[On December 15th,
1891, James
Naismith invented the game of basketball. So for the sport’s 125th
birthday, I’ll BasketballStudy five histories, figures, and stories connected
to one of our most enduring pasttimes. Add your responses and thoughts for a
slam-dunk crowd-sourced weekend post, please!]
Three
interesting contexts for the sport’s invention and popularization.
1)
Canadian Origins: Naismith
himself was Canadian: born in Ontario to Scottish immigrant parents, he
attended (and starred in multiple sports) at Montreal’s
McGill University, where he subsequently became the first director of
athletics before leaving to become a physical education teacher at the Springfield
(MA) YMCA International Training School (later Springfield College). That
biography itself illustrates the interconnected identities of Canada and the
U.S., in an era when the border was unpatrolled and movement between the two
nations was particularly easy and frequent. But Naismith’s first ideas for
“Basket Ball” likewise reflect a Canadian influence: the game of “duck on the rock,”
which the young Naismith had played in the fields of Ontario and which taught
him the value of arcing or lobbing rather than straight throws and directly
inspired key aspects of basketball. Thanks, Canada!
2)
Fun at the Y-M-C-A: It was while teaching PE at
that Springfield YMCA that Naismith invented basketball; he was tasked by the
school’s PE director, the pioneering
recreation advocate Dr. Luther Gulick, with coming up with a game that
would keep the school’s rowdy young men active during the New England winters
(and one that would both be fair and not too physically rough), and in December
1891 Naismith debuted “Basket Ball.” That origin thus reflects two core
elements of the YMCA: its Christian emphasis on fairness and its attempt to
harness the energies of young men. And it was through the YMCA that the sport truly
began to spread: even when Naismith moved to the University
of Kansas in 1898 and founded that institution’s men’s basketball program,
many of their games were against regional YMCA teams (as most colleges did not
yet offer basketball). We often focus on collegiate and professional athletics
to trace the history of sports in America, but basketball’s early history
reminds us of the equally vital role of community and recreational athletics in
that story.
3)
A Coaching Tree: Although Naismith frequently
argued that “you
don’t coach basketball; you just play it,” he nonetheless originated a
chain of coaches that includes some of the sport’s most legendary figures: he
instructed his successor at Kansas, Forrest “Phog”
Allen, who came to be known as “the Father of Basketball Coaching”; and
during his long career at Kansas Allen coached both Adolph Rupp
and Dean
Smith, who went on to become two of the 20th century’s most
influential coaches (at Kentucky and North Carolina, respectively). That multi-generational
story illustrates how influential individual figures and relationships can be
in affecting and changing the course of history. But it also reminds us of how
young America is, and how quickly our contemporary figures and stories (like
that of Michael Jordan, who was coached
and in his own words profoundly influenced by Smith) can be connected back
to originating moments and histories. A great lesson to take away from Naismith
and the origins of basketball.
Next
BasketballStudying tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other basketball stories or histories you’d share for the weekend post?
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