Hardcourt: Stories from 75 Years of the National Basketball Association
By Fred Bowen and James E. Ransome
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About this ebook
The National Basketball Association is the biggest league for one of the nation’s most beloved sports. Played in massive stadiums by athletes who are now household names, with millions of fans around the world, basketball has truly become a global phenomenon. But it didn’t always exist the way we know it now.
Follow basketball from its humble beginnings as a casual indoor pastime played in gyms and colleges through its evolution for seventy-five years of hardcourt history. The NBA gained legions of fans thanks to the introduction of rules like the three-point line and the twenty-four second clock, and teams such as the Harlem Globetrotters, who paved the way for desegregated teams. Discover the story of the legendary Olympic Dream Team of 1992 and beloved players like Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, and LeBron James, along with the early game-changers who made basketball what it is today.
With the expert storytelling of veteran sportswriter Fred Bowen and stunning full-page illustrations from award-winning artist James E. Ransome, experience the biggest and best basketball league in the world, the NBA.
Fred Bowen
Fred Bowen is the author of Gridiron and more than twenty additional children’s books about sports, and for the past twenty years has written the weekly KidsPost column in The Washington Post. Fred lives in Maryland with his family. Visit him at FredBowen.com.
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Gridiron: Stories from 100 Years of the National Football League Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Hardcourt - Fred Bowen
Fred Bowen
James E. Ransome
Hardcourt
Stories from 75 Years of the National Basketball Association
Hardcourt, by Fred Bowen, illustrated by James E. Ransome, Margaret K. McElderry BooksTHE TIP-OFF
It started after World War II with a bunch of empty sports arenas. Too many days and nights when there were no games, and the bright lights were off and everything was dark.
Places such as the old Madison Square Garden on 8th Avenue between 49th and 50th streets in Manhattan. The Boston Garden at North Station. The Philadelphia Arena and Chicago Stadium. The Duquesne Gardens in Pittsburgh and the Uline Arena in northeast Washington, D.C.
The owners of these places knew one simple truth—you can’t make any money when no one is in the building. You have to have some attraction that makes people want to show up.
There was always the circus. Ice shows were big. Boxing was popular in the 1940s, especially the heavyweights. Everyone knew Joe Louis. Pro wrestling, bicycle races, anything to draw a crowd. Some of the owners had teams in the National Hockey League.
But they needed more. The soldiers were coming home from Europe and the Pacific. They were buying houses, starting families, and looking for ways to spend their money and have some fun. Maybe forget about the horrors of the war—seventy million dead, including more than four hundred thousand Americans.
Maybe the arena owners could try another professional sport. Baseball was king back then. People couldn’t wait to see Ted Williams and Joe DiMaggio swing the bat again. Horse racing was big too, but you can’t race horses inside. The National Football League had been around for more than twenty years, although you would hardly know it. The NFL was not that big a deal in 1946.
College basketball was drawing more crowds in some cities. The National Invitational Tournament (NIT) was a big event in New York. Maybe a professional basketball league would work. The National Basketball League (NBL) had been in business for a while. Mostly around the Midwest and in small towns such as Hammond, Indiana; Sheboygan, Wisconsin; and Youngstown, Ohio.
So they gave it a try. Called the new league the Basketball Association of America (BAA). They started with eleven teams the first year. They played a sixty-game schedule in front of a lot of empty seats. But at least the arenas weren’t completely empty.
And slowly… it wasn’t easy… the league got bigger. There was something about the game and the players that made people sit up and notice. Players such as George Mikan, Bob Cousy, Bill Russell, Bob Pettit, and Wilt Chamberlain. Hard not to notice Wilt. He was listed at seven feet, one inch tall, and 275 pounds.
But the story of professional basketball is a long one. Seventy-five years of hardcourt history. How a game that started in a YMCA gymnasium in Springfield, Massachusetts, grew into the biggest and best basketball league in the world.
The NBA.
ONE
A NEW GAME
James Naismith had to come up with something… quick. Or he might be out of a job.
The thirty-year-old physical education instructor at the International YMCA Training School in Springfield, Massachusetts, had a class of eighteen restless boys. It was December 1891 and too cold to go outside and play football or baseball. Tempers were running short.
The school’s directors told Naismith to come up with a game that would give the boys some exercise. But not break anything or any bones in the gym.
They gave Naismith two weeks.
Two weeks later, Naismith had the school’s janitor, Pop Stebbins, nail a peach basket at each end of the gymnasium. The baskets were ten feet above the floor and secured to a railing that ran along the edge of the gym balcony. There were no backboards.
Naismith then asked Mrs. Lyons, the secretary at the school, to type up the thirteen rules for his new game. The idea of the game was for the players to throw the ball—a soccer ball—into one of the peach baskets. Some of the rules stated:
The ball may be thrown in any direction with one or both hands.
The ball may be batted in any direction with one or both hands (never with the fist).
A player cannot run with the ball. The player must throw it from the spot on which he catches it.…
No shouldering, holding, pushing, tripping, or striking in any way the person of an opponent.…
Finally, the rules declared:
The time shall be two fifteen-minute halves, with five