Skip to main content
Part of complete coverage on

Nigerian NBA boss finding Africa's basketball stars

By Vladimir Duthiers, CNN
November 9, 2012 -- Updated 1154 GMT (1954 HKT)
Masai Ujiri is the general manager of the Denver Nuggets. Born in Zaria, Nigeria, he is the first African to take charge of a major league American sports team. Masai Ujiri is the general manager of the Denver Nuggets. Born in Zaria, Nigeria, he is the first African to take charge of a major league American sports team.
HIDE CAPTION
Masai Ujiri
Masai Ujiri
Masai Ujiri
Masai Ujiri
Masai Ujiri
Masai Ujiri
<<
<
1
2
3
4
5
6
>
>>
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Masai Ujiri is the general manager of NBA team the Denver Nuggets
  • The Nigerian is the first African to take charge of an American major league team
  • Ujiri hopes to grow the sport of basketball across Africa

African Voices is a weekly show that highlights Africa's most engaging personalities, exploring the lives and passions of people who rarely open themselves up to the camera. Follow the team on Twitter.

Denver, Colorado (CNN) -- Soccer may be the king of sports in Africa, but one man is on a mission to change that by uncovering the continent's rising basketball stars.

Masai Ujiri is the general manager for the Denver Nuggets and the first African to take charge of an American major league sports team.

The Nigerian, himself a former professional basketball player outside the NBA, took over at the Nuggets in 2010 but has been working to develop the game across Africa for just short of a decade.

Basketball boss scouts global talent

"I don't just want to be the first African GM in American sports -- I want to win. I want to make an impact in Africa (and) grow the game," he says.

See also: Luc Mbah a Moute -- African prince of the NBA

Africa's athletic ambassador
African NBA boss on meteoric rise

Ujiri is a camp director with Basketball without Borders -- a community outreach program run by the NBA which sees talented youngsters around the world receive coaching from professional players.

He is also the founder of the Giants of Africa Foundation, a basketball camp that aims to give talented young African players a solid education and the skills to compete at an international sporting level.

"Kids come from Benin Republic or in the past we have had kids come from Ghana and Togo. I think it has been a great concept," says Ujiri of his foundation.

"My honest goal is to try to build facilities in Africa ... so kids have [the] chance that I got, to get to where I am."

Watch video: Masai Ujiri's meteoric rise

Since opening its started in 2004, more than 80 camp attendees have moved on to high school or university in the United States, whilst around 20 now play professionally in Europe.

Ujiri hopes to generate a level of interest that will result in more players making it to the very top of the sport in Africa and beyond.

He highlights Cameroon's Luc Mbah a Moute -- now in his fourth season at the Milwaukee Bucks and former Basketball Without Borders attendee -- as the type of player he hopes to see more of in the professional game.

Watch video: Basketball boss scouts global talent

"It's all up to us to find the talent," says Ujiri. "Building facilities, helping coaching ... helping to start leagues, all these things are going to enhance one person somewhere."

But in Africa, basketball must compete for attention with already established sports, making it even more challenging to encourage young people to take up the game.

Some of the world's most identifiable soccer stars, such as Samuel Eto'o, Didier Drogba and Michael Essien hail from Africa and are feted as heroes across the continent.

A host of European football clubs meanwhile have partnerships with their African counterparts.

Basketball will get there, I hope during my time, and I hope we can build facilities to grow where kids can get a place to play and we can find more talent
Masai Ujiri

"I think [with] basketball we are little bit behind," admits Ujiri. "I said to my friends years ago, football is going to make some kind of impression because the talent is so great.

"Look at it now all over the world you can look at any big team and see so many impactful [African] soccer players.

"Basketball will get there, I hope during my time, and I hope we can build facilities where kids can get a place to play and we can find more talent."

See also: From war child to U.S. Olympic star

Even with increased focus on promoting basketball opportunities in Africa, Ujiri is mindful to point out just how difficult it remains to be successful basketball pro.

He cites his own circuitous journey to the peak of his profession as an example of the sacrifice, dedication and good fortune required to make it to the top.

After ending a professional playing career in 2002, which saw him grace a number of European leagues, Ujiri worked as a youth coach in Nigeria and an unpaid talent scout for the NBA's Orlando Magic.

He secured his first paying NBA gig in 2003 as a scout for the Nuggets before moving to the Toronto Raptors to work as director of global scouting. In 2010 he returned to Denver to take over as GM.

"Not many make the NBA. It's really tough and you try to explain that to a lot of African kids not many have made it that way, the Luc Mbah a Moute's [way]," he says.

He is keen to impart this wisdom to the youngsters who attend his schools and training camps.

But Ujiri remains confident that with the right encouragement and role models, Africa's talented young players can become the NBA's stars of tomorrow.

"I was once a basketball player like them," he says. "I grew up in Nigeria playing basketball ... there is always a way.

"Roads may be bumpy and [you] may have to take a longer path but Africa is a wonderful continent."

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
African Voices
September 16, 2013 -- Updated 1111 GMT (1911 HKT)
Hollywood star Charlize Theron is campaigning to prevent the spread of HIV in her homeland of South Africa.
August 14, 2013 -- Updated 1139 GMT (1939 HKT)
Meet singer Fatoumata Diawara, one of world music's most exciting stars.
August 15, 2013 -- Updated 1551 GMT (2351 HKT)
Developers, designers and big thinkers gather together on the rooftop of the Co-Creation Hub in Lagos to discuss ideas.
It's time for Africa to invest in tech-driven development, and become a world-class innovator, says Harvard professor Calestous Juma.
August 6, 2013 -- Updated 0847 GMT (1647 HKT)
Fartuun Adan is a champion for women's rights and the co-founder of Sister Somalia, the East African country's first rape and crisis center.
August 2, 2013 -- Updated 1027 GMT (1827 HKT)
The founder of the "African Oscars," Peace Anyiam-Osigwe, picks her favorite films of the 21st century. Check them out.
July 29, 2013 -- Updated 1623 GMT (0023 HKT)
What if American Beauty, The Matrix and other iconic films had been made in Africa? This is what they'd look like.
July 26, 2013 -- Updated 1108 GMT (1908 HKT)
A Maasai activist is trying to help his people adapt to the 21st century, starting radio stations and encouraging women to set up businesses.
July 2, 2013 -- Updated 0955 GMT (1755 HKT)
Tererai Trent is a former child bride turned scholar, who has dedicated her life to bringing educational opportunities to disadvantaged children.
June 28, 2013 -- Updated 1108 GMT (1908 HKT)
The doctor-turned-satirist, known as "Egypt's Jon Stewart," has faced lawsuits and hostility, but he says jokes can help rebuild his country.
June 19, 2013 -- Updated 1111 GMT (1911 HKT)
Esspresso being made at the Everyman Expresso coffee house July 31, 2012 in the Soho section of New York.
Ugandan businessman Andrew Rugasira has created an international coffee brand that he says is a model for African success.
June 12, 2013 -- Updated 1052 GMT (1852 HKT)
Meet Yityish Aynaw, the Ethiopian-born Miss Israel who's ready to shine on the world stage.
June 6, 2013 -- Updated 1231 GMT (2031 HKT)
EUROPAPOKAL DER LANDESMEISTER 92/93, FINALE 1993, Muenchen; AC MAILAND - OLYMPIQUE MARSEILLE 0:1; JUBEL OLYMPIQUE MARSEILLE - CASONI, Marcel DESAILLY, Basile BOLI, Didier DESCHAMPS, Abedi PELE
Abedi "Pele" Ayew is a football legend whose skills on the field earned him the nickname of arguably the game's greatest player.
May 31, 2013 -- Updated 0935 GMT (1735 HKT)
Ethiopian scientist Zeray Alemseged discovered "Selam," the fossil known as "the world's oldest child."
Each week African Voices brings you inspiring and compelling profiles of Africans across the continent and around the world.
ADVERTISEMENT