
5 minute read
Inspiring Positive Societal Gain Through Basketball
She eld Sharks basketball team player, training with young adults who are part of the Canon Medical supported RESPECT TOO programme.
Putting Self-RESPECT back into forgotten communities
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Basketball is the second most popular sport played in the UK by young teenagers, after football, and is particularly popular among Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) communities. Itspopularity has risen since the London 2012 Olympic Games, in part due to a Sports England funding uplift, but also because it represents valuable engagement to young peoplefrom diverse and disadvantagedbackgrounds.
The upcoming Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games will also provide a further platform for raising accessibility of the game whenit takes centre stage in a high-octane 3x3 basketball format at an outdoor venue at Smith eld in the centre of Birmingham.
The importance of basketballbeyond sport
She eld, once known as the heart of the industrial north, is now an ethnically diverse community with around 19% from black or minority ethnic groups such as Pakistani, Caribbean, Indian, Bangladeshi, Somali, Yemeni andChinese communities.
It is a city that lags behind other areas in the UK when averages are compared, including the di erence in life expectancy which between the best and worse o is 20 years. It is also an area identi ed as one of the rst to receive UK Government 2022 ‘levelling-up’ regeneration funding to help start narrowing the gap in health, education, housing and job outcomes.
But even before a national strategy was announced to help disadvantaged or ‘forgotten’ communities, a ‘home-grown’ focus on citizenship and wellbeing through the sport of basketball was forging strong gains and societal links.
She eld Sharks ‘dropping dimes’ with its community outreach initiative
She eld Sharks, the city’s professional basketball team that ranks third in the British Basketball League 2020/21, has not only been scoring its way up the league in play on the courts, but also rolling out a successful community outreach programme for local school children.
For the last 8 years close to 10,000 10-11-year-old primary school children at 16 inner-city She eld schools have been positively impacted by the RESPECT programme. This provides a fusion of fun basketball sessions with the players and citizenship workshops covering online safety and personal health topics.
More recently, RESPECT TOO, a Canon Medical Systems UK sponsored initiative for young adults aged 14-15 years at risk of county-lines drugs tra cking, violence and gangs, has been created. This provides vulnerable young people with a weekly workshop for six weeks about choosing the right path in life. The sessions are run with the help of She eld Sharks’ basketball players, many of whom have come from tough city backgrounds in the UK and USA, and can share their real-life experiences of overcoming obstacles and creating a positive future. The RESPECT TOO course includes socially oriented topics such as anger management, self-identity, behaviour & conduct, communication, healthy lifestyles and creating future goals.
“We are heavily intertwined with our local community through basketball, and it is our duty to make a positive impact with the young people in our city. We want to step in and help where parents or family networks may be lacking to give guidance to young people growing up in tough economic, academic and social situations,” states Marko Backovic, Head of Community at BBraun She eld Sharks Basketball Club. “The RESPECT initiatives give She eld schools greater support in delivering PSHE topics than they can achieve themselves with sta and budget constraints in the education system. Plus, our unique delivery of courses by our players ensures kids are inspired and their attention engaged. We wouldn’t be able to do any of this without the funding from Canon Medical UK and I rmly believe that this is keeping people out of gangs and ultimately prison.”
Two RESPECT TOO students from a She eld-based school shared their thoughts on why the programme has been useful to them.
“It was interesting to listen to what the players have been through when they were my age as it helped me to think about my behaviour too,” states Ashantai, a Year 9 student.
“There was an incident at school that could have got me banned from coming to the nal RESPECT TOO session, but what I had learnt made me stop and think about my actions more and control my behaviour,” adds Lindo, a Year 9 male student.
Mike Tuck Captain of the She eldSharks team
Basketball continues to grow in popularity within the UK


She eld Sharks work closely with the children from the RESPECT programme, both on the court and in the classroom.
“As a result of the RESPECT initiatives we are told by teachers that some young people who were not expected to get any GCSEs, have made considerable positive changes to their attitudes and are now on track to go on to college,” Marko adds.
Teaching self-respect for a healthier future
Katy, a teacher at one of the participating RESPECT TOO schools in She eld adds, “Our students have bene tted a lot from the initiative - coming o the school site, for one, and meeting professional sports people. They’ve really enjoyed playing on the courts with the players and the classroom activities teach them to understand the way they conduct themselves. Schemes, such as these, give them a broader view of the world, beyond the school setting, to see di erent environments and give a wider range of in uences. A big part of the programme is about behaviour and conduct at school – this helps the students to self-re ect. It is a great way for children to consider how they behave, and not just being repeatedly told within behavioural programmes of a school setting, but by external sports people that they look up to and respect.”
Mike Tuck, Captain of the She eld Sharks team and former Canadian and England international player concludes, “There probably isn’t any other team in the UK basketball league running something as unique as the RESPECT programmes. They continue to grow and will be a catalyst to help further children beyond She eld as we look to take content online. We’re not a big, fancy sports club making millions, but we keep true to ourselves by interacting directly with our fans and public to set good examples. What sets us apart is our desire to use sport to create better individuals and a better local community.” //
References 1 Basketball: Does the sport get the respect and support it deserves? Sky Sports, Sept 2020, https://www.skysports.com/more-sports/ news/36244/12069769/basketball-does-the-sportget-the-respect-and-support-it-deserves 2 She eld City Council, Population & Census, https:// www.she eld.gov.uk/home/your-city-council/ population-in-she eld 3 NHS She eld Clinical Commission Group, Annual
Report 20/21, p.43, https://www.she eldccg.nhs. uk/Downloads/About%20US/Documents%20
Policies%20and%20Publications/2020%20 21%20Annual%20Report%20including%20
Annual%20Accounts%20without%20front%20 page.pdf 5 Canon Medical – https://global. medical.canon/products/magnetic-resonance/
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