Basketball
Again, It’s Libya versus Nigeria as the Basketball Africa League begins in Tripoli
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Months after an ill-tempered Africa Cup of Nations qualifying confrontation, Nigeria and Libya are back again in the sports arena. This time it is the qualification for the AfroBasket 2025.
Unlike the October episode in which the Nigeria football team could not gain access into Libya, the tension is doused this time as the Nigerian basketball team, D’Tigers are already in Tripoli and will be taking on Libya in the opening Group B encounter of the three-day mini tournament.
Libya on Friday will host Nigeria at 20.00 hours GMT which is 9 pm in Nigeria. On Saturday, Nigeria will face Uganda at 6 pm Nigerian time.
The Nigerian team’s last match is against Cape Verde on Sunday.
The Libyan Ministry of Sports of the Government of National Unity announced the start of preparations to sponsor and host “window 2 qualifiers” for AfroBasket 2025 – which is going to be held in Angola.
The Ministry explained that the qualifiers would be held in the Grand Hall in Tripoli from February 21 to 23 for the teams of the second and fifth groups.
It adds that this step comes as a continuation of the series of Arab, African and international championships that Libya has hosted in recent years and the remarkable organizational and administrative success, as well as its keenness to embrace Arab and African sports in various games and championships.
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Basketball
MFM beat Customs in an all-Nigeria semi-finals
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Mountain of Fire and Miracle women’s Basketball team are again at the mountaintop after getting the upper hand against Nigeria Customs in all-Nigeria semi-finals of the FIBA Africa Women Basketball League Zone 3 Qualifiers.
In a keenly contested duel, the MFM sides won 57-53. They thus
qualify for the African Women’s Basketball finals holding on Senegal.
Basketball
Confirmed! A Nigerian team will feature FIBA Africa Zone 3 final match
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One of the semi-finals of the FIBA Africa Women Basketball League Zone 3 Qualifier in Monrovia, Liberia will feature the two Nigerian teams that battled for the NBBF-Zenith women’s Basketball League championship – the MFM Women’s team and the Nigerian Customs.
Ahead of the semi-final game this Saturday, the MFM team visited the Nigerian embassy in Monrovia on Friday afternoon.
According to the Chef de Mission, Godwin Enakhena, “we were received by Mrs Esther Ahuimbe, Charge D’Affiars, Nigerian Embassy, Monrovia.
“She promised to mobilize the Nigerian community to come and cheer both teams.
“You’re welcome to Liberia. When I was informed about your coming, I got your contacts and tried reaching your representative, but the number wasn’t connecting.
“I wanted to know your itinerary so that I can send a delegation to the airport to welcome you. I will mobilize the Nigerian community to the stadium for Saturday’s game to support both teams because both are repressing Nigeria”.
In his response, Godwin Enakhena thanked her for the warm reception at short notice.
Winner of today’s game would not only play in the final on Sunday but also pick one of the two tickets from Fiba Zone 3 to the finals of FIBA Africa Women Basketball League holding in Dakar, Senegal from December 5th-12th, 2024.
Basketball
Shaq draws inspiration from Muhammad Ali’s generous spirit
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Shaquille O’Neal hopes to carry on the legacy of late boxing great Muhammad Ali, the retired four-time NBA champion said, as he uses his extraordinary fame to advance his philanthropic work.
O’Neal will be honored on Saturday at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville for his work supporting underserved youth, a cause that reflects the ideals that “The Greatest” championed, Ali’s widow Lonnie Ali said.
“We don’t give this out lightly,” Ali told Reuters in a joint interview with O’Neal.
“We give it to people who emulate Muhammad’s example, who bring that Ali spirit and carry that torch forward to the next generation.”
She said she sees a lot of her husband, a global icon known as much for his political activism as his boxing brilliance, in Hall of Famer O’Neal.
“He has a compassionate and kind heart like Muhammad had,” she said.
O’Neal, 52, credits the Boys & Girls Club of America as being a safe haven for him when he was growing up in a rough part of Newark, New Jersey.
O’Neal’s foundation has long been a high-profile supporter of the philanthropic organization as part of his mission to create pathways to success for young people.
Muhammad and Lonnie first got to know O’Neal in the early 1990s when he was about to be drafted into the NBA, beginning what would become an enduring friendship.
“I can remember my father telling me one day, if you listen to me, you can be as big as Muhammad Ali,” O’Neal said.
“I didn’t believe it. But I had the opportunity to meet Mr. Ali and when he recognized me in a restaurant, I almost cried. I was like, oh my God, Muhammad Ali knows who I am.
“I don’t consider myself in the same stratosphere as Ali but to have had the opportunity to see him, try to mimic him and to be close to his family.
“Everything I’ve tried to do I’ve patterned after the great Muhammad Ali.”
GOOD DEEDS
O’Neal said another inspiration to perform good deeds comes from his mother, who he plans to bring as his date to Saturday’s awards dinner.
“When I do things, I don’t do them for recognition, I do them because I’ve seen other greats like Muhammad Ali do it,” he said.
“And I’m a mama’s boy, and she always told me to be kind and compassionate and help those in need.”
Since retiring from the NBA in 2011, the larger-than-life profile of “Shaq” has only grown.
He is an analyst for TNT’s beloved “Inside the NBA” and is involved in myriad business ventures, charitable causes and artistic endeavors.
Saturday’s annual awards dinner also serves as a fundraiser for the center, whose mission is to “foster respect, inspire generations of changemakers, and advance social justice”.
It welcomes over 100,000 visitors annually and will celebrate its 20th anniversary next year.
“The first 20 years was getting established and putting Muhammad’s legacy down,” Lonnie Ali said.
“We really wanted the center to be built and grounded while Muhammad was still with us,” she said of her husband, who she was married to for three decades before he passed away in 2016.
“The next 20 years will embody even more of Muhammad’s legacy, talking about his greatness and passing that greatness on.”
-Reuters
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