Early history A game similar to basketball is mentioned in a 1591 book published in Frankfurt am Main that reports on the lifestyles and customs of coastal North American residents, (German; translates as
Truthful Depictions of the Savages): "Among other things, a game of skill is described in which balls must be thrown against a target woven from twigs, mounted high on a pole. There's a small reward for the player if the target is being hit."
Creation In December 1891,
James Naismith, a Canadian-American professor of
physical education and instructor at the International
Young Men's Christian Association Training School (now
Springfield College) in
Springfield, Massachusetts, was trying to keep his gym class active on a rainy day. He sought a vigorous indoor game to keep his students occupied and at proper levels of fitness during the long
New England winters. After rejecting other ideas as either too rough or poorly suited to walled-in
gymnasiums, he invented a new game in which players would pass a ball to teammates and try to score points by tossing the ball into a basket mounted on a wall. Naismith wrote the basic
rules and nailed a peach basket onto an elevated track. Naismith initially set up the peach basket with its bottom intact, which meant that the ball had to be retrieved manually after each "basket" or point scored. This quickly proved tedious, so Naismith removed the bottom of the basket to allow the balls to be poked out with a long
dowel after each scored basket. Shortly after,
Senda Berenson, instructor of physical culture at the nearby
Smith College, went to Naismith to learn more about the game. Basketball was originally played with a
soccer ball. These round balls from "
association football" were made, at the time, with a set of laces to close off the hole needed for inserting the inflatable bladder after the other sewn-together segments of the ball's cover had been flipped outside-in. These laces could cause bounce passes and dribbling to be unpredictable. Eventually a lace-free ball construction method was invented, and this change to the game was endorsed by Naismith (whereas in
American football, the lace construction proved to be advantageous for gripping and remains to this day). 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 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 was common by 1896, with a rule against the double dribble by 1898. The peach baskets were used until 1906 when they were finally replaced by metal hoops with backboards. A further change was soon made, so the ball merely passed through. Whenever a person got the ball in the basket, their team would gain a point. Whichever team got the most points won the game. The baskets were originally nailed to the mezzanine balcony of the playing court, but this proved impractical when spectators in the balcony began to interfere with shots. The backboard was introduced to prevent this interference; it had the additional effect of allowing rebound shots. Naismith's handwritten diaries, discovered by his granddaughter in early 2006, indicate that he was nervous about the new game he had invented, which incorporated rules from a children's game called
duck on a rock, as many had failed before it. Frank Mahan, one of the players from the original first game, approached Naismith after the Christmas break, in early 1892, asking him what he intended to call his new game. Naismith replied that he had not thought of it because he had been focused on just getting the
game started. Mahan suggested that it be called "Naismith ball", at which he laughed, saying that a name like that would kill any game. Mahan then said, "Why not call it basketball?" Naismith replied, "We have a basket and a ball, and it seems to me that would be a good name for it." The first official game was played in the
YMCA gymnasium in Albany, New York, on January 20, 1892, with nine players. The game ended at 1–0; the shot was made from , on a court just half the size of a present-day
Streetball or
National Basketball Association (NBA) court. At the time,
soccer was being played with 10 to a team (which was increased to 11). When winter weather got too icy to play soccer, teams were taken indoors, and it was convenient to have them split in half and play basketball with five on each side. By 1897–98, teams of five became standard.
College basketball Basketball's early adherents were dispatched to YMCAs throughout the United States, and it quickly spread through the United States and Canada. By 1895, it was well established at several women's high schools. While 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 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 of the United States (forerunner of the
NCAA) vied for control over the rules for the game. The first pro league, the National Basketball League, was formed in 1898 to protect players from exploitation and to promote a less rough game. This league only lasted five years. James Naismith was instrumental in establishing
college basketball. His colleague C. O. Beamis fielded the first college basketball team just a year after the Springfield YMCA game at the suburban Pittsburgh
Geneva College. Naismith himself later coached at the
University of Kansas for six years, before handing the reins to renowned coach
Forrest "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. On February 9, 1895, the first intercollegiate 5-on-5 game was played at
Hamline University between Hamline and the School of Agriculture, which was affiliated with the
University of Minnesota. The School of Agriculture won in a 9–3 game. In 1901, colleges, including the
University of Chicago,
Columbia University,
Cornell University,
Dartmouth College, the
University of Minnesota, the
U.S. Naval Academy, the
University of Colorado and
Yale University began sponsoring men's games. In 1905, frequent injuries on the
football field prompted President
Theodore Roosevelt to suggest that colleges form a governing body, resulting in the creation of the Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States (IAAUS). In 1910, that body changed its name to the
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The first Canadian interuniversity basketball game was played at
YMCA in
Kingston, Ontario on February 6, 1904, when
McGill UniversityNaismith's alma matervisited
Queen's University. McGill won 9–7 in overtime; the score was 7–7 at the end of regulation play, and a ten-minute overtime period settled the outcome. A good turnout of spectators watched the game. The first men's national championship tournament, the National Association of Intercollegiate Basketball tournament, which still exists as the
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA)
tournament, was organized in 1937. The first national championship for NCAA teams, the
National Invitation Tournament (NIT) in New York, was organized in 1938; the
NCAA national tournament began one year later. College basketball was rocked by gambling scandals from 1948 to
1951, when dozens of players from top teams were implicated in
game-fixing and
point shaving. Partially spurred by an association with cheating, the NIT lost support to the NCAA tournament.
High school basketball and Powell High School girls teams, Wyoming, March 1944 Before widespread
school district consolidation, most American high schools were far smaller than their present-day counterparts. During the first decades of the 20th century, basketball quickly became the ideal interscholastic sport due to its modest equipment and personnel requirements. In the days before widespread television coverage of professional and college sports, the popularity of
high school basketball was unrivaled in many parts of America. Perhaps the most legendary of high school teams was Indiana's
Franklin Wonder Five, which took the nation by storm during the 1920s, dominating Indiana basketball and earning national recognition. Today virtually every high school in the United States fields a basketball team in
varsity competition. Basketball's 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 2016–17 season, 980,673 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, commonly called
Hoosier Hysteria in Indiana; the critically acclaimed film
Hoosiers shows high school basketball's depth of meaning to these communities. Girls Junior Basketball team, 1915–1916There is currently no tournament to determine a national high school champion. The most serious effort was the National Interscholastic Basketball Tournament at the
University of Chicago from 1917 to 1930. The event was organized by
Amos Alonzo Stagg and sent invitations to state champion teams. The tournament started out as a mostly Midwest affair but grew. In 1929 it had 29 state champions. Faced with opposition from the
National Federation of State High School Associations and
North Central Association of Colleges and Schools that bore a threat of the schools losing their accreditation the last tournament was in 1930. The organizations said they were concerned that the tournament was being used to recruit professional players from the prep ranks. The tournament did not invite minority schools or private/parochial schools. The National Catholic Interscholastic Basketball Tournament ran from 1924 to 1941 at
Loyola University. The National Catholic Invitational Basketball Tournament from 1954 to 1978 played at a series of venues, including
Catholic University,
Georgetown and
George Mason. The National Interscholastic Basketball Tournament for Black High Schools was held from 1929 to 1942 at
Hampton Institute. The National Invitational Interscholastic Basketball Tournament was held from 1941 to 1967 starting out at
Tuskegee Institute. Following a pause during
World War II it resumed at
Tennessee State College in Nashville. The basis for the champion dwindled after 1954 when
Brown v. Board of Education began an integration of schools. The last tournaments were held at
Alabama State College from 1964 to 1967.
Professional basketball '' magazine promoting an exhibition in Harlem, March 1922. Drawing by
Hugo Gellert Teams abounded throughout the 1920s. There were hundreds of men's
professional basketball teams in towns and cities all over the United States, and little organization of the professional game. Players jumped from team to team and teams played in armories and smoky dance halls. Leagues came and went.
Barnstorming squads such as the
Original Celtics and two all-African American teams, the
New York Renaissance Five ("Rens") and the (still existing)
Harlem Globetrotters played up to two hundred games a year on their national tours. In 1946, the
Basketball Association of America (BAA) was formed. The first game was played in
Toronto, Ontario, Canada between the
Toronto Huskies and
New York Knickerbockers on November 1, 1946. Three seasons later, in 1949, the BAA merged with the
National Basketball League (NBL) to form the
National Basketball Association (NBA). By the 1950s, basketball had become a major college sport, thus paving the way for a growth of interest in professional basketball. In 1959, a
basketball hall of fame was founded in
Springfield, Massachusetts, site of the first game. Its rosters include the names of great players, coaches, referees and people who have contributed significantly to the development of the game. The hall of fame has people who have accomplished many goals in their career in basketball. An upstart organization, the
American Basketball Association, emerged in 1967 and briefly threatened the NBA's dominance until the
ABA-NBA merger in 1976. Today the NBA is the top professional basketball league in the world in terms of popularity, salaries, talent, and level of competition. (#1) drives to the basket around
Maya Moore (#23) in the Minnesota Lynx vs Chicago Sky game 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; charismatic center
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,
Shaquille O'Neal,
Hakeem Olajuwon and
Karl Malone; playmakers
John Stockton,
Isiah Thomas and
Steve Nash; crowd-pleasing forwards
Julius Erving and
Charles Barkley; European stars
Dirk Nowitzki,
Pau Gasol,
Nikola Jokić and
Tony Parker; Latin American stars
Manu Ginobili, more recent superstars,
Allen Iverson,
Kobe Bryant,
Tim Duncan,
LeBron James,
Stephen Curry,
Giannis Antetokounmpo, etc.; and the three players who many credit with ushering the professional game to its highest level of popularity during the 1980s and 1990s:
Larry Bird,
Earvin "Magic" Johnson, and
Michael Jordan. In 2001, the NBA formed a developmental league, the
National Basketball Development League (later known as the NBA D-League and then the
NBA G League after a branding deal with
Gatorade). As of the 2023–24 season, the G League has 31 teams.
International basketball FIBA (International Basketball Federation) was formed in 1932 by eight founding nations:
Argentina,
Czechoslovakia,
Greece,
Italy,
Latvia,
Portugal,
Romania and
Switzerland. At this time, the organization only oversaw amateur players. Its acronym, derived from the French
Fédération Internationale de Basket-ball Amateur, was thus "FIBA". Men's basketball was first
included at the Berlin
1936 Summer Olympics, although a demonstration tournament was held in 1904. The United States defeated Canada in the first final, played outdoors. This competition has usually been dominated by the United States, whose team has won all but three titles. The first of these came in a controversial final game in
Munich in
1972 against the Soviet Union, in which the ending of the game was replayed three times until the Soviet Union finally came out on top. In 1950 the first FIBA World Championship for men, now known as the
FIBA Basketball World Cup, was held in Argentina. Three years later, the first FIBA World Championship for women, now known as the
FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup, was held in Chile. Women's basketball was added to the Olympics in 1976, which were held in
Montreal, Quebec, Canada with teams such as the
Soviet Union,
Brazil and
Australia rivaling the
American squads. In 1989,
FIBA allowed professional NBA players to participate in the
Olympics for the first time. Prior to the
1992 Summer Olympics, only European and South American teams were allowed to field professionals in the Olympics. The United States' dominance continued with the introduction of the original
Dream Team. In the
2004 Athens Olympics, the United States suffered its first Olympic loss while using professional players, falling to
Puerto Rico (in a 19-point loss) and
Lithuania in group games, and being eliminated in the semifinals by
Argentina. It eventually won the bronze medal defeating Lithuania, finishing behind Argentina and
Italy. The
Redeem Team, won gold at the
2008 Olympics, and the B-Team, won gold at the
2010 FIBA World Championship in Turkey despite featuring no players from the 2008 squad. The United States continued its dominance as they won gold at the
2012 Olympics,
2014 FIBA World Cup and the
2016 Olympics. game in
Moscow in 2018 Worldwide, basketball tournaments are held for boys and girls of all age levels. The global popularity of the sport is reflected in the nationalities represented in the NBA. Players from all six inhabited continents currently play in the NBA. Top international players began coming into the NBA in the mid-1990s, including Croatians
Dražen Petrović and
Toni Kukoč, Serbian
Vlade Divac, Lithuanians
Arvydas Sabonis and
Šarūnas Marčiulionis, Dutchman
Rik Smits and German
Detlef Schrempf. In the Philippines, the
Philippine Basketball Association's first game was played on April 9, 1975, at the
Araneta Coliseum in
Cubao,
Quezon City, Philippines. It was founded as a "rebellion" of several teams from the now-defunct Manila Industrial and Commercial Athletic Association, which was tightly controlled by the Basketball Association of the Philippines (now defunct), the then-FIBA recognized national association. Nine teams from the MICAA participated in the league's first season that opened on April 9, 1975. The
NBL is Australia's pre-eminent men's professional basketball league. The league commenced in
1979, playing a winter season (April–September) and did so until the completion of the 20th season in
1998. The
1998–99 season, which commenced only months later, was the first season after the shift to the current summer season format (October–April). This shift was an attempt to avoid competing directly against
Australia's various football codes. It features 8 teams from around Australia and one in New Zealand. A few players including
Luc Longley,
Andrew Gaze,
Shane Heal,
Chris Anstey and
Andrew Bogut made it big internationally, becoming poster figures for the sport in Australia. The
Women's National Basketball League began in 1981.
Women's basketball on winning the
2006 FIBA World Championship for Women Women began to play basketball in the fall of 1892 at
Smith College through
Senda Berenson, substitute director of the newly opened gymnasium and physical education teacher, after having modified the rules for women. Shortly after Berenson was hired at Smith, she visited Naismith to learn more about the game. Fascinated by the new sport and the values it could teach, she instantly introduced the game as a class exercise and soon after teams were organized. The first women's collegiate basketball game was played on March 21, 1893, when her Smith freshmen and sophomores played against one another. The first official women's interinstitutional game was played later that year between the
University of California and the Miss Head's School. In 1899, a committee was established at the Conference of Physical Training in Springfield to draw up general rules for women's basketball. These rules, designed by Berenson, were published in 1899. These rules called for six to nine players per team and 11 officials. The
International Women's Sports Federation (1924) included a women's basketball competition. 37 women's high school varsity basketball or state tournaments were held by 1925. And in 1926, the Amateur Athletic Union backed the first
national women's basketball championship, complete with men's rules. The Grads also shone on several exhibition trips to Europe, and won four consecutive exhibition Olympics tournaments, in 1924, 1928, 1932, and 1936; however, women's basketball was not an official Olympic sport until 1976. The Grads' players were unpaid, and had to remain single. The Grads' style focused on team play, without overly emphasizing skills of individual players. The first women's
AAU All-America team was chosen in 1929. ==Rules and regulations==