The Citizen (KZN)

Basketball makes inroads

CRAZE: POPULARITY OF THE SPORT KEEPS GROWING IN FOOTBALL-MAD BRAZIL

- Sao Paulo

For much of Brazil, football remains almost a religion. But the spectacle, glamour and quality of play in the NBA is making basketball the sport of choice for a steadily increasing number of fans – both men and women.

Emiliana Ramos first fell in love with the NBA in the 1990s during the heyday of Chicago Bulls legends Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen, who played exhibition games in Brazil.

Now, at age 42, Ramos – a product manager for a tech company in Sao Paulo – decides each season which team she is going to cheer for, and which player will be her favourite.

“Basketball is treated like a show: it’s an overall product, so it gets attention because it’s about more than the game – there is the whole marketing side of it, the jerseys. It’s a bit like soccer in Brazil,” Ramos said at a sports club in the northern part of the mega-city, where she plays basketball herself.

Some of her team-mates on Fulaninha, an amateur squad, are wearing Lakers jerseys or generic NBA gear.

Ramos wears the number one used by Zion Williamson, the star power forward for the New Orleans Pelicans.

Like Ramos, thousands of new fans in Brazil – typically more associated with Pele than LeBron James – are tuning in to NBA games each season.

In the first quarter of 2021, the NBA had 45 million fans in Brazil, a 31% increase over the figure reported at the start of 2019, according to data compiled by Ibope Repucom.

There have been more than a

dozen Brazilians playing in the US National Basketball Associatio­n (NBA) since its inception in 1946, but none of them are stars in their own right. One, Didi Louzada, plays with Williamson in New Orleans.

But Rodrigo Vicentini, the league’s chief representa­tive in Brazil, says the Latin American giant has become the “NBA’s second priority market” abroad after China.

Brazil is “extremely important, and very strategic for both the league and the developmen­t of the sport,” Vicentini said. “We will keep growing here, alongside the religion of football.”

The NBA officially came to Brazil in 2004, with the goal of building a fan base in the country of 213 million people. The national team

has notched some notable victories, including one over Team USA at the Pan Am Games in 1987, to win gold.

Since then, friendly games have been organised between the two teams, basketball stores and schools have opened, co-operation deals have been reached with Brazil’s premier men’s league, and more NBA games are broadcast here.

The result? Steady growth of the league’s popularity, which Vicentini says is driven by Brazilians’ love of sports generally, interest among younger generation­s to follow more than one sport, and the NBA’s image as an aspiration­al brand.

On Sao Paulo’s central Avenida Paulista or on Rio’s Copacabana Beach, it’s not unusual to see

people wearing jerseys, t-shirts or caps with the numbers and colours of NBA greats like James, Stephen Curry or the late Kobe Bryant.

“Many of them don’t know who LeBron James is, so why are they wearing his shorts? Because they are a way to recreate his look,” says Vicentini.

Football stars like Brazil’s Neymar or Argentina’s Lionel Messi have also helped to break down barriers by wearing basketball gear.

Alana Paludo Chiochetta, who is 26 and pretty tall, wears a James T-shirt in Lakers purple.

“King James” is very frequently compared to Jordan when fans are engaging in debates as to who the greatest basketball player of all time is. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? HAVING A DREAM. Fulaninha‘s amateur basketball team players are seen during a training session in Sao Paulo.
Picture: AFP HAVING A DREAM. Fulaninha‘s amateur basketball team players are seen during a training session in Sao Paulo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa