History Of Shooting A Basketball

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Biomechanics has been around for a long time but in last twenty years technology have blown up so much that we have been able to take it another level. Equipment that we think is so simple now a days like a high-speed camera or a cell can now be used to record and track date. My first sport to ever play was basketball; it was my first love when it came to sports. In basketball there are a few was to score a basket. First one is the lay, second one which most people can’t do is dunk it in and last but not least is to shoot it in. For this assignment I will be going over how to shoot a basketball.
Before we get into how to shoot a basketball I think it’s best to know a little history about what we going to be discussing. Doctor James Naismith invented basketball in 1891 in Springfield, Massachusetts. Doctor Naismith a Canadian man invented the game for the YMCA to play during the winter months so they could stay in shape while beating the cold at the same time. He nailed up two peach baskets for hoops and the object was to get the rubber ball through the peach baskets and that’s how it all began in a nutshell. The greatest basketball player to ever live Michael Jordan once said “You can practice shooting eight hours a day, but if your technique is wrong, then all you become is very good at shooting the wrong way. Get the fundamentals down and the level of everything you do will rise.”(Jordan, 2014). Jordan is a hundred percent right just because you do something over and over don’t mean you doing it right. It could just mean you doing the same thing wrong over and over. My break down of shooting a basketball will show the correct way to shoot. As simple as it may seem shooting a basketball has a lot of steps to it. To make it a li...

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... hand had very little backspin on the ball and when he missed the ball would go flying in another direction. Erick had a three-point percentage of 30 percent, which is not half bad, but it was with no one guarding him. Ray on the other hand is a career 40 percent three-point shooter with someone guarding him. I can’t even image what that number is if no one was ever guarding him. It would be drastically better.
Dissecting the jump shot is challenging thing to do then adding biomechanics to it takes it to another level. Even though it can be a difficult thing to do but by analyzing and breaking down shooting you can greatly improve your shot. Trying to perfect the four phases of shooting is key to mastering the fundamentals, which could help turn you into the next Ray Allen. That wouldn’t be to shabby, people say Ray Allen is one of the best shooters to ever play.

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