EVANSVILLE — An Evansville-based company along with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) are recalling about 18,000 Goalsetter wall-mounted basketball goals that can unexpectedly detach from the wall and fall to the ground.
The CPSC says a Granger, Indiana boy died after one of the recalled goals fell on him in 2018. Goalsetter has received three additional reports of scenarios where the goal detached from the wall. In one incident, the person had "severe facial injuries," and in a separate incident someone had a fractured leg.
The basketball goals were sold at SCHEELS and other stores, such as Walmart and Target, and online from November 1999 through June 2022 for between $919 and $2,250.
CPSC and Goalsetter are urging consumers to stop using the recalled basketball goals immediately and contact Goalsetter for free removal of the basketball goal with a full refund or a free inspection of the installed wall-mounted basketball goal and free installation of an additional safety bracket.
This recall involves all Goalsetter Adjustable and Fixed Wall Mount Series and GS Baseline Series 72-inch, 60-inch, 54-inch, and 48-inch wall-mounted goal systems. The basketball goals have a white Goalsetter logo (a white basketball to the left of the word “Goalsetter” printed in the lower left corner of the backboard).
Goalsetter says it is directly contacting all known purchasers.
You can contact Goalsetter at 855-951-7460 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. ET Monday through Friday or on its website.
-
Suspect dead after shooting involving state police at Frankfort gas station
A suspect is dead after a shooting involving state police at a Frankfort gas station Monday afternoon.Rod Stewart to perform in Indianapolis August 2025
The soon to be 80-year-old will be bringing his "One last time" 2025 tour to Ruoff Music Center on Saturday, Aug. 9th. Joining him will be Cheap trick.Indianapolis bike advocates host vigil for those killed in traffic accidents
In the shadows of the Indianapolis City-County Building, Bike Indianapolis advocate Chris Holcomb was somber as he rang a bicycle bell 81 times.Real estate broker agrees to surrender license following AG complaint
Jeffrey Rothbard failed to disclose prior criminal convictions when applying for and renewing his Indiana real estate broker license.