The Guardian (Nigeria)

With FIBA U16 Afrobasket boys, the future looks bright

- By Alex Monye

IT has been acknowledg­ed by followers of basketball that Nigeria has the potential to compete favourably with the best countries in the game given its abundant youth population. With a youth population estimated to be over 100 million, the country is seen as a talent deposit yet to be mined to the fullest.

That was aptly demonstrat­ed recently by the nation’s U16 team, which took part in the just concluded FIBA Africa U16 Championsh­ip in Praia, Cape Verde.

The hurriedly assembled team finished third behind Egypt and Mali.

The team of 11 boys had just two days of light training at the indoor sports hall of the National Stadium Lagos, with assistant coach, Tony Nelson. They only got to meet their head coach, Fubara Onyanabo at the Murtala Internatio­nal Airport on the day of their departure for the competitio­n. They played their first game on the second day after their arrival in Praia against three time champions, Egypt.

They lost the game, but they were not disgraced.

Prior to the game, three of the boys were also medically screened out of the championsh­ip leaving the coach with an eight-man rotation throughout the competitio­n.

Apart from not having the best of preparatio­n, the team was not prepared for the long trip they encountere­d. None of the boys had previously had an internatio­nal travelling experience and their first time was a flight from Lagos to Nairobi, which took over five hours, another connecting flight to Dakar that took about seven hours with a stopover at Bamako included.

Another four-hour wait in

Dakar before the team were finally airlifted to Praia on a flight that lasted about an hour 15 minutes arriving Cape Verde some minutes past 10.00 p.m. local time, and past 12.00 a.m. Nigerian time on the day of their opening game against

Egypt.

They had a few hours of sleep, a breakfast the boys were unused to and about 20 minutes late for their first practice with the head coach almost spelled doom for them.

Bormini Dennis, the team’s point guard, who was selected to be the team captain, resumed his position with the shortest notice as they faced an uphill task against an Egyptian team that had been off and on in camp for over seven months.

But the boys were not daunted. They took a shock 21-13 lead heading out of the first quarter, leaving many believing that the boys would pull a famous win. But fatigue, inexperien­ce and lack of proper understand­ing robbed them of what would have been a win enabled by the famous “Nigerian spirit,” The game ended 86-77 in favour of the North Africans.

The team after the loss must have signed a pack, as they bounced back smoking winning their next three group games, starting with a 64- 39 demolition of hosts, Cape Verde, and also trashing former champions Angola, 9057.

The team’s final group game ended 75-64 against Algeria, with the outcome and overall game performanc­e revealing that the boys were either getting too confident or fatigue was creeping into the team.

The boys once again showed class and resilience in their quarterfin­al game against Tunisia, beating their opponent by a massive 50-point gap, 86-36 to progress to the semifinal where they faced defending champions, Mali.

The game against Mali was always going to be difficult as the Malians came into the game unbeaten and as the more physical side. The team might have qualified for the final, as well as picked one of the U17 World Cup tickets scheduled for Sofia in Bulgaria if most of their three-point shots had gone in. But it was a day where almost nothing worked.

The Malians kept the scoreline low, making it a closed one. They outmuscled the Junior D’tigers to qualify for the final, where they lost to Egypt.

The boys had to show the world they did not travel all the way to Cape Verde for jamboree, as they fought hard to pip Guinea 54-53 in a highly nervy and entertaini­ng third and fourth classifica­tion match. The result, though a team performanc­e, but a lot must be given to the boys on their individual performanc­e, as it also showed on the statistica­l table. With a total of 112 rebounds during the competitio­n, Reuben Chinyelu won the award for the best rebounder, Precious Ikpe barely missed out on the best three pointer award, while Farouk Isah made the top five list of best players at the competitio­n, with captain Bormini Dennis also leading the pack on the assist table.

Thrilled by the performanc­e of his wards, Head Coach, Fubara Onyanabo said, “Nigeria can attend this championsh­ip with six different teams and still win it, but it is all based on preparatio­n.”

One can only imagine what the team would have achieved if they had had enough time to prepare and gel for such a tournament. Speaking on the performanc­e of the team, Adeyinka Adedipe, a journalist, praised the boys for a fantastic outing in their first internatio­nal contest.

He added: “The Nigeria Basketball Federation must do better when it comes to age grade competitio­ns, as the future of Nigerian basketball depend on the young ones, the exposure they get and also opportunit­ies availed them through internatio­nal competitio­ns.

“Big appreciati­on must go to the team sponsor, Nestlé Milo, who believed in the boys and decided to expose them to such a life changing experience in Cape Verde. “The boys are different now, they have been able to play alongside their peers in Africa, they have interacted with young people, who share the same goal of making basketball a career and now, thanks to Milo, they can dream higher.”

 ??  ?? Nigeria defeated Angola at the FIBA Africa U-16 Basketball Championsh­ip in Praia, Cape Verde…recently.
Nigeria defeated Angola at the FIBA Africa U-16 Basketball Championsh­ip in Praia, Cape Verde…recently.

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