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slam dunk

 
Dictionary: slam dunk   (slăm'dŭngk')
n.
  1. Basketball. A dramatic forceful dunk shot.
  2. Slang. A forceful dramatic move: "I ask (Ron Rosenbaum).

slam-dunk (slăm'dŭngk')

v., -dunked, -dunk·ing, -dunks.

v.intr. Basketball
To make a slam dunk.

v.tr.
  1. Basketball. To shoot (the ball) in a slam dunk.
  2. To make a forceful dramatic move against (another): "They've stopped slam-dunking each other and begun designing strategies with the ... aim of moving those on welfare into decent jobs" (David L. Kirp).
slam-dunker slam'-dunk'er n.

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Word Overheard: slam dunk
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Basketball term in the news: slam dunk. Ex-CIA head George Tenet is actively opposing — in a new book and in TV interviews — the accusation that has dogged him since 2004: that in 2002, he assured President Bush that finding WMD in Iraq would be a slam dunk (virtually certain):

"Tenet said his comment did not refer to whether Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, but related to what information could be used to make a public case for the war....
"'We can put a better case together for a public case. That's what I meant.'
"The expression 'slam dunk,' used originally to describe a basketball move, has come to mean something that can be done with near certainty."

Link: 'Slam dunk' comment on Iraq distorted, Tenet says - CNN.com

Posted April 29, 2007.

Idioms: slam dunk
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A forceful, dramatic move, as in That indictment was a slam dunk if ever there was one. This expression is also often put as a verb, slam-dunk, meaning "make a forceful move against someone," as in This is a great chance for us to slam-dunk the opposition. The idiom comes from basketball, where it refers to a dramatic shot in which the ball is thrust into the basket from above the rim. It was transferred to other activities from about 1980 on.


Wikipedia: Slam dunk
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A slam dunk

A slam dunk (or simply a dunk) is a type of basketball shot that is performed when a player jumps in the air and manually powers the ball downward through the basket with one or both hands over the rim.[1] This is considered a normal field goal attempt; if successful it is worth two points. The term "slam dunk" was coined by Los Angeles Lakers announcer Chick Hearn.[2] Prior to that, it was known as a dunk shot.[1]

The slam dunk is one of the highest percentage shots one can attempt in basketball as well as one of the most crowd-pleasing plays. Other terms for slam dunk include "jam," "yam,", "flambledamble"[citation needed], "boom," "bang," "punch," "stuff," "flush," "cram," "spike," "yoke," "poke," or "throw down." Slam dunks are also performed as entertainment outside of the game, especially during slam dunk contests. Perhaps the most popular such contest is the NBA Slam Dunk Contest held during the annual NBA All-Star Weekend. The first slam dunk contest was held during an American Basketball Association All Star Game.

Dunking was banned in the NCAA from 1967 to 1976. Many have attributed this to the dominance of the then-college phenomenon Lew Alcindor (now called Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) upon his entry into the NCAA. Subsequently, the no-dunking rule is sometimes referred to as the "Lew Alcindor Rule."[3]

Contents

Notable dunks

Julius Erving performing a slam dunk in 1981

Wilt Chamberlain was known to have dunked on an experimental 12-foot basket set up by Phog Allen at the University of Kansas in the 1950s.[4] Michael Wilson, a former Harlem Globetrotter and University of Memphis basketball player, matched this feat on April 1, 2000 albeit with an alley-oop. Dwight Howard dunked on an 12-foot basket in the 2009 NBA dunk contest also off an ally-oop.

Jim Pollard, Wilt Chamberlain, Julius Erving, Clyde Drexler, Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Stromile Swift, Shawn Kemp, Darrell Griffith, Korleone Young, Edgar Jones, LeBron James, James White, Vince Carter, Kobe Bryant, Jamario Moon, Dwight Howard, Mike Conley, Jr., Brent Barry and Al Thornton have each dunked while jumping from around the free throw line, which is 15 feet from the basket. Unlike the others, Wilt Chamberlain did not require a full running start, but instead began his movement from inside the top half of the free throw circle.[4]

Several notable and remarkable dunks have been performed by players at the annual NBA Slam Dunk Contest. Spud Webb at 5'6" (1.68 m) defeated 6'8" (2.03m) Dominique Wilkins in the 1986 contest. Michael Jordan popularized a dunk referred to by some fans as "the leaner." This dunk was so-called because Jordan's body was not orthogonal to the ground ("leaning") while performing the dunk. TNT viewers rated it "the best dunk of all time" over Vince Carter's between-the-legs slam.

Vince Carter dunked while leaping over 7-foot-2 (2.18 m) French center Frédéric Weis in the 2000 Summer Olympics. The French media dubbed it "le dunk de la mort" — "the dunk of death." Carter is also known for introducing the "Honey Dip" or the "cookie jar" dunk in the 2000 Slam Dunk Contest, where Carter demonstrated it hooking his forearm/elbow into the rim after dunking and hanging. The "Honey Dip" at the time was unnamed. Carter used it as his specialty dunks along with his Reverse 360 Windmill dunk and between-the-legs dunk. When performed much of the audience was speechless, including the judges, because none had seen these types of amazing dunks before (although, Carter's 360 Windmill dunk is closely reminiscent of Kenny Walker's winning "Tomahawk" dunk in 1989). Carter would later go on to comment that he copied these dunks from an article in Slam magazine featuring Jameel Pugh.[citation needed]

In the 2008 Sprite Rising Star's Slam Dunk Contest Dwight Howard performed the "Superman" dunk. He donned a superman outfit as Orlando Magic guard Jameer Nelson tied a cape around his shoulders. Nelson alley-ooped the basketball as Howard jumped from just inside the foul line, caught the ball, and threw it through the rim. This dunk is considered controversial, as his hand was not over as well as on a vertical plane to the rim. Some insist that it should in fact be considered a dunk because the ball was thrusted downward into the basket, meeting the basic definition of the dunk. During the following year's dunk contest, Howard had the arena bring a separate basket onto the court that was reported to be between 11 and 12 feet high. Howard, after going into a classic telephone booth near the stands and coming out with his cape, used a pass from Nelson to easily dunk two-handed. While this was not performed for record-setting purposes, the dunk received a perfect score and a warm response from the crowd, in part because of its theatrics. Also in this contest, 5'9" guard Nate Robinson wore a green New York Knicks jersey and green sneakers to represent Kryptonite, counteracting Howard's Superman theme. He used a green "Kryptonite" ball, and jumped over the 6'11" Howard while dunking. This dunk essentially won the competition for Robinson, who was voted the winner by the NBA fans. Robinson than thanked Howard for gracefully allowing him to dunk on him, asking the crowd to also give Howard a round of applause.

The only player that has proven the ability to perform a 720 degree dunk (that is, two full turns while in the air) is Taurian Fontenette also known as Air Up There during a Streetball game.

In the past, it has been possible for players to dunk a basketball and pull the rim down so hard that the glass backboard breaks, either around the rim itself or, at times, shattering the entire backboard. Reinforced backboards and rims have minimized this at the college and professional levels, but it still happens at lower levels. In the late 1980s basketball videogame Arch Rivals, and its 1990s spin-off, NBA Jam, it was possible for a player to break the backboard with a dunk. All-star power forward Gus Johnson of the Baltimore Bullets was the first of the famous backboard breakers in the NBA, shattering three during his career in the 1960s and early 1970s.[5] Darryl Dawkins of the Philadelphia 76ers was also notorious for two glass-shattering dunks in 1979 resulting in the league threatening to fine him and eventually installing breakaway rims.[6] At the beginning of his career, center Shaquille O'Neal also dunked so hard that he broke the supports holding two backboards during games against the New Jersey Nets and the Phoenix Suns, making them collapse to the ground; the glass would shatter all over anyone within a few feet (including the audience). This resulted in reinforced backboard supports as well. The NBA has made shattering the backboard a technical foul. This has assisted in deterring this action, as it can cost the team points.

In the ABA, Charlie Hentz broke two backboards in the same game on November 6, 1970 resulting in the game being called.[7] In the NCAA, Darvin Ham shattered a backboard while playing for Texas Tech in a tournament game against the University of North Carolina in 1996.

The Premier Basketball League has had two slam-dunks that have resulted in broken backboards. Both came consecutively in the 2008 and 2009 PBL Finals, and both were achieved by Sammy Monroe of the Rochester Razorsharks.

Dunking in women's play

Lisa Leslie was the first woman to score a dunk in the WNBA.

Dunking is much less common in women's basketball than in men's play. Georgeann Wells, as a 6'7" junior playing for West Virginia University became the first woman to score a slam dunk in women's collegiate play, in a game against the University of Charleston on December 21, 1984.[8]

In professional WNBA play, a total of six dunks have been scored. Lisa Leslie of the Los Angeles Sparks was the first to score a dunk, on July 30, 2002 against the Miami Sol. Leslie also scored the second dunk in WNBA history on July 9, 2005. Other professional women's players who have scored dunks are Michelle Snow, Candace Parker (twice), and, most recently Sylvia Fowles.[9]

Candace Parker was also among the first high school women's players to dunk. As a high schooler in 2004, Parker defeated five male players to become the first woman to win the Slam Dunk competition of the McDonald's All-American Game, joining past male winners including LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony.[10]

Use as a phrase

The phrase "slam dunk" is often used outside of basketball to refer colloquially to something that was accomplished in an impressive manner or that was an easy success (a sure thing). For example "getting funding for that project is not a slam dunk."[11]

Former CIA Director George J. Tenet assured President George W. Bush in December 2002 that the existence of Iraqi Weapons of Mass Destruction was "a slam dunk case," affixing himself to the term.[12]

References

  1. ^ a b Merriam-Webster refers the term "slam dunk" to the term "dunk shot", which is defined as "a shot in basketball made by jumping high into the air and throwing the ball down through the basket". M-W dates "slam dunk" at 1972, and "dunk shot" as "circa 1961".
  2. ^ sportsillustrated.com, Lakers announcer Heard dead at 85, accessed April 15, 2007.
  3. ^ time.com, Lew's Still Loose, accessed April 15, 2007.
  4. ^ a b Ostler, Scott (February 12, 1989), "The Leaping Legends of Basketball", Los Angeles Times 
  5. ^ Goldaper, Sam (April 30, 1987), "Gus Johnson, Ex-N.B.A. Star with Baltimore, is Dead at 48", The New York Times, http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE6D6153FF933A05757C0A961948260 
  6. ^ Bierman, Fred (February 4, 2007), "In the Distance, the Sound of ‘Chocolate Thunder’", The New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/04/sports/basketball/04glass.html?_r=1&oref=slogin 
  7. ^ "A Roundup Of The Sports Information Of The Week", Sports Illustrated, November 16, 1970, http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1084305/index.htm 
  8. ^ wsj.com, The First Dunk: A Sports Milestone in Women's Basketball, accessed October 9, 2009.
  9. ^ wnba.com, Triple-Doubles, Dunks and 20-20 Games, accessed October 9, 2009.
  10. ^ espn.com, Parker's dunk title a win for women's hoops, accessed October 9, 2009.
  11. ^ [1]
  12. ^ washingtonpost.com, Slam Dunk: Into the History Books, accessed April 15, 2007.

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