Content Creator Wyydogg Visits Live SlamBall Court, Joins Athletes On-Site
Wyydogg stepped onto a live SlamBall court March 9, filming extended on-court sequences and going head-to-head with athletes at the facility.

Content creator Wyydogg brought his camera directly onto an active SlamBall court last Monday, posting a first-person video that gave his audience an unfiltered look at the sport from ground level, or more accurately, trampoline level.
The video, titled "I WENT TO A SLAMBALL COURT AND TOOK OVER!", dropped on March 9 and documents Wyydogg moving through the facility with access that most fans never get. Rather than watching from the stands or narrating from a distance, Wyydogg embedded himself in the action, filming extended on-court sequences alongside the athletes and interacting directly with facility staff throughout his visit.
SlamBall, for the uninitiated, is not a sport that rewards passive observation. The game layers basketball fundamentals onto a trampoline-equipped court, where players launch off the trampolines embedded near each basket to elevate their attacks and defensive contests. The physical demands are immediate and obvious to anyone watching live, which is exactly what made Wyydogg's ground-level documentation compelling. You get a completely different read on the sport's athleticism and pace when the camera is down on the court rather than mounted in the rafters.
What separates this from a standard facility tour is the direct engagement with the athletes on-site. Wyydogg wasn't just walking through while players warmed up in the background. The video captures him in extended sequences with the athletes themselves, which adds a dimension that broadcast coverage rarely delivers. Broadcast frames the game; this kind of access frames the experience of actually being inside it.

The timing matters too. SlamBall has been building renewed momentum, and content like this, raw, first-person, and personality-driven, has historically done more to expand a niche sport's footprint than any traditional media push. When a creator with an established audience steps onto the court and takes it seriously enough to compete with the athletes there, it signals something about where the sport stands in the broader culture.
The video is live on Wyydogg's channel now, and for anyone who wants to understand what SlamBall actually feels like at court level rather than what it looks like from a broadcast angle, it is worth the watch.
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip

