The National - News

BAL IS BACK AS EGYPTIAN BASKETBALL CONTINUES TO PICK UP STEAM

▶ Al Ahly to begin title defence with sport growing in popularity and NBA expanding its talent-spotting operations across Africa

- REEM ABULLEIL

The Basketball Africa League (BAL) is set to return to Cairo for a third consecutiv­e year next month, cementing Egypt’s growing status as a major player on the continent.

A collaborat­ion between the NBA and Fiba (Internatio­nal Basketball Federation), the BAL is currently in its fourth season and will see Cairo giants Al Ahly begin their title defence when the Nile Conference tips off on April 19.

Moroccan champions FUS Rabat won the Kalahari Conference last week in Pretoria, South Africa, to secure direct qualificat­ion to the play-offs and finals in Rwanda, along with Angolan side Petro de Luanda.

Cairo’s Al Ahly will be looking to join them but will face stiff competitio­n from City Oilers (Uganda), league newcomers Al Ahly Ly (Libya) and Bangui Sporting Club (Central African Republic). The regular season will conclude with the Sahara Conference, taking place in Dakar, Senegal, from May 4-12.

Egyptian clubs have won two of the three BAL editions so far, with Zamalek triumphing in the inaugural season before Al Ahly reigned supreme last year. The league brought an NBA-like flair to basketball fans in Cairo, with star-studded courtside seats and midgame entertainm­ent providing a unique experience for spectators and players alike.

“The main thing that stood out to me was the organisati­on. For something like that to be organised in Egypt, it was very different than local competitio­ns or the African competitio­ns that we’re normally used to,” Al Ahly centre Omar Oraby told The National.

“I know this year is going to be much tougher than last year. All the teams are getting much better and they’re bringing much better talent.”

Oraby believes Egypt has “some of the most talented local players in Africa” and credits team unity for Al Ahly’s BAL success last season. “We stayed together as a team. We got new players but we didn’t lose the chemistry aspect of the team,” explained the University of Southern California (USC) alum. “We didn’t bring one or two American players and just let them have the ball and let them play and let them lead, no we didn’t do that.

“That was something very good that our coach did, he kept control of the team and everyone played his role. That was the main thing.”

Winning the BAL sent Al Ahly to the Fiba Interconti­nental Cup, where they made history by stunning NBA G League side Ignite. The Cairo side became the first African team to record a win at the Interconti­nental Cup, but they walked away with a bitterswee­t feeling after narrowly losing to the Zhejiang Golden Bulls in the bronze medal game.

“That was a heartbreak­er for us,” recalls Oraby. “We made history in the tournament but to win a bronze medal, of course that would have been something else.

“That’s one of the things that’s pushing us to try to win the BAL this year, so we can go again to the Interconti­nental Cup and try to achieve what we couldn’t do last year.”

Egypt isn’t just making waves at the club level. With more and more attention being given to unearthing talent in Africa, the NBA has been expanding its operations across the continent, and last year opened new offices in Cairo and Nairobi, to go with the ones in Dakar, Johannesbu­rg, and Lagos.

The NBA Egypt office, which launched in January 2023, has already started to make an impact, with clinics, community events, and a Jr NBA programme.

“Egypt has huge potential for the NBA. For starters, from a population point of view, it’s a huge country. So, if we can help the ecosystem and grassroots in Egypt, we can help find new talent,” Mohamed Abdel-Motaleb, head of NBA Egypt, told The National.

“We need to increase the accessibil­ity of the sport and we have that slogan that any kid, when they see a ball, instead of kicking it, they dribble it.

“So instead of playing football, we want them to think basketball first.”

The only two Egyptians to make it to the NBA, Alaa Abdelnaby and Abdel Nader, grew up in the United States. But there is now reason to believe that homegrown Egyptian talent can carve a path to the biggest league on the planet.

When Oraby first went to the US to study it was an anomaly to see an Egyptian play Division I basketball in the US collegiate system.

Upon graduation from USC in 2014, he worked out with several NBA teams and played for the Houston Rockets in the Summer League before returning to Egypt, where he had to fulfil mandatory military service, which forced him to decline a training camp offer with the LA Lakers.

Fast-forward eight years and there are now eight Egyptian men playing Division I basketball, and two more are competing in the NBA G League.

On the women’s side, Egyptian Jana El Alfy, a product of the NBA Global Academy, was recruited by the University of Connecticu­t, who are the No 3 seeds in the ongoing NCAA tournament. El Alfy is currently sidelined with an injury but is expected to play a huge role for the Huskies next year.

March Madness features another Egyptian, 18-year-old Jannah Eissa, who was born and raised in Cairo, playing for North Carolina State University. “I definitely think the pathway exists for Egyptian players to make it to the NBA,” says Oraby. “People know now that there is talent in this part of the world. They acknowledg­ed there is talent in Egypt and this region, so they’re paying closer attention to the area as a whole.

“Nowadays, to go to play college basketball in the US it’s

The NBA last year opened new offices in Cairo and Nairobi, to go with the ones in Dakar, Johannesbu­rg and Lagos

become very easy for us Egyptians. So many agents, scouts, and coaches know the players in Egypt, they talk to a lot of the young players.

“I know a lot of U16 or U17 players here in Egypt that are being contacted by coaches in the US to go to play there.”

The Egyptian men’s national team has been building momentum over the past couple of years. At the 2023 Fiba World Cup, Egypt won two of their five games to earn a place in the Olympic qualifying tournament as the second-best African team behind South Sudan.

“I think it’s one of, if not the best generation of Egyptian national team right now, with all the players available to choose from. There’s a large pool of players to choose from, whether those who play in Egypt or abroad,” said Oraby.

The Egyptian Basketball Federation has done a great job in bringing together several players with Egyptian roots based abroad.

The likes of Abdel Nader, a former Phoenix Suns small forward, and New York-born Patrick Gardner, who plays in the NBA G League for the Long Island Nets, are now part of Team Egypt.

Egypt landed in a brutal group, alongside hosts Greece, and the Dominican Republic, in the Olympic qualifying tournament, which will take place in Piraeus early July.

With NBA stars like Giannis Antetokoun­mpo of the Milwaukee Bucks and Karl-Anthony Towns of the Minnesota Timberwolv­es, set to suit up for Greece and Dominican Republic respective­ly, Oraby acknowledg­es Egypt’s chances are slim but believes such big match-ups are exactly what the team needs.

“Even if we don’t qualify, it’s going to be a good experience for the players to play against this level of competitio­n,” said the 32-year-old centre.

“In the World Cup, we benefited a lot from all these games. We had good results, but even the games we lost to Lithuania and Montenegro, ultimately this is what makes national teams improve ... when you get to play against this level of competitio­n regularly, this is what makes you grow as a team.

“So we’re on the right track and hopefully it gets better for Egypt.”

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 ?? Getty Images ?? Al Ahly’s Omar Oraby, above right, in action against CFV Beira in Giza last season, while, right, his Cairo-based team celebrate winning the Basketball Africa League
Getty Images Al Ahly’s Omar Oraby, above right, in action against CFV Beira in Giza last season, while, right, his Cairo-based team celebrate winning the Basketball Africa League
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