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|South Africa

Noah’s father, former French tennis star Yannick Noah, took him to visit their family’s native Cameroon when he was a child. In recent years, Joakim Noah has built basketball courts in Cameroon and Nigeria. Through the BAL, he is helping build the foundation to develop African basketball players, coaches, referees and venues. “It’s just important being able to work with BAL,” Noah said. “The beauty is just really traveling all around the continent. And South Africa is a special place. It’s a charged place. It’s the land of the Zulus, Zulu warriors. Heavy history, a history of real revolutionaries. What made me join BAL is the leadership, first and foremost. That’s what I was the most excited about. “[BAL president] Amadou [Fall] is somebody that I trust and I believe in. He came to my village in Cameroon early in my career for my first [basketball] camp. He didn’t have to do that. This is way before BAL. This is just supporting my village where my father’s from, my roots, and I remember him speaking to the kids and I was like, ‘OK, this guy’s a real leader with a real vision.’ And for this opportunity to happen as soon as I retired from basketball, I feel more purpose now than I did when I played because of this opportunity.”

Andscape


For Khaman Maluach, who will be in South Africa on Tuesday, being a part of the NBA Academy Africa has been life-changing. And while signing with Duke brought major attention to him, he remains humble and focused on what it will take to get to the NBA. “Going to Duke is a big thing. I’m excited,” Maluach told Andscape in a phone interview. “I’m going to a great place. A great program. But at the same time, I got to stay humble and stay low-key. I stay committed to my goal. At the end of the day, I have to do my job. And my job is to get better every day in the gym, work hard, play well at Duke and the next level in the NBA”.

Andscape


Are you involved in the game anymore? What’s next for you? Thabo Sefolosha: “I actually ran for the presidency of the Swiss (basketball) federation. It didn’t go through. We had some ups and downs. So, right now I’m less involved with that, but still involved with the game and helping players and helping coaches. I feel like I’m a big-time veteran in Switzerland when you’re talking about basketball. I try to provide a little of that and help the game grow. Other than that, try to do the same thing in South Africa where I’m from. The game is growing there, so I’m spending a little bit of time focusing on that.”

oklahoman.com

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Most 20-year-olds would be content with 137 regular …

Most 20-year-olds would be content with 137 regular season NBA appearances, 26 playoff appearances and a championship ring over the course of two seasons, but Kuminga feels he has not yet lived up to others' expectations of superstardom. Kuminga told ESPN at the Basketball without Borders camp in South Africa: "This upcoming season is definitely the year. "A lot of people are expecting so much from me - and myself; I'm expecting a lot. It's a lot of pressure, but I don't really pay attention to the noise. "The pressure is always going to be there. It's just [on] me to go out there and perform."

ESPN

Some campers have been dealing with similar …

Some campers have been dealing with similar expectations to Kuminga. Indeed, last year's MVP, Thierry Darlan, who currently plays for Kuminga's old team, G League Ignite, is widely expected to be a first round 2024 draft pick. Kuminga said that he hoped to be the mentor he once needed and help prepare Darlan, who was also coaching at the camp, for the weight he would carry on his shoulders in upcoming years. "I actually want to get some time with him and not really mentor him, but tell him what it's about with Ignite, what it's about to get drafted and be an NBA player at a young age," Kuminga said.

ESPN

Sean Cunningham: Kings coach Mike Brown says Luke …

Sean Cunningham: Kings coach Mike Brown says Luke Loucks will coach the Summer League squad. Brown will also participate in the NBA’s Basketball Without Borders program in South Africa during the offseason.

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Pack joins Al Harrington, who is an assistant coach with the South Africa Cape Town Tigers, as the only two former NBA players coaching in the 12-team league. “I’m always in the mode of teaching, especially people that really want to learn the game and then at the same time compete,” Pack said. “So, I thought it was a chance for me to grow as a coach and get an opportunity to be a head coach.”

Andscape

Time will tell if Gentry is still the head coach of …

Time will tell if Gentry is still the head coach of the Kings by the time he turns 68 on Nov. 5, 2022. Regardless of whether the Shelby, North Carolina, native is with Sacramento or elsewhere, he will always be appreciative of his time in the NBA that began in 1989 as an assistant coach under Larry Brown with the San Antonio Spurs. “Look at how the league in general has grown and what [former NBA commissioner] David Stern did to this league and how he made it so globally,” Gentry said. “I remember taking a trip to Africa [with] me, Wes Unseld and Alex English, and David Stern went. And we went to South Africa. We had dinner with Nelson Mandela. We did things like that that you could only dream of as a kid from Shelby, North Carolina.

The Undefeated


Boris Diaw: I did eight safaris in a row when I was playing because we didn't have much time. And so for like eight years, I went every year. Where would you go? Diaw: South Africa is like a good place to start because it's everything. It's easier. Everything is close. You got small planes that take you to all these places. Then I think Tanzania was pretty cool, but my favorite was Botswana. There's a place called Okavango Delta, which is like flooded in some seasons and then it gets dry sometime, and then you got all the in between so it's pretty cool you got all the animals all the life the predators also coming because of all the life and so it's just a great place to go. Any close calls on safari? Diaw: A few, a few [laughs].

The Ringer

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