Showing posts with label Basketballnews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Basketballnews. Show all posts

Saturday, October 07, 2023

South Sudan’s men’s basketball team will be at the Olympics for the first time thanks to Luol Deng OBE

Report from Mail & Guardian - mg.co.za
By Lethabo Nxumalo
Dated Friday, 6 October 2023 - here is a full copy:

Luol Deng: South Sudan’s great rebound

Hope: Luol Deng (centre) trains young players at the Manute Bol basketball court, built by the two-time All-Star NBA player’s foundation in South Sudan’s capital Juba. Photo: Akuot Chol/AFP


In 2024, South Sudan’s men’s basketball team will be at the Olympics for the first time. The 13-year-old nation qualified for the Paris event after a 101-78 win over Angola at the Fiba World Cup.


In the jubilant locker room after that decisive game, among the elated, perspiring, screaming and dancing players, stood Luol Deng. 


The two-time All-Star NBA player is a class act; a consummate professional on and off the court, a humanitarian whose work has won him multiple awards, including the Order of the British Empire. 


To tell the story of South Sudanese basketball is to tell the story of Deng’s capacity to dream and build.


In 1990, his father Aldo Deng was arrested after a coup in Sudan and the rest of his family fled the country. They eventually settled in London where young Deng joined the British basketball system.


An American scout spotted him and took the lanky 14-year-old into the cold winters of New Jersey, where he enrolled in Blair Academy. By his senior year, Deng was the second-highest ranked and most sought-after high school basketball player in the entire country.


He chose to go to Duke University, known for its prestigious basketball programme, from which he went on to a successful NBA career.


Deng, who was mentored by another South Sudanese basketball great, Manute Bol, never lost sight of his roots. A year after turning professional, he set up the Luol Deng Foundation, which coordinated emergency relief and surgical missions for refugees and people living with disabilities. 


The foundation also placed a strong emphasis on education and wellness, using basketball as a vehicle for positive change.


Its work would provide the blueprint for Deng’s later work on developing basketball in independent South Sudan.


In 2010, a year before South Sudan’s independence referendum, Deng returned to his homeland. He donated his salary to enable people in the diaspora to travel and vote in the referendum. His next undertaking was developing basketball in South Sudan. Deng serves as the president of the South Sudanese basketball federation.


Building a basketball culture in the newly independent, war-traumatised country was daunting. Infrastructure was sorely lacking. In 2015, Deng’s foundation built the Manute Bol Court in Juba. 


It still stands as one of only six outdoor basketball courts in the country — four are still under construction. But Deng appears motivated by challenges. Under his leadership, the men’s basketball team has found its footing on the continent and world stage.


The team is made up of primarily immigrant players whose families left the country during the long war, dispersing to different regions of the world as refugees. They reached the quarter-finals of the 2021 AfroBasket and breezed through their World Cup 2023 African qualifying group, winning all but one of their 12 games.


Their 11-1 win-loss record was a first in the history of the competition. It included two major upsets against the 2021 AfroBasket champion Tunisia and Africa’s most tenured team, Egypt.


Despite not progressing beyond the group stages of the recently concluded Fiba World Cup, South Sudan left the tournament ranked number one in Africa and 31 in the world. And, of course, having qualified for the 2024 Paris Olympics. 


“This is a significant achievement for us as a nation that is only 13 years old,” says Orom Mackmot, vice-president of the South Sudan Basketball Federation.


The feat is all the more remarkable considering that South Sudan only became a member of Fiba in 2013.


Recognising that “basketball, and sports in general, have the capacity to change a nation”, as Mackmot points out, South Sudan is expanding its investment in developing teams and leagues. To rectify a gap between the men’s and women’s national basketball team, which has yet to compete in the AfroBasket women’s tournament, the federation has created the South Sudan Women’s League to build a talent pipeline.


Assembling a women’s national team “is a bit of a struggle because a lot of the players are in collegiate basketball so it’s hard to get everyone in the same place at the same time”, says national forward Christina Deng (no familial relation to Luol Deng). 


Launched last year, the second edition of the women’s league is under way with round one and two fixtures scheduled till the middle of October.


Deng’s foundation is collaborating with the Jr NBA for the under-16 league programme.


It’s a long game in which everyone can win. “Basketball can not only bring unity but also improve the lives of players and their families through education, by awarding scholarships. If they don’t make it as pro athletes, they can become doctors, lawyers, and so forth, helping the nation at large,” says Mackmot. 


This article first appeared in The Continent, the pan-African weekly newspaper produced in partnership with the Mail & Guardian. It’s designed to be read and shared on WhatsApp. Download your free copy here


Tags: All-Star NBA, Basketball, Fiba World Cup, Luol Deng, Olympics, Order Of The British Empire, South Sudan


View original: https://mg.co.za/africa/2023-10-06-luol-deng-south-sudans-great-rebound/


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Monday, June 19, 2023

Sudanese hero and basketball superstar Manute Bol

Thanks to Cameron Hudson @_hudsonc for retweeting news of a great Sudanese humanitarian and basketball super star Manute Bol. Read about his incredible life story and amazing heart of gold here.
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Monday, March 22, 2010

Sudan Sports Latest

Sudan Sports Latest
From SRS - Sudan Radio Service:
Monday, 22 March 2010 - (Nairobi) – Four Sudanese clubs participating in two African competitions played matches on Sunday evening.

In the African Champions League, Al-Hilal drew nil-nil with Africa Sport National in Abidjan, while Al-Merriekh drew with Gazzelle FC of Chad 1-1.

In Egypt, Khartoum FC lost their African Confederation Cup game against Petrojet 3-0.

Khartoum FC will have to defeat Petrojet 4-0 in Khartoum or face elimination from the competition.

The other confederation cup game took place in Atbara where Amal hosted Costa de Sol of Mozambique and defeated their guests 4-2.

Basketball next and on Saturday in the premier league Maktaba Omdurman defeated Al-Shurta 97-81 and Al-Gipti beat Merriekh 87-73.

In the first division league there will be two games on Tuesday evening. Al-Suri will play Al-Rabie and Al-Hilal confront Bait Al-Mal.
Other News from SRS

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Al-Merriekh’s match against Al-Nil will be played on Monday

Sudan Sports Latest
From SRS (Sudan Radio Service), Friday, 12 March 2010:
(Nairobi) - Al-Hilal won their game against Hilal Al-Sahil 2-0 in their premier league game on Thursday.

The remaining five games of the fourth week will take place on Friday and Saturday.

The Football federation received a message of condolence from the chairman of the African Football Confederation, Mr. Issa Hayatou, for the death of Al-Merriekh’s player, Endurance Idahour.

Al-Merriekh’s request to have their Saturday match against Al-Nil postponed was eventually accepted by the Federation. The game will be played on Monday instead.

And in the basketball first division league on Thursday, Al-Suri defeated Shabab Omdurman 114-64 while Al-Yonani beat Bait Al-Mal 72-63.