Tuesday, January 8, 2008

CAM - Lazare Adingono at the helm emerging force, Cameroon - Part I



BUFFALO (FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament) – Cameroon were one of the surprise packages at the FIBA Africa Championship last year, reaching the title game before falling to Angola.
They served notice that Africa has a powerhouse in the making, and coach Lazare Adingono has been charged with the responsibility of making sure this national team reaches its full potential.
Adingono, who is an assistant coach at Canisius in Buffalo, New York, spoke to Julio Chitunda on behalf of FIBA.
Here is Part I of Chitunda's story on the emerging force in international basketball, Cameroon.
If confidence were something you could put your hands on, or see with your own eyes, then confidence would come in the shape of Cameroon head coach Lazare Adingono.
That’s right.
Everything about Adingono exudes confidence after the stunning performance of his national team last year at the FIBA Africa Championship, where Cameroon announced their arrival on the world stage with a terrific run to the final.
They were ultimately beaten for the first time in the tournament by juggernauts Angola.
The performance was good enough to earn a place in the FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament, though, an event that will be staged in Athens in July.
The draw for that tournament comes at the end of January, and rest assured, no team will be taking Cameroon lightly if they come up against them.
"One thing for sure is that every time we take the floor we will compete, expecting to win," Adingono said to FIBA.com.
Only three spots are up for grabs in the men’s tournament at the Olympics and there are 12 teams vying for those places.
In addition to Cameroon, you will find Brazil, Cape Verde, Canada, Croatia, Germany, Greece, Korea, Lebanon, New Zealand, Puerto Rico and Slovenia all contesting for those places.
Cameroon’s team is young and talented, and their players are currently in the United States playing college basketball or in Europe.
Most of the attention is on the young guns honing their skills in the US.
Youth, in fact, applies to all aspects of this national team.
Adingono is only 29-year-old, and he, too, is in America. He is assistant coach at Canisius College in Buffalo, New York.
"I honestly think our future performances at the next Pre-Olympic Games will greatly depend on how much and where we prepare for that special upcoming event," Adingono said.
Could this really be the emerging force in African basketball? If you consider who is in this team, it’s tempting to say yes.
There is talent in abundance, youth and now international experience.
Adingono said: "I believe that, in addition to Angola, which has proven that they can compete with the very best in the world, the African continent is right at the forefront and will be ready to compete on a consistent basis worldwide," he said.
And the preparation will be key.
"I am hopeful that we will have a (good) preparation leading to the next qualifying tournament," he stressed again.
"We, as a nation, will welcome any sponsors that would like to endorse us for that particular event.
"Working in collaboration with the [Cameroon] Basketball Federation and Ministry of Sports, we are looking to put a plan in place.
"I am confident that all the people that support basketball in Cameroon and worldwide will help us every step of the way and provide the finances necessary to prepare and compete on an even playing field."
Adingono is confident, yet he is also very humble.
His national team players, he believes, are getting first-class instruction in the game in America.
"I would like to take this opportunity to thank all the coaches that are doing everything possible to get these young men to be the best that they can be," he said.
"I think the NCAA is the best thing that we have going in developing our young talent to give us a realistic chance to compete and expect to win in such grand stage."
And who are some of these talented players?
The best known lives in Los Angeles, and plays at the same university – UCLA - that gave the basketball world Lew Alcindor, the man who later changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and shone for the Milwaukee Bucks and Los Angeles Lakers.
Cameroon’s star at UCLA is forward Mbah A Moute.
"Mbah A Moute is very talented young man and will play a huge role in leading a young group of people to many future competitions starting with the Pre-Olympics next summer in Greece," Adingono said.

LAT -Tare looks ahead to FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament for Women



Riga (Olympics) - Latvia star Ieva Tare is playing a waiting game.
She is dreaming about fulfilling a lifetime's ambition, to play at the Olympics, but there are big hurdles to clear before that happens.
A leading player with TTT Riga in the Euroleague Women, Tara was a vital part of her national team's success last summer in Italy, when they reached the semi-finals of the Eurocup Women before falling to Russia.
It didn't help that injuries to leading players Anete Jekabsone-Zogota and Gunta Basko hurt their chances in that semi-final.
The setback meant that Latvia woluld have to go to the 12-team FIBA-Olympic Qualifying Tournament Women in Madrid instead and the draw for that competition is on Monday.
“It will be a great opportunity for the Latvian national team to qualify,” Tare said.
“But it will be very hard for sure. Only five of the 12 teams go through. And the others will be very good. Most important will be who is in our group.
“But we won't know for a while (the draw is January 14 in Madrid).
”Indeed, it will be a very big ask to reach the Beijing Olympics.
Europe has put a glittering array of teams in the competition, with EuroBasket runners-up Spain, bronze-medal winners Belarus and the Czech Republic also taking part.
Then there are the teams from the FIBA Americas, including Brazil, Argentina and Cuba.
Asia will have Chinese Taipei and Japan, Angola and Senegal will represent Africa and Oceania has Fiji taking part.
Other than the opponents, it will be a tough tournament for Latvia because it follows shortly after the end of TTT Riga’s season, with the games tipping off in Spain on June 9.
“I don't know,” Tare said. “It will come after a very hard season. But everybody else has to do the same, so that won't have much of an effect.
“That's life and we'll deal with it.
”There is little doubt as to what it would mean for Tare, and women’s basketball in Latvia if she and her teammates were to qualify for Beijing.
“That is so big,” she said. “It would be very, very, very great, especially since we're such a small country.”