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Archive 1Archive 2Archive 3Archive 4Archive 5

Where did this game start?

"While basically unknown in its homeland," -The homeland is never named as far as I can see! If the U.S. is meant (since basketball was invented there), I question the statement (I am an American and quite familiar with the game, since we used to watch girls play it in the fifties and sixties. I doubt that all those girls and the boys watching no longer know of this game). if another country is meant, then pleasee name it! Or does the text mean something else by "unknown" - e.g., "rarely seen"? Kdammers 10:12, 29 September 2006 (UTC)

Yes, the US is meant. Michael 05:14, 9 October 2006 (UTC)

speed is a key elemt in netball. right? there are no mention on netball player positions and which position is generally the speediest? will there soon be a netball positions information area?

Basketball was invented by a Canadian who began developing his game in Ontario before finalizing it in the US, after he got a job down there. Varlaam (talk) 19:23, 19 October 2010 (UTC)


Rule variants

Today I heard part of an item on Radio New Zealand National about some rule changes being trialled, including a "2-pointer". Who's up with the play there? Robin Patterson (talk) 09:27, 23 March 2009 (UTC)

They would have been talking about the World Netball Series. Two-pointers are one of a whole host of rule changes they're trialling, kinda like Twenty20. I'll get around to adding information on the world series to this article soon, I promise :). Cheers. Liveste (talkedits) 12:03, 23 March 2009 (UTC)


Netball lovers

There are many netball lovers! And the sport should be involved in more schools, and entered in more competions! I love the sport netball and maybe one day you will! so get out the get involved as you never know. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.25.196.105 (talk) 18:28, 14 October 2009 (UTC)

What's the result of solo-play?

See the topic name, because I know Basketball allow solo-play but Korfball and Netball are not allow to make it.--Pierce (talk) 22:24, 22 October 2009 (UTC)

Not sure what you're asking. If you're talking about solo basketball, then neither korfball or netball has any equivalent variant. In netball you can't move while holding the ball, which means you need more than one player (rules require at least five), while korfball requires male and female players in each team. Let me know if you meant something else. Liveste (talkedits) 02:39, 23 October 2009 (UTC)

Recent revisions, better history

An improvement on the 'invented by Clara Baer' story which I think used to head the article, the yahoo answers version if you will, a slightly nationalistic history aimed at kids. The article looks a tad more encyclopedic. Hakluyt bean (talk) 21:27, 29 October 2009 (UTC)

Women?

It says nowhere that netball is virtually a womans-only sport. That's a pretty big part of the game's character... 86.200.86.80 (talk) 13:55, 17 January 2010 (UTC)

It says so in the lead section: it says that "[n]etball is popular in Commonwealth nations and is predominantly played by women". Graham87 15:26, 17 January 2010 (UTC)

Paragraph makes no sense

"Netball traces its roots to basketball. Basketball was devised in 1891 by James Naismith for his students in the School for Christian Workers (later called the YMCA). Female teachers got curious and started to formulate a version for girls. The outfits of women at this time prohibited them from effectively executing important basketball moves such as running and dribbling, so the game had to be modified to accommodate these restrictions. Women’s basketball was thus born."

So was it netball or women's basketball which was born in this way ?? Makes no sense.Eregli bob (talk) 06:33, 11 April 2010 (UTC)

The paragraph indicates that "women's basketball was thus born". The transition from women's basketball to netball is explained in the next two sections, although it's a bit confusing. I'll revise the entire History section tonight to hopefully make things clearer. Cheers. Liveste (talkedits) 03:21, 12 April 2010 (UTC)
I've rewritten the History section. Much of the information comes from History of netball, hopefully without going into too much detail. Let me know if the information is still unclear. Cheers again. Liveste (talkedits) 13:58, 12 April 2010 (UTC)

Women's sport

I've twice reverted the description of netball being a "women's sport" in the opening sentence. Netball is not exclusively played by women: men's and mixed teams exist at most levels, if not all. The dominance of women in the sport is already mentioned in the lede, and I don't believe it needs to be repeated there. Please add any relevant comments and opinions below. Cheers. Liveste (talkedits) 01:55, 16 December 2010 (UTC)

Comments

The table containing comments regarding the roles of the various players is inaccurate :

For example: GS This player must get past the Goal Keeper of the other team. He or she can move within the "attacking" goal third, including the shooting circle. The above is not true, as at times the GS may be defended by a player other than the GK. Also, the "get past" is inaccurate as it may serve the GS to get behind the defending player and receive a lob pass.

The description from Netball Australia's website is much better i.e. "The main task of the Goal Shooter is to score goals."

9 February 2011 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 144.131.84.20 (talkcontribs) 22:56, 8 February 2011 (UTC)

NA has a pretty good outline of each position. I'm a bit unsure about describing the "roles" of each position at length, since any description could be POV unless it's actually stated in official guidelines. It might be more useful to include a diagram or table of the allowed areas for each position. Thoughts? Liveste (talkedits) 07:36, 28 February 2011 (UTC)
If anyone is still involved in the netball project, maybe it might be worth spinning off the positions into their own articles? Or in the context of this article and trying to improve it, would it be worth expanding the positions, list some of the more well known international players in those positions? I don't know if there is much on how these positions have evolved but I haven't looked much at the sources that would have details about that. --LauraHale (talk) 11:27, 28 February 2011 (UTC)
There's probably enough information out there to source articles on each of the netball positions. Basic articles should do fine. The Netball WikiProject sorta stalled in 2008 a few months after it was created. I'll ask a couple of editors to see if it's worth reviving again. Cheers. Liveste (talkedits) 12:26, 2 March 2011 (UTC)


Quoting Talk:Netball/GA1: replied the flaw questions of user

If the questions are flawed, maybe you should take it as a sign that you are not being clear and that my questions are a sign of trying to get clarity that you implied on your talk page I hadn't sought. I'm not trying to be difficult. This isn't personal. I want to improve this article. I want to get it to good article status. I'm trying desperately hard to work with you to do that. I added sections. I took away sections. I solicited feedback. I explained why I could not do what you asked. I repeatedly asked for concrete examples of where the text did not meet with your approval towards getting good article status. (I'll not you still have not provided examples in the text of the article of where the article is biased.) All I want to do is either work with you to get the article to good status, or to find some one else to work with. This isn't personal. I just do not understand the points you are trying to communicate to me. It would really help our communication if you could quote the article, directly referencing the text when trying to communicate with me. If we can't communicate effectively, could you find another person to offer a second opinion who can help us resolve our communication gap? (Copy and pasted to Talk:Netball/GA1.) --LauraHale (talk) 09:54, 13 March 2011 (UTC)


Trying to fix NPOV issues

In my opinion, Racepacket reviewed both Netball and Netball in the Cook Islands with the clear intention of pushing a point of view that the sport was not popular in general, and specifically was not popular in the Cook Islands. This can be seen by his repeated claims of wanting more information on the popularity of the game, by his insistence in saying "X amount of countries of the Y amount of countries in Africa are affiliated with the regional federation." He wanted similar statements in every region. He wanted the total percentage of players as a representation of the country's total population. In my opinion, he wanted to know how many teams competed and to let people know that they were ranked X out of Y, to make the game appear less popular. In my opinion, he wanted to irresponsibly gender the article to highlight the fact that the game is played by women, and is thus less popular and less credible. He wanted to remove the country sections and information on statistics that showed relative popularity by country. In my opinion, he tried to get phrases like "most popular women's participation sport" in the country removed and alleged biasthey were biased, even if there were citations that supported this claim, in order to make it appear as if netball was less popular. In my opinion, he wanted to remove the Olympic sport part because by removing the Olympics, he makes the game appear less popular and credible as a sport. He demanded its removal even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. In my opinion, he tried to diminish the importance of international competitions by treating international federations, similar to CONCACAF and CONMEBOL for FIFA into regional leagues that countries in the area compete in. Racepacket also kept on insisting the sport be compared to basketball. In my opinion, this was another case of trying to diminish netball's global popularity by forcing comparisons to an American sport that he feels is more popular and makes netball appear less popular. In my opinion, he wanted spectator numbers for netball in the Cook Islands to show that the game was not popular there because no one watched it in person. (This in a country with 23,000 or so people, with 13,000 or so total people on the most populated island.)

Given that we tried really hard to make any reasonable accommodation we could in order to try to get the article into good status, we may have helped him in his Point of View pushing. (Copying and pasting his suggestions along the line of "X # of countries out of # on Y continent have member federations" was an easy accommodation, easy to fix and made it feel like we were making progress towards getting closer to good article status.) Thus, I think we need to seriously look at some of the edits we made to accommodate, determine if that information is actually needed and how to address this problem before we resubmit. :/ --LauraHale (talk) 12:31, 23 March 2011 (UTC)

I am very surprised to hear you raise this for the first time today. A few days ago, you claimed that I was sexist, racist, someone so immersed in American culture that I could not see the perspectives of other cultures, and now you claim that I am anti-Netball. I think that most of the NPOV concerns were raised at the start of the review by Bill, but were not fully addressed. We have to remove Words to Watch whether they are pro-Netball or anti-Netball. We have to frame statistics so that they are neutral and in context. If I make a suggestion off the top of my head, as the subject matter expert you are free to correct me or to suggest alternatives. This is a collegial process. The X countries out of Y statistics came directly from the IFNA website — how could they be anti-Netball? Again, it is best to discuss such concerns one at a time in the review rather than waiting a week, leaving the review. and trying to develop a post-hoc objection to the manner the review is being conducted. Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 19:11, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
I haven't really followed this article, although I've watched the Netball in the Cook Islands a little more closely. A peer review might be a good idea. Although the most common use of peer review is as preparation for FAC, it's open to all articles. Peer reviews are generally lower-pressure, more collegiate and more improvement-focussed than GAN, which given the circumstances is probably the order of the day. —WFC17:51, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
WFC: Thank you for your peer review suggestion. I think that we are very close to getting the GA. It is typical for at least one peer review to occur between a GA and an FAC submission. We have had three different people weigh in with detailed review comments - Bill, KnowIG and myself, I suspect that we have had the benefits of that process. I am trying to keep the GA collegial and improvement=focused, so let's see how it ends up. Racepacket (talk) 19:05, 23 March 2011 (UTC)


GAReview 1 has been collapse as it is long and the review is closed.

GA Review

GA toolbox
Reviewing
This review is transcluded from Talk:Netball/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Bill william comptonTalk 08:54, 6 March 2011 (UTC)

N.B.: Although we all agree that the article is using British English spelling, we are all friends here and everyone is free to use their own native spellings on this review page. Just assume that any posting to the article page will have the corrected spellings. Racepacket (talk) 14:31, 22 March 2011 (UTC)


I'll start reviewing this article against the Good Article criteria by tomorrow. Bill william comptonTalk 08:54, 6 March 2011 (UTC)

This article certainly has potential for GA, but there are some major issues which i'd like to be addressed before i pass this Good Article review. In meantime i'd advice few major changes in the article.


GA review (see here for criteria)
  1. It is reasonably well written.
    a (prose): b (MoS for lead, layout, word choice, fiction, and lists):
  2. It is factually accurate and verifiable.
    a (references): b (citations to reliable sources): c (OR):
    Check these inaccessible and dead links
    All links were checked again. Should now work. Thompson now fixed. --LauraHale (talk) 02:17, 13 March 2011 (UTC)
  3. It is broad in its coverage.
    a (major aspects): b (focused):
    This is the main concern of my review; article is stuffed with details which are overwhelming it. Specially Netball around the world and Major competitions
    Please cite specific passes that need fixing. --LauraHale (talk) 20:58, 12 March 2011 (UTC)
    Please cite Wikipedia policy that suggests an article cannot be stuffed with information. Much of the trivial information has been removed in order to comply with that. We've removed headers, at your suggestion, which make it appear more stuffed and harder to find information. If there is trivial information that is still in the article, please provide specific, concrete examples so that it can be removed. --LauraHale (talk) 23:18, 12 March 2011 (UTC)
    How many times i've to tell you about the bulkiness of sections like Netball around the world and Major Competitions, refer this second point. I didn't ask you to just remove headers, but i recommended you to remove header and to replace the sections of each country with a unified short, most relevant and brief summary under the heading of each region.
    This problem should now be fixed. --LauraHale (talk) 04:38, 19 March 2011 (UTC)
  4. It follows the neutral point of view policy.
    Fair representation without bias:
    Slightly biased towards the popularity of the game
    Please cite examples of bias. This cannot be fixed with out clear examples. --LauraHale (talk) 20:58, 12 March 2011 (UTC)
    slightly biased towards the popularity of the game because the whole article is about - how much it's popular in Commonwealth Nations, how it became a popular women's sport just by introducing to different countries, etc; but article doesn't tell why this sport is still not a part of Olympics, why it took 20 years for IOA to even recognize this sport while many other non-contemporary sports were already being in the list, why this is not as recognizable as basketball, even if both are so much similar, why this game is limited to women only and many other such questions. I think this is sufficient to question the neutrality of this article, sufficient examples or you need more??
  5. It is stable.
    No edit wars, etc.:
  6. It is illustrated by images, where possible and appropriate.
    a (images are tagged and non-free images have fair use rationales): b (appropriate use with suitable captions):
    well illustrated by the free images
  7. Overall:
    Pass/Fail:
    I extend the on hold period of this article for two more days to resolve above mentioned concerns.

Thank you Bill william comptonTalk 19:40, 12 March 2011 (UTC)

I am going to request another person fail it. The reviewer's comment not detailed enough to improve. The reviewer as not provide actionable feeback to improve the article. Based on the reviewers previous comments, his concerns cannot be fixed in two days as we've tried to repeatedly fixed these concerns and if we haven't done it already, we aren't going to meet his requirements now.. The reviewer hasn't been time responsive. --LauraHale (talk) 20:58, 12 March 2011 (UTC)
If these points will remain unresolved by tomorrow than i'll fail it by myself, no need of your advice. If you need more time to work on it than in this case i may further extend the period of hold and please tell me how much actionable feedback you need??, i tried to explain each and every point of all my concerns in detail. I told you i was busy for few days and wasn't in condition to response effectively, so why are you blaming me for not being a time responsive. I'd advice you to refer some good sports related articles like Association Football, Baseball, etc and you'll be able to interpret my recommendations.
I've looked at the association articles and the baseball articles. Both articles are largely about sports with large rates of male participation, sports that have popularity largely dependent on professionalism and spectatorship, and sports where principle interest is from Europe and South America. Given these huge differences, they aren't the best examples. --LauraHale (talk) 04:38, 19 March 2011 (UTC)


General
  • Global View

The lead says Netball is popular in Commonwealth nations, but as i know and have researched about Netball, except Australia, New Zealand, England and few Caribbean countries or may be one or two African nations its not that much popular or even recognizable. So i couldn't digest that its a popular sport in Commonwealth nations, because word Commonwealth constitutes more than 50 sovereign countries and most of them are in Asia and Africa (and on population basis more than 90% Commonwealth population is from Asia and Africa). So i'd like to see change in this context or other such patterns in whole article like this Netball became a popular women's sport in countries where it was introduced, and spread rapidly through school systems, it doesn't sound to constitute a global view of the game.

I've done quite a bit of research in netball myself. The description you've given seems more akin to international-level competition than grassroots netball, which is widespread across the Commonwealth, particularly among southern African, Caribbean and Pacific island nations, and to a lesser extent in south Asia. Much of this (cited) information was moved off the main article into separate "netball in <country>" articles just before the GA review started. I guess we could add more citations back to the Netball article to support it. Liveste (talkedits) 04:29, 9 March 2011 (UTC)
Ditto this in my own way. Netball feels a bit different than say soccer, baseball or basketball. Yes, there are international competitions and yes, some of these are televised. The important part of netball though isn't spectatorship, it is participation. In soccer or basketball or baseball, the Cook Islands and Fiji and Samoa and Malawi and Saint Lucia do not rank on the world scale. This sport is known more for its participation on the grass roots levels, for providing women with an opportunity to manage a game that they participate in on all levels. Most of the information that was moved off into separate netball articles was for countries that had one or two lines about them. This information was generally integrated into the section about the region, rather than leave up that one line. I really think the global view is important to keep, possibly expand. I think the little snippets of history for these countries is important for highlighting what I mentioned: The game is important in smaller countries, it has high rates of female management, it is generally played by women and non-traditional nations dominate it. I guess what I'm wondering is if expanding more on individual nations in their own nations section is the answer to the problem or if the solution is to move the individual by nation data out of the general region section. --LauraHale (talk) 04:58, 9 March 2011 (UTC)
Just a note here, the top 25 countries are all Commonwealth countries, and the list includes Asian and African members of the Commonwealth. It would take quite a lot of work to adequately source how 'popular' it is across the population of all these countries.this looks like a good source for "Commonwealth's most popular female sports", but I don't have access to the article, so I cant be sure. John Vandenberg (chat) 21:43, 11 March 2011 (UTC)
Checked the source. The chapter on netball is talking about how netball players land on their knees and the impact it has on their knees. (Netball's requirement for being stationary when throwing was intended to make netball less physically demanding. It did not succeed. It just changed the particular areas of stress.) The article does not contain any statistics regarding world wide popularity. --LauraHale (talk) 04:38, 19 March 2011 (UTC)

Fixed: Merged the global section from history with Worldwide popularity. Renamed the section World game. --LauraHale (talk) 08:18, 9 March 2011 (UTC)

I'm not sure that really fixes the problem. I think what Bill wanted clarified was just how prevalent the game was throughout the Commonwealth, but moreover the extent in which the game is played in the world at large. In which case, I think a paragraph along the following lines would have sufficed:
  • played in 70+ countries worldwide
  • historically, the game spread throughout the British Empire (being an English game)
  • primarily popular in "many" Commonwealth nations; limited inroads elsewhere (USA, France, Argentina, Israel)
In addition, moving the "global game" subsection has limited coverage in the History section to the end of the 1960s: forty years of netball history is now suddenly absent from the relevant section of the article. I suggest moving the subsection back and clarifying worldwide popularity as above. Liveste (talkedits) 04:48, 10 March 2011 (UTC)
Please feel free to take a stab at fixing that. I'm kind of at a loss of how to do it. :/ If the article's history bit is more about the rule changes, I can provide citations and examples for when the rules changed and that would could help make the section more about the history of the game on the court, rather than a history of the game in a broader sense. And yeah, at a loss how to fix beyond what was done to try to fix it. --05:57, 10 March 2011 (UTC)
  • HistoryGreen tickY

The sub-section of History- Origins from basketball, talks about only how basketball was originated and than there is another sub-section Early development of netball, so either these both sub-sections have to be merged suitably or Origins from basketball section should employ more words for Netball

I think this has been addressed/resolved now. --LauraHale (talk) 04:07, 9 March 2011 (UTC)

Fixed: The two sections were merged and given a new header. --LauraHale (talk) 08:18, 9 March 2011 (UTC)

  • Worldwide popularityRed XN

There is no need of such a bulky section. Only brief idea should be mention here, extra information could be place into respective article or new stub/start class articles could also be made.

Not sure how this fits in the context of the comments above about not conveying the reach of the game... or how to make it more brief. Could you suggest which sections should be eliminated here and explain why some more? --LauraHale (talk) 05:02, 9 March 2011 (UTC)

Fixed: Merged the global section from history with Worldwide popularity. Renamed the section World game. --LauraHale (talk) 08:18, 9 March 2011 (UTC)

Suggestions:-

Replace this whole section with a title like Netball around the world or something like that, because World Game is a very broad sense term; the bulkiness of this section is completely senseless, i still don't understand why this section was made with so much over-information, there are already concerned articles for each sub-section (like Netball in Australia and Netball in South Africa) so why to detail them here also.
Concentrate this section within one or two paragraphs, don't mention each country with separate heading instead make sub-headings like:- Asia, Oceania , Europe, Americas and Africa; but mention only important and necessary facts, like:-
any major historical aspect
level of popularity
Grassroots of the game within the country or continent
number of regular participants (not necessary if data is not available)
any major impact on the tactics of the game
Again, this is my first time going through a good article review so I'm a bit slow on how to do this. It is really hard to put the historical aspects. There is no comprehensive history of netball that has been written about the sport, let alone individual countries. Most of the countries that are big netball countries are less well developed countries in Africa, the Caribbean and Oceania. It is hard to get a sense of the grassroots level as a result.
The popularity levels are hard to measure. The number of participants information that is available is all in the info box. Beyond that, it is hard to find. (For example, I've spent a good two or three hours trying to find total participant levels in Jamaica and another Caribbean nation mentioned in the article originally but not cited.) Getting this information can only be done by country, not continent and that's a maybe. (The level of administration is not comparable to baseball, basketball, soccer or rugby union which are much more popular.)
The historical aspects are some what subjective and that comes down to by country. The issue of apartheid in South Africa had a tremendous impact on the game in South Africa but it has little impact on say Botswana, Lesotho, Zimbabwe, Tanzania. Tanzania or Botswana had funding issues that were unique to their economic situation if I recall correctly. The Cook Islands had the same issues in various parts of their history. The history of the game in individual countries is unique (which is why things were separated) and the patterns don't necessarily hold true by continent.
The issue of tactics wouldn't really be important to the history of individual countries, nor is it documented in the limited available sources regarding how the game being played in a country.
For this reason, I'm still at a complete loss as how to address your feedback, beyond just removing the individual countries completely and leaving the summary by region. --LauraHale (talk) 23:05, 10 March 2011 (UTC)
I think I fixed this again. I removed the country headers. I removed some of the data that was in there. Every country was basically brought down to one paragraph. --LauraHale (talk) 23:48, 10 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Major competitionsRed XN

Again this section is unnecessarily too large; concentrate it into one or maximum two paragraphs, don't include tabular data or irrelevant details. Preferably make two sections of international and domestic competitions.

There are no sections in the major competitions area about domestic competitions. They were all taken out and put into the information by country. Beyond this, if we take this information out now, it will all have to be put back and expand upon it in order to get the article to featured status. Given that, I'm not sure why it needs to be taken out in order get good article status. --LauraHale (talk) 20:09, 8 March 2011 (UTC)

Fixed: Mostly. The Asian Championship paragraph made it some of seem like a mess. Cleaned up that section. Removed a table. No domestic competitions included in the section. --LauraHale (talk) 08:18, 9 March 2011 (UTC)

Suggestions: don't include results in tabular form, mention which are the various tournaments (competitions) of the game, place whole material within one or two paragraphs.
I've never gone through a good article process before so yeah. I apologize if I'm a little slow and not understanding what you're asking. I did that for the Netball World Championships I think. I removed the table and replaced it with the information in paragraph form. Is that example what you're thinking of? Should I try that for the other major competitions?

I'm still not sure why you don't want tables in this section. If you could explain that some more? I've removed the duplicate information from the competition sections so there is less repetition. Wikipedia:Manual of Style (tables) says of tables:

Tables are perfect for organizing any information that is best presented in a row-and-column format. .... Tables should not be used simply for layout, either. If the information you are editing is not tabular in nature, it probably does not belong in a table.

If a table is not used, the prose gets repetitive: Year, location, number of teams, first, second, third place. Repeat per year. If you don't think this information should be included for the most important international events for this sport, can you please explain why, and edit those sections to include the informatuon you think should be included. I believe the citations in the article should provide you with information that you may think should be included that I'm unclear about you wanting. --LauraHale (talk) 04:51, 13 March 2011 (UTC)


  • Governing bodies of the NetballGreen tickY

There is not a single section about the governing bodies of the game. A section should be made about how this game is governed on the continental/region basis.

Fair point. Will work on adding a section about that. --LauraHale (talk) 20:09, 8 March 2011 (UTC)
Added a section on that. How much more information is needed? --LauraHale (talk) 03:49, 9 March 2011 (UTC)

Fixed: Section added. --LauraHale (talk) 08:18, 9 March 2011 (UTC)

I've restructured it.
Awesome. Thanks. --LauraHale (talk) 04:38, 19 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Red-LinksGreen tickY

There are many dead hyperlinks which could be clear/correct.

Can you give some examples? My list of Redlinks that I see includes:
That's 16 total. A few of those could probably be removed, especially the high school ones. The rest are important netball related people or netball and sport organizations that realistically, should have articles about them. And this isn't a criteria as near as I can tell in manual of style or mentioned at Wikipedia:Good article criteria. To be frank, I'm not sure why this is an issue. --LauraHale (talk) 20:09, 8 March 2011 (UTC)
I support LauraHale i see that she is right... You should fix those... --Zalgo (talk) 00:01, 11 March 2011 (UTC)
The issue is to reduce the red links as much as possible, those which are highly relevant to the subject could be retain and keep in mind linking is also the part of MOS.Bill william comptonTalk 20:49, 8 March 2011 (UTC)

Fixed: Red links are removed from all but the national netball team parts, which use a template to show the flag. --LauraHale (talk) 08:18, 9 March 2011 (UTC)

  • Schools I think the article needs more information about netball in schools, esp. schoolyard and curriculum, besides the titbits of information included in the subsections of "Netball around the world". Netball is (or at least has been) one of the most common school sports in modern health & physical education programs.(crikey, that is a redlink??) If there is a lot of variance between countries, those subsections could be fleshed out a bit more with this information, or a section elsewhere should cover its use in schools. John Vandenberg (chat) 01:10, 11 March 2011 (UTC)
Thought about this. Hard to do as there isn't a consistent method of doing that. In some countries, netball is included and some it isn't. In some places, it appears to be in the curriculum of mixed gendered classes and girls only classes. In other places, netball is offered as a school sport only. In still other places, netball is offered as a school sport, where the school does not offer physical education classes. These three things can actually exist in the same state in a country. The inclusion of netball in the curriculum also appears to differ and there isn't a universal timeline of sorts. Beyond these basic issues, there are school based competitions and level of competitions that are described as school competitions but are actually competitions for school aged girls. --LauraHale (talk) 05:27, 11 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Olympics The article says that "In 2008, efforts were started to include netball in the Olympic Games from as early as 2012." The source says that there are no plans to have it included in 2012 or 2016, but it would be discussed at a meeting in 2009. I think the article needs to summarise the current situation a bit better. John Vandenberg (chat) 01:51, 11 March 2011 (UTC)
Added a section on the Olympics. Removed problem sentences. Removed parts about Olympics in the body that would have made that repetitive. --LauraHale (talk) 05:27, 11 March 2011 (UTC)

Copied from my talk page:

If you had so much problem in interpreting these issues, than you could simply ask me for assistance and i'd pleased to do it by myself. How specifically i'd tell you that these sections are bulky in size, unbalanced and stuffed with unnecessary details, what you had to do just replaced the whole section with one or two paragraph sized summary, as there are already articles for each sub-section, similarly for the section major competitions, if there are articles for each competition/tournament than why you redundantly added tabular data about the results of these competitions. I really don't know why you're unable to understand these simple recommendations i made. Bill william comptonTalk 08:09, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

I asked you on your talk page to put this on the GA page so I copied it here so there would be a record. I feel like I have repeatedly asked for clarification regarding what you've written. You said a section was bulky in size. They were made less bulky. You didn't indicate if this satisfied your requirements or how to improve upon that. You didn't respond for additional requests for feedback. You didn't provide any examples of sections, nor how to fix these sections. Please feel free to go through the world section and fix it. We reduced content, reduced content, reduced content and it was never right and you didn't provide additional feedback on how to improve them. Beyond that, there are no non-start articles for most of these country articles. We're talking trying to integrate information from over 50 nations. I don't understand your instance on referring to poorly written articles and non-existent articles as superior to the main article. --LauraHale (talk) 08:32, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

The tabular data is not cited on the sub pages and the tabular data is extremely important to understanding the competition. It helps explain the schedule for the event, who hosts these events and what the top teams are. Information presented that way is more condense. Thus, I'm still completely unclear as to what you want in these sections. Do you just want a list of the major competitions? --LauraHale (talk) 08:32, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Within the time frame you have given yourself, please fix all the problems you have identified. I still don't understand what you want and you have provided me with no additional clarity regarding your desires for how to edit the article, nor your rational for cutting down sections as the information is on sub pages that doesn't exist. I don't know what you want. You are not communicating with me effectively. Please use your time frame and edit the article so it can get a good article status using your advice. --LauraHale (talk) 08:32, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Too much content in ones view is not bias. Gee. Personally I would consider removing the bits about the Asian champs and nation cup as the article imo should just have world comps. KnowIG (talk) 10:01, 13 March 2011 (UTC)
Moved the Asian championship referenced to the Asian section. I then removed the section. The Nations Cup is something I honestly don't know enough about to know if it should be moved/removed as a non-major event. It was listed on the article when I first started editing. The article that it points to has no real sources, so it makes it hard to evaluate based on those grounds alone. Tomorrow morning Australia time, when I'm more awake, I'll try to find sources to get a better idea of its importance on the international calendar. If it is important, I'll expand the little blurb in front of it to better demonstrate relevance. Thanks for the comment. :) If there is any other concrete examples like this that you could cite, I'd be happy to have a go at trying to improve them. --LauraHale (talk) 11:28, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

I came to this review because of the request for a second opinion. I am willing to give you an opinion, but I am not sure what is the question. If the question is whether tables or bullet lists are allowed under the GA criteria, yes they are. Given a broad topic such as netball, it is diffcult to draw a line around the appropriate scope of the article. I generally allow a lot of leeway in relevant content. If the article's overall size grows too long, then daughter articles can be split off. See, WP:SPLIT. I would not delete the challenged material completely (vs. splitting it off.) Racepacket (talk) 16:40, 13 March 2011 (UTC)


KnowIG's review

If you don't mind I'm going to go section by section and flag major issues. Minor ones I'll sort myself.

History

at her Physical Training College in London (later in Dartford). Should be Dartford near London. All Dartford is famous for is a tunnel which people usually sit in a traffic jam in :P checkY Trying to help, but lost in the traffic. Linked to article on "Dartford" Hawkeye7 (talk) 22:27, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Basketball spread to England within a few years of its invention. Martina Bergman-Österberg introduced one version of basketball in 1893 to her female students at her Physical Training College in London (later in Dartford). Which version also is a source avaliable. If not don't worry too much vary comprensive article. checkY Added a source Hawkeye7 (talk) 22:27, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Australia, netball competed with women's basketball. The two sports shared a name. What was this name. Although implied in next sentence spelt out would be better. checkY "women's basketball" re-phrased. Hawkeye7 (talk) 22:27, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

In 1963, the first international tournament was held in Eastbourne, England. Originally called the World Tournament, it eventually became known as the Netball World Championships. It has been held every four years since, most recently in 2007. The World Youth Netball Championships started in Canberra in 1988, and have been held roughly every four years since. In 1995, netball became an Olympic-recognised sport, allowing its inclusion in future games. Reference needed for the world tournament claim and the world youth champ plus the olympic claim. checkY "Added refs Hawkeye7 (talk) 22:27, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

primarily contested between second- and third-tier netball nations. Link second and third tier . If red link then you can create an article later stating these tier differences. checkY struck "second- and third-tier" Hawkeye7 (talk) 22:27, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Australia had started playing a game similar to the of England during the 1960s. to the English players during the 1960s checkY corrected typo. Hawkeye7 (talk) 22:27, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

KnowIG (talk) 17:20, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Description and rules be at least .9 metres (2 ft 11 in). Centmeters would be better. checkY done. Hawkeye7 (talk) 22:27, 13 March 2011 (UTC) checkY done Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Varients A unique feature of this form of the game is that players can shoot from outside the goal circle for a two-point goal, while shots taken inside the goal circle still earn one point. Can anyone shoot. checkY Specified "attacking and centre players". Liveste (talkedits) 14:14, 14 March 2011 (UTC)

Each quarter lasts only six minutes, compared with 15 minutes in normal international netball competition. Rm latter part of sentence. checkY done Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Each team can separately nominate one "power play" quarter, in which each goal scored by that team counts for double points. This is somewhat similar to powerplays in One Day International and Twenty20 cricket,[67] although it is not a feature of standard netball.[66] Rm although its is not a feature.... checkY done Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Umpires raise one arm for a single-point goal and two arms for a two-point goal. In standard netball rules, goals can only be shot from within the shooting circle and count for one point only. Think the umpire stuff is not needed. And the rest of it really? I think the point is made and is self explanatory with out this. checkY done Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Centre passes: After each goal, the team that conceded the goal takes the next centre pass; teams alternate taking the first centre pass of each quarter. Under normal rules, a coin toss determines the first centre pass of the match, after which centre passes alternate between the two teams.[66] So it's no difference to normal right? Remove then. checkY done Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Readded. There is a difference, which I've tried to clarify: "After each goal, the team that conceded the goal takes the next centre pass. Under normal rules, centre passes alternate between the two teams, regardless of which team scored the last goal." It doesn't take into account every situation, but the description is true in general. Liveste (talkedits) 14:14, 14 March 2011 (UTC)

The Fun Net program runs for 8–16 weeks. There are no winners or losers. Is this really needed. checkY removed Hawkeye7 (talk) 01:13, 14 March 2011 (UTC)

High Five Netball has been heavily promoted by the All England Netball Association.[74] Move into above paragraph. checkY done Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Childrens a bit Aussie focused but if you state that these are played all over then I can forgive for the AUssie focus.

Global section. I am going to do a bit of work and post some bits here. KnowIG (talk) 17:47, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Demo appeal

Representative men's teams exist, but attract less attention. But are less popular/recieve less attension. your call.

England were at 0.6% of the total. Made up not were at. checkY done Hawkeye7 (talk) 01:13, 14 March 2011 (UTC)

Mixed Netball Association, is this a global assoication or an aussie one. If global link don't care if it red links. Bill was wrong

Added red links in the men's section. Added more information as a source was found. Should give a better idea of the history of men's netball and global participation. Also, red links added. --LauraHale (talk) 05:43, 19 March 2011 (UTC)

International Challenge Men’s and Mixed Netball Tournament. Link don't care if its red.

nice stuff on the trannys

Players were all in wheelchairs and used netball posts to. Don't need to state that they were in wheelchairs. It's implied by polo and the cross of basketball as basketball for disabled is wheelchair based. checkY done Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

basketball in 1956.[181] The replacement version of the game is what is now called wheelchair basketball. Write wheelchair basketball and you can rid of the next sentence but obviously keep the ref. checkY done Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

less coverage of the sport, because most coverage of women's sport focuses around the Olympics. I would be happier if you stated most coverage of women's sport takes place at major champs along side men's events. Sorry my specialist subject at the moment :P checkY done Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Money that is available through International Olympic Committee and the British Council to promote women's sport sometimes ignores women's sport in certain geographic areas. Repeat of 2 sentences earlier with the inclusion of British council. Keep the Brit bit, I didn't know this. checkY done Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Netball may be the most popular women's sport, in terms of media coverage and participation rates, in an area but the money goes towards Olympic sports with low participation rates, low rates of interest and few facilities. Pritty sure women's tennis recieves more media coverage than netball. Should probably remove this unless you can make so your not making a bold claim. in an area gives plenty of room. Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

I've added where it is played, just to give it a bit more definition. Certainly makes it less of a bold claim now as it now doesn't mean globally.

Some supporters of netball have argued that by trying to internationalise the game and be included in the Olympics has moved netball away from a model of women's sport and more towards a male model of competitive sport. This is viewed by some sport people as detrimental to the game. intersting but strange, considering that on the box down the bottom a list of sports are given, most are played by men and are masculine or gender neutral. So probmatic. Yes this and the one above have a source but as you can see, it's a bold claim easily shot down unfortunatly :(

  • That people are saying it is a fact. Editorialising myself, the issue is really about participation sport vs spectator sport, an issue which many mens sports also grapple with. Hawkeye7 (talk) 23:18, 13 March 2011 (UTC)
Do you think that it could be phrased in a better way, cause it is just rather difficult to interpret in the right way to me. KnowIG (talk) 09:49, 14 March 2011 (UTC)

The most important competition in netball is the World Championship which is held every four years. Can't have one sentence. State who has won the most times and where the first tournie was and who was the winner. Yeah I know table but you needed to pad here. checkY done.

Commonwealth state that Aus and NZ are the most successful, Aus first 2 NZ next 2.

Nice stuff on the world series, this should be the standard for the bits above.

Nations cup well we've already talked about that. I think once this is done and I've had a proper look at global bit we're good to promote. KnowIG (talk) 18:03, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Red links

Grand Festavile of Paraligic sports do you mean/could it be/is it this IWAS World Games

Global I've rearranged it into alphabetical order of regions then countries.

I've sorted out the lead to this section. But can you please remove the fastnet format as it's a varient and is of little worth here.

School leagues and national club competitions have existed in countries such as England, Australia, New Zealand and Jamaica since the early 20th century. However, franchise-based netball leagues only emerged in the late 1990s. The most prominent of these competitions is the ANZ Championship in Australia and New Zealand, and the Netball Superleague in the United Kingdom. references please. And before this can you write that international competiton really took off in 67 with the advent of the world cup reference that. Then link into the above section.

Generally before I start any sections I've removed trival tournament spec stuff which doesn't enhance the article. Like 6 teams competed in 2008 etc. And have removed double links.

Americas This can be seen in the countries that play it Antigua and Barbuda and Grenada being an important netball being important minor netball playing countries. Complete garbage. Makes no sense. Should be if it stays This can be seen in the countries that play it for example. Antigua and Barbuda who are part of the commonwealth and Grenada who are not. In Antigua it is a popular sport unlike in Grenada. checkY cleaned up. Hawkeye7 (talk) 01:13, 14 March 2011 (UTC)

Asia removed stuff about the gay games team because its repetition. And removed the listy so and so played in this year stuff. As tbh not really presenting diverstiy imo.

Europe Cleaned up.

Oceania Cleaned up.

I'll leave it here for today. Plenty for you to do. I'll be back tomorrow to work on the countries. :) KnowIG (talk) 21:32, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Other comments

Per WP:SIZE and WP:SPLIT this 140K artcle should be shortened. You already have daughter articles such as Netball in Samoa, Asian Netball Championship, Netball in India, etc. I believe that you can shorten and summarize what is covered in depth in the daughter articles. If the material in the tables regarding World Championships, Nations Cup, etc. appear in the daughter article, you can remove them from this article. As a general rule, the goal should be an article of about 60K to 80K in length. This article should be an international, generic overview with details left to the daughter articles. I hope this helps. I was going to do a detail review, but I don't want to supplant KnowIG. Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 19:04, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

  • I would reword "Some supporters of netball have argued that by trying to internationalise the game and be included in the Olympics has moved netball away from a model of women's sport and more towards a male model of competitive sport." Please find more concrete terms than "male model of competitive sport." Are you saying that these advocates seek Netball to be included in the Olympics as both a men's and women's sport? Or are you referring to commercialization? If example, in the United States, women's basketball and women's boxing have become professional sports. Perhaps you mean amateur vs professional rather than men vs. women.
Fixed this issue by adding a quote that clearly illustrates that point. Also fixed it by addressing some of the citation issues in the section.--LauraHale (talk) 21:15, 14 March 2011 (UTC)
Isn't the latter suggestion covered by Netball#Court_and_dimensions, Netball#Scoring_goals, Netball#Positions? I'm unclear as to why basketball (men's and women's generally don't vary, with most of the difference in the court changing at levels of play, not gendering of play) should be mentioned in these sections, as it would assume people are familiar with basketball. In the Cook Islands, Australia and New Zealand at lest, people would be more familiar with netball court size and dimensions than they would be with basketball. (Would the inverse be true? Should we be editing the basketball article to compare it to netball courts to provide perspective?) --LauraHale (talk) 21:15, 14 March 2011 (UTC)
Agreed. Differences between basketball and netball are adequately covered in the "Description and rules" section. Further comparisons could be covered in a Comparison of basketball and netball article, similar to (for example) Comparison of American football and rugby union. Liveste (talkedits) 04:50, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
That was also done for cricket apparently: An article compares Cricket to American baseball. --LauraHale (talk) 05:31, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
The article is currently confusing to the reader. It starts off saying that it evolved from women's basketball, but it does not say how the game differs. Presumably, the difference is that women's basketball has five players on the court who run from both the offensive to defensive positions, while in netball there are seven players on the court whose travel is limited to restricted to particular thirds of the court. Why can't the article make a statement like that? Racepacket (talk) 12:19, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
Where do you think that should be included in the article? It shouldn't be in the rules section. If you think it should be in the history section, please make the edit. :) --LauraHale (talk) 21:03, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
That is really more up to the nominator. The history section would be fine. Racepacket (talk) 11:15, 16 March 2011 (UTC)
If it is important to the article to mention basketball (not women's basketball. Netball is not a variation of women's basketball. It is a variation of basketball.), you'll need to make the edit. Comparing netball to basketball (as opposed to women's basketball, which is another name for netball) only makes sense if the assumption is that the audience is familiar with basketball. Please make the edit yourself or provide a detailed rational as to why the comparison between basketball and netball need to be made. (And then edit the basketball article to make similar comparisons. The instance to include basketball feels like American bias.) --LauraHale (talk) 00:08, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
Fixed: I removed all references to women's basketball in the history section. I changed it to basketball or netball to make sure there is clarity: Netball is a derivative of BASKETBALL (a sport with rules that are the same for both genders) and netball is also called women's basketball. The use of women's basketball in both ways just made it confusing and may be why we keep having confusion. --LauraHale (talk) 01:17, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
Not exactly. At the time that netball was emerging, women's basketball rules were substantially different from men's rules. I think the confusion in the History section arose because there wasn't a clear explanation that the rules of basketball varied across the United States, and that several versions (most notably the Spalding rules for women) each influenced the development of netball in England. Eliminating women's basketball from the article has actually confused things further. I've tried to explain this on the article talk page, as a justification for restoring the references to women's basketball (or whatever you want to call it) here. And netball has not been called "women's basketball" for around forty years now, so one name can't be considered a synonym for the other. Cheers. Liveste (talkedits) 16:40, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
I understand that tables don't count against readble prose size, but I still recommend moving the tournament result tables to the daughter articles. Racepacket (talk) 05:46, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
Why are you making this recommendation? As one of the issues that appears to be happening in this article is that there is a goal to make the article more American centric in its appeal (basketball and listing commonwealth countries), the tables amply demonstrate that the sport is popular outside of American areas of interest. That seems to be important for people to understand. At the same time, the daughter articles are extremely poor. If they were better, I would understand this argument better. Why are you making this recommendation? --LauraHale (talk) 00:11, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Why the title "Globally"? "Netball around the world" looks more encyclopedic IMO. Personally I'd prefer the country subheadings to be removed, but I'm not too concerned about it for GA purposes. One question though: Netball Australia is considered to be in the Asian netball region, rather than in Oceania (similar to Football Federation Australia) – shouldn't we move the Australian information to Asia? Liveste (talkedits) 04:50, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
As the geographic break up is by IFNA region, I would move Australia to the correct IFNA region. (I'm probably responsible for it being there. I think the article originally just had sections by country. I imposed the regional structure and just made assumptions.) I personally like the country subheadings as I find it easier to find information when scanning the article. If it went, I wouldn't necessarily be object. The major issue would be how to put in the see alsos and mains. --LauraHale (talk) 05:31, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
  • I'm inclined to agree with Bill that a "Domestic competitions" section should be included, either as a stand-alone section or as part of "Major competitions". I can rework current sections so that the information wouldn't (for the most part) be redundant. Liveste (talkedits) 04:50, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
Changing major competitions to International competitions and Domestic competitions, each with their own hierarchy would be cool with me. My only concern would be that it could be a bit biased towards England, New Zealand and Australia. I'd also be concerned that it would duplicate soe of the information in by area section. If you can figure out how to resolve that, please do. :) I'll be happy either way so ong as everything is fully cited. :) --LauraHale (talk) 05:31, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Also think that Olympics should be moved to the bottom of the "Major competitions" section, since it's not a major netball competition (perhaps "Inclusion in the Olympics"?). I also think we should readd World Netball Series to that section, since despite being a fastnet tournament it's still a part of the overall international netball calendar. The same (participating) national netball teams (except Aus and NZ, which send development teams) contest both test netball and fastnet annually, unlike (say) rugby union and rugby sevens. Liveste (talkedits) 04:50, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
Would it make sense to add a section about press coverage (or the lack of it) and sexism in the coverage of sport as that is a major underlying issue with the Olympics? Move the Olympics section to that section. Otherwise, yeah, I'm cool with it being moved to the bottom of the section or whatever solution you think works. I didn't quite understand why the Fastnet tournament was moved to that subsection because the game is still played by the the national team. It doesn't seem much different to me than say 1 day cricket, 40 overs cricket, 20 overs cricket. --LauraHale (talk) 05:31, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
Agree don't understand why Netball world series was moved as I didn't ask for it. Anyway Laura if you want to include stuff about sexism in sport I can help with some decent accdemic quotes KnowIG (talk) 09:02, 15 March 2011 (UTC)
I think that the issue could be addressed as either the relative commercial success and participation levels of netball vs. basketball, because it also has racial aspects. I grew up in a small town in Illinois with virtually no minorities and was taught that basketball was a male game that I was required to play. By the time that I got to college it had generally been labeled a game for African-American males and all of the attention of my peers turned to ice hockey as the big winter sport. Today, my college embraces women's basektball and some of the women team members aspire to make their careers in the sport as players or coaches. So it is more a question of society celebrating athleticism than current prejudice against feminism. Women's basketball is an Olympic sport and it has a large professional and collegiate following in the United States. The article could attempt to explain the evolution to that outcome. Racepacket (talk) 11:15, 16 March 2011 (UTC)
Please stop comparing netball to basketball. This article is not a comparison between netball and basketball. This is an article about netball. It does not make sense to continually reference basketball. Also, please stop referring to women's basketball. Women's basketball is not an Olympic sport. Women's basketball is an Olympic recognised sport that is not played in the Olympics. The article is written in British English and Women's basketball is another name for netball.
In Australian and New Zealand English. Try reading your sentence using that language: "Today, my high school embraces netball and some of the women team members aspire to make their careers in the sport as players or coaches." I do not think your high school embraces netball.
Now that we've covered that, can you please explain exactly what edits you want made? With out references to netball (women's basketball) and the United States? It makes it very, very confusing. I'd love to move this article forward. --LauraHale (talk) 00:17, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
I will rephrase my suggestion: I think that the issue could be addressed as either the relative commercial success and participation levels of netball vs. basketball, because it also has racial aspects. I grew up in a small town in Illinois with virtually no minorities and was taught that basketball was a male game that I was required to play. By the time that I got to college it had generally been labeled a game for African-American males and all of the attention of my peers turned to ice hockey as the big winter sport. Today, my college embraces the sport that the IOC calls "women's basektball" and some of the women team members aspire to make their careers in that sport as players or coaches. So it is more a question of society celebrating athleticism than current prejudice against feminism. The IOC has made the sport it calls "Women's basketball" an Olympic sport, and that sport has a large professional and collegiate following in the United States. The article could attempt to explain the evolution to the outcome where a single sport evolved into two separate sports with one gaining Olympic sport and a robust professional league while the other not achieving the same acceptance by the IOC and the professional sports world.
I've fixed the article so that errant references to "women's basketball" are completely removed. The IOC has a sport called: Basketball. I'm looking at their site. It has Basketball, Men. Basketball, Women. I don't see references on their current site to "women's basketball." In either case, as you've made clear above, the IOC acts in concert with USAOC. This would imply American bias towards language that is inappropriate in an article using British English , with heavy influences from Australian and New Zealand English. As the problematic phrase is no longer included in the article, as the citations have been fixed to refer to the game as "American Basketball", this situation should be fixed.--03:28, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
Why did you delete the portion of the history discussing how special rules were established for women's basketball shortly after the original game was invented? 17:54, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
As for your other issues regarding minorities, I too grew up in small town Illinois. As Illinois is part of the USA, your experiences are culturally biased towards America. They do not match with the experiences of Australia and New Zealand and the Cook Islands, nor of how race is dealt with in England, nor Jamaica, nor South Africa. Nor for that matter, do they match with Vanuatu, Singapore, Malaysia, India, Fiji and Malawi. --03:28, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
If you're really stuck on American Women's Basketball being important to reference in an article like this, I would suggest the situation be resolved by having you create an article that compares the difference to Women's Basketball/Netball and American Basketball/Basketball played by women in the USA. That would be a more appropriate place for this topic. If people cannot understand the sport of Women's Basketball/Netball on its own, as written, then the article has larger issues. Please cite problematic passages that you do not understand. They can be fixed to help fix up any misunderstandings.
If the existence of a women's basketball article referring to American basketball play women is an issue, I will find an admin to help merge the two articles together, because no similar article about men's basketball exists. --03:28, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
Isn't that a bit WP:POINTy? I think that the Taylor article raises some of the items that occured to me about gender roles. Perhaps you should consider using it more in this article. Racepacket (talk) 12:20, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • As I read the article, "women's basketball" was no longer the officially accepted name for netball after 1968. The article should explicitly state what happened in 1968. I don't understand why 40 years later you claim that there is public confusion about "women's basketball," which is the Olympic sport. On August 8, 2008, the New Zealand women's basketball team defeated the Mali team 76-72 in the 2008 Summer Olympics. Are you saying that the New Zealand team was playing by netball rules with 7 players on the court while the Mali team was playing by rules similar to men's basketball with only 5 players on the court because New Zealand players didn't understand what was meant by "women's basketball?" Why did the New Zealand media cover the game as a "women's basketball" game when it reported this Olympic victory? Also, this source also indicates the current meaning of the phrase "women's basketball."
The article does not use the phrase "women's basketball". The article does not mention netball. Your source does not support claim regarding the phrase "women's basketball" being a separate sport from "basketball." FIBA does not represent two separate sports: Basketball and women's basketball. Women's basketball and basketball are not two separate sports. In Australia and in places like New Zealand and elsewhere, the game of netball has historically been referred to as "women's basketball." (See reference to the American basketballers paying the Australian women's basketballers to change their name in 1970 to netball.) In either case, this is a largely irrelevant debate. This is an article about netball. The article is not about basketball. What passages do you think reflecting on are not clear? What passages do you think need to be reworded because you don't understand the difference between basketball and netball? What passages do not stand on their own for understanding the sport? --LauraHale (talk) 04:06, 20 March 2011 (UTC)

If you're going to insist on American basketball being played by women be included in the article, I would like to include a section on comparing the sport to rugby union. (There are women's teams. The sport is played outside, on grass. They both have scoring areas.) I'd also like a section comparing the sport to hockey. (Hockey is popular in commonwealth countries. It too is often played outside on grass. It too has scoring areas. In hockey, women also wear skirts. Hockey also has an issue with confusing Americans, because Americans call it field hockey, whereas the global default in commonwealth countries is to call it hockey and call the American and Canadian game Ice Hockey.) Can you please edit the article to make these references? --LauraHale (talk) 04:12, 20 March 2011 (UTC)

Still unaddressed by nominator
  • "If a player misses and the ball does not touch the rim or any part of the post, the player cannot catch it otherwise it is called replay." - reword sentence to active voice - a referee calls a replay? "Ball" is the antecedent of the pronoun "it". Runon sentence.
Fixed. --LauraHale (talk) 00:32, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • I would change, "In 1992, the country hosted its first national championship.[128]"->"In 1992, the USANA hosted its first national championship.[128]" and define USANA in the prior sentence. Neither the United States government nor its US Olympic Committee sanctioned a national championship.
Fixed. --LauraHale (talk) 00:32, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • "However, while Netball may be the most popular women's sport in an area where it is played, in terms of media coverage and participation rates, money often goes to Olympic sports with low participation rates, low rates of interest and few facilities." - this is POV pushing. Not clear what you mean by "area."
Added a quote to help neutralize the PoV issues. Media coverage often does go there. Tried to make the issue of area clearer. Thought the areas where netball was played were made clear in the rest of the article. (Mostly in commonwealth countries, in oceania, in Africa, in parts of Asia, in the Caribbean.) --LauraHale (talk) 00:48, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Please clarify whether the Netball World Championships are a part of the World Games.
Not sure how to do this. What word implies that? (Is the World Series part of the World Games?) Can you please edit to clarify this or specifically reference the text which suggests that the two are connected. Added reference to the Cook Islands section to show that they competed in both the world games and that championship. --LauraHale (talk) 00:48, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
Still unaddressed by nominator
  • In demographic appeal, the source does not support the part of the sentence which reads, "Netball requires speed, strategy, team work and co-ordination". The logical leap between that phrase and "its appeal is not limited to women" is unsupported. I suggest that you remove the first phrase as unnecessary. Wikipedia does not need to explain why netball appeals to men.
Fixed: Removed the whole first sentence. It was part of the original section that had been carried over and never adequately sourced. --LauraHale (talk) 01:17, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • In the next sentence, "Representative men's teams exist" - but it is not clear to the reader what "representative" means.
Fixed: Changed to say club, national and international instead of representative. --LauraHale (talk) 01:17, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • " At Gay Games VI, " - I suggest you state the year. This paragraph only discusses two occassions rather than the general practice of whether Transgenders and transsexuals are allowed to compete on men's teams or women's teams under IFNA rules. Still unaddressed by nominator
Fixed the section to state that IFNA does not recognise any version of the sport but when played by women. Added year after Gay Games number as games are not referred to by year but by number. --LauraHale (talk) 01:17, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • The Tagg article makes an excellent point regarding the limitations on netball's appeal and the view that traditional "women" sports are inferior to traditional "men" sports. For example, women demanded the right to compete in basketball, but men did not demand the right to compete in netball. (Tagg at 419) This should be discussed in the section "Demographic appeal." Women's basketball has been a part of the Summer Olympics since 1976 while netball received recognition much later. Some people view the two sports as competing for resources and recognition, and the article could explore why women's basketball has gain Olympic status and large financial sponsorship. Is it more exciting for spectators to watch or does it appeal to the gender prejudices of various societies? Racepacket (talk) 12:19, 15 March 2011 (UTC) Still unaddressed by nominator
Can you please refer to it women playing basketball as "basketball played by women" instead of "women's netball". "women's basketball" is another name for netball. The article is not written in American English. It is written in British English and could easily be written in Australian or New Zealand English. Beyond that, the article's topic is not about a sport played in America, with a very tiny American following. It makes your comments appear biased towards America, and suggests a violation of NPOV by pushing an American viewpoint. And men did not demand the right to play netball because the rules clearly prohibited them from playing, and there was cultural bias against it. The article you cite never once uses the phrase women's basketball.
I am also failing to see "Women's basketball has been a part of the Summer Olympics since 1976 while netball received recognition much later." being mentioned in that article by Tagg. The only reference to 1976 mentions apartheid.
Given these issues, can you please reword your request with out a single reference to basketball played by women? I cannot understand what you want added as it pertains to netball and the netball article. --LauraHale (talk) 01:26, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
The Tagg article makes an excellent point regarding the limitations on netball's appeal and the view that traditional "women" sports are inferior to traditional "men" sports. For example, women demanded the right to compete in basketball, but men did not demand the right to compete in netball. (Tagg at 419) This should be discussed in the section "Demographic appeal." The sport labelled by the IOC as "Women's basketball" has been a part of the Summer Olympics since 1976 while netball received only recognition much later. Some people view the two sports as competing for resources and recognition, and the article could explore why what the IOC calls "women's basketball" has gain Olympic status and large financial sponsorship. Is it more exciting for spectators to watch or does it appeal to the gender prejudices of various societies? I hope my question is now clear. Racepacket (talk) 02:34, 20 March 2011 (UTC) Still unaddressed by nominator
The Tagg article does not mention 1976, except in the context of apartheid era netball\rugby. "Women's basketball" is not mentioned in the tagg article. Given the issues with what you said and what I know the source says, I'm unclear as to what you are looking for her. Please explain what you are looking for again, with out any references to sports other than netball. I will be happy to make the changes once I know exactly what it is that you are looking for. In the men's section, I removed problematic, poorly sourced wording on the appeal to men and thought this fixed the problem you were getting at. --LauraHale (talk) 05:18, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
I also found this passage in Taylor at p. 64 to be insightful: "The official exclusion of men from women's basketball was ingrained in AAWBBA's constitution and underpinned its ideological stance. Despite constant pressure to change, the AAWBBA executive held steadfast to a women-only policy for over 50 years. The game's advocates felt that if men were allowed to assume positions of influence they would soon dominate the organisation's decision-making. It was not until the 1970s that men were allowed to hold formal positions within the member associations." Can we generalize from the Austrilia experience to the world concerning the gender issues? Racepacket (talk) 12:56, 20 March 2011 (UTC) Still unaddressed by nominator

GA procedures

User:Bill william compton started this review and requested a second opinion. I replied, and he handed it off to me. Before I could write up the review, User:KnowIG started an excellent review, but also went on to make a number of valuable edits to the article. Given KnowIG's active editing of the article, would it be better if I made the independent assessment of the article against the GA criteria when it came time to close the review? I would appreciate everyone's views. Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 01:41, 20 March 2011 (UTC)

I personally have no preference. I don't know if User:KnowIG is actively reviewing the article at this time. I think you're the only one left. If you're comfortable passing or failing it, I'm more than happy so long as we get some form of resolution regarding its status. --LauraHale (talk) 05:22, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
Fine with me. Hawkeye7 (talk) 05:25, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
Definatly fine with me. I was going to ask you to review. KnowIG (talk) 18:42, 21 March 2011 (UTC)
Then we have agreement, and Bill has expessed agreement as well. Let us go forward and work to finish this. LauraHale, Hawkeye7, KnowIG, Bill and anyone else, please jump in and lend a hand to we can get this to GA. Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 22:16, 21 March 2011 (UTC)

Comments after the March 19 Edits

I have re-read the most recent version of the article, and I agree that we are making progress toward reducing confusion about terminology. However, more work remains:

  • State what happened regarding the name in 1968.
  • In the next paragraph, change "In 1963, the first international tournament was held in Eastbourne, England."->"In 1963, the first international women's netball tournament was held in Eastbourne, England."
    • No need to say "women's" which is a tautology, and the whole article is about netball. Hawkeye7 (talk) 04:35, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
      • I appreciate your concern. However, because the article discusses the development of men's netball and coed netball, the history section should make clear that as of 1963, we are discussing women-only. Alternatively, you could add a prefatory note at the top of the article explaining that unless otherwise stated, "netball" refers to the women-only form . Racepacket (talk) 12:06, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Change " In 1995, netball became an Olympic-recognised sport,[25][26]"->" In 1995, the International Olympic Committee recognized netball as a sport,[25][26]"
Something happened.[1] Could we please say "recognized netball as a sport" which is true and not "recognized netball as an Olympic sport" which is false. Racepacket (talk) 18:03, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Change "Three years later it debuted at the 1998 Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpur.[8]"->"Three years later, women's netball debuted at the 1998 Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpur.[8]"
If you read the article, it is clear that the netball is mostly only played by women. Men's netball is not recognised by IFNA. The Commonwealth game is an IFNA recognised one. Beyond that, the international organisation for men was not created until the 2000s. Why should the article used gendered language? See Wikipedia:Gender-neutral language that says: Uncommon gender-marked terms (conductress, career woman, male nurse, aviatrix), with the possible implication that the participation of the subject's gender is uncommon, unexpected or somehow inappropriate. --LauraHale (talk) 05:02, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
Isn't our common goal to make the article easy to read and to understand? When a sport takes three forms - coed, male and female - the article should help the reader understand what is being said and Wikipedia:Gender-neutral language would dictate against the possible implication that the participation of the subject's gender is uncommon, unexpected or somehow inappropriate. I have no preconceived notion that netball is a women-only sport, and the article must assume a reader who has no idea what the sport is or who plays it. How does the reader know by reading the History section that 1) the IFNA sanctions only the women discipline or 2) that the Commonwealth Games only includes IFNA recognized competition to the exclusion of the men or coed disciplines? Please say it in the history section (without judgment) so that the reader can follow what is said. Racepacket (talk) 12:06, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Change "Other international competitions also emerged ..."->"Other international women's netball competitions also emerged ..."
If you read the article, it is clear that the netball is mostly only played by women. Men's netball is not recognised by IFNA. The other competitions are IFNA recognised ones. Beyond that, the international organisation for men was not created until the 2000s. At the same time, when a competition does involve men (or transgenders or transexuals), it is specifically referenced. Why should the article used gendered language? See Wikipedia:Gender-neutral language that says: Uncommon gender-marked terms (conductress, career woman, male nurse, aviatrix), with the possible implication that the participation of the subject's gender is uncommon, unexpected or somehow inappropriate. --LauraHale (talk) 05:02, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
Thank you for explaining your concern on both changes. Please see my comment above. Racepacket (talk) 12:06, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Court and dimensions - as noted on the talk page, imperial measurements should be used with metric equivalents following in paranethesis.
The consensus was that metric measurements were to be used because metric measurements are in the official rules. Beyond that, the article is in British English. British English does not use imperial measurements. Please provide another rational for switching to American measurements. --LauraHale (talk) 05:02, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
Per WP:MEASUREMENT, even an American English article should use metric. Put the units first that are in the most widespread use in the world except for topics strongly associated with places where imperial measurements are still used, like Burma and Liberia. Hawkeye7 (talk) 05:20, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
The talk page points out that the dimensions were standardized prior to the adoption of the metric system in Britain. How does one explain that it is 100 ft long and 50 ft wide. Would a "metric form of netball" be played on a court 100m long and 50m wide? Should the article (perhaps in the History section) explain how and why these dimensions are used? The IFNA website says the center circle is 3 ft in diameter, not 2 ft 11 inches. What is correct?
Imperial units may have been used initially, but the current version of the rules list measurements in metric units; this appears to have been a straight unit conversion. This page on the IFNA website also shows the court measurements in metric units, including the diameter of the centre circle (0.9 m). Liveste (talkedits) 00:02, 21 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Demographic Appeal section - please see my comments above in the "Other Comments" section of this review.
Comments were made on this section and I think they got lost in a conflict edit with you. In any case, this was addresses in the text by removign problematic phrasing. --LauraHale (talk) 05:23, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
  • I still believe the explanation of the differences with Women's basketball would be helpful to the reader.
You can believe that but until you are willing to compare netball to hockey and rugby union, it isn't going to happen. And until you can give direct quotes from the article where people may confuse the two sports, we can't fix this because I do not know where in the article you are confused about the difference between American basketball played by women and "women's basketball" also called netball. Can you please cite these passages so we can move forward with the process? --LauraHale (talk) 05:02, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
We need to help the average reader. Please make whatever comparisons you feel is most helpful to the reader. The article starts out by explaining the common origin of basketball as it evolved separately into what LauraHale calls "Basketball - women" and "netball." Can we help the reader appreciate what the differences are between those two evolutionary forks? Analogies to field hockey or rugby may be included as well, but I don't think that they have the same degree of common heritage. Racepacket (talk) 12:06, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
I don't think it would be helpful. While many people know netball, few have a knowledge of basketball. Hawkeye7 (talk) 19:23, 20 March 2011 (UTC)

Thank you for your cooperation on this review. Racepacket (talk) 03:55, 20 March 2011 (UTC)

Racepacket (talk) 18:12, 20 March 2011 (UTC)

Worklist as of March 20

Going through the items raised on the talk page and the GA review above, here is a list of what appears to remain unaddressed:

  1. neutrality issues outlined by Bill william compton
  2. statements about where it is popular and why
  3. Liveste correctly notes that the early history of women's basketball, which quickly evolved rules separate from men's basketball was removed from the article and she suggests restoring it to the History section. I support that and would have the history section trace further changes in the rules until the sport evolved to the present netball rules.
    See general talk page. The sources do not support a connection between American women's basketball and English women's basketball. All sources support a connection to the game of basketball that was invented by Naismith. If you have multiple sources that suggest otherwise, please cite them. --LauraHale (talk) 06:26, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
    I've responded to your concerns and provided sources indicating the link between women's basketball and netball. Unless the information can be effectively contradicted, then we should reinclude the references to women's basketball. And I'm male, FWIW ;). Liveste (talkedits) 12:48, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
    I know that a number of souces have been discussed on the talk page. The final version can be different than what was there originally. Liveste, do you want to try putting something (old or new) back into the article? Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 14:26, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
  4. History section can document the variety of rules and the push to standardize them under the IFNA.
  5. The correct full name of COSANA. - probably overtaken by the renaming as "Africa Netball."
  6. Eliminating red links - not really a GA criteria
    Fixed
  7. Add material about netball in schools per John Vanderberg
    Fixed.
  8. Dimensions - I am dropping the request to put metric measurements second, but what year were the field dimensions standardized? Is the center circle 3 ft or 2 ft 11"?
    Which metric measurement did you want? Centimetres and metres convert over differently. Official measurements are in metric. The metric measurement was changed per your request above. This is resulting in the difference, as centimetres and meters have different tolerances for deviation.
    We should quote what the official IFNA rules say. The problem is that the IFNA website says 3 ft, and the Wikipedia article now says 2 ft 11 inches, so there is a WP:V issue to clean up. Racepacket (talk) 14:44, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
    Tricky. I'd go with 3 ft since that's what the rules say, even if it's less accurate. Mind you, "3 feet" is a measurement with one significant figure, so it can be considered approximate (as in "significantly" accurate but imprecise). We could always just add a footnote. Liveste (talkedits) 05:44, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
  9. Professional model for netball? This was raised by KnowIG in his review comments above and the discussion was left unresolved.
    Incomplete sentence.
  10. Explaination of the difference between netball and modern basketball
  11. Clarifying what part of the article refers to men, what refers to women and what refers to coed netball.
    Fixed. Not yet, but please help Racepacket (talk) 15:59, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
    Note: Coed is an American term. It would not be understood by most speakers of British, Australian and New Zealand English. This is another example of American bias in your review... just like your mention of minorities. The term minorities is not used in Australia or Australia. It would not be understood. Beyond that, what minorities? We're talking a game played around the world: Who are the minorities in Jamaica, the Cook Islands, Sri Lanka, New Zealand, Malawi, Singapore? Where there is an issue of different participation rates, it is documented in the section by country.
    Again, everyone is free to use their native language on the talk page without implying that the language won't be translated when copying over to the article space. The reader is currently left puzzled as to what is being discussed women, men or a "mixed gender" game at each stage of the article. I have offered a few suggested edits to clarify this, but I am open to alternatives. Our goal is clear prose. Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 15:30, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
    User:LauraHale is incorrect about WP:MOS which says, "Use gender-neutral language where this can be done with clarity and precision. This does not apply to ... where all referents are of one gender." So, to the extent that some competition is men-only, or women-only, or "mixed" we can include that fact for clarity. Racepacket (talk) 19:18, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
  12. Eliminate any "Olympic sport" claims regarding netball
    Factually inaccurate to do so. It is an Olympic sport. The article uses British English. The usage is accurate in British English and its usage matches with the page about what are Olympic sports on Wikipedia. We've been round and round and round on this one. If you're unhappy with this and cannot accept this wording, then fail the article.
    I want to understand your viewpoint. If we both agree that "Olympic sport" means a sport played in the Olympics and we both agree that netball does not meet that definition, why would anyone want to mislead or confuse the readers? Do you have any references supporting a different meaning in British English? If so, then the Olympic sport Wikipedia article should be amended to warn readers about the potential for misunderstanding. Assuming that there is a 180 degree difference in meaning between American English and British English (which remains to be established) then it is best to avoid the term completely in this article to avoid confusion. Racepacket (talk) 16:11, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
    Hi, Racepacket asked me as another UK Brit to join in and try to resolve this. The claim that "the International Olympic Committee recognized netball as an Olympic sport, does seem to be unclear for readers. Is there any difference between a sport that is already played in the Olympics and one that has been granted the status of Olympic sport that has not yet been played at the Olympics, it seems to me that there is a big difference and that difference could use clarification that although netball has been accepted as having the ability to be a part of the Olympics but to date has not been a part of the Olympic games. I think the internal should also link to the relevant section Olympic sport#Recognized sports and not to the main Olympic sports as the issue is specifically explained in that section and possibly a clarification to the statement as I mentioned above. This similar sport starts a section with the clarification "Efforts begun in 1996 to promote the inclusion of orienteering in the Olympic Games have so far been unsuccessful" and does not refer to the sport as being an "Olympic sport" at all, although it has the same status as Netball - Orienteering#Orienteering and the Olympics - Off2riorob (talk) 16:51, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
    Based on Off2riorob's comments, I would propose, changing: "In 1995, netball became an Olympic-recognised sport,[26][203] making it possible for the sport to be included in future games.[8][204] This came after a twenty year period of lobbying.[203]"->"After 20 years of lobbying,[203] in 1995, the [[International Olympic Committee]] recognized netball as a sport.[26]" I would drop the "making it possible language" because that is speculation not allowed by WP:CRYSTAL. (Please verify both fn. 203 and 26.) Racepacket (talk) 19:08, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
    There is a difference between a sport that is played in the Olympics and one that has been granted the status of a recognised Olympic sport. The distinction is extremely important in Third World countries where being a recognised sport brings in IOC funding. In order to qualify, a sport must have male participants in at least 75 countries on four continents and female participants in at least 40 countries on three continents. It must have national and international bodies and international competitions. It must have an organised drug testing program. This is distinct from a demonstration sport like Australian Football which was played at the 1956 Olympics. I have linked it to Olympic sport#Recognized sports per your suggestion. Deleted "making it possible" which was only there as a clarification. Hawkeye7 (talk) 19:33, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
    The idea that IOC-recognised sports are called "Olympic sports" in British English is news to me. Please provide sources verifying the claim. The IOC website lists the IFNA as a "Recognised Sport Federation" ([2]) and netball as a "recognised sport" ("Olympic Movement Directory: International Federations" drop menu at [3]), with British English spelling. "Olympic-recognised sport" or "IOC-recognised" sport is less confusing than "Olympic sport" regarding netball. Liveste (talkedits) 05:44, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
  13. Demographic appeal - this can use the references regarding gender roles evolving
  14. Number of countries playing netball
  15. Need to assure that there are no close paraphrase problems, particularly in the position descriptions
    I am particularly concerned with the "position descriptions" in the table. These are close paraphrases of other sources. Would it be better to quote the rule book, or another authoritative source directly? Racepacket (talk) 19:08, 22 March 2011 (UTC)

We need to address some details and sourcing issues:

  • "and in 1924 the first national governing body was established." - need source and say which country.
    Fixed.
  • "In Australia, netball competed with women's basketball, with the two sports sharing the name 'women's basketball'."->" In Australia, confusion existed because both netball and basketball were called 'women's basketball'." - Need ref and reword
    Fixed.
  • According to [4] the African regional body is called "Africa Netball."
    Citations mentioning the Southern Africa region do not use that name. Are you 100% certain that these sources are referring to this particular region? Or are could they possibly be referring to a more regional federation? Do you have any citations to support your interpretation? --LauraHale (talk) 06:59, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
    We need to clear up the reference in terms of today's realities. As I understand it, African netball governing bodies have been reorganized and renamed "Africa Netball" or formerly "CANA."[5][6] Are your other Southern Africa references perhaps out-of-date or have I been misinformed? Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 19:41, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
  • fn 84 for the "About IFNA" web page needs to be cleaned up. I suggest the {{cite web}} template.
    Fixed: Some one added (about IFNA) in to cite. This broke link. No year is listed because the about page had no year to date it. --LauraHale (talk) 06:52, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
    My bad. Thanks for fixing it. Liveste (talkedits) 05:44, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
    A larger problem is that fn 84 supports a number of facts that are not present on that webpage. If the fact is on a different webpage, we need to provide a footnote to that separate webpage. Criteria 2(a). Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 19:46, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
  • In the Africa section, add that of the 57 countries in Africa only 12 have national governing bodies that are full IFNA members. [7]
    Added.
  • In the Asia section, add that of the 49 countries in Asia, only 10 have national governing bodies that are full IFNA members. [8]
    Added
  • In the Americas section, add that of the 54 countries in the Americas, only 13 have national governing bodies that are full IFNA members. [9]
    Added
  • In the Europe section, add that of the 64 countries in Europe, only 8 have national governing bodies that are full IFNA members. [10]
    Added
  • In the Oceania section, add that of the 24 countries in Oceania, only 6 have national governing bodies that are full IFNA members. [11]
    Added
  • In the governance section, add that IFNA is a signatory to the World Anti-Doping Code. [12]
    I added the information, but I wasn't sure how to cite another undated IFNA page, so I used a straight {{cite web}} citation for now. How best to cite? Liveste (talkedits) 05:44, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
  • "These countries were heavily involved in creating the rules for netball.[97]"->"These countries were heavily involved in standardizing the rules for netball.[97]"
    Fixed
  • "In England, netball has been popular enough to be included as part of the physical education curriculum.[160]"->"In England, netball has been included as part of the physical education curriculum.[160]" - over what period of time? what percentage of schools play it?
  • "Male participation in netball in Wales has been increasing in the past several years.[162]" Fn 162 does not support statement. Avoid relative temporal statements like "past several years" also what percentage of male students participate?
  • Regarding Cook Islands: "and the team has been an important in the region since then.[174]" - rewrite. Avoid "important in the region" and "since then" It might be true in 2011, but that does not guarantee it will be true in 2020.
  • "As of January 2011, the women's national team was ranked number eleven in the world.[85]" - add "out of 25" because the reference only shows 25 teams.
  • "Samoa and Fiji are traditional netball rivals." - need source
  • " At Gay Games VI held in 2000, a transgendered netball from Samoa competed.[184]" - was it a "netball team"?
    Fixed
  • "are largely self funded.[147]" ->"are largely self-funded.[147] "
    Fixed
  • "Currently, IFNA only recognises women's netball.[147]"->"Currently, IFNA's scope is limited to only women's netball.[147]" - IFNA does not really recognize competitions. It sanctions them. I think that the source is wrong. Can't we find a better secondary source that Turk who is a primary source - an official that competes with IFNA.
  • "The competition is the major international competition for men's national netball teams.[150]" - statement is also true for mixed teams.
    Changed to "It is the major international competition for men's and mixed gendered national netball teams."
  • In the "Transgenders and transsexuals" section, I would start out by explaining that they are ineligble to play under IFNA rules, but that they compete internationally as a part of the Gay Games, which also have division for gay and lesbian players.
  • "Players used netball posts to score, instead of requiring them to shoot at the basket.[189]" - meaning is unclear and I can't access the source.
  • "In 1995, netball became an Olympic-recognised sport,[26][202] making it possible for the sport to be included in future games.[8][203]"->"In 1995, the International Olympic Committee recognized netball as a sport." - leave out any speculation about future games. Fn 8 does not support that. Fn 203 does not address it either with page 143 not mentioning netball at all.
  • "However, while netball may be the most popular women's sport in some parts of the world, in terms of media coverage and participation rates, money often goes to Olympic sports with low participation rates, low rates of interest and few facilities." - sentence is phrased to pre-suppose that netball is an Olympic sport, which it is not. Perhaps insert "instead" to flag that netball is not an Olympic sport.
    Rewrote: "..., money often goes instead to Olympic sports with low participation rates ..." (minus italics).
  • Rewrite: "Some supporters of netball have argued that by trying to internationalise the game and be included in the Olympics has moved netball away from a model of women's sport and more towards a male model of competitive sport. This is viewed by some sport people as potentially detrimental to the game:[205]"
  • In the "Men" subsection, the sentence, "Currently, IFNA only recognises women's netball.[148]" probably should be "recognises only women's netball" or better would be to move that statement to the top of the "Demographic appeal" section to apply to all non-women competitions. The scope of the IFNA should also be covered in the "Governance" section, so that the reader will understand whether IFNA asserts jurisdiction over male or "mixed"/"coed" or transgendered competition. Racepacket (talk) 20:09, 22 March 2011 (UTC)

Let's try to wrap this up. Thanks Racepacket (talk) 02:31, 21 March 2011 (UTC)

Worklist as of March 22 for Racepacket

"Enthusiasm in wanting an article to be the best it can be is admirable, but take care not to impose conditions for passing the article, perhaps based on your own stylistic preferences, that exceed the criteria. In particular, the GA criteria do not require compliance with several major guidelines, including Wikipedia:Notability and the main Wikipedia:Manual of Style page." [13]

I am always open to criticism, and although I have done a number of GA reviews, I am always willing to learn and to improve. However, I also have been told that this is User:LauraHale's first review and that some people react differently to constructive criticisms. Therefore, I will take the time to address her list of concerns in the hope that we can quickly move back to the task at hand — completing the GA review.

  1. Citation style is a nitpick. - criteria 1(b), 2(a) and 2(b)
  2. Metric vs. Imperial, the level of metric measures used are nitpicks. - WP:V
  3. American English usage suggestions fail the article's requirement for the use of British English. - an assumption that is contrary to my many statements that we can use our own language on the talk page or the review page without implying that the spellings would carry over to the article page.
  4. When seven citations are provided to counter your argument, it is not your place to argue that your preference should trump those references. - I don't know to what you are referring. It is possible that seven citations may have been misused or are not the majority opinion, so I would have to see the example.
  5. Sexist requirements are part of your requirements: You're insisting on gendering the page in violation with Wikipedia policy. - criteria 1(a) clarity
  6. Asking for issues to be worked on after they have already been resolved. - we are working in a transparent way to make sure that everyone agrees that they have been resolved.
  7. Imposition of American language usage and American thinking on an article that does not involve that: See Olympics. - Wikipedia article Olympic sport and the vast body of literature does not support your view. "Olympic sport" means sports played in the Olympics not sports recognized by the IOC, but not included in the Olympic Games schedule.
  8. Giving advice on how to fix an article and then about facing on that. Make up your mind. Bill was wrong about the red links. You add red links. Then you change your mind. - discussed below. Could you please provide a diff?
  9. Imposing on editors to insure no plagiarism is taking place. That's the job of the reviewer to verify this. - discussed below
  10. Insisting on putting factually incorrect information on the article. - a misunderstanding of the process. See, criteria 1(a),2(b),2(c),3(a),3(b) and 4.

This review has been going on since March 5. You're not following the guidelines for reviewing a good article. Your primary task is to review Wikipedia:Reviewing good articles and come up with a workable list of suggestions that comply with the guidelines on reviewing a good article. If you cannot review this article, ask for another reviewer or fail the article. --LauraHale (talk) 08:31, 22 March 2011 (UTC)

You are correct on all these issues. Any citation style is fine so long as consistent. Imperial measurements and American English are not to be used. Red links are fine. Hawkeye7 (talk) 09:01, 22 March 2011 (UTC)

As for the length of the review, the original reviewer Bill noted a number of important ways that the article did not met GA criteria. The nominator, LauraHall said that she could not communicate with Bill and after a lot of time back and forth, asked for a substitute. I volunteered, and as I began, KnowIG gave a detailed critique. I have also been trying to give detailed examples to minimize miscommunications. However, just because I point out a few examples of "words to watch," that does not free the people working on this article from addressing all similar problems. This review has become rather lengthy, so I took the time to catalog what appeared to be the open issues. In some cases, like the red links I have added a notation that they are not a GA criteria. diff (Could you please give an example where I "add red links.") I would like us to review the list and see what has been resolved and what has not. Being included on the list means that it is not self-evident that the matter was closed.
As for "Imposing on editors to insure no plagiarism is taking place," as nominator you were supposed to bring the sourcing and verifiability of the article up to GA standards prior to nominating it. In the course of that work, did you see any copying or close paraphrasing that you think that I should examine? You have greater access to some of these off-line references than do I. May I pick some selected pages, ask you to scan and email them to me so that I can spot check the unavailable sources? I will do a copyright review once we have otherwise finalized the article.
Most of the records are available on Google Scholar, and Google Book. Beyond that, no, you may not imply that I am a plagiarist with out cause. If you have serious concerns, then go check Google Book. Go check Google Scholar. Go to your library or bookstore and get the books cited. If you have genuine cause to believe that this article has serious plagiarism problems, which your demands for sources implies, it should be quick failed for copyright vios. Beyond that, you're exceeding the scope of the Good Article Review. Now, please retract the unsubstantiated allegations of plagiarism. --LauraHale (talk) 20:29, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
I am not aware of ever insisting on "putting factually incorrect information on the article." You found Bill's comments were too vague for you to appreciate, so I have tried to give concrete examples. If my proposed language (after transliterating spellings) are not exactly correct, you are free to propose a substitute or to post an edit implementing the guidance in a manner that is accurate. That is different from ignoring the suggestion.
The GA criteria of comprehensive and focused are very subjective. So it is not surprising that it has provoked so much discussion. But, editors working on most articles find a way to resolve this.
There are many people involved in editing the article and at least three people have devoted considerable time in reviewing it. Let's calmly and systematically walk through what remains, resolve any outstanding problems, and then complete the review. Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 15:16, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
  • "May I pick some selected pages, ask you to scan and email them to me so that I can spot check the unavailable sources? I will do a copyright review once we have otherwise finalized the article." No, you may not. That will be regarded as harassment. Hawkeye7 (talk) 19:35, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
I don't think it's a good idea to give anything to racepacket to look for copyrighted vio, considering his history. It was only last month that he was banned indef for copy vios. So I don't think he is the best person to judge copyright here. KnowIG (talk) 19:43, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
For you information, that was a controversy involving the close paraphrasing of public domain materials, which has been resolved, but it underscores the need to be very careful about copyright matters. I still have not heard from User:LauraHale on my proposal, but if necessary, I have access to the Library of Congress reading room and can probably obtain the books there. The important point is that we work together to finalize the language and then get it reviewed. Racepacket (talk) 19:58, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
KnowIG, was checking for copyright/close paraphrasing within the scope of the review work that you did last week? Any concerns noted? Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 20:34, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
A lot of them are on google. Nothing similar to what is written in the books and sources I've seen. can not be a copy vio. Although double check what the source says please Laura. I've corrected 0.6 to 0.7 and added that it was within schools. So i don't know if you've made any other little errors. KnowIG (talk) 20:51, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
I double checked them. This can be verified by Hawkeye7, who was given access to the sources I have been using that are not available on Google Books and Google Scholar. I've checked and rechecked them. Beyond that, if Racepacket wants to accuse me of plagiarism or even ellude to the fact that he thinks I've plagiarised in the article, he needs to cite the text that he alleges that is plagiarised and cite the reference that he belives is plagiarised. That is an incredibly serious accusation to make. Beyond that, if there are accusations of plagiarism and copyright violations where I am found guilty of having done this, it needs to be addressed and appropiate action taken against me for that. In either case, I've verified that I have done this. I consider a demand for me to provide sources an operation of bad faith. The job of the Good ARticle Reviewer is not to engage in this type of nitpicking. What's he doing is more for a featured article. I'd like a retraction from Racepacket regarding any alleged possibility of plagiarism UNLESS HE CAN PROVE IT. --LauraHale (talk) 23:34, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
The article may have citation issues. I can readily acknowledge that. Some of this stems from repeated rewrites done at the request of multiple reviewers, and with multiple editors trying to fix the text to get it passed. The meaning subtlely changes away from the source in some cases. Beyond that, in attempting to fix wording that doesn't make use of the proper use of American antecedent usage, editors with out access to the original text may have inadvertently arrived at the same wording as the original text. --LauraHale (talk) 23:34, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
I've seen what he has flagged up, and TBH it seems rather flimsy as in, you have taken the source and written it in another way. When in the context of the bit you were writing there is really no other way to state this. But it's upto someone else now and I believe they may think the same. No other way of phrasing it. Anyway I'll make an effort tomorrow to clear this GA up. KnowIG (talk) 00:18, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
I've asked one of my supervisors about the issue of that, and yeah, sometimes there are just no other ways to word things. Or you have four sources who almost all use variations of the same wording. If that is the case, then it isn't that much of a problem. How many different ways are there to indicate which parts of the court a player can be in? Yesterday, I went through multiple different sources on the history of netball (and its early history as it connects to basketball) and the sources were all basically pretty much phrasing things the same way with a few words here or there. This isn't a case where we have one or two sources on a particular topic... but where we could concievably cite 100 different sources for the same information and we'd inadvertently copy some one else's text. It's just the nature of the beast with common knowledge and important information like this. --LauraHale (talk) 00:30, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
Could User:LauraHale please provide the diff where you believe that I "accuse [you] of plagiarism"? I only suggested that if I can't get online access to some sources, that I designate a random sample of pages and ask you to provide me with specified pages to spot check. You have not responded to my proposal one way or the other. Close paraphrasing is a wide-spread problem in Wikipedia, and as LauraHale noted above, she believes "That's the job of the reviewer to verify this." User:LauraHale can not have it both ways — on the one hand, she is telling me that checking for any possible plagiarism is "the job of the reviewer" while on the otherhand taking great umbrage when I discuss a workplan for performing that task. In the meantime, this discussion highlights two still unaddressed items: 1) the close paraphrasing in the table describing player positions and 2) adding Google Scholar or Google Books to the footnotes when available. Racepacket (talk) 03:39, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
Since when has Wikipedia requiered notes to google books. Usually you quote the book and boom show over. Pushing it here imo. KnowIG (talk) 08:18, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
If KnowIG has gone to the trouble of locating an online version of a source, it would be a courtesy to the reader to help him find the online material, if it is not available via its ISBN or DOI. Wikipedia:Citing_sources#Convenience_links Racepacket (talk) 16:12, 23 March 2011 (UTC)

Moving forward

What is the process for moving forward from this? Given Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Racepacket 2, it is highly possible that the current person doing the review is going to get blocked on Wikipedia. Are there ways that the Good Article nomination can be retracted, the valid criticism be worked on for a week, and then we can submit it for review again with out having the original nominator or Racepacket involved? --LauraHale (talk) 20:36, 22 March 2011 (UTC)

I honestly don't think that "highly possible" is an apt term. I foresee us wrapping up this review in the next few days, and I won't even turn my attention to that other matter until we are through. I have place the article on hold, and because User:LauraHale complained about Bill's time deadlines, I am being very liberal in not rushing you to complete the noted work. I appreciate you (LauraHale) volunteeering as the original nominator to step away from the process, but at this time I am willing to work with you to complete it because I think we are close to a conclusion. But if the orginal nominator wishes to step aside and there are other editors willing to address the few remaining items, there is no requirement that the nominator make the final edits to the article. Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 20:50, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
I have addressed all of the items that User:LauraHale asked me to address in the "Worklist as of March 22 for Racepacket" that she wrote. Having done that, let us return to clearing the remaining issues in order to bring this GA review to a successful conclusion. I will start the process of checking the sources and will try to get help. Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 03:59, 23 March 2011 (UTC)

Clearing the article for copyright or close paraphrase problems

The following is copy and pasted from Wikipedia:PLAGFORM#What_is_not_plagiarism:

With some text, plagiarism is not a concern because content is not creative. Here are some examples where attribution is generally not required for plagiarism concerns, although you may still need to cite sources because of Wikipedia's policy on verifiability and original research:

  • Use of common expressions and idioms, including those that are common in various sub-cultures such as academic ones.[1]
  • Phrases that are the simplest and most obvious way to present information. Sentences such as "John Smith was born on 2 February 1900" lack sufficient creativity to require attribution. [14]

End quote. There are only so many ways to word an idea such as where a player may stand on the court. Accusations of paraphrasing around that as being plagiarism are covered by "Phrases that are the simplest and most obvious way to present information."

While at it, Wikipedia:Reviewing_good_articles says it is up to you "At a bare minimum, check that the sources used are reliable (for example, blogs are not usually reliable sources), that they support the content of the article, and that the article contains no plagiarism." It isn't up to me to prove that. --LauraHale (talk) 05:04, 23 March 2011 (UTC)

Thank you for asking this important question, which I read as going past quibbling over "paraphrase" vs. "plagiarism". Every Wikipedia article goes through a life cycle from a stub to a poorly sourced article to a Good Article and for some a Featured Article. In order to pass the GA stage, a second person (the reviewer) must test the sourcing and verifiablity of the article. As long as we are testing the article for quality, we also have to check out its copyright status, not only what is on the face of the article, but also any images that it uses. I am most familiar with United States intellectual property law, having taken courses in law school, passing an examination to be admitted to the US Patent Office, and then litigating cases, but I understand that New Zealand law is similar. Wikipedia does not use the copyright infringement standard when assessing its articles, because it is not only worried about its own liability, it wants material that can be completely reusable. So it imposes a much higher standard in WP:C and WP:PARAPHRASE which prohibits the "close paraphrasing" of texts written by others. In US copyright law, one can take a number of facts from different sources, rearrange them, and it will not be an infringement. But Wikipedia wants its users to have the right to break apart those facts, perhaps rearranging them again, and not have any fear that the new combination will accidentally infringe some other works. This is a big problem when writing about sport rules, because putting the rules in your own words can make an article inaccurate. So the article describes the Goal Shooter:

The Goal Shooter's main role is to shoot goals.[38] Players in this position can move within the attacking goal third, including the shooting circle.[34][39] This player is often defended by the opposing team's Goal Keeper. The Goal Shooter works closely with Goal Attack in the shooting circle, and work to position themselves to receive passes from the feeding midcourt players.[38]

comes from:

This player must get past the Goal Keeper of the other team. He or she can move within the "attacking" goal third, including the shooting circle.

I recommended quotation from the rulebook over close paraphrase. Racepacket (talk) 15:23, 23 March 2011 (UTC)

Funny that the outside user who looked at it said that it would be ok. Ignore the last suggestion, more POV pushing from Racepacket. KnowIG (talk) 18:11, 23 March 2011 (UTC)
KnowIG: I have an open mind on the issue, perhaps I missed "the outside user who looked at it." Please enlighten me and I will drop the issue. I just want us to resolve it one way or the other and have been trying to get a third party to give an opinion on it. Racepacket (talk) 18:20, 23 March 2011 (UTC)

Dimensions

The NZ Indoor Netball rules are:

RULE 33 COURT DIMENSIONS

33-1 The court must be no less than 27 metres and no more than 30 metres in length, no less than 10.0 metres and no more than 12 metres in width and the height being no less than 4 metres and no more than 4.5 metres.

33-2 The Centre line divides the court into Attack and Defence halves.

33-3 The goal circle must be at least 3.6 metres in radius or 7.2 metres in diameter.

33-4 The goal hoop must be positioned centrally in the goal circle with the back of the hoop no more than 800mm off the back net.

33-5 The goal hoop must be 3.05 metres high and 380mm in diameter.[15]

Perhaps we should take our accuracy of dimensions from this. Racepacket (talk) 15:23, 23 March 2011 (UTC)

Withdrawing request for good article status

This review has gone one for almost three weeks. There are issues with the reviewer. We're never going to get these issues resolved satisfactorily and in a timely manner. The request for good article status has been withdrawn until we can address some of the outstanding issues in the article. After these have been fixed, we will resubmit. Contrary to the reviewers contention, you cannot force some one to go through the good article process against their will and insisting that they do could be considered harassment. --LauraHale (talk) 20:17, 23 March 2011 (UTC)




Archive 1Archive 2Archive 3Archive 4Archive 5

Bibliography

Apparently, one of the important steps towards getting an article featured is to add a bibliography. I started on that bit. I've never really edited with the serious citation bits so a bit confused on how to improve it more to get to a featured article place. --LauraHale (talk) 02:38, 26 February 2011 (UTC)

Looks as though you're getting the hang of it – let me know if you need specific help. Getting this article up to featured status would be a hard task, not least because there's a woeful lack of detailed information in published, reliable sources. But if you're keen on the idea, I'll certainly help out. Cheers. Liveste (talkedits) 07:36, 28 February 2011 (UTC)
We'll see how keen I am to actually work on this more. :) I've never really edited Wikipedia before to this extent. I wanted to try with this article mostly so that if/when I talk to people about how to edit Wikipedia appropriately, I have some actual experience to fall back on. :) At the moment, my goal is to start adding citations. It is also to clean up the I added citations and didn't know how to make it look neat and tidy in the citations/bibliography sections mess. I've removed one citation so far that I couldn't find. (The only references to it were Wikipedia and it didn't appear in the three databases I looked at.) Any help in continuing to clean up the citations section so the works cited looks all clean, fixing the citations which are basically urls... very much appreciated. :) --LauraHale (talk) 11:27, 28 February 2011 (UTC)
You've done a great job with citations. One useful hint is that if consecutive sentences or even an entire paragraph uses only one source (incl. same ref and page) then you only have to add the citation once at the end of the last sentence/paragraph. The citation you removed was the IFNA Game Plan 2007–2011, which is available on request from the IFNA. It was added by User:Lanma726 to this article, who also sent me a copy a couple of years ago (on my old computer) for the History of netball article. It's the only source I've seen that reports on global playing numbers: plenty of other sites seem to have copied this figure though (many from this article, probably). Liveste (talkedits) 12:26, 2 March 2011 (UTC)
Yeah. Sorry about that citation removal then. :( I just couldn't find any references to it anywhere that I looked (except where people had copied and pasted from Wikipedia.) and was worried that if we tried to get to the point of making this featured, some one might call BS on that source, because it doesn't appear to be verified. If it is relevant, please stick it back in.
The playing totals numbers by country has been a big problem. I keep looking for citations for that and then not being able to find them. (I did see one with the 20 million number ((Maybe the Indian article?)) but forgot at the time and couldn't figure out how to fit the total players into the article.) (How many people play in the Cook Islands? How many people play in India?) I then get a bit derailed. The transgendered section (which could be removed) came about as I was looking for a citation for the total number of players in Jamaica. --LauraHale (talk) 12:50, 2 March 2011 (UTC)

Dimentions originally in imperial measurements?

Since 30.48 m is exactly 100 ft, and 15.24% m is exactly 50 ft, it seems logical that all the measurements in netball are still in feet and inches (which makes sense because of the history of the game). Therefore, I think that all measurements should be initially given in feet/inches with metric conversions in brackets per the guidelines about units of measurement. Any comments? Graham87 01:02, 27 February 2011 (UTC)

Are the standards in metric or imperial in the netball guidelines? The book I was using for a source had the measurements all in metric. That was why I tweaked that bit. I'd opt for metric measurements over imperial ones just because the game appears to be played in places where metric is the default measurement. (Er. And that whole section needs sourcing.) --LauraHale (talk) 02:21, 27 February 2011 (UTC)
My guess is that they were probably originally in imperial units and, when the use of the metric system became more common, they were converted into metric units without any rounding. Graham87 13:46, 27 February 2011 (UTC)
That'd be my guess too, but I'll try to find out for sure. Liveste (talkedits) 07:36, 28 February 2011 (UTC)
According to Netball Australia, the current IFNA official rules list court measurements in metric units. They would have been in imperial units previously, I'd guess. Liveste (talkedits) 02:02, 1 March 2011 (UTC)
I don't suppose you could clean up the measurements part of the article with the proper cites? :) --LauraHale (talk) 02:33, 1 March 2011 (UTC)
Done. I've also removed some older information that was unsourced, as well as some redundant info. Liveste (talkedits) 12:26, 2 March 2011 (UTC)
Awesome. Thanks. :) Any help in cleaning up the how to play sections would also be much appreciated. I don't have a clue how to play and I'm not sure what should be in there. (Should the bibs thing get more attention? It is mentioned in the player section but not really elsewhere. That seems to fall under the equipment, but it isn't mentioned in the info box.) And given that there are no articles about the positions in netball, should there be sections for individual positions, examples of famous players in those positions, theory on how to play that position, or how that position has evolved over time? Should beach netball be included as a variant? (I didn't include dragon netball as a variant as it looks like another attempt at what other countries have done, in creating child friendly versions.) --LauraHale (talk) 12:46, 2 March 2011 (UTC)

History of netball

As the history of netball article appears to be quite good and well cited, is there any good way to copy and paste a summary to help improve the article? --LauraHale (talk) 04:38, 28 February 2011 (UTC)

Hi Laura. The History section of this article was added about a year ago (by me) in response to an earlier discussion on this talk page. I intended it to be a summary of the History of netball article, but without repeating large chunks of text from that article, which I thought might be annoying to readers. Mind you it was a rather hurriedly written summary, so any ideas for improvements would be welcome. Cheers. Liveste (talkedits) 07:36, 28 February 2011 (UTC)
The history of netball article looks not so bad. I just wanted to make sure the citations were there and that, as a summary, it was accurate. I started to add information myself and then realized that I probably shouldn't. :) --LauraHale (talk) 11:27, 28 February 2011 (UTC)

Netball in Oceania

Would love some help with this section. The netball in Australia article isn't as good at the netball in New Zealand article so I'm trying to put more Australian information into this section. The problem is the section lacks cohesion. It feels like a lot of random information that should be in the article. I just can't figure out how to make it into a cohesive narrative. :/ --LauraHale (talk) 09:46, 1 March 2011 (UTC)

Impressive compilation of references. It might be easier to write a few basic paragraphs on worldwide popularity in this article, and move the specific information to individual "Netball by <country>" articles (we only have two at the moment). Association football has a featured article on Wikipedia, so it may be useful for inspiration. Regarding Netball in Australia, both User:Rebecca and I started drafts for expanding the article but never got around to finishing them (mine's here; drop Rebecca a line if you want to use her information). Liveste (talkedits) 12:26, 2 March 2011 (UTC)
I thought about doing that, with taking those sections and moving them to Netball in COUNTRY. I asked some one who went has repeatedly gone through the process of trying to get an article featured. Their advice was to keep them. The netball in New Zealand article is pretty good. I've spent some time on that section, but not as much as other sections. My recall from having looked at Netball in Australia was that it wasn't very good so I kind of started from scratch. The content in the section could probably be copy and pasted to the Netball in Australia article. (Or conversely use the drafts that you've cited in that article or in this article.) I'll probably continue to add some information in there, because it seems really important to have that section big if the article we want to get it up to the next level.
Babbling and sleepy. The Association football articles has the rules much more clear than this one. That article also appears to have been featured in 2006, with the rules having changed a bit more. (I could be wrong.) Category:FA-Class cricket articles probably has better and more recent examples.
Not sold on organization of this article. I just am not really sure how to do it. (I'm also a radical inclusionist.) It might just be nice to have the netball by country, develop additional content around the rules, variations, major competitions and then re-evaluate the status of the netball by country thing. Still, open to idea.s --LauraHale (talk) 12:41, 2 March 2011 (UTC)
I'm amazed at how quickly you're able to find esoteric information – damn impressive. I had a look at other similar sports articles, and found that Wikipedia has only two FAs (association football and baseball) and one GA (field lacrosse) for general sports articles, so unfortunately they're the best yardsticks we've got for overall organisation (although association football looks set for FAR). (If this article ever gets to FA (in time for the World Champs?) it could set some examples of its own for other sports articles.) This article has sort of grown ad-hoc over the years, so I wonder if we should start a new article structure from scratch, and develop the article holistically from there. Thoughts? Liveste (talkedits) 08:52, 3 March 2011 (UTC)
I'm not intentionally looking for esoteric information. I'm looking to either build sections or find existing citations. If I find a citation, I tend to toss everything and the kitchen sink in around it. The association football article is probably going to get delisted as an FA article. It needs about two weeks before that happens. The citations on that article die off about half way through and it has some other major issues. The Australian rules football article is probably better than the association football article in terms of pure content and quality of writing. That Aussie rules article could probably squeak through an FA approval if that alone was done. --LauraHale (talk) 09:21, 3 March 2011 (UTC)
I'm all for trying to reconfigure it. It might not actually need to be done. If I was adding much new structure, I'd probably blow out the section on the player types, and their roles. I'd also add a section based on famous players. I went to Borders recently, looked at the books they have on the shelves. Most of those books had lots and lots of information on the players. Given that the books run that way, it seems like a section worth developing. Have small biographies for say the top 10 players, totally subjective who we think are great. --LauraHale (talk) 09:21, 3 March 2011 (UTC)
The by country sections can probably be taken apart or moved to stub pages unless we say have two good paragraphs for them. That should limit things and still provide enough information for a good article. Maybe change the heading for that and just remove popularity. In the front of each region, talk more about IFNA in that region. And the competitions need more information. (Citing them is a pain in the ass.) --LauraHale (talk) 09:21, 3 March 2011 (UTC)

Competitions

I've integrated the major national competitions into the sections about that country. (Or region, as is the case with the ANZ Championship.) I've also moved information on the youth tournament out, trying to integrate that information back into the specific regions. The one series named after a New Zealand company? I couldn't find a source for it to keep it in.

The Commonwealth Games section could probably use an improvement. It would be great to see a picture put in it. The problem I worry about is making that section a lot better than the actual article about netball at the commonwealth games. (I've just edited that page to add citations. Which. Annoying, it lacked.)

Any other thoughts regarding how to organize this section? --LauraHale (talk) 12:30, 2 March 2011 (UTC)

The Nations Cup

Is this competition very important to the netball community as a major international event? Does it warrant its own section? If yes, I'll work on improving it and the citations. I just haven't found a handy little table like the one for the two other tournies to make writing about it easier. I'll keep looking for sources. --LauraHale (talk) 01:57, 3 March 2011 (UTC)

It's an example of a second-tier international tournament, played largely by second- and third-tier national teams. We should only exclude it if we want to limit mentions of international competitions to the World Champs, Comm Games and World Series (and probably World Youth Champs); if not, then it's the highest of the second-tier tournaments (in addition to being the only other intercontinental one) and should probably remain. Cheers. Liveste (talkedits) 08:52, 3 March 2011 (UTC)
I eventually tossed it into its own section because it was eating the top of the Asian section and there was no additional information about Asia as a whole there. If we can figure out how to write an introduction for Asia that mentions the Asian competition and the Nations Cup competition, then we can it back out of its own section? --LauraHale (talk) 09:23, 3 March 2011 (UTC)

citation errors

Major oops on my part. :( When there are multiple authors, I didn't realize that I needed to list them all in that harvb template. That has caused some of the links to have a major case of fail. Meep. :( Lots of annoying things to fix. --LauraHale (talk) 10:33, 3 March 2011 (UTC)

All fixed! --LauraHale (talk) 04:21, 4 March 2011 (UTC)

Weee. :D There are no uncited sentences. On to the next task. --LauraHale (talk) 05:33, 4 March 2011 (UTC)

Netball by country

My thinking at the moment is unless there are four sentences and / or a list of events the country has hosted and the country's performance in major competition, that the information be moved to a stub page for the country. Not quite ready to do that but getting closer to that stage where it might need to be moved or removed. --LauraHale (talk) 04:21, 4 March 2011 (UTC)

Demographic appeal women

Is that section needed? Most of the article specifically deals with women. The history section deals specifically with a lot of these issues. It is dealt with in many of the country sections. The mens and transsexual/transgendered sections are there mostly because these groups are under represented in the netball community. --LauraHale (talk) 05:54, 4 March 2011 (UTC)

Other known problems

There are brackets that need to be removed around years and other dates. --LauraHale (talk) 01:39, 5 March 2011 (UTC)

Repitition

There is a problem with repetition in the article. I need help in getting rid of that. It comes from trying to use the same source information in multiple sections. --01:42, 5 March 2011 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by LauraHale (talkcontribs)

How many countries play netball?

United States of America Netball Association (USANA), Inc. says people in over 70 countries. Van Bottenburg says 40 countries. Is there a way to resolve this? --LauraHale (talk) 02:25, 3 March 2011 (UTC)

Who knows ... there isn't much information out there. Van Bottenburg's figure comes from a 1998 analysis of Olympic and IOC-recognised sports. The IFNA's figure is (presumably) their own but it's from around 2007 (it's still quoted on their website [16], and could be used to replace the removed Game Plan 2007–2011 citation). On the one hand, Van Bottenburg's figure is more than 12 years old; but on the other, the IFNA isn't a third-party source. Of interest, the 1998 data listed 91 "rugby"-playing countries, while the IOC site today mentions 117 affiliates [17]. Based on this, an estimate of 60 or 70-odd current netball-playing nations isn't unreasonable, so ultimately I'd recommend the IFNA figure. Liveste (talkedits) 08:52, 3 March 2011 (UTC)
Ug. Confusing mess. :( I'll leave you to resolve that one and the sourcing as I really don't know enough about it to make a good judgment call. --LauraHale (talk) 09:26, 3 March 2011 (UTC)
Adopted IFNA figure of 70+ countries. Wasn't sure about how best to cite the page, since it isn't dated. Liveste (talkedits) 00:01, 8 March 2011 (UTC)
Thanks for handling that and doing the assessment for other articles in the category. :) (And if you're feeling courageous, would be awesome if you could do the good article review for Netball in the Cook Islands. --LauraHale (talk) 03:47, 8 March 2011 (UTC)

South Africa and apartheid

I've put the apartheid era information in for South Africa and Jamaica. It could possibly also go in the England section and the New Zealand section but that seems like over kill. It could probably use some condensing. Another strategy may be to integrate apartheid era issues into the overall history section or to put it into another section. Any help addressing this would be appreciated as apartheid had a big impact on the sport. --LauraHale (talk) 02:45, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Australia

Added another more modern picture and more information about Australia. Section still needs work, highlighting netball in school more. The section could also use an improvement in terms of the national team coverage and more recent history. There may be some trivia found in the section that could be removed. --LauraHale (talk) 03:21, 13 March 2011 (UTC)

Sources once used but not any more

I wanted to post a list of sources that were once list in the article but are no longer referenced. This is in case additional citations are needed or there are later citation issues. I'm working towards removing them from the article shortly.


--LauraHale (talk) 02:37, 14 March 2011 (UTC)

Confederation of Southern Africa(n) Netball Association(s)?

There are four variations on the name of the COSANA: the Confederation of Southern Africa Netball Association, the Confederation of Southern Africa Netball Associations, the Confederation of Southern African Netball Association or the Confederation of Southern African Netball Associations. The last one is the only gramatically correct title, as there is no confederation of southern africa, and the association does not exist to confederate South African netball ... it's a *confederation* of the various national netball associations of Southern Africa. All four variants of the title appear on the Internet in relatively reliable sources: see respectively this Times of Zambia article, this IFNA calendar (PDF), this media release from the Government of Lesotho, and this Nyasa Times article. However in Google Books, the grammatically correct title is the only one to get more than one result ... which isn't saying an awful lot! I'm leaning towards changing the COSANA's name to its grammatically correct version in all Wikipedia articles, but the IFNA does use a variant of it in its events calendar. What do you all think? Is there a better way to determine the *correct* name of the confederation? Graham87 08:21, 20 March 2011 (UTC)

Had not realized there was no consistent spelling for that name. I'm not sure how to fix that. Maybe use Confederation of Southern African Netball Assoications (COSANA) and then refer to the organization as COSANA in the rest of the article? --LauraHale (talk) 08:47, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
I think that's the best way forward; it seems that it's normally referred to as "CASANA" anyway. Interestingly, there's no such problem with a Google search for the Confederation of Southern African Football Associations or its variants ... I'd put that down to lazy journalism and the fact that netball generally has a lower profile than football/soccer. Graham87 09:32, 20 March 2011 (UTC)

Women's basketball

References to women's basketball were earlier removed from this article, which has resulted in a somewhat misleading account of netball's early history. Women's basketball played a key role in the early development of netball, which I'll try to summarise below:

During the 1890s and early 20th century there were clear differences in the way basketball was played by men and women; there were also variations in each of these two forms. Women's basketball rules had a clear influence on the rules of netball, which were not derived from Naismith's original game alone, or even directly (I'd love to see Peter McIntosh's exact wording on the issue; I can't access it online). The AENA mentions women's rules being introduced in 1897; "basketball" was being played before this time, although which version isn't specified (you could present arguments for either men's or women's). Jobling and Barham (see History of netball) specifically mention the Spalding rules for women being incorporated into the codified rules of netball. In addition, both netball and women's basketball were similarly designed to accommodate contemporary notions on the participation of women in sport (of the usual "unladylike" and "too strenuous" sort).

Removing references in this article to women's basketball, despite current issues on its status, glosses over a significant factor in netball's early development. I intend to restore the references, while making it clear that there were variations in the rules of basketball in the United States, several of which influenced the development of netball in England. Comments welcome. Cheers. Liveste (talkedits) 16:29, 20 March 2011 (UTC)

McIntosh says: "Madam Osterberg had heself introduced the American game of Basketball to her Hampstead College and to this country. Her students developed Netball from it. It was found to be suited to the grounds of a country house and flourished in the new setting." That is on page 292. On page 293, it says "C. Lawrence and M. Hankison, E.R. Clarke and E. Adair Impey, for example, were key figures in establishing of national governing bodies for women in Hockey, Lacrosse an Netball respectively, and in general the Osterberg Girls were to play collectively, a role in women's sports not unlike that of the A.P.T.C., through the years, in the corresponding areas for men." That's page 293. The reference refers to the game as American. To a degree, this is also supported by the All England Netball Association Golden Jubilee book: "1895: Visit of Dr. Toles, an American, to Madame Osterberg's P.T. College (then at Hampstead). Students were taught Basket Ball -- indoors -- no printed rules -- no lines, ircles or boundaries. The goals were two waste paper baskets hung on walls at each end of the hall." Also on page 13: "1897: Game played out of doors on grass. An American lady paid a visit to the College (moved to Dartford), and taught the game as then played by women in American. The students at Dartford introduced rings instead of baskets, the larger ball and the division of the ground into three courts." These two quotes from the All England Netball Association demonstrate the game that they learned was Basket Ball, or basketball. There is no clear indication that American women were playing a distinct form of Basketball, that had separate and unique rules that were different than the game being played by men. Hence, the use of Women's Basketball as a distinct sport unique from Basketball is inappropriate and causes confusion. Women's Basketball is also used as the official name of the sport in New Zealand and Australia until 1970. Using the term Women's Basketball, with out some mention that the term "women's basketball" is another name for netball, adds unwanted confusion and can be clarified by doing away with women as an adjective, especially as the idea that women's basketball that netball came from is not supported in earlier references. --LauraHale (talk) 20:04, 20 March 2011 (UTC)

Thanks for providing McIntosh's wording; it's much the same as the AENA information. Regarding basketball history, the fact that women were using different rules for basketball than men were during the 1890s is very clear, and well supported by references. I'm surprised you hadn't come across the women's rules of the game during your research. The references in the History of netball article ("Origins from basketball" section) give a good insight into the unique rules of women's basketball, particularly Shattering the glass: the remarkable history of women's basketball by Grundy and Shackleford, and Senda Berenson: the unlikely founder of women's basketball by Ralph Melnick.Liveste (talkedits) 23:12, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
The sources that I've read have not suggested that basketball played by women in the United States during the 1890s was a unique sport. The books I've been reading have all basically said that the game played by men and by women were both basketball. Added to that, the one source I cited either above or below appears to indicate that the game which the first attempts at playing netball was derived from was a game being played by men. If you strongly believe and feel you have the sources to support the roots of netball are a unique game that is not "basketball" and is instead a unique game called "women's basketball," then any references in the article should probably be prefaced with American to avoid confusion with Women's Basketball, IE Netball. --LauraHale (talk)
No-one is saying that women's basketball is, or ever was, a separate sport. I'd consider it a gender-specific version. But however you frame it, there were clearly different versions of the rules played by men and women during the 1890s. Grundy and Shackelford (pp 26–7) wrote about Senda Berenson introducing basketball to her students: "Berenson responded by creating a set of women's rules. She divided the court into three equal sections and assigned each player to one. Forwards played under a team's home basket, centers roamed the middle section and guards patrolled the opposing team's goal. Teams could have anywhere from five to ten players, but no-one could venture outside her assigned section. As dribbling developed, it sped up the men's game, but Berenson forbade her players to dribble more than three times per possession. She banned physical contact of any kind. Such rules, she explained, allowed women to develop qualities such as 'alertness, accuracy, coolness and presence of mind under trying circumstances,' while minimizing rough play."
If no one is contending that women's basketball is a separate sport, which is the impression that I am under from Racepacket's insistence on gendering basketball and insisting that American women's basketball is the historical root of English women's basketball/netball, I'm not sure what the issue is. The origins from basketball do not need to be gendered as it would be inappripiate. Beyond that, Berenson and her rules are not cited in a single netball source that I've seen as inspiring the Ling Association rules. The Ling Association rules are always cited as being inspired by Naismith's sport of basketball. In addition to that, what you describe for Berenson appears to match with the early rules of basketball developed by Naismith in the period between 1891 and 1895: Flexibility for the number of players per side, no contact between players, no dribbling, players confined to certain parts of the court, no physical contact. --LauraHale (talk) 23:44, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
As I can find no sources that link Berenson's rules with the origins of netball, it may be a better fit to have this information on an article comparing and contrasting netball to basketball, or on the history of netball article. If Berenson is going to be mentioned as a source for netball, then she should be cited by netball texts as inspiring the game... and she's just not. The sources I've cited have all gone back to Naismith. --LauraHale (talk) 23:44, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
To reiterate, my contention is that women's basketball (a retronym, but a very well used one) is a distinct version. I say distinct because, despite the similarities, there were significant differences (court divided into thirds, restricted movement specifically for women's play). The reason why I recommend specifying "women's basketball" here is that it played a distinct role in the development of netball. The link between Naismith's game and netball isn't disputed, and that's why his original game is (and will be) mentioned in the History section. However, none of the sources linking Naismith's game preclude the influence of another version of basketball. On the other hand, the AENA and Jobling & Barham specifically link women's basketball and the development of netball rules in England. Jobling & Barham mentions the influence of the Spalding basketball rules for women on the Ling Association's netball rules in 1899. This is the link between Berenson and netball: the Spalding rules were edited by Berenson with many rules from her game (and from Baer's, but to a lesser degree). Hence the need to mention her in this article, although to a much lesser degree. Liveste (talkedits) 23:11, 24 March 2011 (UTC)
I understand your concerns. If we're trying to reach some form of consensus, after having read what you've said, I can understand your rationale better now. So long as the in article discussion are limited in scope and not over stated, I don't oppose a rewrite in that section with what you've described. --LauraHale (talk) 23:22, 24 March 2011 (UTC)
The sport may have been called basketball (for women), but it was clearly a different form of the game. "Women's basketball" as a name is retrospective, but this is what it's called by many sources, which is why we use it here. "American basketball" is a fringe term at best and should not be used – is there such a thing as "British basketball"? Confusion in the History section can be rectified by elaborating on the variations of basketball that existed in the 1890s, and that netball emerged as one of them; I would add the particular influence of women's basketball, with that name. Further points are presented below. Liveste (talkedits) 12:41, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
The version developed by Clara Gregory Baer in 1895 is another key example. What led you to believe that the men's and women's rules of basketball at the time were similar? Liveste (talkedits) 23:12, 20 March 2011 (UTC)
The sources I've read never made the connection to Baer. The All England Netball Association text does not reference her. It might be highly possible that what happened was that netball and American women's basketball are two unique games that developed rather independently of each other. (See the lack of Baer references in all the texts I've cited in the history of netball prior to 1895.) American's women basketball eventually synced back with and became basketball at a later date. Netball continued on its separate trajectory. (Though there were attempts to merge it with korfball and korbball during the 1940s and 1950s.) --LauraHale (talk) 03:01, 21 March 2011 (UTC)
That's one of the reasons why Baer isn't mentioned here. I brought it up as another prominent example of women's basketball rules being different from those of the men's game. The IFNA and a few other sources mention her, although the link isn't clear. I think years ago I read an article saying that Miss Porter in 1897 introduced rules from Baer's game. Not sure though, which is why it isn't mentioned in the main Netball article. Liveste (talkedits) 12:41, 22 March 2011 (UTC)


On a different note, I'm not suggesting that women's basketball is, or even was, a distinct sport. But the unique women's rules of the time were what shaped netball into the sport it is today, and so it deserves a mention here. References to "basketball" in the literature is more a reflection that the rules varied across the United States during the 1890s – or else writers need to be more specific with their wording. Netball itself started as just another variation of basketball, based on the rules used by women, but gradually developed into a separate sport. Regarding "unwanted confusion", women's basketball is not another name for netball: it used to be another name, but not any longer. Hope this helps. Liveste (talkedits) 23:12, 20 March 2011 (UTC)


Just dumping inhere for more source support...

Netball traces its roots to basketball. Humberstone says on page 11: "Before we turn to the sport as we know it today, it is worth looking at its originas. It is an offshoot of basketball, the game founded by Dr James Naismith at Springfield College, Massachusetts. Two Englishwomen watched a game at the YMCA in Springfield and immediately saw the possibilities for their own sec. They returned home and developed a set of rules more suitable for the less robust female competitior who, in those days, was regarded as a rather frail and timid person." This source explicitly says that netball was derived from watching a men's game.

This one's tricky. The account described above is one of two theories on the origins of netball. The theory used in Wikipedia's article describes how basketball was introduced to England by Madame Österberg, and modified over several years. Most sources advocate this theory. Humberstone (p. 11) refers to a second theory, which has only been presented in a few sources, including Smith and Humberstone (1978), and later by Taylor (1991). It describes how "two Englishwomen" (who they were is anyone's guess) brought the game to England after seeing the game played in the United States. However they don't elaborate much on this, so it's difficult to provide a comprehensive history based on it (for all we know one of them could have been Madame Österberg). We could add a mention of it to the History of netball article, but I wouldn't mention it here, since the historical information on this article is apparently complicated enough. More importantly, the "two Englishwomen" theory is published in fewer sources and is less comprehensive than the account of Madame Österberg developing the game at her college. Liveste (talkedits) 12:41, 22 March 2011 (UTC)

Buchanan and Slottje talk about the early history of basketball. On page 3, they say "In the beginning, basketball was actually played within the confines of a steel cage. Furthermore the ball was never out of bounds. Players would simply bounce off the sides of the cage." Later in that same paragraph they say: "In fact the game originally had a nine man format but in 1897 was set at five." The nine-a-side reference supports the idea that women and men played a similar game at the time with similar rules.

Not really. All it suggests is that the both nine-a-side and five-a-side versions of basketball existed. This is true of Berenson's rules for women's basketball as well: Melnick (p. 3) indicates that Berenson's game used nine players per team. It also describes some of Berenson's other rules – including the division of the court into thirds, and assigned "forward", "center" and "guard" roles for players who couldn't leave their assigned zone (David Porter, in Basketball: a biographical dictionary p. 1, also mentions that players could not "[hold] the ball for more than three seconds") – which have clear parallels to rules found in netball. Another point is that both women's basketball (including Berenson's and Baer's rules) and netball had rules designed to accommodate the particpation of women in sport. This is a vital part of the early development of netball, and should not be excluded from our article. Liveste (talkedits) 12:41, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
I'm not quite sure how to resolve this. From my perspective, this seems like it goes beyond a short summary of the history of netball that is necessary for the article and may be more appropiate for the history of netball article, or an article comparing and contrasting the history of netball and American women's basketball. (I'm calling it that to avoid confusion with women's basketball, as the sport was called in Australia and New Zealand until 1970.) It may also be important on a general article on the history of women's sport. Paralells in the development of both's sports history are interesting, but not necessarily relevant. Beyond that, Berenson is not cited in netball sources and the article is fundamentally about netball, not basketball. That's my rational for exclusion. If we had netball sources citing Berenson's role in the development of early American women's basketball, I think there would be a place for this in this particular article. For me, this just adds confusion, especially since the two sports share the same name. --LauraHale (talk) 23:59, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
Yeah, I wouldn't recommend going in-depth in discussing Berenson's rules here; that's more for the History of netball article. But the distinct rules mentioned here and their influence on netball mentioned elsewhere justify the references to women's basketball in this article IMO. I've added my proposed wording for the first two paragraphs of the History section to the bottom of this discussion. Tell me what you think. Liveste (talkedits) 23:11, 24 March 2011 (UTC)

Colbeck also point to similarities between what would become netball in the early rules of basketball. On page 12: "It was once the practice for the game to be restarted at the centre after each goal; now the ball is put into play immediately by the defending team." On page 15, Colbeck says that "The game bust be played indoors or out, thus tackling must be forbidden, and to offset this, running with the ball must also be eliminated." Early basketball had no dribbling, a characteristic found in netball today. The original rules for the game are found on page 16. The rules do not exclude either gender from participating. This was different from netball, which at the onset did not permit men to compete.

There were similarities and differences between early basketball and netball rules. The early basketball rules do not specifically include women playing, in stark contrast to netball, which as you pointed out excluded men's participation from the start. I've previously mentioned similarities between early women's basketball and early netball rules. One point where men's and women's basketball rules diverged is with the issue of dribbling: while it became entrenched in the men's game by 1896, it was restricted in the Berenson's game and excluded altogether from Baer's version of women's basketball (Grundy and Shackelford, pp 26–28). Liveste (talkedits) 12:41, 22 March 2011 (UTC)

According to Hollander on page 5, "Naismith envisioned the new sport as a mass game, in which any number of players could participate." This suggests that Naismith did not envision the game as being played exclusively by males. The players were playing basketball. On page 6, it says : "Girls got involved in basketball almost at the game's beginning. In March, 1892, a match pitted a team of local Springfield girls against a squad of women teachers. Naismith apparently liked what he saw at the game because he married one of the players, Maude Sherman. Vassar and Smith, both women's colleges, added basketball to their activities in 1892." There is no suggestion that basketball at this time had become two separate sports in the United States. There is no suggestion that women played using modified rules. (In fact, it appears that there were collegiate basketball teams for women before there were collegiate basketball teams for men. On page 7, the first men's collegiate team was created in March 1893 at the University of Chicago.) While on page 225, Hollander says: "Women have been playing basketball since 1892, a year after the game's invention. But the game they played differed greatly from the men's. Early rules called for nine women to a side, each confined to an area, with the ball passed from area to area before a shot." This passage does not indicate when separate rules were created for women. (This is important. We know that netball was being played in England in 1895. With out a date as to when separate rules were created, we do not know what game the women watched. Netball sources do not indicate which gender that 1895 game drew inspiration from. Smith and Humberstone indicate the game they may have adapted to create netball was a men's game.) At the same time, while women are separated, there is no indication that basketball played by women was viewed by players as a separate and distinct game in the United States basketball community: The texts indicate the game shared the same name and were viewed as two versions of the same sport.

  • Buchanan, Michael J; Slottjie, Daniel J (1996). Pay and Performance in the NBA. Jai Press Ltd. ISBN 0762301848. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)


  • Colback, A.L. (1961). Modern basketball, a fundamental analysis of skills and tactics. Nicholas Kaye. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)


  • Hollander, Zander (1979). The modern encyclopedia of basketball. Doubleday & Company. ISBN 0385143818. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)

--LauraHale (talk) 00:00, 21 March 2011 (UTC)

The quote on page 5 merely suggests that "any number of players" could play the game. No comment is made regarding gender, and none should be inferred from it. While the paragraph on page 6 of the book sheds no light on the women's rules for basketball, other sources that I've presented here illustrate them clearly. Regarding page 225, at least you're now aware that separate rules existed for men and women playing basketball. Your subsequent concern about what year the different rules were drafted is certainly valid – and easily answered. According to Melnick (pp 2–3), women's basketball was first played in 1892, and over a period of a few weeks from the day after its introduction the rules were modified. By 1893, the first official game was played at the college.
From the AENA information you gave me:
  • 1895: Visit of Dr. Toles, an American, to Madame Osterberg's P.T. College (then at Hampstead). Students were taught Basket Ball - indoors - no printed rules - no lines, circles or boundaries. The goals were two waste paper baskets hung up on walls at each end of the hall.
  • 1897: Game played out of doors on grass. An American lady paid a visit to the College (moved to Dartford), and taught the game as then played by women in America. The students at Dartford introduced rings instead of baskets, the larger ball and the division of the ground into three courts.
We don't know which gender version of the game was introduced in 1895, but we sure do know which version was brought over in 1897. Thus, while the influence of the male version of basketball has yet to be firmly established, the influence of women's basketball is clear-cut, particularly with the Spalding rules introduced in 1899 (see next response). References to women's basketball should therefore not be excluded from the article. I've addressed Smith and Humberstone's information with the explanation of the "two Englishwomen" theory, and I've already stated my view supporting two versions of the same sport. Liveste (talkedits) 12:41, 22 March 2011 (UTC)


More supporting sources for the idea that netball was derived from the American sport of basketball, not from the American sport of women's basketball:

In 1996, Levinson and Christenson also fail to reference American women playing basketball under their own set of unique rules that differ from men as a the source of the game of netball in England. Their wording on page 683 says: "Netball was introduced from England in 1895 as the indoor game of basketball. The person responsible for this was an American educator called Dr. Toll, who was a visiting college of physical training in north London. Dr. Toll taught the female students how to play basketball, but she did not distribute a book of rules and the playing area was of an indeterminate size. The goals were wastepaper baskets hung on the wall at each end of the hall. This very much mirrored Dr. James Naismith (1861-1939), who invented basketball in 1891 and who used peach baskets as his original scoring targets." Levinson and Christenson trace the origins of netball to Naismith, not a later female America game that used its own unique rules. Later on page 683, the text says that in 1899, "a Ling Committee subcomittee drafted a set of rules that established a transatlantic compromise. Goals were to be replaced by points, and a shooting circle was introduced -- these elements were part of the American game. However, the size of the ball (68 centimeters [27 inches] in circumference), was similar to the size of an English football and 4 inches less in circumference than the American "basketball."" When they talk of a compromise between the two set of rules for the sport, the source refers to the American game as basketball, not women's basketball or not American women's basketball. This I believe supports my claim: The sport of netball traces its roots to basketball. If there was a unique women's American sport called women's basketball, it seems like it would be cited as the place where compromise was made.

Page 683 merely notes the similarities of the peach baskets of Dr Naismith's original game and the wastepaper baskets of Dr Toll's version. It does not make a direct link between Naismith's game and Dr Toll's game that specifically negates the influence of another version. As for the compromise you mention, it merely refers to "basketball". It doesn't specify which version was influential. The fact that these authors fail to mention "women's basketball" precludes neither its existence nor its influence on netball. Jobling and Barham (1991) is more specific: it mentions that in 1897 and 1899, rules from women's basketball were incorporated into the game. The following sentence (p. 30 of the article; p. 2 of the PDF) is critical: "The game was also played outdoors on grass and by 1899 the USA Spalding rules for women had been adopted." Out of interest, these Spalding rules were edited by Senda Berenson, codified in 1899 and published in 1901. Liveste (talkedits) 12:41, 22 March 2011 (UTC)

In 2005, Levinson and Christenson again trace the roots of netball to Naismith's game on page 1066: "The goals were wastepaper baskets hung on the wall at each end of a hall -- an arrangement the mirrored that of Canadian born Dr. James Naismith (1861-1939), who invented basketball in Massachusetts in 1891 and used peach baskets as his goals." Both the 1996 and 2005 texts by Levinson and Christenson agree that the game invented in England and derived from American basketball was called "women's basketball" in England until they made the switch to netball in 1899, when metal rings with nets hung below them replaced baskets. (Page 1067 for 2005, Page 683 for the 1996.)

The comparison of the baskets I've dealt with above. The contemporary name of "women's basketball" in England does not make that name an exclusive synonym for netball. The term also retrospectively describes the early version of basketball played by women in the United States, and later worldwide. And considering that "women's basketball" and "netball" are both played in some countries, prescribing one name solely as a synonym for the other would lead to even greater confusion. Liveste (talkedits) 12:41, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
  • Levinson, David; Christenson, Karen (1996). Encyclopaedia of world sport: from modern times to the present. ABC-CLIO, Inc. ISBN 0874368197. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Levinson, David; Christenson, Karen (2005). Berkshire encyclopedia of world sport. Berkshire Publishing Group LLC. ISBN 0974309117. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)

--LauraHale (talk) 04:05, 21 March 2011 (UTC)

Thanks for your prompt and well-reasoned response, Laura. I apologise for taking more than a day to reply, and I've attempted to address the many points you've raised. Overall, hopefully I've demonstrated to you that not only were there separate basketball rules for men and women, but that the women's version played a crucial role in the development of netball. From this, I reiterate my position that references to women's basketball, using that name, should be restored. Furthermore, now that I have a clearer understanding of the confusion regarding the History section, I propose adding a couple of sentences elaborating on the variations of basketball that existed in the 1890s, explaining that netball emerged as one of them to become a separate sport. The particular influence of women's basketball, with that name, clearly deserves a mention as well. Cheers again. Liveste (talkedits) 12:41, 22 March 2011 (UTC)


Is there a particular reason why this discussion is being conducted outside the scope of the current review? Could we please develop a comprehensive and balanced history? Racepacket (talk) 04:21, 22 March 2011 (UTC)

I decided to start the discussion here, rather than the GA1 page. Had I added the discussion there, by itself it would have greatly swelled the review page and drowned out other points. The inclusion or exclusion of references to women's basketball I believe is the only point of contention regarding the History section. Once it's resolved, a comprehensive summary can be either confirmed or finalised. Cheers. Liveste (talkedits) 12:41, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
I understand. Please jump in and work on the problem. Just because a GA review is underway does not make the nominator the exclusive editor of the article. Thanks, Racepacket (talk) 20:29, 22 March 2011 (UTC)

Proposed wording

Dealing with this seems kinda anti-climactic after the GAN, but some progress is better than endlessly stalled discussions. Below is my proposed wording for the first three paragraphs of the History section (the rest of it doesn't seem to be disputed). It reduces the emphasis on women's basketball that was included before the GAN, but still makes mention of it. Tell me what you think.

Netball emerged from early versions of basketball, and evolved with the increasing participation of women in sport. Basketball was invented in 1891 by James Naismith, a Canadian physical education instructor working in Springfield, Massachusetts. It was played in his school's gymnasium between two teams of nine players, using an association football that was shot into closed-end peach baskets. Naismith's new game spread quickly across the United States. Variations of the rules also emerged: in 1892, Senda Berenson developed modified rules for women, giving rise to women's basketball; intercollegiate rules were also played by men and women (Jobling and Barham, p. 30). But while the various basketball rules eventually converged in the United States, an entirely new sport emerged once basketball spread to England.

Martina Bergman-Österberg introduced one version of basketball in 1893 to her female students at the Physical Training College in Hampstead, London. The rules of the game were modified at the college over several years: the game moved outdoors and was played on grass; the baskets were replaced by rings that had nets; and in 1897 and 1899 rules from women's basketball in the United States were also incorporated. Madame Österberg's new sport acquired the name "net ball". The first codified rules of netball were published in 1901 by the Ling Association (later the Physical Education Association of the United Kingdom). From England, netball spread to other countries in the British Empire. Variations of the rules and even names for the sport arose in different areas: "women's (outdoor) basketball" arrived in Australia around the start of the 20th century and in New Zealand from 1906, while "netball" was being played in Jamaican schools by 1909.

From the start, netball was viewed as an appropriate sport for women to play, with restricted movement that appealed to contemporary notions on women's participation in sport, while remaining distinct from potentially rival male sports (Hargreaves, p. 124; McCrone, pp 148–9). Netball became a popular women's sport in countries where it was introduced, and spread rapidly through school systems ...

It's a glossed-over version but hopefully easy to understand. I've also added a sentence about how it was viewed as "appropriate" for women, for a bit of sociographic context (the listed sources can be found in the History of netball article). It still contains the term "women's basketball" though, which remains contentious at this stage. Comments welcome. Liveste (talkedits) 23:11, 24 March 2011 (UTC)

  1. ^ In order to qualify as a "common expression or idiom", the phrase must have been used without attribution at least 2 years ago by someone other than the originator and in a reliable source, in other words one that is likely to have watchful editors and lawyers; there must be no evidence that the author(s), or publisher(s), of the unattributed use later lost, or settled out of court, a lawsuit based on the unattributed use, and that the publisher did not issue an apology, or retraction, for plagiarism relating to the unattributed use. Since it is impossible to prove completely that something does not exist, Wikipedia editors who suspect plagiarism is involved must provide reliable evidence of such a legal judgment, out-of-court settlement, apology, or retraction.