent moved the basket, it would count as a goal. When the ball went out of bounds, it was thrown into the field of play by the person first touching it. The person throwing the ball was allowed five seconds; if he held it longer, the ball would go to the opponent. In case of a dispute, an umpire would throw the ball straight into the field. If any side persisted in delaying the game, the umpire would call a foul on that side.

The length of a game was two 15-minute halves, with five minutes' rest between.   The team making the most goals within the allotted time was declared the winner. If a game was tied, it could be continued until another goal was made.

Kansas University coeds get expert coaching

First public games

The first public game of basketball was played in a YMCA gymnasium and was recorded by the Springfield Republican on March 12th, 1892. The instructors played against the students. Around 200 spectators attended to discover this new sport they had never heard of or seen before. In the story published by the Republican, the teachers were credited with “agility” but the student’s “science” is what led them to defeat the teachers 5-1.

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Within weeks the sport’s popularity grew rapidly. Students attending other schools introduced the game at their own YMCAs. The original rules were printed in a college magazine, which was mailed to YMCAs across the country. With the colleges’ well-represented international student body the sport also was introduced to many foreign nations. High schools began to introduce the new game, and by 1905, basketball was officially recognized as a permanent winter sport.

The first intercollegiate basketball game between two schools is disputed, according to the NCAA. In 1893, two school newspaper articles were published chronicling separate recordings of collegiate basketball games facing an opposing college team.

In 1892, less than a year after Naismith created the sport, Smith College gymnastics instructor Senda Berenson, introduced the game to women’s athletics. The first recorded intercollegiate game between women took place between Stanford University and University of California at Berkeley in 1896.

With the sport’s growth in popularity, it gained notice from the International Olympic Committee and was introduced at the 1904 Olympic Games in St. Louis as a demonstration event. It wasn’t until 1936 that basketball was recognized as a medal event. Women’s basketball wasn’t included as an Olympic medal event until the 1976 Montreal games. ( Wheelchair basketball in Cambodia changed these women's lives. )

Boston Celtics-New York Knicks Playoff Action

As the sport continued its rapid spread, professional leagues began to form across the United States. Basketball fans cheered on their new hometown teams. The first professional league was the National Basketball League (NBL) formed in 1898, comprised of six teams in the northeast. The league only lasted about five years. After it dissolved in 1904, the league would be reintroduced 33 years later in 1937 with an entirely new support system, with Goodyear, Firestone, and General Electric corporations as the league owners, and 13 teams.

While professional sports leagues gained nationwide attention, college basketball was also a major fixture. The first NCAA tournament, which included eight teams, was held in 1939 at Northwestern University.   The first collegiate basketball national champion was the University of Oregon. The team defeated Ohio State University.

Basketball Match In Shanxi Village

Like most of the United States in the early to mid 1900s, basketball was segregated. The sport wouldn’t be integrated until 1950 when Chuck Cooper was drafted by the Boston Celtics. Prior to Cooper being drafted there were groups of black teams across the country, commonly known as “the black fives”, which referred to the five starting players on a basketball team.   All-black teams were often referred to as colored quints or Negro cagers.   The teams flourished in New York City, Washington, D.C., Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Chicago, and in other cities with substantial African American populations. They were amateur, semi-professional, and professional.

Of the more than 1,000 collegiate basketball teams across all divisions of the NCAA, 68 teams play in the annual March Madness tournament. The best college teams from each conference around the country compete for a place in the Sweet 16, Elite Eight, Final Four and, ultimately,   the national championship. Though basketball might not be played the same way as it was when Naismith invented it—peach baskets have been replaced with nets, metal hoops and plexiglass blackboards—its evolution proves that the game has transcended a century.

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The early years

Growth of the game.

  • U.S. high school and college basketball
  • U.S. professional basketball
  • U.S. women’s basketball
  • International competition
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  • Principles of play
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Michael Jordan playing for the Dream Team

How does basketball exercise your body?

Should colleges and universities pay college basketball athletes.

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  • Table Of Contents

Michael Jordan playing for the Dream Team

What is basketball?

Basketball is a game played between two teams of five players each on a rectangular court, usually indoors. Each team tries to score by tossing the ball through the opponent’s goal, an elevated horizontal hoop and net called a basket.

When was basketball invented?

Basketball was invented by James Naismith on or about December 1, 1891, at the International Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) Training School, Springfield , Massachusetts , where Naismith was an instructor in physical education . Basketball is the only major sport strictly of U.S. origin (although Naismith was born in Canada).

Basketball is a dynamic sport that builds stamina from the short sprints required of running up and down the length of the court. Movements distinct to basketball, such as jumping to take a shot or to grab a rebound, require frequent muscle contractions , which can build muscular endurance. Additional weight training is recommended for basketball players in order to improve their performance on the court.

Where is basketball popular outside of the United States?

The success of international basketball was greatly advanced by the inclusion of men’s basketball in the Olympic Games beginning in 1936. Basketball has caught on particularly well in Italy , and Spain has several basketball leagues. The other major centre of European basketball is eastern Europe, particularly in the Balkans .

What was the influence of television on basketball?

Basketball grew steadily but slowly in popularity and importance in the United States and internationally in the first three decades after World War II (1939–45) as a result of television exposure. However, with the advent of cable television , the game’s popularity exploded at all levels, especially during the 1980s.

Whether college and university athletes, including basketball players, should be paid is widely debated. Some argue the NCAA, colleges, and universities profit unfairly and exorbitantly from the work and likenesses of college athletes, who are risking their bodies as well as their future careers and earning potential while often living below the poverty line. Others argue that the scholarships given to student athletes are fair compensation for their services, especially since so few college athletes actually "go pro," and that the real problem is not greater compensation for student-athletes but an incompetent amateur sports system for feeding talent to professional sports leagues. For more on the debate over paying college athletes, visit ProCon.org .

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basketball , game played between two teams of five players each on a rectangular court, usually indoors. Each team tries to score by tossing the ball through the opponent’s goal, an elevated horizontal hoop and net called a basket.

(Read James Naismith’s 1929 Britannica essay on his invention of basketball.)

The only major sport strictly of U.S. origin, basketball was invented by James Naismith (1861–1939) on or about December 1, 1891, at the International Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) Training School (now Springfield College), Springfield , Massachusetts , where Naismith was an instructor in physical education .

history of basketball essay conclusion

For that first game of basketball in 1891, Naismith used as goals two half-bushel peach baskets, which gave the sport its name. The students were enthusiastic. After much running and shooting , William R. Chase made a midcourt shot—the only score in that historic contest. Word spread about the newly invented game, and numerous associations wrote Naismith for a copy of the rules, which were published in the January 15, 1892, issue of the Triangle , the YMCA Training School’s campus paper.

Serena Williams poses with the Daphne Akhurst Trophy after winning the Women's Singles final against Venus Williams of the United States on day 13 of the 2017 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on January 28, 2017 in Melbourne, Australia. (tennis, sports)

While basketball is competitively a winter sport, it is played on a 12-month basis—on summer playgrounds, in municipal, industrial, and church halls, in school yards and family driveways, and in summer camps—often on an informal basis between two or more contestants. Many grammar schools, youth groups, municipal recreation centers, churches, and other organizations conduct basketball programs for youngsters of less than high school age. Jay Archer, of Scranton , Pennsylvania , introduced “biddy” basketball in 1950 for boys and girls under 12 years of age, the court and equipment being adjusted for size.

history of basketball essay conclusion

In the early years the number of players on a team varied according to the number in the class and the size of the playing area. In 1894 teams began to play with five on a side when the playing area was less than 1,800 square feet (167.2 square meters); the number rose to seven when the gymnasium measured from 1,800 to 3,600 square feet (334.5 square meters) and up to nine when the playing area exceeded that. In 1895 the number was occasionally set at five by mutual consent; the rules stipulated five players two years later, and this number has remained ever since.

Since Naismith and five of his original players were Canadians, it is not surprising that Canada was the first country outside the United States to play the game. Basketball was introduced in France in 1893, in England in 1894, in Australia , China , and India soon thereafter, and in Japan in 1900.

While basketball helped swell the membership of YMCAs because of the availability of their gyms , within five years the game was outlawed by various associations because gyms that had been occupied by classes of 50 or 60 members were now monopolized by only 10 to 18 players. The banishment of the game induced many members to terminate their YMCA membership and to hire halls to play the game, thus paving the way to the professionalization of the sport.

Originally, players wore one of three styles of uniforms: knee-length football trousers; jersey tights, as commonly worn by wrestlers; or short padded pants, forerunners of today’s uniforms, plus knee guards. The courts often were of irregular shape with occasional obstructions such as pillars, stairways, or offices that interfered with play. In 1903 it was ruled that all boundary lines must be straight. In 1893 the Narragansett Machinery Co. of Providence , Rhode Island , marketed a hoop of iron with a hammock style of basket. Originally a ladder, then a pole, and finally a chain fastened to the bottom of the net was used to retrieve a ball after a goal had been scored. Nets open at the bottom were adopted in 1912–13. In 1895–96 the points for making a basket (goal, or field goal) were reduced from three to two, and the points for making a free throw (shot uncontested from a line in front of the basket after a foul had been committed) were reduced from three to one.

history of basketball essay conclusion

Baskets were frequently attached to balconies, making it easy for spectators behind a basket to lean over the railings and deflect the ball to favor one side and hinder the other; in 1895 teams were urged to provide a 4-by-6-foot (1.2-by-1.8-meter) screen for the purpose of eliminating interference. Soon after, wooden backboards proved more suitable. Glass backboards were legalized by the professionals in 1908–09 and by colleges in 1909–10. In 1920–21 the backboards were moved 2 feet (0.6 meter), and in 1939–40 4 feet, in from the end lines to reduce frequent stepping out-of-bounds. Fan-shaped backboards were made legal in 1940–41.

A soccer ball (football) was used for the first two years. In 1894 the first basketball was marketed. It was laced, measured close to 32 inches (81 cm), or about 4 inches (10 cm) larger than the soccer ball, in circumference, and weighed less than 20 ounces (567 grams). By 1948–49, when the laceless molded ball was made official, the size had been set at about 30 inches (76 cm).

The first college to play the game was either Geneva College (Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania ) or the University of Iowa . C.O. Bemis heard about the new sport at Springfield and tried it out with his students at Geneva in 1892. At Iowa, H.F. Kallenberg, who had attended Springfield in 1890, wrote Naismith for a copy of the rules and also presented the game to his students. At Springfield, Kallenberg met Amos Alonzo Stagg , who became athletic director at the new University of Chicago in 1892. The first college basketball game with five on a side was played between the University of Chicago and the University of Iowa in Iowa City on January 18, 1896. The University of Chicago won, 15–12, with neither team using a substitute. Kallenberg refereed that game—a common practice in that era—and some of the spectators took exception to some of his decisions.

The colleges formed their own rules committee in 1905, and by 1913 there were at least five sets of rules: collegiate , YMCA–Amateur Athletic Union, those used by state militia groups, and two varieties of professional rules. Teams often agreed to play under a different set for each half of a game. To establish some measure of uniformity, the colleges, Amateur Athletic Union, and YMCA formed the Joint Rules Committee in 1915. This group was renamed the National Basketball Committee (NBC) of the United States and Canada in 1936 and until 1979 served as the game’s sole amateur rule-making body. In that year, however, the colleges broke away to form their own rules committee, and during the same year the National Federation of State High School Associations likewise assumed the task of establishing separate playing rules for the high schools. The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Rules Committee for men is a 12-member board representing all three NCAA divisions. It has six members from Division I schools and three each from Divisions II and III. It has jurisdiction over colleges, junior colleges, the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), and Armed Forces basketball. There is a similar body for women’s play.

history of basketball essay conclusion

Basketball grew steadily but slowly in popularity and importance in the United States and internationally in the first three decades after World War II . Interest in the game deepened as a result of television exposure, but with the advent of cable television , especially during the 1980s, the game’s popularity exploded at all levels. Given a timely mix of spectacular players—such as Earvin (“Magic”) Johnson , Julius Erving (“Dr. J”), Larry Bird , and Michael Jordan —and the greatly increased exposure, basketball moved quickly to the forefront of the American sporting scene, alongside such traditional leaders as baseball and football. Four areas of the game developed during this period: U.S. high school and college basketball, professional basketball, women’s basketball, and international basketball.

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The History of Basketball

It is interesting to know that a Canadian invented the game of basketball. Great games are supposed to originate in Europe, in exotic countries, or perhaps in the great cities of the United States of America. But no one will consider a Canadian as the originator for something that is as popular as basketball. It is so popular that the game is virtually in all countries all over the world (Grasso 1). In countries where basketball is played, the game is ever-present at all levels, from primary school to college.

Men, women, children, play the game of basketball. People from all walks of life enjoy watching players dribble a round ball, in order to shoot it into a hoop. One of the greatest moments came in the 1992 Barcelona Olympic Games when the U.S. Dream Team showcased what a great basketball team could accomplish in a world stage. A well-written history of basketball must retrace the game’s evolution, from its rudimentary beginnings in a YMCA gym, to its global impact through the National Basketball Association.

The Invention of Basketball

An unlikely candidate invented basketball. James Naismith was an orphan growing up in the Northern territories of Ontario, Canada. The emergence of an inventive spirit in order to push back boredom characterized his childhood years. He needed to be inventive in order to solve the problems brought about by financial difficulties and isolation. Naismith fondly recalled the happy memories in a place called Bennie’s Corners.

Naismith fondly remembered the time when they utilized available items and transformed ordinary things into a plaything. The rope that the blacksmith used to control the beasts of burden when they were brought to his shop never stayed long on the wall display. Children and teenagers from his neighborhood often borrowed it for their tug of war games.

Naismith recalled the joyous celebration of summer. However, he also recalled the bitter struggles during the winter months. The indomitable spirit of young people compelled them to go hunting or fishing. When Ontario’s Indian River was frozen solid during the winter months, the boys and girls came out to play with their skates, and they glided over the ice. Naismith remembered the time when he was an eight-year-old orphan boy, and he did not have the money to buy a pair of ice skating shoes.

He also recalled how pride prevented him from asking money from his uncle, who was acting as his guardian during one of the most challenging times of his life. But when everyone went to bed, the young Naismith went to his uncle’s shop, and he labored all night in order to produce a pair of crude, but functional skating shoes. It was this ability to create solutions that forged an inventive spirit within the young boy.

A curious brain set on fire by a passion for life and tempered by the socio-cultural context of Ontario, Canada enabled Naismith to do things without fear of censure. He was not afraid of the negative backlash from his friends, relatives, and town mates. It also gave him and similar minded people the freedom to solve problems in order to improve the lives of the people around them.

This was the same mindset that prodded Naismith to succeed in life, and to intervene when his help was needed the most. The same spirit guided him on that fateful day of 1891. He was a gym teacher in Massachusetts when he decided to create a game that his students could play indoors. He was working in a YMCA gym.

In the initial stages of development, the inventor utilized a soccer ball to play the new game. However, Naismith had forbidden kicking. The only allowable actions were throwing, catching, and jumping. The players were able to score when they succeeded in shooting the ball into a peach basket. Naismith found a peach basket and cut a hole through it.

The peach basket was made from wooden planks that are held together by a binder. Dr. James Naismith asked one of the janitors to nail the peach basket to the balcony (Helmer and Owens 4). It so happened that the distance between the ground and the basket was ten feet (Helmer and Owens 4). And so, basketball was born that day (Helmer and Owens 4).

The emergence of basketball as a popular ball game that would make someday rival the popularity of football was a slow and torturous process. There was no YouTube or Cable TV in the year 1891. There was not even a radio to broadcast the potential of the game to change people’s lives.

The boys from Massachusetts had to play the game in order to spread the good news of basketball. Nevertheless, Dr. James Naismith was the tireless promoter of the sport. In fact, in 1892, the town folks witnessed the first women’s basketball game at Springfield, Massachusetts, YMCA (Helmer and Owens 5).

It is interesting to note that it was the women’s game in 1892 that was the crucial moment in basketball history. The audience was enthralled by the new way of dribbling and shooting a ball into a hoop. After the contest, the word about the new game quickly spread, particularly through the YMCA network all over the country. Teachers and volunteers at the YMCA followed Naismith’s footsteps, and they began teaching the rudimentary rules of the game all across the United States of America.

In 1893 the first women’s basketball game that utilized Senda Berenson’s newly adapted rules was played at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts (Grasso 1). It became very clear during basketball’s early days that the game was popular with both men and women.

In 1895 Clara Baer published her own version of basketball rules. In February of the same year, the first men’s intercollegiate basketball game was played at Hamline College in St. Paul, Minnesota. During this particular game, the Minnesota School of Agriculture defeated the Hamline players with a score of 9-3 (Grasso 1).

It is also interesting to note that less than five years after its inception, the game of basketball was already exported to distant shores. In January of 1896, spectators who flocked into a YMCA gym in Tianjin, China, witnessed the first basketball game ever played in Asia.

As the rules evolved, so does the quality of the game. On January 16, 1896, the first men’s intercollegiate basketball game featuring five players per team was played between the University of Chicago and the University of Iowa. The University of Chicago won the contest with a score of 15-12 (Grasso 13).

It did not take long before basketball joined the ranks of baseball and football as a team sport with a professional league. In July of 1898, the National Basket Ball League (NBL) was born. In December of that same year, the first professional league basketball game was played. The Trenton team defeated the Hancock Athletic Association with a score of 21-19 in Philadelphia.

In January of 1903, the second professional organization called the Philadelphia Basketball League (PBL) was created to compete with the NBL. Due to the emergence of other professional basketball leagues, the NBL played its last game in 1904. But in the same year, the game of basketball was introduced to the Olympic games as an exhibition type of event.

Due to the directive of President Theodor Roosevelt, the Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States was created. Four years later, the same organization became the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).

In the year 1913, it has become apparent that the game of basketball has already grown in popularity beyond the shores of the United States. In that same year, the first Far Eastern Championship Games were contested in Manila, Philippines. The participating countries were comprised of the host nation, Japan, China, Malaysia, Thailand, and Hong Kong.

In 1935 the arrival of the game of basketball into the international stage was no longer in doubt. In the same year, the first FIBA men’s European Championship was held in Geneva, Switzerland. In 1936, the first Olympic basketball tournament was held at the Berlin Olympics. It was during the Berlin Olympics that Dr. Naismith was honored as the creator of the beloved game. Dr. Naismith accepted the invitation and attended the Olympic Games (Grasso 14).

The games foothold into America’s sports scene was strengthened even further when the NCAA organized the first National Championship tournament in 1939. In 1945 significant changes were made to the rules governing the game of basketball. One of the rules that were later adopted into the game was the rule that the player is awarded three points for every successful attempt made beyond the 21 feet mark from the basket.

The year 1949 was another major milestone in basketball history when two of the most prominent professional leagues in the country, the Basketball Association of America and the National Basketball League, were merged to form the present-day National Basketball Association.

The decade of the 1970s was a tumultuous decade for American basketball. The demise of various professional leagues paved the way for the titanic conflict between two powerful professional leagues. The first one was the American Basketball Association (ABA) and the National Basketball Association. NBA officials knew the potential growth of the sport if the ABA can be persuaded to merge with the NBA.

It was a strategic move that was advantageous to the NBA because the CBA had in contract several exciting African American players. For example, Dr. J or Julius Erving was under contract with an ABA team. As a result, it was not easy to merge both leagues. Nevertheless, it was the desire to see basketball in the highest levels that prompted officials to agree to the terms of the merger.

The Impact of the NBA and the U.S. Dream Team

The merger between the ABA and the NBA was one of the brilliant business decisions ever made. Due to the merger, the NBA was able to consolidate resources and the fan base for both leagues. As a result, the merger created a profitable system that attracted more people to watch a diversified and talented group of people.

The NBA’s resources enabled the league to broadcast games all over the planet. At the same time, the additional resources allowed the NBA to create favorable working conditions for the workers. The NBA made possible the gathering of talented players under one league.

The NBA was instrumental in promoting the game of basketball in the far corners of the globe. Nevertheless, it was the 1992 U.S. Dream Team that competed in the Barcelona Olympic games that proved to be the most effective ambassador of basketball throughout the planet. The Basketball Hall of Fame considered the U.S. Dream Team as the greatest collection of basketball talent in the games 100-year history.

Consider the following basketball talent compressed into one basketball team:

  • Michael Jordan;
  • Scottie Pippen;
  • John Stockton;
  • Karl Malone;
  • Magic Johnson;
  • Larry Bird;
  • Patrick Ewing;
  • Chris Mullin;
  • David Robinson;
  • Charles Barkley;
  • Clyde Drexler;
  • Christian Laettner.

In order to provide a little perspective, the champions of the NBA finals are called World Champions. This serves as a reminder to the world-class talent within the NBA. In addition, one can select five players from the 12-man roster mentioned earlier, and that person can expect to defeat the best team around the world. If one can do that using only five players from the U.S. Dream Team, one has to wonder what they could do if the 12 men are allowed to play as a team.

Their opponents discovered the bitter truth when the Dream Team destroyed the opposition, where games that have 40 point differential was a common occurrence. The U.S. Dream Team destroyed their opponents, but they inspired the next generation of basketball players all over the world to study the game of basketball. It can be argued that their performance during the 1992 Barcelona Games influenced the current crop of superstar basketball players to follow in their footsteps.

Works Cited

Grasso, John. Historical Dictionary of Basketball. MD: Scarecrow Press, 2011. Print.

Helmer, Diana and Tom Owens. The History of Basketball . New York: Rosen Group, 2000. Print.

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Essay on Basketball

Students are often asked to write an essay on Basketball in their schools and colleges. And if you’re also looking for the same, we have created 100-word, 250-word, and 500-word essays on the topic.

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100 Words Essay on Basketball

Introduction to basketball.

Basketball is a popular sport enjoyed worldwide. It was invented by Dr. James Naismith in 1891. The game is played between two teams, each aiming to score by shooting a ball into the opponent’s hoop.

Rules of the Game

Each team consists of five players. The game begins with a jump ball. The team that scores the most points by shooting the ball through the hoop wins. There are rules against holding the ball and making physical contact.

Skills in Basketball

Basketball requires skills like dribbling, passing, and shooting. It also demands physical fitness, teamwork, and strategic thinking. Players need to be quick, agile, and coordinated.

Why We Love Basketball

Basketball is thrilling and dynamic. It encourages teamwork and promotes physical fitness. It’s not just a game, but a way of life for many, teaching valuable lessons about cooperation, discipline, and hard work.

250 Words Essay on Basketball

Introduction.

Basketball, a globally acclaimed sport, is a dynamic game that combines physical prowess with strategic thinking. The sport is not only about scoring points but also about the integration of teamwork, discipline, and perseverance.

The Essence of the Game

The beauty of basketball lies in its simplicity and the profound skills it demands. From shooting, dribbling, passing to defending, each aspect of the game requires a unique set of skills, making it a comprehensive physical activity. Moreover, the constant movement across the court boosts cardiovascular health and promotes physical fitness.

Teamwork and Strategy

Basketball is a team sport, and its essence lies in the harmony of the team. Each player’s role is crucial, but the collective effort determines the outcome. The game fosters a sense of unity and camaraderie, as players must strategize and communicate effectively to outscore their opponents.

Life Skills through Basketball

Beyond the court, basketball teaches invaluable life skills. It instills discipline, as players must adhere to rules and respect officials’ decisions. The game also encourages resilience; players must rebound from setbacks and maintain a competitive spirit, mirroring life’s ups and downs.

Basketball, therefore, is more than a game. It is a blend of physicality, strategy, and life lessons. Its global popularity is a testament to its capacity to entertain, educate, and inspire, making it a quintessential sport in today’s world.

500 Words Essay on Basketball

Basketball, a sport that has captivated millions across the globe, is a dynamic game that demands both physical prowess and mental agility. Invented by Dr. James Naismith in 1891, it has evolved from a simple indoor game into an international spectacle, played in arenas filled with thousands of fans and broadcast worldwide.

At its core, basketball is a game of strategy and skill. Each team, consisting of five players, aims to score by shooting the ball through the opponent’s hoop while preventing the opposing team from doing the same. The game is played in quarters, each lasting 12 minutes in professional leagues and slightly less in amateur games. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins.

Physical and Mental Demands

Basketball demands a high level of physical fitness. Players require strength, endurance, agility, and hand-eye coordination to excel. Yet, the game is not purely physical. It also requires strategic thinking, teamwork, and the ability to make quick decisions under pressure. Players must constantly adapt to the changing dynamics of the game, making split-second decisions that can mean the difference between victory and defeat.

The Impact of Basketball

Basketball’s impact extends beyond the court. It has become a powerful social and cultural force. The sport has been a platform for athletes to influence societal issues and inspire younger generations. From Michael Jordan’s global brand influence to LeBron James’s activism, basketball players have leveraged their fame for greater causes.

Technological Influence on Basketball

In conclusion, basketball is more than just a sport. It is a test of physical and mental fortitude, a platform for social change, and a barometer of technological advancements. As the game continues to evolve, it will undoubtedly continue to captivate and inspire, embodying the spirit of competition and the joy of teamwork.

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142 Basketball Topics & Essay Examples

If you need to write a research paper about basketball, it’s useful to read through some essay examples while looking for content ideas. Our team has compiled this selection of the best basketball research topics.

👟Top 10 Basketball Topics to Write about

🏆 best topics about basketball, 🤾 good basketball research topics, 🏀 interesting basketball titles for essays, 🎓 simple & easy basketball essay topics, ❓ research questions for basketball essays.

  • Physiology of basketball players.
  • Difference in football and basketball mechanics.
  • Michael Jordan: basketball legend.
  • Professional basketball and health risks.
  • Mathematics of the basketball court.
  • Comparing NBA basketball teams.
  • Is basketball a dangerous sport?
  • Bullying in college basketball teams.
  • Efficacy of basketball slogans.
  • Most famous basketball games of all time.
  • The Cost of Running a NBA Basketball Team The estimated value is derived from a breakdown of various aspects such as; Sport which contribute 52% of the total worth Stadium which contribute 16% of the total worth Market which contribute 24% of the […]
  • Perfect Diet for a Women’s College Basketball Player Due to their complexity, proteins take a while in the body and that means that a lot of energy will be kept in the body only to be released at intervals when the body needs […]
  • An Overview of the Game of Basketball The game is played by throwing a puffed-up ball over the heads of the players; the ball goes down through one of the two baskets dangling at each end of the court.
  • LeBron James’s: Biography of a Famous Basketball Player However, while people hear his name for a number of reasons, LeBron James became famous for his expertise in the game of basketball.
  • Jim Carroll’s Drug Addiction in the Movie “The Basketball Diaries” by Leonardo Dicaprio After the bursting of Jim and apprehending of his friends, using drugs red handed by the couch, disintegration starts taking place in the group and most of the boys lose their essence for being thrown […]
  • Michael Jordan: The Story of a Basketball Player Michael was born into a large family he is the fourth of the five children in the family, and his parents are James and Deloris Jordan.
  • National Basketball Association SWOT Analysis NBA headquarters are located in the USA, where the largest fan base and players reside. In the USA, the association has a huge fan base.
  • NBA: Competing on Global Delivery With Akamai OS Streaming Thus, the use of Akamai helps the NBA compete within this market because the company’s services are used to guarantee the provision of the high-quality content around the globe of regardless the location of the […]
  • 12-Week Basketball Training Plan for Male Players However, on the other hand, the rhythm of the exercises should be less demanding for the athlete to have time to recover and regain energy after the season.
  • National Basketball Association: Porter’s Forces Analysis One way the use of Akamai has given NBA an edge is through the use of its 25,000 servers located across the globe.
  • World Basketball Legend: Stephen Curry In 2008, he was included in the second symbolic team of the best players in the US Student Championship, and in 2009 Curry played in the first team.
  • Rhetorical Analysis of Basketball In this aspect, it is worth considering basketball not only from an emotional and ethical point of view but also from a logical one, thus, the logos.
  • NBA Live 08 by EA Sports: History and Gameplay The last “generation” game to be released prior to the NBA Live series was NBA Showdown which was released in 1994 NBA Live 95 was the first of the series to be released and appeared […]
  • San Antonio Spurs Analysis: The National Basketball Association San Antonio Spurs is one of the major teams in the National Basketball Association in the United States of America representing the city of San Antonio in the league.
  • The US Basketball Teams’ Performance Analysis Data set was obtained from the NBA was categorical to the; NBA Team, year of specific games, points scored, and average level of the competence of the team.
  • How White Privilege Works in Basketball White players are not obliged to understand or research the history of racism in sports and basketball. Non-white players are unable to be ignorant of race as they often encounter issues that have racism at […]
  • Geometry Web Quest for Soccer, Baseball, Basketball, Bowling, Golf, Volleyball and Pool Field for golf is the biggest and made of grass, sand and water and is the biggest and it has no fixed shape. Soccer field is made of grass or synthetic material and is the […]
  • Plyometric Training Effects on Jumping Performance in Junior Basketball Players Before the training procedure, the maximum vertical jump height of the groups was recorded, as well as the results of isometric tests on the maximal voluntary force of hip and knee extensors and the rate […]
  • The Business Side of NBA and Other Sports The use of sports and the development of mass media have facilitated the growth of professionalism in sports.”This has created some friction where by the money is seen as more important than the recreational aspect”.
  • Mark Cuban’s Leadership Style in a Basketball Team Leadership is the process of influencing people through acts of motivation and providing the employees with the course and the organizational goals.
  • Sports Passion: Basketball in the Stadium Once the game is on and the ball is being dribbled on the court, spectators are glued to the ball and where it is.
  • National Basketball Association: Team Work From 1884 to 1889, the Spurs team had a rough time as they lost during all the four seasons, but with the help of Red McCombs, the originator, the team got encouraged and started improving.
  • National Basketball Association’s Corporate Culture Therefore, it could be argued that emphasis on social issues, innovative approach to marketing, and size advantages are the main strengths of the league in the process of adaptation to the forces of globalization.
  • Donald Sterling and National Basketball Association The scenario has attracted the attention of sports administrators and sociologists who have given their respective interpretations of the events that led to Sterling losing the ownership of the professional basketball franchise of the National […]
  • NBA’s Corporate Culture Modernization Project The objective of this project is to explore the consequences for the NBA in terms of its social activity and to analyze the ways it will modernize its corporate culture to address the issues correctly.
  • UC Riverside Men’s Basketball Team’s Social Media Marketing In order to increase credibility and maintain professionalism, the proposed website, twitter fan page, and Facebook channels will encompass processes and features that flawlessly facilitate a healthy lifetime relationship between social media and the UCR […]
  • The NBA 2K Game as the Element of Popular Culture Despite the original aim of producing the series of popular video games NBA 2K is a popularization of basketball among the representatives of the modern situation, the release of the series also focuses on advertising […]
  • Sports and Entertainment Event in the USA: NBA Playoffs The NBA Playoffs is one of the favorite sporting events in the US. The viewer rating for the NBA Playoffs shows that this event is one of the biggest sports and entertainment events in the […]
  • UCR Women’s Basketball Marketing Strategies Designing jerseys that contain a logo and the name of the basketball and selling them to fans, supporters, and sponsors effectively promote UCR Women’s Basketball.
  • Changes in NBA History Kirchberg makes a comparison of the growth of the league to the growth of athletes by noting that the league has grown “From the first superstar, center George Mikan of the Minneapolis Lakers, to its […]
  • 2011 NBA Lockout: Public Relations Failure The NBA strike began on the 1st of July, 2011 and is still in effect until the time when the NBA owners and the National Basketball Players Association will make a deal.
  • The Aspects of Basketball in the American Society In the 1980s, the National Basketball Association was organized in order to represent the interests of the professional players and regulate the main principles of the sport.
  • The Basketball Game A basketball is a vital component in the game of basketball at the playing field, commonly referred to as a court and the basket. The lighter the basketball, the easier it is to roll the […]
  • Comparison and Contrast of Jordan and Bird in the Game of Basketball
  • Comparison Between Basketball and Soccer
  • Comparison Between High School and College Basketball and Professional Basketball
  • Analysis of the Basketball Community in New York City
  • Analysis of the Basketball Game and Rules
  • Analysis of the Fail to Succeed for Michael Jordan
  • Analysis of the Impact of Money on Athletes in Relation to Basketball Players
  • Basketball and Amateur Athletic Union
  • Basketball Vs. Baseball
  • Differences Between Amateur and Professional Basketball
  • New York City Basketball Lost a Legendary Figure Last Week
  • Middle Schools Should Return Middle School Basketball
  • Effects of the Sport Education Model on University Students Game Performance and Content Knowledge in Basketball
  • Employee Discipline and Basketball Referees: A Prediction Market Approach
  • Greatest College Basketball Coach of All Time
  • Basketball for Short People Basket to Be Lowered
  • LeBron James Vs. Kevin Durant in NBA basketball
  • Joseph Jefferson Jackson Missed Chance in the Basketball Hall of Fame
  • Duration-Specific Peak Acceleration Demands During Professional Female Basketball Matches
  • Identifying and Describing the Bad Boy in the Game of Basketball
  • Market Evidence Against Widespread Point Shaving in College Basketball
  • NBA During the 70s the Rise in Popularity of Basketball
  • Suppose That the Price of Basketball Tickets at Your
  • Clemon Tigers Men’s Basketball Team
  • Broken Dreams and Predictable Future in Ex-Basketball Player by John Updike
  • Relationship Between Outcome Uncertainties and Match Attendance: New Evidence in the National Basketball Association
  • Joe Jackson Should Have a Place in the Basketball Hall of Fame
  • Foreign Players and Competitive Balance in Greek Basketball and Handball Championships
  • Practice and Feedback Methods to Improve Performance of Basketball Layups
  • Factors determining production (FDP) in basketball
  • Beckett Brenn High School All American Basketball Player
  • Past, Present and Future of Lithuanian Basketball
  • Basketball Comparison Clash Vince Carter
  • Biography and Life Work of Basketball Player Michael Jordan
  • Biography and Life Work of Larry Bird
  • Life Work of Michael Jordan, an American Professional Basketball Player
  • History of Basketball, a Popular Sport in America
  • A Multicriteria Selection System Based on Player Performance
  • Analysis of the Pyramid of Success from the Sports Successes of Basketball Coach John Wooden
  • Proposal for a New Draft Process in the National Basketball Associations
  • Basketball History: From Origins and Geographical Diffusion
  • Basketball in Colleges University
  • Basketball Shoes Product Positioning
  • Basketball Is the Most Important Factor on Offense
  • Benefits of Basketball Is the Most Productive Sport for Children
  • Coaching High School Boys’ Basketball
  • Corruption in College Basketball
  • Consumption Benefits and Gambling: Evidence from the NCAA Basketball Betting Market
  • Cultural Manifestation Via a Game of Street Basketball
  • Developing a Basketball Training Program
  • High School and Phenomenon Basketball Player
  • Kobe Bryant: The Best Basketball Player of the Last Decade
  • Leadership Qualities and Characteristics of Successful Basketball Coaches
  • Marketing Plan for Basketball
  • Methods and Techniques Used for Endurance Developing for the Basketball Beginner Teams
  • Michael Jordan the Greatest of All Time National Basketball
  • National Basketball Association and Cedar Park Center
  • National Basketball Association and the Woman National Basketball Association
  • Playing For Money / NBA Basketball Players and Personal Greed
  • Professional Basketball Physical Performance and Genetic Predisposition
  • Development and Evolution of Basketball
  • Difference Between College and Professional Basketball
  • Effect of Additional Police Force on Crime Rate: Evidence from Women’s Japan Basketball League
  • History of Modern Basketball
  • Media and Its Effects on the Sport of Basketball
  • Women’s College Basketball History and Background
  • Who Is Your Favorite Basketball Player?
  • How Can Basketball Affect the Growth of a Child
  • How a Basketball Player Vertical Jump Hang Time?
  • Does Mental Imagery Improve the Performance of Free Throws in Basketball?
  • Why Lebron Is the Best Basketball Player of His Time?
  • What Muscles Does a Basketball Player Primarily Focus on?
  • How Earl Lloyd Changed Basketball History?
  • How Can Basketball Affect the Growth of a Child?
  • What Does the Material Record Tell Us About Human Use of Space at the Basketball Courts?
  • How Has Basketball Changed My Life?
  • Does Basketball Star Endorsement Work in China?
  • How to Increase Stamina in Basketball with Physical Exercises?
  • Are Sunk Costs Irrelevant in the Basketball?
  • How Did Basketball Influence the Philippines?
  • How Does Gravity Limit my Potential as a Basketball Player?
  • Do You Agree that Football Play is equal to Professional Athletes?
  • What Does It Take to Be a Basketball Player?
  • Does the Basketball Market Believe in the ‘Hot Hand’?
  • How the Dream Team Changed Basketball Forever?
  • How Basketball Statistics Affect Winning Percentage for NCAA Division?
  • Are Former Professional Basketball Athletes and Native Better Coaches?
  • What Does Basketball Look Like Without Michael Jordan?
  • Does Early Career Achievement Lead in the Basketball to Earlier Death?
  • Are Professional Basketball Players Reference-Dependent?
  • Does Gender Affect Compensation Among NCAA Basketball Coaches?
  • How Being a Basketball Player Teaches You to Handle Defeat?
  • Are You Someone Waiting to Enter the World of Basketball?
  • What a Basketball Player Should Eat?
  • How Is Basketball Affected by Biomechanics?
  • Should College Basketball Be Banned?
  • Hard Work Research Topics
  • NFL Research Topics
  • Success Ideas
  • Hobby Research Ideas
  • Goals Questions
  • Health Promotion Research Topics
  • College Education Essay Ideas
  • Personal Growth Research Ideas
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Basketball Essay for Students and Children

500+ essay on basketball.

The game of basketball has truly become global in the last few years. The game is currently popular in the United States. Also, it is described by many as an American game because of the fun and competitive element in it. Also, this is one of the games which is played indoors and still caters to billions of fans around the world. This game was Dr. James Naismith from Canada. Initially, he invented the game by using a rectangular pitch which was 6 feet wide and 4 feet high. Additionally, the court includes a free throw line which is 12 feet long. In basketball essay, students will get to know about the different components that make the game of basketball special.

Basketball Essay

It is a team game that has gained immense popularity. Also, the game is played with the help of a ball and the ball is shot into the basket that is positioned horizontally. So, the objective in the game is to shoot the ball and score the maximum points. This game is played by 2 teams that constitute a total of 5 players each. Also, the game is played on a marked rectangular floor that has a basket on both the ends. 

Originally, basketball was played using a soccer ball. Also, it was James Naismith that used a peach basket which ha ad a nonhollow bottom. So, this basket was nailed at a height of 10 ft. above the ground and on an elevated track. If you consider the manual removal of the ball from the basket a drawback then the bottom was removed to and it took the shape of modern-day baskets. Also, dribbling was not part of the game initially. Eventually, it evolved till 1950 by which the balls got better shape due to manufacturing. 

Additionally, the orange ball was evolved from the brown ball. The brown ball was used in the beginning as it was thought that the ball is more visible. By 1996, the peach baskets used were replaced by metal hoops on the backboard. 

Get the huge list of more than 500 Essay Topics and Ideas

Basketball Game 

At the start of the game, a referee tosses the ball at the center of the court between two players. One player from either team try to get their hands on the ball and the ball is passed on to the teammates. For scoring a point, a team needs to shoot the ball through the basket. If a shot is scored from a distance that is closer to the basket than the 3 point line than it fetches 2 points. Also, if the ball is shot from the distance behind 3 point line, it fetches 3 points. So, the team that has a maximum number of points is declared the winner. 

In case of a draw, there may be additional time allotted to both the teams. In the game, a player is cannot move if he is holding the ball. The player needs to dribble, otherwise, it is considered as a foul. Likewise, when there is a physical contact that affects the other team then it counted as a physical foul. 

Basketball is game played with a maintained and carefully marked court. It is a team sport that is commonly found in many different areas. 

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Where To Start With James Baldwin

James Baldwin, novelist, essayist, intellectual, and activist wrote with a crisp clarity that was as loving as it was critical. Renowned as one of the most influential and prophetic voices of his time, James Baldwin’s radical truth-telling and activism propelled him into international prominence that would make him one of the most essential literary voices of the 20th century.

Baldwin is a radical truth-teller in any genre—taking readers on an exploration of identity, history, and rage, from Harlem to Paris. If you are new to Baldwin, here are some recommendations to explore his work as a mirror to the world, history, ourselves, and our potential to grow. 

On August 2, 2024, The New York Public Library celebrates what would have been the 100th anniversary of the birth of novelist, essayist, intellectual, and activist James Baldwin (1924–1987).  Learn more about how the New York Public Library is honoring the legacy of this literary titan and a beloved and long-time patron of the library with special exhibitions, free programs for all ages, and book giveaways. 

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Baldwin portrays 14-year-old John Grimes, the stepson of a fire-breathing and abusive Pentecostal preacher in Harlem during the Depression. The action of this short novel spans a single day in John’s life, and yet manages to encompass on an epic scale his family’s troubled past and his own inchoate longings for the future, set against a shining vision of a city where he both does and does not belong.

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Giovanni's Room (1956)

Set in the 1950s Paris, a young American expatriate finds himself caught between his repressed desires and conventional morality. David has just proposed marriage to his American girlfriend, but while she is away on a trip he becomes involved in a doomed affair with a bartender named Giovanni. With sharp, probing insight, James Baldwin's classic narrative delves into the mystery of love and tells a deeply moving story that reveals the unspoken complexities of the human heart.

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Another Country (1962)

Set in Greenwich Village, Harlem, and France, among other locales, Another Country tells the story of the suicide of jazz musician Rufus Scott and the friends who search for an understanding of his life and death, discovering uncomfortable truths about themselves along the way. 

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Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone (1968)

At the height of his theatrical career, the actor Leo Proudhammer is nearly felled by a heart attack. As he hovers between life and death, Baldwin shows the choices that have made him enviably famous and terrifyingly vulnerable. For between Leo's childhood on the streets of Harlem and his arrival into the intoxicating world of the theater lies a wilderness of desire and loss, shame and rage. 

If Beale Street Could Talk (If Beale Street Could Talk)

If Beale Street Could Talk (1974)

Told through the eyes of Tish, a 19-year-old girl, in love with Fonny, a young sculptor who is the father of her child, Baldwin’s story mixes the sweet and the sad. Tish and Fonny have pledged to get married, but Fonny is falsely accused of a terrible crime and imprisoned. Their families set out to clear his name, and as they face an uncertain future, the young lovers experience a kaleidoscope of emotions–affection, despair, and hope.

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Just Above My Head (1979)

This sprawling drama traces the passage of three individuals through the events of the 1950s, 60s, and 70s from the Apollo in Harlem to the Olympia in Paris. Love and courage bind a former child evangelist, a famous gospel singer, and the latter's manager-brother as they shape and are shaped by the events of the past three decades.

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Notes of a Native Son (1955)

Notes is the book that established Baldwin’s voice as a social critic, and it remains one of his most admired works. The essays collected here create a cohesive sketch of black America and reveal an intimate portrait of Baldwin’s own search for identity as an artist, as a Black man, and as an American.  

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Nobody Knows My Name: More Notes of a Native Son (1961)

Nobody Knows My Name records the last months of Baldwin's 10-year self-exile in Europe, his return to America and to Harlem, and his first trip south at the time of the school integration battles. It contains Baldwin's controversial and intimate profiles of Norman Mailer, Richard Wright, and Ingmar Bergman. And it explores such varied themes as the relations between Blacks and whites, the role of Blacks in America and in Europe, and the question of sexual identity.

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The Fire Next Time (1963)

As remarkable for its masterful prose as it is for its frank and personal account of the Black experience in the United States, it is considered one of the most passionate and influential explorations of 1960s race relations, weaving thematic threads of love, faith, and family into a candid assault on the hypocrisy of the "land of the free."  

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The Evidence of Things Not Seen (1985)

Examining the Atlanta child murders of 1979 and 1980 with a reporter’s skill and an essayist’s insight, Baldwin notes the significance of Atlanta as the site of these brutal killings—a city that claimed to be “too busy to hate”—and the permeation of race throughout the case: the Black administration in Atlanta; the murdered Black children; and Wayne Williams, the Black man tried for the crimes.

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Blues for Mister Charlie (Play, 1964)

James Baldwin turns a murder and its aftermath into an inquest in which even the most well-intentioned whites are implicated—and in which even a killer receives his share of compassion.   

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Going To Meet the Man (Short Stories, 1965)

"There's no way not to suffer. But you try all kinds of ways to keep from drowning in it." The men and women in these eight short fictions grasp this truth on an elemental level, and their stories detail the ingenious and often desperate ways in which they try to keep their head above water.

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No Name in the Street (Nonfiction, 1972)

In this stunningly personal document, James Baldwin remembers in vivid details the Harlem childhood that shaped his early consciousness and the later events that scored his heart with pain—the murders of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X, his sojourns in Europe and in Hollywood, and his retum to the American South to confront a violent America face-to-face.

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Little Man, Little Man: A Story of Childhood (Children's Book 1976)

with illustrations by Yoran Cazac

Four-year-old TJ spends his days on his lively Harlem block playing with his best friends WT and Blinky and running errands for neighbors. As he comes of age as a “Little Man” with big dreams, TJ faces a world of grown-up adventures and realities. Baldwin’s only children’s book, Little Man, Little Man celebrates and explores the challenges and joys of Black childhood. 

Recorded in 2018 at the Schomburg Center, listen to Baldwin's niece, Aisha Karefa-Smart, and nephew, Tejan "TJ" Karefa-Smart , talk about the book, their childhood, and memories of their uncle.

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Jimmy's Blues and Other Poems (Poetry, 1983)

A complete collection of published poems by the acclaimed writer includes six significant poems previously only available in limited editions and offers insight into his near-prophetic views on race, class, poverty and social orientation. 

Summaries provided via NYPL’s catalog, which draws from multiple sources. Click through to each book’s title for more.

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Team USA men's basketball coach Steve Kerr: 'I felt like an idiot' for not playing this star

Team USA men’s basketball coach Steve Kerr says he plans to adjust his rotations after one NBA star was noticeably left out of the lineup during the team’s opening matchup against Serbia. 

The Team USA men’s basketball team is stacked, with NBA All-Stars and former league MVPs making up the 12-man roster . With so much talent on the team, that means that inevitably some players won’t get the same amount of minutes on the floor in the 2024 Paris Olympics that they are used to in the NBA. 

On July 28, Team USA faced off against Serbia, led by current reigning NBA MVP Nikola Jokic, and delivered a dominating 110-84 win. While basketball fans celebrated Team USA’s victory, some pointed out the lack of minutes for two NBA players, particularly Jayson Tatum. 

Jayson Tatum and Tyrese Haliburton

Tatum, who helped his Boston Celtics win an NBA championship last month, did not play during Team USA’s first Olympic game and instead cheered on his teammates from the bench. Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton also did not check into the game. 

After the win, Kerr spoke about leaving Tatum, a five-time NBA All-Star, on the bench. 

“It’s tough,” Kerr told ESPN’s Brian Windhorst about the decision. “But Jayson handled it really well. I talked to him today before the game that it may play out this way, with Kevin (Durant) coming back and the lineups that I wanted to get to.”

Although Tatum had played in the exhibition games leading up to Team USA’s arrival in Paris, he was bumped from the rotation in favor of Durant, who played for the first time this summer. Durant had been sidelined for weeks with a calf injury, which The Athletic first reported on July 7. 

The Phoenix Suns star was unstoppable during the game, scoring 23 points off the bench and making his first eight shots. 

But, Durant’s impressive performance doesn’t mean Tatum will be left out of the rotations for all the Olympic matchups. Kerr said that his lineups will be adjusted for future games. 

“That’ll change. Jayson’s going to play,” he assured. “Every game is going to be different based on matchups.”

Kerr then complimented Tatum, calling him a “total pro” and pointing out that he has been named All-NBA First Team for the past three years. 

He continued, “I felt like an idiot not playing him. But in a 40-minute game, you can’t play more than 10 (players). You really can’t. So, I just think he’s an amazing guy, great player and handled it beautifully. He’ll be back out there next game.”

The men’s team’s next game will be against South Sudan on Wednesday, July 31. 

With Tatum re-entering the lineup, that means another star will have his minutes cut down. Kerr isn’t revealing who that player will be. 

“I’m not going to answer your next question, which is if he plays, who doesn’t,” he said, according to an ESPN story published July 29. “But we’re going to need him, and part of this job for me is to keep everybody engaged and ready, because my experience with this is crazy stuff happens.”

Kerr said he understands that “it makes no sense at all” to sit some of the top players in the NBA. But, he added, it is important to stay focused on the next game. 

“I have to do the same thing. And so I felt like last night those were the combinations that made the most sense,” he said. 

Speaking about Team USA's next game, Kerr said, “With South Sudan, it’s more about the speed, and speed is a killer. You have to be prepared for everything, and that means we need everybody.” 

The full roster for the Team USA men’s basketball team includes LeBron James, Stephen Curry, Joel Embiid, Anthony Davis, Devin Booker, Anthony Edwards, Bam Adebayo, Jrue Holiday, Derrick White, Durant, Haliburton and Tatum. 

Peacock is streaming the Paris Olympics around the clock. Learn more about accounts here . TODAY earns a commission on purchases. Peacock is owned by our parent company NBCUniversal.

Ariana Brockington is a trending news reporter at TODAY digital. She is based in Los Angeles.

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Carlik Jones throwing a basketball at a hoop. He is wearing dark clothes.

Their Parents Fled War. Now South Sudan’s Young Team Is in the Olympics.

War, famine and floods have beleaguered the world’s youngest nation. The arrival of its men’s basketball team at the Paris Olympics is set to offer a modicum of hope.

The Bright Stars are currently representing Africa in the Olympic men’s basketball tournament. Credit... Guillem Sartorio for The New York Times

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Abdi Latif Dahir

By Abdi Latif Dahir

Abdi Latif Dahir interviewed members of South Sudan’s basketball team in Kigali, Rwanda, where they gathered to train ahead of the Olympics.

  • Published July 30, 2024 Updated Aug. 1, 2024

When South Sudan’s young basketball team took to the court for an exhibition game against America’s basketball royalty, there were few expectations that they could hold on against the likes of LeBron James and Stephen Curry. Then they lost by just one point, 101-100, stunning not only their loyal followers, but also the team’s players, who had grown up revering the N.B.A. stars.

The South Sudanese will face the United States again Wednesday, this time at the Paris Olympics, and with the Americans now on notice, the odds are distinctly against the African team. But for many of their fans in Africa and elsewhere, that is beside the point.

The way they see it, it is a bit of a miracle that a team of refugees and their descendants, whose home country is just 13 years old and has suffered through devastating wars, made it to the Olympics at all.

Despite having no place of their own to train, the team won the only slot open to Africa for men’s basketball. They already beat the odds by not only coming within a hair of winning against the Americans — James made the winning layup with just 8 seconds remaining — but also by beating Puerto Rico in their first match of the Games in Paris.

“South Sudan and its people are known all over the world now,” said Aninyesi Tereza Mark, a 33-year-old university lecturer in the South Sudanese capital, Juba. “We are very proud of them and we are happy.”

South Sudan is the world’s youngest country . It won its freedom from neighboring Sudan only in 2011, and since then, has suffered through a civil war that has claimed the lives of some 400,000 people and displaced more than 4 million. While a shaky peace deal has been in place since 2018, inter-communal violence persists . Poverty and corruption are endemic .

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Home — Essay Samples — Entertainment — Forrest Gump — Forrest Gump: An Unforgettable Journey through History

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Forrest Gump: an Unforgettable Journey Through History

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Published: Aug 1, 2024

Words: 897 | Pages: 2 | 5 min read

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The narrative structure: a tale of simplicity and complexity, character development: from innocence to wisdom, portrayal of historical events: a tapestry of american history, conclusion: a timeless tale of love, resilience, and humanity.

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    In Conclusion. The history of basketball is a testament to the power of innovation, perseverance, and passion. From its humble beginnings on the streets of Springfield to its status as a global phenomenon, basketball has proven to be more than just a game. It has brought people together, broken down barriers, and inspired generations of players ...

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