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Star African to watch: Serge Ibaka live on ESPN

epa07905503 Toronto Raptors player Serge Ibaka (L) and Houston Rockets player Eric Gordon (R) in action during the NBA Japan Games 2019 between Houston Rockets and Toronto Raptors at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan, 08 October 2019. EPA/CHRISTOPHER JUE

 

Viewers on DStv can look forward to seeing one of Africa’s top sporting sons, basketball player Serge Ibaka, grace the continuing 2019-20 National Basketball Association (NBA) season, live on ESPN.

DStv is your home of the Entertainment and Sports Programming Network.

Serge Ibaka hails from Brazzaville in the Republic of the Congo, where his basketball-playing parents encouraged him to take up the sport. At the age of 17 he moved to France and then Spain, where his skills in the sport made scouts sit up and take notice.

In the 2008 NBA Draft he was the 24th overall pick, signed by the Seattle SuperSonics – who soon rebranded to the Oklahoma City Thunder – and after a year away at Spanish side Ricoh Manresa (where he had a rolling option to be brought to the NBA) he moved to the United States and quickly became a key player for the Thunder.

Ibaka proved a brilliant player for Oklahoma City from 2009 to 2016 (and he featured for EuroLeague team Real Madrid during the 2011 NBA Lockout) before being traded to the Orlando Magic, while 2017 brought another trade when he ended up at the Toronto Raptors. It was with the Canadian team that Ibaka won his first NBA Championship, leading the Raptors to victory over the Golden State Warriors in the 2019 Finals.

The 30-year-old’s career achievements include being a three-time NBA All-Defensive First Team selection, the blocks leader in the 2012 and 2013 seasons, and a silver medal at the 2012 Olympic Games with Spain, his national team (having been granted citizenship in 2011).

As of now, Ibaka’s focus is on helping the Raptors put up a strong defence of their NBA title, though he has also become a key figure in the Black Lives Matter movement, eloquently expressing the ways in which the issue, as experienced in the United States, is translated to the world at large, and especially in his home continent of Africa.

“This is one thing I want people to understand: What is going on in the United States is what is going on everywhere,” explained Ibaka.

“In the States, you can see what is happening directly, how police [are] killing somebody. But in Congo, in Africa, in all the countries in Europe, it’s happening too, in different ways.

“The fight we’re fighting here is bigger than the fight people are thinking [about] because if we can win this fight here, we’re going to change a lot of things around the world.”

He added, “When we go immigrate out there, they don’t want us [African people] to be there. They treat us like nothing. … They think we don’t deserve respect. They don’t respect us.”

That’s why Ibaka, who has become a quiet warrior for social justice and equality, wears the words “Respectez Biso” meaning “Respect Us” on his jersey.

 

Don’t miss the unrivalled NBA coverage on ESPN. Visit www.dstv.com to subscribe or upgrade, and join in on the excitement. And while you’re on the move, you can stream matches on DStv Now.

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Tags: DSTVNBA
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