Published On: Wed, Aug 24th, 2011

Basketball

London Olympic games 2012 is an event of a life time and Spin Palace likes our chances of winning. Play all your favourite casino games at www.spinpalace.co.uk


At the London 2012 Games, Basketball will feature both men’s and women’s events. Both competitions will comprise 12 teams.

Did you know?

  • 600 Basketballs will be used during the competition.
  • The original Basketball hoops were not bottomless nets, but peach baskets with bottoms. An official had to use a ladder to retrieve the ball after every score.
  • The modern basketball is 24cm in diameter, while the hoop has a diameter of 46cm.
  • The tallest player in modern Basketball is Yao Ming of China, who stands at a massive 7’6” (2.29m).
  • In Berlin 1936, the first official Olympic Basketball tournament was held outdoors on courts made of sand that turned to mud in the rain.
  • There was an exhibition Basketball tournament at the St Louis 1904 Olympic Games, but only a few American club teams competed.

Key facts
Venues: Basketball Arena; North Greenwich Arena (finals)
Dates: Saturday 28 July – Sunday 12 August
Gold medals up for grabs: 2
Athletes: 288 (144 men, 144 women).

Basketball: a history of the sport
Basketball is usually considered an American sport, but it was actually invented by a Canadian churchman called James Naismith.

He wanted to create a game that could be played indoors during the winter, as a way of keeping his students at the YMCA in shape.

Today, basketball is played worldwide, with players from more than 30 countries strutting their stuff in the American National Basketball Association (NBA) – the world’s leading professional league.

For more information on the history of the sport, visit the IOC website.

Basketball at the Games
The US men’s team has dominated Olympic Basketball.

For 36 years after Basketball entered the Games as a full medal sport at Berlin 1936, the question was always who would win silver.

Then, at Munich 1972, the Soviet Union won a tight gold medal match, beginning a rivalry that lasted until Barcelona 1992.

At Barcelona, professional players took part for the first time, and an all-star NBA ‘Dream Team’ won gold.

Women’s Basketball – first held at the Montreal 1976 Games – has not been so one-sided, although the United States and Russia still dominate.

How to play – and win
At the Olympic Games, Basketball is played on an indoor court by two teams of five players.

The aim is to score points by shooting the ball into your net (or ‘basket’), which sits on a backboard 3.05 metres (10 feet) above floor level.

The players move the ball around the court by bouncing it along the floor and throwing it to one another. Games consist of four 10-minute quarters with teams changing ends at half-time.

Jargon buster

  • Slam dunk: When a player jumps to the level of the basket and slams the ball down into the net with one or both hands.
  • Downtown: The area outside the ‘three point’ semi-circle.
  • Time-out: A one-minute break, called by the coach to talk tactics.
  • Live ball: A ball in play.
  • Assist: A pass that leads directly to a basket scored by a teammate.

 

Get involved
Most players get their first taste of the sport in the park or school playground with friends. Use the Active Places site to find a court near you.

If you want to join a club contact England Basketball, Basketball Scotland or Basketball Wales who also run grassroots schemes to help people get started in Basketball.

Incoming search terms:

ecommerce wordpress plugin

About the Author

- London 2012’s ambition is to create a Games for everyone, where everyone is invited to take part, join in and enjoy the most exciting event in the world. London 2012 will create the most accessible and participative Games. It will touch people as it has never done before, stimulating people to do more and to try new things and reassess what we are all capable of. London 2012 has sport at its heart and London at the centre, but it is more than London and more than sport. It is a Games for London, the UK and the rest of the world, for sport and culture, for volunteers and business.

Displaying 2 Comments
Have Your Say
  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by londonolymp2012, londonolymp2012. londonolymp2012 said: New Post – Basketball. Read it now at http://bit.ly/e8JeVM [...]

  2. Hailey says:

    howdy, good website, and an excellent understand! definitely one for my favorites.

Leave a comment

XHTML: You can use these html tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Powered by AutoBlogged