Basketball is
unique in that it was invented by one person, rather than evolving from
a different sport. In early December 1891, Dr. James Naismith, a Canadian-born physician of McGill University and minister on
the faculty of a college for YMCA
professionals (today, Springfield
College) in Springfield,
Massachusetts, sought a vigorous indoor game to keep rugby
players occupied and at proper levels of fitness during the long New England winters. Legend has it
that, after rejecting other ideas as either too rough or poorly suited
to walled-in gymnasiums,
he wrote the basic rules and
nailed a peach basket onto the 10-foot (3.05 m) elevated track. In
contrast with modern basketball nets, this peach basket retained its
bottom. Therefore balls scored into the basket had to be poked out with
a long dowel each time. Women's basketball began in 1892 at Smith College
when Senda
Berenson, a physical education teacher, modified Naismith's
rules for women. The first official basketball game was played in the
YMCA gymnasium on January 20, 1892 with
nine players, on a court just half the size of a present-day NBA court.
"Basket ball", the name suggested by one of Naismith's students, was
popular from the beginning.
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Basketball's
early adherents were dispatched to YMCAs throughout the
United States,
and it quickly spread through the country. By 1896, it was well
established at several women's colleges. While the YMCA was responsible
for initially developing and spreading the game, within a decade it
discouraged the new sport, as rough play and rowdy crowds began to
detract from the YMCA's primary mission. However, other amateur sports
clubs, colleges, and professional clubs quickly filled the void. In the
years before World War I, the Amateur Athletic
Union and the Intercollegiate
Athletic Association (forerunner of the NCAA) vied
for control over the rules for the game.
Basketball was
originally played with a soccer ball.
The first balls made specifically for basketball were brown, and it was
only in the late 1950s that Tony Hinkle,
searching for a ball that would be more visible to players and
spectators alike, introduced the orange ball that is now in common use.
Dribbling, the
bouncing of the ball up and down while moving, was not part of the
original game except for the "bounce pass" to teammates. Passing the
ball was the primary means of ball movement. Dribbling was eventually
introduced but limited by the asymmetric shape of early balls.
Dribbling only became a major part of the game around the 1950s as
manufacturing improved the ball shape.
College
basketball and early leagues
Naismith and
Berenson were instrumental in establishing college basketball.
Naismith coached at University of Kansas
for six years before handing the reins to renowned coach Phog Allen.
Naismith's disciple Amos Alonzo Stagg
brought basketball to the University of Chicago,
while Adolph
Rupp, a student of Naismith's at Kansas, enjoyed great success
as coach at the University
of Kentucky. In 1892, University of
California and Miss Head's School, played the first women's
inter-institutional game. Berenson's freshmen played the sophomore
class in the first women's collegiate basketball game at Smith College,
March 21, 1893. The same year, Mount Holyoke
and Sophie
Newcomb College (coached by Clara Gregory Baer)
women began playing basketball. By 1895, the game had spread to
colleges across the country, including Wellesley, Vassar and Bryn Mawr.
The first intercollegiate women's game was on April 4, 1896. Stanford
women played Berkeley,
9-on-9, ending in a 2-1 Stanford victory. In 1901, colleges, including
the University
of Chicago, Columbia University,Dartmouth College,University of
Minnesota, the U.S. Naval Academy,
the University
of Utah and Yale University
began sponsoring men's games. By 1910, frequent injuries on the men's
courts prompted President
Roosevelt to suggest that college basketball form a governing
body. And the Intercollegiate
Athletic Association (IAA) was created.
U.S.
high school basketball
Today virtually
every high school in the United States fields a basketball team in varsity
competition, and its popularity remains high, both in rural areas where
they carry the identification of the entire community, as well as at
some larger schools known for their basketball teams where many players
go on to participate at higher levels of competition after graduation.
In the 2003-04 season, 1,002,797 boys and girls represented their
schools in interscholastic basketball competition, according to the National Federation
of State High School Associations. The states of Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky are
particularly well known for their residents' devotion to high school
basketball; the critically acclaimed film Hoosiers
shows high school basketball's depth of meaning to these rural
communities. In fact, the term "March Madness"
was first used to describe the
Illinois
high school basketball tournament.
National
Basketball Association
In 1946, the National Basketball
Association (NBA) was formed, organizing the top professional
teams and leading to greater popularity of the professional game. An
upstart organization, the American Basketball
Association, emerged in 1967 and briefly threatened the NBA's
dominance until the rival leagues merged in 1976. Today the NBA is the
top professional basketball league in the world in terms of notoriety,
salaries, talent, and level of competition.
The NBA has
featured many famous players, including George Mikan,
the first dominating "big man"; ball-handling wizard Bob Cousy and
defensive genius Bill Russell
of the Boston
Celtics; Wilt
Chamberlain, who originally played for the barnstorming Harlem Globetrotters;
all-around stars Oscar Robertson
and Jerry West;
more recent big men Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
and Bill Walton;
playmaker John
Stockton; and the four players who many credit with ushering the
professional game to its highest level of popularity: Julius Erving,Larry Bird, Magic Johnson,
and Michael
Jordan.
The
NBA-backed Women's
National Basketball Association
(WNBA) began 1997. Though it had an insecure opening season, several
marquee players (Sheryl
Swoopes, Lisa
Leslie and Sue
Bird among others) helped the
league's popularity and level of competition. Other professional
women's basketball leagues in
the United States, such as the American
Basketball League (1996-1998),
have folded in part because of the popularity of the WNBA.