Metro

Shooting vic: Keep stop-frisk

One of four teens shot by a bike-riding gunman on a crowded Brooklyn basketball court is sick of the violence plaguing city streets.

“Stop-and-frisk should be continued, after what I went through, being shot for no reason,” a bandaged Shamar Smith told The Post yesterday of the NYPD’s controversial crime-fighting tool.

“[Cops] should do it, get guns off the street.”

Smith, 16, was playing hoops at about 6:30 p.m. Monday at Brownsville’s Fish Playground when an armed cyclist on a BMX bike squeezed off at least four rounds.

“I heard the shots and I saw people running, so I started running, too,” Smith recalled from home, where he’s recuperating.

Then he saw that his hoops pal, Isaiah Thomas, had been shot.

“He said, ‘I’m bleeding. I’m shot.’ I saw the blood pouring out of his shoulder.

“That’s when I checked myself and I saw I had a hole in my shirt. I saw I had been shot.”

Rohan Alexander, 18, was also shot — but the bullet had been slowed by his backpack.

“The book bag slowed it down and saved my life,” he said, citing doctors at Brookdale Hospital. “The bag was stuffed with jeans and heavy clothes and without that I would be paralyzed.”

The fourth victim was a teen girl whose name was not released.

“We just come to the courts to play and go home. I’m not into that gang stuff. I focus on other stuff,” said Smith. “I want to play ball next year for Transit Tech High School.”