filmov
tv
James Naismith and the First Basketball Game — Tales of Sports Foolishness (ep. 5)
Показать описание
On December 21, 1891, a YMCA instructor named James Naismith had his students play the first basketball game ever, in a tiny little gym in Springfield, Massachusetts. And so, to celebrate the anniversary of that sport’s creation – or, “Basketball Day” if you’re inclined - let’s recount what happened in the first basketball game in history, and how what happened in that game has lead to the sport that we see today.
It's Tales of Sports Foolishness!
Notes:
*I didn’t have time to include it in this video, but the reason basketball hoops have backboards is also really interesting. Because hoops were perched on railings and balconies in its early years, and because the sport was so rough at the time that it attracted rowdy fans, it became common for fans to reach out and interfere with teams’ shot attempts. So hoops started getting made with backboards, specifically to prevent fans from getting in the way of the action. Interesting, right?
*Note how basketball courts looked back in the day at the 14:30 mark. If you’ve ever wondered why a shot from the top of the free throw circle is called “the top of the key,” it’s because the markings on the floor used to resemble a key once upon a time. (Or a thermometer.)
*The illustration of the first game that you see a few times in this video was drawn by Genzaburo Ishikawa, a Japanese college student who was one of the 18 participants in the first ever basketball game. His illustration appeared in The Triangle, a monthly journal by the YMCA Training School, where the first ever public references to basketball were made.
*Dec. 21 is also the day, in 2012, that the world was supposedly going to end because it was the end of the Mayan calendar. This has nothing to do with the video, but it's funny to me that the day people thought the world was going to end was also basketball's birthday.
››››››››››››››››
This is 𝐓𝐚𝐥𝐞𝐬 𝐨𝐟 𝐒𝐩𝐨𝐫𝐭𝐬 𝐅𝐨𝐨𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐡𝐧𝐞𝐬𝐬: a video essay series in which I, Velodus, dig deep on sports figures in history who were either obscure or whose stories were not getting nearly enough attention at the time these videos were made. If you're a huge fan of sports history, or if you're just a fan of well-researched, tightly-edited video essays, you might dig these videos - and if so, be sure to press that subscribe button.
It's Tales of Sports Foolishness!
Notes:
*I didn’t have time to include it in this video, but the reason basketball hoops have backboards is also really interesting. Because hoops were perched on railings and balconies in its early years, and because the sport was so rough at the time that it attracted rowdy fans, it became common for fans to reach out and interfere with teams’ shot attempts. So hoops started getting made with backboards, specifically to prevent fans from getting in the way of the action. Interesting, right?
*Note how basketball courts looked back in the day at the 14:30 mark. If you’ve ever wondered why a shot from the top of the free throw circle is called “the top of the key,” it’s because the markings on the floor used to resemble a key once upon a time. (Or a thermometer.)
*The illustration of the first game that you see a few times in this video was drawn by Genzaburo Ishikawa, a Japanese college student who was one of the 18 participants in the first ever basketball game. His illustration appeared in The Triangle, a monthly journal by the YMCA Training School, where the first ever public references to basketball were made.
*Dec. 21 is also the day, in 2012, that the world was supposedly going to end because it was the end of the Mayan calendar. This has nothing to do with the video, but it's funny to me that the day people thought the world was going to end was also basketball's birthday.
››››››››››››››››
This is 𝐓𝐚𝐥𝐞𝐬 𝐨𝐟 𝐒𝐩𝐨𝐫𝐭𝐬 𝐅𝐨𝐨𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐡𝐧𝐞𝐬𝐬: a video essay series in which I, Velodus, dig deep on sports figures in history who were either obscure or whose stories were not getting nearly enough attention at the time these videos were made. If you're a huge fan of sports history, or if you're just a fan of well-researched, tightly-edited video essays, you might dig these videos - and if so, be sure to press that subscribe button.
Комментарии