Basketball is a competitive sport invented as a men's game in 1891 by James Naismith in Springfield, Massachusetts, United States, but now played on every inhabited continent and by women, most often contested by two teams, each comprising five participating players, for whom substitutions may be made. The team attempts to advance a spherical ball through a cast-iron basket with attached net and backboard, elevated such that the basket rim is–in most professional leagues–ten feet (3.048 meters) from the surface of the rectanguar basketball court, for indoor games usually made of hardwood and for outdoor games usually made of asphalt, on which the sport is played.
Offensively, a player advances the ball either by bouncing it himself while stationary or moving (dribbling) or by throwing it (passing) it to a teammate, such that a player, within the time permitted by a shot clock, eventually propels (shoots) the ball toward the basket; should the ball pass through the basket, one (free throw), two (field goal), or three (three-point field goal) points, depending on the distance from which the shot is taken, are awarded; the player, in most cases, to have tendered the ball to the scoring player is credited with an assist. Several strategies are employed by a team toward the end of generating uncontested shots for players, who most often begin a given play play in distinct areas—the center and power forward proximate to the basket (top of the key); the small forward and shooting guard proximate to the three-point arc; and the point guard passim. The team to have scored more points upon the expiration of the time alloted for the game, usually between 40 and 60 minutes and divided into four equal quarters or two equal halves, is the winner, and ties are most often settled during overtime periods.
A defense attempts to prevent an offensive team from scoring and to garner the ball for itself, employing various strategies to force an opposing player to surrender (turnover) the basketball, by dispossessing (steal) a player or successfully contesting his shot (block) or, upon an opponent's making an unsuccessful shot, overcoming an opponent to win the loose ball (rebound).
Certain disruptive contact, especially that by which an advantage is gained, is penalized (as a personal foul), as is unsportsmanlike conduct (as a technical foul), with disqualification often imposed on players who accumulate a pre-arranged number of fouls in one game. Certain means of ballhandling, such as one's running with the ball while not dribbling (travelling) or one's catching the ball between dribbles (double dribbling) are proscribed and, when committed by a given team, result in the awarding of possession to the opposing team.
- April 7, 2008 - With a comfortable lead, Derrick Rose of the Memphis Tigers flubbed his free-throws to set-up a desperation three-point field goal by Mario Chalmers to force overtime for the Kansas Jayhawks. In the extra session, the Tigers went cold as the Jayhawks pulled away at San Antonio, Texas to win the 2008 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament to win their third national title, with Chalmers adjudged as the Most Outstanding Player.
- September 16, 2007 - Thanks to clutch free throws from tournament MVP Andrei Kirilenko, a mid-range jumper from J.R. Holden and a missed perimeter jump shot from Pau Gasol, Russia clinch their first EuroBasket championship, beating Spain, 60–59, at EuroBasket 2007 in the Palacio de Deportes in Madrid, Spain. Meanwhile, the Phoenix Mercury win their first WNBA championship by beating the Detroit Shock in the 2007 WNBA FInals.
- September 2, 2007 - Tournament MVP Luis Scola came up short as Argentina was defeated by the United States, 118–81, at the FIBA Americas Championship 2007 held at Las Vegas, Nevada.
- August 25, 2007 - Angola successfully defended their championship at the FIBA Africa Championship 2007 by beating Cameroon in the final at Luanda, Angola, 86–72.
- August 24, 2007 - Despite losing the third game in their FIBA Oceania Championship 2007 best-of-3 series 67–58 against New Zealand, Australia will still be Oceania's representatives in the upcoming 2008 Beijing Olympics after winning the first two games at their home courts.
For other basketball news, see the current sports events portal or the Wikinews sports portal.
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