Narrow Your Search:
| 20 Item(s) | Show per page |
| View as: Grid List | Sort by: Position| Name| Price| New |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes Black/White/PurpleRegular price: $108.99 Discount Sale: $92.64 |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes Black/WhiteRegular price: $98.99 Discount Sale: $84.14 |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes Red/Black/WhiteRegular price: $98.99 Discount Sale: $84.14 |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes Grey/White/Green/YellowRegular price: $98.99 Discount Sale: $84.14 |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes White/Black/RedRegular price: $98.99 Discount Sale: $84.14 |
ERKE Men's Training basketball shoes White/Big RedRegular price: $108.99 Discount Sale: $92.64 |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes White/DarkgreenRegular price: $118.99 Discount Sale: $101.14 |
Li-Ning Men's Basketball Court Shoes Black/White/OrangeRegular price: $105.99 Discount Sale: $90.09 |
361° Men's Basketball Shoes White/Deep RedRegular price: $106.99 Discount Sale: $90.94 |
361° Men's Basketball Shoes Blue/WhiteRegular price: $106.99 Discount Sale: $90.94 |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes Black/White/RedRegular price: $108.99 Discount Sale: $92.64 |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes Blue/Black/WhiteRegular price: $98.99 Discount Sale: $84.14 |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes Black/Grey/SilverRegular price: $98.99 Discount Sale: $84.14 |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes White/Purple/BlackRegular price: $98.99 Discount Sale: $84.14 |
ERKE Men's Training basketball shoes Black/Big RedRegular price: $108.99 Discount Sale: $92.64 |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes Black/RedRegular price: $118.99 Discount Sale: $101.14 |
ERKE Men's Training basketball shoes White/BlackRegular price: $108.99 Discount Sale: $92.64 |
ANTA Men's Basketball Shoes White/BlackRegular price: $118.99 Discount Sale: $101.14 |
Li-Ning Men's Basketball Court Shoes White/Grey/RedRegular price: $105.99 Discount Sale: $90.09 |
361° Men's Basketball Shoes Black/Shallow BlueRegular price: $106.99 Discount Sale: $90.94 |
| 20 Item(s) | Show per page |
| View as: Grid List | Sort by: Position| Name| Price| New |
About Men Basketball Shoes
Men's basketball is one of the few men's sports that developed in tandem with its men's counterpart. It became popular, spreading from the east coast of the United States to the west coast , in large part via men's colleges. From 1895 until 1970, the term "men's basketball" was also used to refer to netball, which evolved in parallel with modern men's basketball.
Men's basketball began in the winter of 1892 at Smith College. Senda Berenson, an instructor at Smith, taught basketball to her students, hoping the activity would improve their physical health. Basketball's early adherents were affiliated with YMCAs and colleges throughout the United States, and the game quickly spread throughout the country.
However, Berenson was taking risks simply in teaching the game to men. She worried a little about the men suffering from "nervous fatigue" if games were too strenuous for them. And, in order to keep it "acceptable" for men to play at all, she taught modified rules. These included a court divided into three areas and nine players per team. Three players were assigned to each area (guard, center, forward) and could not cross the line into another area. The ball was moved from section to section by passing or dribbling. Players were limited to three dribbles and could hold the ball for three seconds. No snatching or batting the ball away from a player was allowed. A center jump was required after each score. Peach baskets and the soccer pink were the equipment. Variations of Berenson’s rules spread across the country via YMCAs and colleges.
The popularity of men's basketball grew steadily around the world for decades. By the 1970s the sport had attracted the notice the International Olympic Committee, which added men's basketball as an official sport of the Olympic Games in 1976. Throughout the 1970s, funding for (and interest in) men's basketball began to dramatically increase as schools receiving federal funding began to come into compliance with new laws mandating a lack of discrimination based on sex which is one of the human rights not to discriminate by sex. The sport was also gaining attention at the collegiate level, under the auspices of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Men (AIAW). A major development in men's basketball occurred in 1982 when the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) began to sponsor the sport.








