
University lecturer argues Scotland should get its due in the creation of basketball
At a time when Canadians are looking over their shoulder thanks to some bluster south of the border, Scotland’s University of Stirling seems to be piling on with a news release titled “Research Reveals Basketball Creator was Scottish, not Canadian.”
But Ross Walker, whose paper titled “James Naismith: The Creation of Basketball and the Scottish Connection” was published in the journal Sport in History, is quick to note that he is not trying to rewrite history.
Instead, the University of Stirling lecturer — akin to an associate professor — just wants Scotland to get its due, writing his homeland “warrants recognition for its role in helping create basketball.”
“It’s not a case that I’m seeking to use this (research) to replace America or Canada or to say that their contributions weren’t important. It’s the complete opposite,” Walker said in an interview. “It’s the fact that all of these components are unbelievably important. Because without one or the other, then there is no basketball.”