Article

Transforming Scottish Basketball: Exploring the Student Impact, 1890s-1930s

Details

Citation

Walker R (2025) Transforming Scottish Basketball: Exploring the Student Impact, 1890s-1930s. International Journal of the History of Sport. https://doi.org/10.1080/09523367.2025.2513612

Abstract
The 1930s were a transformational era for Scottish basketball. This article discusses the impact of American students in the development of basketball in Scotland. It documents their role and efforts from their arrival in 1929 until the beginning of World War II in 1939. It rests upon two arguments: the impetus to develop basketball in Scotland required support from protagonists hailing from origins where the sport was popular; and the Scottish university ecosystem provided the optimal platform, foundations and infrastructure to enable the growth and participation in basketball. Prior to the enrolment of American students at Scottish universities, basketball existed on the periphery of the sporting landscape and made limited progress in Scotland. It is contended that students in conjunction with other prevalent cultural and societal shifts helped transform basketball from a recreational and social activity to a competitive sport. During the process, the students helped change the gendered stereotype associated with basketball in Scotland, prompted increased media coverage, improve playing standards and contributed to the growth of the game overall. Through American students’ heightened knowledge of basketball, they helped Scots develop a passion for the sport and assisted with codifying and standardizing the rules whilst establishing competitions and teams.

Keywords
Americanization; basketball; cultural transfer; higher education; student sport

StatusEarly Online
Publication date online30/06/2025
Date accepted by journal20/05/2025
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/37155
ISSN0952-3367
eISSN1743-9035

People (1)

Dr Ross Walker

Dr Ross Walker

Lecturer in Sport Management, Sport

Files (1)