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		NBA takes basketball know-how to Cuba, 
		first for U.S. pro league 
		
		 
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		[April 07, 2015] 
		By Steve Ginsburg 
		  
		 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The National 
		Basketball Association, along with basketball's international governing 
		body, announced plans on Monday to host a developmental camp for male 
		and female players in Cuba, in the first such initiative by a U.S. pro 
		sports league since the United States and the communist-ruled island 
		embarked on a diplomatic thaw in December. 
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			 Retired NBA stand-outs Steve Nash and Dikembe Mutombo and former 
			WNBA star Ticha Penicheiro will lead the camp, set for April 23-26 
			in Havana. 
			 
			The NBA will also join with the International Basketball Federation 
			(FIBA) to refurbish three basketball courts and host youth 
			basketball clinics at two Havana locations. 
			 
			Cuba has a long history of basketball and has participated four 
			world championships, but its players' links to the NBA have been 
			limited by a 50-year standoff between the Cuba and the United 
			States. 
			 
			Mutombo, a Congolese-American elected to the U.S. Basketball Hall of 
			Fame on Monday, said "this visit to Cuba will be a fantastic 
			opportunity to teach the values of our game and learn from one 
			another." 
			  
			  
			 
			The United States and Cuba agreed on Dec. 17 to restore diplomatic 
			ties after more than a half century of tensions, and President 
			Barack Obama called for an end to a long-time U.S. economic embargo. 
			 
			FIBA President Horacio Muratore said in a statement it was 
			"extremely gratifying" to see Cuba hosting the camp. 
			 
			Cuba's men's national basketball team has participated in six 
			Olympics, winning the bronze medal at the 1972 Games in Munich. 
			 
			The NBA said Cubans have played basketball since 1906, when the game 
			was introduced after being learned in North American colleges and 
			YMCA gymnasiums. 
			 
			The NBA said two players and one coach from Cuba will be invited for 
			the first time to participate in an upcoming camp of Basketball 
			without Borders, a global NBA and FIBA basketball development and 
			community relations outreach program. 
			
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			"To have both the NBA and FIBA collaborate on youth instruction and 
			the development of the game in our country is magnificent," Cuban 
			Basketball Federation President Ruperto Herrera said in a statement. 
			 
			Cuba allows its some of its top athletes to play in professional 
			leagues abroad as long as Cuban sports officials retain the right to 
			recall those players for international events or domestic 
			competition. 
			 
			But so far that system has not been tested in U.S. sports because of 
			restrictions imposed by the American embargo. 
			 
			(Editing by Mary Milliken and Steve Orlofsky) 
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