Basketball
Basketball
History
Basketball is one of few sports with a known date of birth. On December 1, 1891, in
Springfield, Massachusetts, James Naismith hung two half-bushel peach baskets at
the opposite ends of a gymnasium and out-lined 13 rules based on five principles to
his students at the International Training School of the Young Men's Christian
Association (YMCA), which later became Springfield College. Naismith (1861-1939)
was a physical education teacher who was seeking a team sport with limited physical
contact but a lot of running, jumping, shooting, and the hand-eye
coordination required in handling a ball. The peach baskets he hung as goals gave the
sport the name of basketball. His students were excited about the game, and
Christmas vacation gave them the chance to tell their friends and people at their local
YMCAs about the game. The association leaders wrote to Naismith asking for copies
of the rules, and they were published in the Triangle, the school newspaper, on
January 15,1892.
Naismith's five basic principles center on the ball, which was described as "large,
light, and handled with the hands." Players
the women as well with broadcast of NCAA championship tourneys beginning in the
early 1980s and the formation of the WNBA in 1997.
Internationally, Italy has probably become the leading basketball nation outside of
the United States, with national, corporate, and professional teams. The Olympics
boosts basketball internationally and has also spurred the women's game by
recognizing it
Basketball Association (ABA) was inaugurated in 1967 and challenged the NBA for
college talent and market share for almost ten years. In 1976, this league disbanded,
but four of its teams remained as NBA teams. Unification came just in time for major
television support. Several women's professional leagues were attempted and failed,
including the Women's Professional Basketball League (WBL) and the Women's
World Basketball Association, before the WNBA debuted in 1997 with the support of
the NBA.
Raw Materials
The outside covering of a basketball is made of synthetic rubber, rubber,
composition, or leather. The inside consists of a bladder (the balloon-like structure
that holds air) and the carcass. The bladder is made of butyl rubber, and the carcass
consists of treads of nylon or polyester. Preprinted decals are used to label the ball, or
foil is used to imprint label information. Zinc and copper plates are used in a press to
either affix the decals or imprint the foil.
Design
The actual configuration of most basket-balls is dictated by the rules or standards of
the type of game in which the ball will be used. NBA, WNBA, and other professional
leagues have specified dimensions for regulation balls, as described above, and even
the imprinted information is specified. Amateur sports bodies have also developed
rules and specifications, and there are specialized basketballs made for junior players
(younger than high-school age), intermediate players (high-school age), and for
indoor, outdoor, or combination play. Promotional basketballs that are much smaller
in diameter are also made as souvenirs of many events such as the NCAA
Championships.
Basketball designers are always trying to improve the product and build a better
basketball. Inventor Marvin Palmquist created the "Hole-in-One" basketball to
improve a player's grip; the ball has dimples, much like a golf ball, and can be easily
palmed Michael Jordan-style by players with smaller-than-Jordan hands. Even the
most skilled NBA star copes with sweaty palms, and this obstacle is addressed in
another modification consisting of microscopic holes in the surface, which is made of
absorbent polyurethane. This is the same material that forms the grip on a tennis
Michael Jordan.
Michael Jordan was born February 17, 1963. Accepting a basketball
scholarship to the University of North Carolina, he became the second
Tarheel freshman to start every game. Jordan was named Atlantic Coast
Conference (ACC) Rookie of the Year and won the National Collegiate
Athletic Association (NCAA) championship in 1982. He led the ACC in
scoring and was named college player of the year in 1983 and 1984.
Jordan left North Carolina after his junior year and was drafted by the
Chicago Bulls as the third overall pick of the 1984 draft.
A broken foot sidelined Jordan for 64 games during the 1985-1986
season. He returned, scoring 49 points against the Boston Celtics in the
first game of the playoffs and 63 in the secondan NBA record. During
the 1986-1987 season Jordan became the first player since Wilt
Chamberlain to score 3,000 points in a season. The Bulls won the 19911993 NBA titles. In 1994 Jordan joined the Chicago White Sox minor
league baseball team, returning to the Bulls for the remaining 1994-1995
season. In the 1995-1996 season, the team finished 72-10, another NBA
record. The Bulls went on to win their fourth NBA title in 1996, fifth in
1997, and sixth in 1998 where Jordan claimed his sixth NBA finals MVP
award,
Jordan participated in the 1984 and 1982 Summer Olympics, earning
gold medals for the United States. He was named 1985s Rookie of the
Year, 1988s Defensive Player of the Year, NBA MVP five times, has a
career record for the highest scoring average of 28.5 ppg, played in 11 AllStar games (starting in 10, missing one due to injury), and named AllStar MVP three times. Jordan retired January 13, 1999.
Still other inventors feel the size of the ball is a disadvantage to proper handling and
have suggested increasing the circumference from 30 to 36 in (76 to 91.4 cm),
resulting in an increase in diameter from 9.6 to 11.5 in (24.4 to 29.2 cm). The socalled Bigball still fits through a regulation hoop and has been used in training
sessions by both college and NBA teams. The Bigball must be shot with a higher arc
to fall through the hoop, and, after practicing with the larger basketball, the
regulation ball seems easier to handle.
1 The making of a basketball begins with the interior bladder. Black butyl
rubber in bulk form (and including recycled rubber) is melted in the hopper of
a press that feeds it out in a continuous sheet that is 12 in (30.5 cm) wide and
0.5 in (1.3 cm) thick. A guillotine-like cutter cuts the long strip into sheets that
are 18 in (45.7 cm) long, and they are stacked up. A hand-controlled machine
selects the sheets one at a time and, using a punch press, punches a 1-indiameter (2.54-cm-diameter) hole that will hold the air tube for inflating the
bladder.
hours. This quality control measure tests their ability to hold air; those that
deflate are recycled.
4 The bladders that withstand the 24-hour inflation test are conveyed from the
holding chamber to the twining or winding department. They make this
joumey suspended from a conveyor system by their air tubes. Machines
loaded with spools of either polyester or nylon thread or string wrap multiple
strands at a time around each bladder; this is the same process used to make
the inside of a golf ball. The irregularly shaped bladders now begin to take on
a better, more rounded shape as the precisely controlled threads build and
shape the balls. The quality of the thread and the number of strands
determine the cost and quality of the ball. The typical street-quality basketball
has a carcass made of multiple wraps of three strands of polyester thread. The
balls used by professional teams have carcasses constructed of nylon thread
that is wrapped using four strands of thread. The same over-head conveyors
continue carrying the carcass-encased bladders by their air tubes to the next
step in the process where the carcasses and covers will meet.
same die has a hole that is punched in one of the six panels to make an
opening for the air tube. The excess rubber surrounding the panels is lifted off
the line and deposited in a bin for recycling.
7 The assembly worker picks up the six panels for a single ball in a specific
order and carries them to the vulcanizer. The interior of the vulcanizer for this
process is different from the one for the bladders. It is form-fitted to hold the
six panels, to create the channels between the panels, and to add any
embossed information. The assembler fits the panels individually into
specified sections in the vulcanizer. A bladder/carcass is taken off the
overhead conveyor, covered with a coating of glue, and placed inside the
chamber of the vulcanizer that is lined with the cover panels. When the ball
emerges from the vulcanizer, most of its surface is still smooth (there are no
bumps, called pebbling), but the channels and any embossing are formed into
the surface.
8 Decals and foil decoration and information (if any) are applied by hand with
small heat presses after the smooth ball is retrieved from the vulcanizer. Each
ball is carefully inspected for gaps between the panels. These can occur, but
each gap is filled during this inspection with a small piece of rubber that is
hand-cut to fit the gap. The ball then is fitted into another vulcanizer that
unifies the finished surface, blending in any gap fillers, and is specially molded
to form the surface pebbling. The vulcanized balls are stored again for 24
hours in a second test to make sure they hold air.
9 The covers for basketballs that are made of synthetic laminated rubber or
leather are also made in panels that are die-cut like the rubber panels. The
synthetic laminated panels are shaved or trimmed along the edges, fitted and
glued together by hand, and laminated to the carcass to create channels. They
are also embossed by a heating process and decals are added. Any glue traces
around the edges are removed, and any imperfect panels are replaced in the
final inspection of synthetic laminated covers. Leather covers are made of fullgrain, genuine leather and are stitched with heavy-duty machines; instead of
indented, formed channels, the stitching forms the channels in leather balls.
They are printed by silk screening and foil stamping, and their inspection
includes a review of the uniformity and color of the leather.
10 Balls that pass the second 24-hour air pressure test are "bounce tested" to
meet the regulation for inflation pressure that results in each ball bouncing a
prescribed height. Balls that pass the bounce test are numbered to show the
production run, and the decals and other artwork are inspected and touched
up by hand as needed. Each completed ball is inspected again. The inspector
removes the production run tag, and the ball is deflated so it can be easily
packed and shipped. Each flattened ball is packed in a polyethylene bag, and
the bagged balls are boxed for bulk shipment to the distributor. The
distributor also inspects the balls when they are received and is responsible
for reinflating them to the correct pressure and packaging them in display
boxes for sale. The display boxes may also be packed in bulk for distribution to
retailers.
Byproducts/Waste
No byproducts result from the manufacture of basketballs, but most makers have a
variety of lines and may also make balls for other sports. Waste is limited. Dies for
cutting panels of rubber, synthetic laminate, and leather are carefully designed to
space the panels closely and limit the material used. This is especially critical for
leather because of the cost; some leather waste is inevitable, though, because leather
is a natural material and has irregularities in color, thickness, and surface. All rubber
materials can be recycled, and they represent the bulk of material used in making a
basketball.
Quality Control
Throughout the manufacturing process, inspections occur regularly to make sure the
finished basketball will hold air and to correct any surface variations. Machines like
punch presses, dies, vulcanizers, and printing tools are carefully designed initially to
maximize use of materials and to create perfect pieces. The assembly process
includes many steps that are performed by hand, and the assemblers are trained to
watch for imperfections and reject unsuitable products. Inspections and tests also
include weight-control testing of the completed carcasses and the panels, regardless
of material. Whenever the completed products are stored for any length of time, they
are randomly inspected for appearance, size, inflation, and any wobble.
Some distributors have special tests for products bearing their name. For
example, Rawlings Sporting Goods Company tests the basketballs they produce for
the NCAA Tournament with a unique "Slam Machine" that simulates the workout a
ball will get in four games in just five minutes. The machine works by propelling the
ball down a chute between two wooden wheels that launch it at about 30 mph (48
kph) toward a backboard that is angled to direct the ball back to the chute. Rawlings
also uses this machine to test new designs, materials, glues, and other changes.
The Future
Basketball sales have escalated dramatically with the sport's popularity. Figures from
1998 show that 3.6 million balls were sold in the United States alone for a total of
about $60 million. Given the record number of television viewers for the 1999-2000
NBA Championships, many parents and children are likely to purchase basketballs to
test their own slam-dunking skills. Participation in the sport and sale of basketballs
shows no sign of slowing down.
Another aspect of the worldwide popularity of basketball is that it has sharpened
collectors' enthusiasm for souvenir balls, autographed balls, and those from key
moments of the great players' games. An example with a high price tag is the
basketball Wilt Chamberlain used to score 100 points in a game; it was sold in the
1990s for $551,844.
Periodicals
Feldman, Jay. "A Hole New Ball Game." Sports Illustrated 18, no. 26 (December 26,
1994): 102.
Jaffe, Michael. "For Better Shooting, Think Big: A Team of Ohio Entrepreneurs
Insists that Their Oversized Basketball Will Improve Your Touch." Sports
Illustrated 74, no. 15 (April 22, 1991): 5.
Mooney, Loren. "Get a Grip." Sports Illustrated (November 30, 1998): 16.
Tooley, Jo Ann. "On a Roll." U.S. News & World Report 107, no. 8 (August 21, 1989):
66.
Other
Rawlings Sporting Goods Co., Inc. http://www.rawlings.com . (December 14, 2000).
Gillian S. Holmes