(CNN) -- Soccer may be the number one sport in most
of Africa but basketball is growing fast and the NBA has set its sights
on the continent to provide future stars, and tomorrow's fans.
In recent weeks, Amadou
Gallo, managing director of NBA Africa, has embarked on a continent-wide
tour including stop-offs in Ethiopia, Nigeria and South Africa. The
talent hunt is part of the NBA's "Basketball without Borders" program, a community outreach project for young people, and is key to expanding the sport's global reach.
Gallo Fall said: "Making the game accessible, increasing participation, growing a fan base, that's the real priority."
NBA looks for African expansion
Basketball without
Borders takes the top youth players, aged 19 and under, from all over
the world and invites them to train with NBA stars and coaches. Launched
in 2001, the program aims to promote basketball outside the U.S. and
also offers young people the chance to develop life skills and education
with their mentors.
"Part of making the game
accessible is also putting it on the televisions," Gallo Fall said.
"More players are going to come from the continent so we are going to
have (NBA) games here, just like in Europe," he added.
In August, the NBA signed
a multi-year deal with South African broadcaster SuperSport to televise
games from the 2013-14 season in 47 Sub-Saharan territories.
Incoming NBA Commissioner
Adam Silver -- who will succeed incumbent David Stern in February 2014
-- said the NBA is growing "exponentially" outside the United States.
He added: "The continent
of Africa, China, increasingly India, there are opportunities for
basketball throughout the world, so that's going to be my focus."
Although he recognizes
that soccer is Africa's most popular sport, Gallo Fall sees no reason
for competition. "Basketball is the number two sport globally and that
holds true in Africa," he said.
"There's always the
debate with football because that's a game that you can play anywhere so
we are working to make sure that children who have passion for playing
our sport have access to playing it," he added.
There's roughly a billion people on the continent of Africa, so
just a little small sliver of those billion people can result in a very
successful business for us.
Incoming NBA Commissioner Adam Silver
Incoming NBA Commissioner Adam Silver
Despite, a lack of
infrastructure in Africa, the NBA has a long tradition of African
players. Legends including Dikembe Mutombo from the Democratic Republic
of the Congo and Sudan's Manute Bol have inscribed their names into the
NBA history books as being among of game's greats.
While more recently
Chicago Bulls' Sudan-born Luol Deng, who played as an All-Star in the
2011-12 season, and Cameroonian Luc Mbah A Moute of Milwaukee Bucks have
broken into basketball's elite league.
Writing in an editorial for CNN last year,
Masai Ujiri, general manager of NBA team Denver Nuggets said Africa
represents a potentially huge talent pool for U.S. basketball.
He said: "Some tribes in
Sudan and Senegal have an average height of 6-foot-6, which also
happens to be the size of the average NBA player. People in Nigeria,
Mali and Congo tend to be very big and physical. We need to build a
strategy to go into these regions and cultivate the talent through
infrastructure and instruction."
But Ujiri added that if
Africa is going to produce the basketball stars of the future,
development needs to start at a young age.
"Most kids in Africa
don't start playing basketball until they are 13 or 14 years old. This
puts them at a disadvantage because they lack the instincts and must
work harder to develop," he noted.
And creating a younger fan base could also be good business for the NBA.
"We think there is a
huge opportunity," said Silver. "I mean, there's roughly a billion
people on the continent of Africa, so just a little small sliver of
those billion people can result in a very successful business for us."
Source: CNN.com
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