
Basketball ring and no court - help
Wut?

If forced to play on grass, inability to bounce the ball and practice some of the fundamental ball control skills.
If forced to use the driveway it doesn't fit the dimensions of an actual court meaning you're likely learning key skills in an incorrect fashion. Some of these hitches are things that professional scouts can pinpoint from a mile away.

Problems:
1. Where to put the ring
2. How to use the ring
3. Why do you still have the ring
4. What else can you do with the ring
5. When can you afford to build a court around the ring
Pains:
1. Arm and hand soreness holding the ring
2. Head soreness being hit frequently by the ball while holding the ring
3. Being annoyed shooting at a ring that may move slightly
4. Fighting over who holds the ring the least
5. Bribing your little brother to come and hold the ring
You're welcome...

Good on you Ethan, good luck with the project.

A legit entrepreneur would create literal Nike Airs which allow a player to fly through the air meaning you wouldn't need any surface at all. Problem solved.

If I had a basketball ring but no court then I could bolt it to a random wall to practise my dunks but I would have nowhere to sue the wall owner if the wall collapsed and injured me :(


And it's Gary Ervin for 20/4/8 in a home win over the Kings.
Runners-up were Ayinde Ubaka (20/6/6) for an OT win over the Cats, Ron Dorsey (20/8/2) in the same game, and Rhys Carter for 20 points including a clutch three in an overtime road win against the Blaze.
It appeared to be the round for scoring 20.
The other contenders:
Julian Khazzouh (Sydney), Ben Madgen (Sydney), James Harvey (Gold Coast), Adam Gibson (Gold Coast), Daniel Johnson (Adelaide), Kevin Lisch (Perth), Corey Williams (Melbourne), Michael Cedar (Townsville), Lucas Walker (Melbourne), Oscar Forman (Wollongong), Will Blalock (Townsville) and Trey Gilder (Sydney).
