mardi 12 juillet 2011

NBA hosts 10th BWB camps, minus active players

NEW YORK (AP)—The NBA is celebrating the 10th anniversary of its Basketball without Borders program, the first that won’t involve active players because of the lockout.

Camps will be held in Slovenia, Johannesburg, South Africa, and Rio de Janeiro. The Slovenian camp will be the first held in one of the former Yugoslav republics, where the 50 campers who attended the inaugural camp in 2001 came from.
The camps, organized by the NBA and FIBA, bring young players together for on-court instruction and life-skills seminars. The campers won’t get any coaching from active players, who are prevented from taking part in league activities during the lockout.
Commissioner David Stern said during the finals the league’s community outreach initiatives would continue without them, relying on retired players.
Former Kings center Vlade Divac from Serbia, who was instrumental in the creation of the Basketball without Borders program, will return for the camp in Slovenia.
“Basketball was always a source of pride in the former Yugoslavia, and I thought it would be a great vehicle through which to teach tolerance and mutual respect after a period of such division and conflict,” Divac said Tuesday in a statement. “I am amazed at how the program has grown over the last decade and couldn’t be prouder to participate in this special anniversary celebration.”
Dominique Wilkins and Allan Houston will help run the camp in Brazil, site of the first Americas camp in 2004. NBA Global Ambassador Dikembe Mutombo  will lead the camp as it returns to Johannesburg for the eighth time.
There have been 27 Basketball without Borders camps in 14 countries since its inception. Seventeen campers have gone on to be drafted into the NBA.

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