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Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story ?Full Length“

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Published by: Austin Film Society
Resume: Make Watch Love Film
  • Director - Jacob Hamilton
  • Jacob Hamilton
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  • Stephen Curry
  • description - Jump Shot uncovers the inspiring true story of Kenny Sailors, the proclaimed developer of the modern day jump shot in basketball. He defined the game, but only now is he ready to share his thoughts on why the game never defined him
Doesnt tell much dude. @Ana Julia. Original title Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story Year 2019 Running time 73 min. Country United States Director Jacob Hamilton Screenwriter Jacob Hamilton (Story: Thaddeus D. Matula) Music Joshua Myers Cinematography Cast Documentary, Kenny Sailors, Stephen Curry, Kevin Durant, Dirk Nowitzki, Bobby Knight, Jay Bilas Producer Ralph Smyth Entertainment. Distributed by Aspiration Entertainment [USA] Genre Documentary | Sport Documentaries. Biography. Basketball Synopsis / Plot "Jump Shot" uncovers the inspiring true story of Kenny Sailors, the proclaimed developer of the modern day jump shot in basketball. He defined the game, but only now is he ready to share his thoughts on why the game never defined him. Movie Soulmates' ratings Register so you can access movie recommendations tailored to your movie taste. Friends' ratings Register so you can check out ratings by your friends, family members, and like-minded members of the FA community. Is the synopsis/plot summary missing? Do you want to report a spoiler, error or omission? Please send us a message. If you are not a registered user please send us an email to All copyrighted material (movie posters, DVD covers, stills, trailers) and trademarks belong to their respective producers and/or distributors. For US ratings information please visit:. Lol a rock that says Meow ?????.
Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story Download full article on foot. Basketball was invented in Canada so for you Americans put that in your pipe and smoke it.

It was invented by a Canadian so basically it is a Canadian sport

This?story originally aired on Feb. 20, 2016. This week it?appears again?as a part of our Origins Show. Sure, the slam dunk is flashy ? but three-pointers win games. And to sink a three-pointer, you have to know how to jump. No one knows who first came up with the idea of jumping in the air and shooting a basketball. But the modern jump shot, the one that's still used today ? the one we teach to kids ? does have an inventor. And that man is not in the basketball hall of fame. At least not yet. Why? To answer that question, we have to turn back the clock 84 years. Two?Brothers?On A Farm The year is 1932. The location: a family farm outside Hillsdale, Wyoming. The star of our story is Kenny Sailors. He’s 12. And he idolizes his older brother, Bud, the way 12-year-olds often do. And so when Bud starts playing?basketball, Kenny wants to play, too. "And, of course, we didn't have any place to play except he'd put a hoop up. A rim and no net on it, and he fixed a backboard, and we fastened it to the old wooden windmill that we had. Bud and I'd go out there and play around. And I never could get a shot off, and he really enjoyed that because he was 6-foot-5, and I was just about, I don't know, 5-foot-7 probably. He'd laugh and he'd say, 'Kenny, this isn't the game for you. It's for big men. Tall men. ' "It was out there on that packed ground and that old windmill that I figured out a way to get a shot off over that brother of mine. Dribble up to him. He couldn't stop my dribble, and I'd dribble up to him and then jump. Boy that spooked him. He said, 'That's a good shot, Kenny. You have to get better at that. '" Kenny Sailors did get better at it. He got good enough to play for the University of Wyoming and good enough to take that team to the 1943 NCAA finals at Madison Square Garden. "People out East,?had heard stories about this team from the West,?and their superstar who played this kind of crazy game, " says Shawn Fury,?author of?" Rise and Fire, " a book about the many men who've contributed to the jump shot.?"They ended up winning the NCAA championship. And then a few days later, they played the winner of the NIT tournament, and they won that as well, so they were kinda the kings of college basketball. " There’s an old highlight reel of that game on YouTube. Thing is, even though Kenny was named the College Basketball Player of the Year, he doesn’t get a shout out on the highlight reel. A clean view of his jump shot doesn’t even make the cut. Fury explains. "Forever in basketball history, both feet were always on the ground when they took a shot. They'd have the ball with two hands and at their chest and they'd shove it forward, kind of like shoving a boat off into the lake or something.?So?it makes sense that a sports announcer who has watched hundreds of games but just seen set shots had never seen anyone like Kenny. So he probably didn't have the words to describe it, so he's just going to kind of gloss it over. " Jump For Don't Announcers weren't the only ones confused by Sailors' shot. Defenders didn't know what to do either. "They would raise a hand to try to block the shot, but a lot of times they wouldn't jump, " Fury says. "You know, that's hilarious, " I say. "It seems so logical. He jumps, you jump. " "Yeah, to us, it sounds so simplistic and it sounds like something that James Naismith himself should've known in 1891, " Fury says with a laugh. "But it just wasn't, because the game for 50, 60 years had been played one way. " Kenny Sailors' first pro coach didn't want him to use the jump shot. (AP) So let’s talk about how basketball was played back in 1943. Kenny Sailors is not the only one on that old, grainy highlights film who jumps. Players on both sides jump for rebounds, they jump for layups. On another highlight reel you can even watch a guy dribble down?the court, jump in the air and fling the ball at the basket. It goes in. So what made Kenny Sailors’ jump shot different? "It looked different, " says Jud Heathcote. "No one would shoot in somebody's face, as we call it, and he did. " Heathcote?would later go on to coach Magic Johnson and Michigan State to the NCAA championship. He?says it's a crime that Sailors isn't in the Hall of Fame. But back in the 1940s, Heathcote was a college basketball player himself, and he saw Sailors and his jump shot at a tournament in Denver. "He would get right close, jump over them and release the ball, " Heathcote?recalls. "And so this was spectacular in terms of my observation. " This is what Heathcote saw. Sailors would stop. (This is important because otherwise he’d plow into the defender ? that's a foul. ) So he’d stop squared up to the basket, jump, and at the top of his jump he’d release the ball with one hand ? using the other hand just as a guide. If you’re having trouble picturing it, think the Warriors' Stephen Curry. It’s pretty much the shot that’s made him ? by some measures ? the most dominant player in the NBA today. Got it? Now picture it in the 1940s. "So when I saw this little guy dribble right up into big guys, just jump and shoot right over them, " Heathcote says, "I was mesmerized with the jump shot. " The jump shot took Kenny Sailors to the league that would become the NBA. But when he got there, he found out that not everyone was mesmerized. "This first coach I had from ? Dutch Dehnert was his name. He had that New York brogue, you know. That ? nice old guy, but he just wasn't a coach. He said to me, 'Sailors, where'd youse ? 'youse' ? where'd youse get that leapin' one-hander? ' That's what they called it. Leapin' one-hander. 'Oh, ' I said, 'I don't know, Dutch. ' I said, 'I've had that quite a while. ' I said, 'That's what keeps me in the game. ' He says, 'You just never make it in this league with that kind of a shot. ' He says, 'I'll show you how to shoot a good two-handed set shot. ' And he says, 'That dribble. ' He says, 'We don't dribble in this league. ' He said, 'We pass the ball up the court. '" Luckily, for both Kenny Sailors and the future success of the NBA, that coach was fired and replaced with a guy who put the ball in Sailors' hands and let him do what he wanted with it. And that worked out pretty well for Sailors and for the NBA. "I think it grew the popularity to a degree that it never would have otherwise, " Fury says. "Increased scoring a lot, in college basketball especially. You know, you used to have games in the 40s or the 50s. Now you had games in the 80s and 90s. And fans just enjoyed that more. " But what about Kenny Sailors? "Kenny's story really has been a forgotten story, " says filmmaker Jacob Hamilton.?"He disappeared for nearly 50 years after he retired from the game of basketball. " Hamilton?is directing a documentary about Kenny Sailors' life, and he?provided?all of the interviews with Sailors that we're using for this story. But?before he started working on?his film, he had the same reaction to the story as I did. "'Wait, this guy invented the jump shot? How is that possible? ' And, 'The jump shot didn't always exist? '" The Jump Shot's Legacy A few years ago,?Hamilton invited Sailors out for breakfast ? Sailors ate ham and eggs ? and they talked about the movie they?wanted to make. Sailors mentioned his time in the Marines, his 15 years as a dude rancher in Jackson Hole, his 35 years in Alaska coaching high school girls basketball and his lifetime as a devout Christian. He seemed more interested in talking about those things than he was in talking about the jump shot. "'Cause he is very humble, he is very modest?and he doesn't like to take credit for it, " Hamilton says.?"You just look at his life and like, 'Man, that's the way to do it. He didn't waste one second of his life. '" Kenny Sailors died on Jan. 30, 2016 ? just two weeks after his 95th birthday. "You know, the thing that we feared most was that he would pass away and no one would know and he'd be forgotten, like he was before, " Hamilton says. But Sailors hasn't been forgotten. Since his death in late January, the call to include him in the Naismith Hall of Fame has only gotten louder. It was always something that seemed to matter to Sailors' friends more than it mattered to him. He'd like to say that as a lifelong Christian, he didn’t spend a lot of time worrying about such things. "You know, these halls of fame that you can get into down here that men select you to get into, they're nice up to a point. I know I belong to the greatest hall of fame that any man or woman can ever belong to. And when you belong to that and you know you belong to it, you don't worry about these halls of fame that men create down here. Don't mean that much to you. " The Naismith Hall of Fame announced its 2016 class at the NCAA Final Four in April. Sailors was not among the honorees. The veteran's committee will continue to consider his case. And should his name eventually be called, Jacob Hamilton says he knows that his friend will be smiling down on the announcement.
Download Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story HD 1080p. Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story Download full review. Another sport, football the shape of the ball and the rules were adopted by the Americans it is all in the history books but the Americans tend to avoid the truth and claim that they invented when it comes to hockey the game and the rules were invented in Canada.
Bro why do some people in the comment section fight about where the game was invented like yall just sound childish. Just to clear things up it was invented by a Canadian but it was made in The USA. That was awesome. 1 win & 1 nomination. See more awards ? Edit Storyline Jump Shot uncovers the inspiring true story of Kenny Sailors, the proclaimed developer of the modern day jump shot in basketball. He defined the game, but only now is he ready to share his thoughts on why the game never defined him. Plot Summary | Plot Synopsis Details Release Date: 2 April 2020 (USA) See more ? Also Known As: Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story Company Credits Technical Specs See full technical specs ?.
Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story download full version. Jump shot 3a the kenny sailors story download full movie. Jump shot the kenny sailors story download full hd. It would be wise to listen to what someone Mr. Sailors' age has to say, and respect it, even if you disagree. In this case he has related the Truth. What you do with it will have eternal ramifications, one way or another. God bless you, Mr. Sailors for keeping it real.
Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story download full. The inventor was in Mayan/Aztec. They had the basket side way and would kick the ball into the Hole. Through evolution of sport the White man change it up. I'm trying a water fast day 3 so far, mostly for health benefits. I did one about a year ago that lasted a week. Hoping to go 2 or 3 weeks this time. It was invented by a Canadian not an American Eh. Jump shot the kenny sailors story download full movie. Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story Download full article on maxi.
For a second I thought it was kenny smith. Lol taking credit for Basketball, when like everyone in the comments knows its Canadian! bro. common. The jumpshot thooo lmfaoo. Jump shot 3a the kenny sailors story download full remix. ABOUT JUMP SHOT: THE KENNY SAILORS STORY JUMP SHOT: THE KENNY SAILORS STORY Attendees of the 1943 NCAA Basketball Championships at Madison Square Garden witnessed something alm... See More Community See All 957 people like this 970 people follow this About See All Contact Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story on Messenger Movie Page Transparency See More Facebook is showing information to help you better understand the purpose of a Page. See actions taken by the people who manage and post content. Page created - March 2, 2013.
I GOTTA SEE THIS.
Uhh it was canadian. Kenny I wanted to see your follow up video after your water fast. Good to see you sharing this. Adrenal fatigue will cause weight gain if you are under stress. I agree with another commenter. Please look into Dr. Berg and Dr. Fung. They are both excellent. Dr Berg has much knowledge on the body and hormones. Thet have the answer to true health issues we all deal with.
Jump shot 3a the kenny sailors story download full karaoke. Wyoming LARAMIE, Wyo. ? The little windmill is long gone, just a small patch of concrete marks where it once stood three-quarters of a century ago. The thawing remnants of another hard Wyoming winter hold back the scrawly brush that normally covers the spot. Just a few feet away stands the base of the old farm well, on top of which lies a new backboard and basketball hoop, waiting to be attached to the house that now stands 20 feet away. The old house burned down decades ago and the land houses a show pig farm. More than 80 years earlier, teenager Barton (Bud) Sailors nailed a cruder version of a hoop to the old windmill so his little brother, Kenny, could play basketball, at least when the boy wasn’t hoeing through acres of potatoes with his mother, Cora Belle, or keeping jackrabbits from ruining the crops on the lonely stretch of farmland in Hillsdale, that Cora, a single mother, had bought with some inheritance money. “(My mother) grew up on a farm and she didn’t want to raise us two boys in the city, so she bought this farm down there in Hillsdale, ” says Kenny Sailors, now 93.?“And we did all right on it. We didn’t have any money, but we had plenty to eat during the Depression, which a lot of people didn’t. We raised everything, you know. (Had a) big garden. Mom canned everything there was. We had livestock, so we had meat and we ate real well. But no money. Nobody had any money in the Great Depression. ” An unincorporated community with a population of 47 lying 23 miles east of Cheyenne, tiny Hillsdale was a town big enough for an athletic boy with golden locks and an aw-shucks smile to challenge his brother, nearly a foot taller, to a game of one-on-one basketball during their spare moments. Big enough, it turned out, for a future College Basketball Hall of Famer to find the divine spark that would spring the most innovative maneuver in the game ? the modern jump shot ? and charm basketball-loving city slickers during a maddening run to the 1943 NCAA title, the first NCAA championship played at Madison Square Garden. On March 30, 1943, Kenny Sailors led a bunch of Wyoming kids ? including an All-America center recruited from Indiana named Milo Komenich ? in a game that “had everything anybody could ask for in the way of a court contest ? speed, crafty floor generalship, great shooting and fine defensive work, ” as the Daily News saw it. He even wowed LIU’s Hall of Fame coach Clair Bee, who wrote: “It was Ken Sailors, a great little player, who saved the situation because he is enough of an individual player to carry the load... Play Sailors close, and he has the speed and dribble to go by you with a great change of pace. Play him out, and he dribbles up to you, steps back and sets ? and he can hit. ” “He's as good a man as ever walked out on this Garden court, ” said Manhattan coach Joe Daher. Sailors took advantage of flat-footed Georgetown for 16 points, the only scorer in double digits, to earn the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player award as Wyoming beat the Hoyas, 46-34. Two days later on the same floor, Sailors' 11 points helped the Cowboys complete the first “mythical national championship” with a thrilling overtime win over?National Invitation Tournament?champion St. John’s in a game to benefit the Red Cross during World War II. The victory capped a whirlwind two weeks ? “March-madness whistled up in the Garden” as Time Magazine put it ? and ushered in a golden era solidifying the Garden as the Mecca of college basketball, where it staged seven NCAA championship games in eight years to parallel the prestigious NIT. Courtesy of University of Wyoming Athletics The Shot It was on a spring day in 1934 when a 13-year-old Kenny Sailors first conceived the shot that would spread all over the world. Then he was just a 5-foot-6 kid trying to shoot over his much taller older brother Bud, a star high school athlete in basketball and track. “He’d swat every shot I’d take, he’d swat it down in my face, ” says Sailors, who still carries that easy smile and whose wavy blonde hair has gone white now. “So I got to thinking how on earth can I shoot a ball over that big clown? “And he’d just laugh, you know. He’d say, ‘Kenny you’re just not big enough to play basketball. You’ve got to be like me. ’ He’s 6-5. He says ‘you’re going to have to find another sport. ’ " In 1934, the game revolved around the tall center. After every made basket, the centers would jump ball again, until the rules changed in 1938. Sailors continues: “And the idea was that, well, if I dribble up to him, don’t get close enough that he can block it. Just dribble up to him. He’s got to back up, or I’m going to go around him. He knew that. And I dribbled up to him and I just stopped and jumped. … So I shot the ball, I don’t know how, maybe I just threw it at the basket (two-handed). But nevertheless, it went in. And he said, ‘Kenny, that’s a good shot, if you can develop it. ’” Develop it he did. He worked on his shot tirelessly on the farm, and he continued working on it a couple of years later when the family moved 71 miles west to Laramie so Bud could play basketball at the University of Wyoming. Kenny’s height peaked at 5-10, but his knack for high jumping helped him extend above the defense of taller players who were all schooled to never leave their feet. It wasn’t easy. There were no clinics or camps or even coaches who taught the shot. It was a shot born out of necessity. A shot born out of perseverance. 'How did he ever do it anyway? ' It took Sailors more than a decade playing in college and on an undefeated Marine Corps team to perfect the form that best resembles the jumper of today’s game. Once he figured out how to control his body in mid-air, so his momentum wouldn’t carry him into a defender for a foul, he finally mastered it. Just a short time after returning from World War II, Sailors had returned to play out his last year of eligibility at Wyoming and found himself back at the Garden playing against Bee’s LIU team in January 1946. As the Daily News’ Dick Young put it: “Little Kenny Sailors was his darling, dribbling, one-hand-shooting self as he clicked for 15 points and worked like a slave. ” It was during that game that Life Magazine immortalized Kenny’s jump shot, snapping a photo of him skying so high above a defender before releasing the ball that he appears to almost break through the Garden roof. The image of Kenny is the inspiration for a 22-foot statue that has been commissioned for the University of Wyoming’s entrance to the Arena-Auditorium during a renovation project sometime after the spring of 2015. Jack Rose, a basketball junkie who grew up in Montclair, N. J., remembers seeing the shot at Kenny’s second trip to the Garden in 1942. “Here we’re going to watch (St. Francis) play some place called 'Wyoming, '” says Rose, now 86, a two-time All-State player at Blair Academy who would go on to captain the Cornell team. “We said, ‘Boy oh boy, (St. Francis) is just going to wipe them out. ’ Well, all of a sudden. as we watch the game there’s this fella Kenny Sailors, who’s the smallest guy on the court and he’s running up and down and he jumps and he makes these shots. And we said, ‘Well what’s that called? A jump shot I guess, huh? '” So Rose and his basketball rat friends went to work, attempting the maneuver for three weeks before giving up and going back to their two-handed set shots. Says Rose: “How did he ever do it anyway? ” But it wasn't all accolades and press raves. Sailors' first professional coach with the Cleveland Rebels ? Dutch Dehnert ? tried later in 1946 to rein in the shot. In the 1920s, Dehnert was an original New York Celtic along with St. John’s coach Joe Lapchick and CCNY’s Nat Holman. As Sailors recalls: “(Dehnert saw me scrimmaging), and old Dutchie he came over to me with that New York brogue, whatever you want to call it. 'Yuze guys... Sailors where’d you get that leaping one-hander. ’ I said, ‘Dutch I don’t know. I’ve been shooting that a long time. ’ He said, ‘That will never go in this league. ’ meaning the pros. He says, ‘I’ll teach you how to shoot a good two-handed set. ’” By midseason, as his playing time dwindled, Kenny went to the front office to ask for a trade or his release. Within a few days, Dehnert was sent away on an extended scouting trip. “That’s how they did it in those days, ” says Sailors, whose playing time increased after that under Roy Clifford. 'The Wyoming Kid comes to town' Sailors arrived on the Wyoming campus in the fall of 1941, two years after future Hall of Fame coach Everett (Ev) Shelton became coach, believing he would play as many as three sports ? football, basketball and wrestling. “(Shelton) said, ‘if you’re going out for football, just forget about basketball. ’ That’s what he said to me. It really shook me, you know, ” says Sailors. Shelton had to come to Wyoming to win a national championship like he had at the AAU level ? AAU ball being shaped much differently in those days, when amateur players would work for companies and play for their sponsored teams, pros without being “professional. ” Shelton’s grasp of the psychology of coaching young men set him apart from many of his peers. He harnessed his best qualities to get his Cowboys, which early in Kenny’s career included legendary broadcaster Curt Gowdy, ready for a grueling road schedule ? Wyoming played two-thirds of its games away from home during Kenny’s career. Not many quality teams were signing up to come way out to Laramie, with its elevation of over 7, 000 feet. “(Shelton) really conditioned us to accept the fact that there’s no difference in playing in these auditoriums and arenas back east. They’re all the same, ” Sailors says. “Everything’s exactly the same. … The only thing that a lot of players can’t handle is the bo
I just want to say that you have an awesome personality. You should be proud of that! Good luck with your journey with health. Wishing you the best dude. Okay everybody saying it was Canadian, it was James Naismith who was from Canada who became American and invented the sport in Kansas. Very inspiring. Rooting for you. Hey Kenny... where you at? ?. Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story Download full article.

Jump shot the kenny sailors story download full version

Why isn't he in the NBA HOF, tho? He revolutionized the whole sport! The jump shot allowed 3 of the 5 all-time points leaders (MJ, Kobe, and Karl Malone) to dominate the game. WTH. Keto does not require you to eat fat! This is common misunderstanding for newbies. The only requirement to get into ketosis is to eat very low carb. If you are eating one meal a day, and it's low carb, I guarantee you are in ketosis most of the time. Podcast recommendations: Low Carb MD Podcast, and Peak Human. Watch Jump Shot: The Kenny Online Hollywoodreporter 'Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story' mp4.

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