Basketball: Nigeria Need Wild Card To Redeem Image

•Nigeria’s player,  Al-farouk Aminu, left, shields the ball from USA’s Kobe Bryant during their match at the 2012 Olympic Games in London

•Nigeria’s player, Al-farouk Aminu, left, shields the ball from USA’s Kobe Bryant during their match at the 2012 Olympic Games in London

Nigeria’s D’Tigers’ failure to secure a ticket for the inaugural FIBA World Cup holding in Spain later this year is still fresh in the memories of many basketball pundits in the country. As the world awaits FIBA’s decision on countries to be granted wildcard for the flagship event, Tijjani Umar, the President of the Nigerian Basketball Federation, NBBF, in this interview with FIBA. com, took time to make Nigeria’s case for receiving a wild card.

What are the three main reasons why Nigeria deserves to receive a wild card to participate in the 2014 FIBA World Cup?

Our team has a pool of sustainable talent in some of the best basketball leagues around the world that can perform and compete against the best at the highest levels of the game and our best players have committed to play in the FIBA Basketball World Cup if we are invited. The quality of our team was demonstrated in 2012 when it became the first African team to qualify to any Olympic basketball event from the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament (OQT) since its inception and a chance to play in the World Cup with our exciting style of play will improve competition and television viewership. Thanks to our team’s recent performances, basketball is now the second most watched sport after football in our country of over 140 million people. Also, no African team before has enjoyed a wild card invitation to the FIBA Basketball World Cup and it will be a great honour to be the first, especially as our formidable team at Afrobasket 2013 failed to qualify directly largely due to a depleted roster caused by major injuries and the players are itching to redeem the team’s profile. If given a wild card, how competitive can we expect Nigeria to be and how confident are you that the team will feature all its leading/best players?

•Nigeria’s player,  Al-farouk Aminu, left, shields the ball from USA’s Kobe Bryant during their match at the 2012 Olympic Games in London
•Nigeria’s player, Al-farouk Aminu, left, shields the ball from USA’s Kobe Bryant during their match at the 2012 Olympic Games in London

If given a wild card, our team will present its best-ever roster for maximum impact and our team captain has written a commitment letter on behalf of his colleagues which is enclosed in our bid document.

How will having your national team play at the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup help the growth, development and popularity of the sport in your country?

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Our team playing in the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup will translate into tangible benefits for the growth and development of the game by way of the guaranteed mass television viewership and popularity attracting more investment in basketball from sponsorships (our premier league sponsor DSTV will be interested to show our team’s games to more than 40 african countries as they do our league games) and deployment of the additional resources to the provision and improvement of basketball infrastructure and establishing basketball academies to secure the future of the game in our country. The team’s World Cup status will also further compel government to improve basketball funding at school levels.

What do you consider as the greatest moment in your country’s basketball history?

Without a doubt, the greatest moment in our country’s basketball history was when our men’s team qualified for the basketball event of the 2012 London Games from the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Venezuela and along the way defeating Greece and Lithuania which were ranked fourth and fifth in the world.

Additional information about basketball in Nigeria

At the moment, the number of documented players (men and women) including those in our leagues and high schools and universities is about 106,950 but there are more than a million yet to be documented players around the country and the federation is looking to them to grow the game.

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