NBA-India can emulate basketball's
popularity in China: NBA executive
Send a link to a friend
[October 05, 2019]
By Sudipto Ganguly
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Basketball can
become as popular in India as it is in neighboring China and
bringing pre-season games to Mumbai can prove a timely catalyst, a
top NBA executive has told Reuters.
Cricket-mad India, with its population of 1.3 billion, has been for
years on the radar of the National Basketball Association, which has
arranged the visits of 35 current and former players in the country
since 2006.
The NBA also runs an academy near New Delhi and opened an office in
Mumbai in 2011 - one of its 12 offices outside the United States.
On Friday, Indiana Pacers and Sacramento Kings faced off in Mumbai
in the first of the two pre-season games in India.
"I have been with NBA for 20 years, I was at those very first games
played in China. It reminds me very much of our early days in
China," NBA deputy commissioner Mark Tatum said in an interview.
"Today in China basketball is the number one sport. 300 million
people play the game of basketball in China.
"It is very reminiscent of the early days of the NBA in China. And I
think that basketball has the same potential here in India."
Since 2004, 17 NBA teams have played 26 games in Beijing, Guangzhou,
Macao, Shanghai, Shenzhen and Taipei and LeBron James' Los Angeles
Lakers will play a pair of exhibition games against the Brooklyn
Nets in China this month.
The Lakers, 16-time champions, and Nets will play in Shanghai on
Thursday followed by a game in Shenzhen on Oct. 12, extending the
trend of NBA squads competing in China.
According to the annual report on the teams' digital performance,
the NBA franchises gained a cumulative 47 million new followers on
Chinese social media platforms last season.
The popularity of Chinese basketball icon Yao Ming, who played nine
seasons in the NBA with the Houston Rockets, opened the doors for
the NBA in his native country but Indian players are yet to make a
mark in the league.
"There is no doubt that the presence of Yao helped accelerate our
interest in the game of basketball there," said Tatum, who is also
the chief operating office of the NBA.
[to top of second column] |
Indiana Pacers v Sacramento Kings - NSCI Dome, Mumbai, India -
October 4, 2019 General view during the game REUTERS/Francis
Mascarenhas
"And now even after Yao has stopped playing, that passion has been
fueled in Chinese fans and they continue to follow the game in
record numbers."
Besides its academy, the league launched the Reliance Foundation Jr.
NBA Program in 2013 to develop the game at the grassroots level in
India and Tatum said the NBA was deeply invested in developing
talent in the country.
"It's not to put a time frame on it. There is no doubt that I think
in the next five to 10 years we will see an everyday starter in the
NBA from India and hopefully an all-star starter in that time
frame," he said.
India is set to overtake China and become the world's most populous
country by 2022 and with its young population and economic growth
prospects, the south Asian country is one of the most important
markets for the NBA, Tatum said.
More than 3.1 million fans follow the NBA India Facebook page while
nearly 100 million people watched the NBA games last year on its
broadcast partner Sony Pictures Networks India.
While regular-season NBA games are not yet a realistic possibility
due to logistical issues, pre-season games might be a regular
feature in India.
"So for us we see all of that growing interest and the big macro
factors around the country, we see that as a great time to continue
to invest in India," Tatum said.
"I think depending on what we have seen so far, such a tremendous
response and a very, very successful trip and experience for our
players and the fans, I'd hope there will be more and more
pre-season games here."
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; editing by Amlan Chakraborty)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|