Nigerian basketballer makes history in America
A Nigerian is the first Penn hoops player ever to make an
Olympic team and this is record-breaking indeed!
Former Quaker Koko Archibong made Penn history when he and
the Nigerian national basketball team defeated the Dominican
Republic to secure a spot in the London
Games.
Archibong was a four-year letterwinner for the Red and Blue
and captained the team in his 22-6 (14-0 Ivy) senior season.
With only 17 days remaining until the opening ceremony of
the 2012 Summer Olympics, Penn has one more athlete heading to London .
Koko Archibong, a College graduate from the Class of 2003,
became the latest member of the Quakers’ family to punch his ticket to the
Olympics when the Nigeria basketball team defeated the Dominican Republic,
88-73, to earn the final spot in the men’s tournament and its first ever
appearance at the Olympics.
In helping Nigeria
qualify, Archibong will be the first current or former men’s basketball player
to ever compete at the Olympics.
The forward appeared in 99 games in his career as a Quaker
and captained the team in 2002-03 along with Andy Toole. During his time at the
Palestra he won three Ivy League titles and finished with 1,131 points and 504
rebounds. In his junior year he tied the school record by starting all 32
games.
Archibong currently plays for the Gießen LTi 46ers in Germany .
In the 2011-12 season, he averaged 23.4 minutes and netted 8.7 points over 34
games.
Drawn in a group along with Lithuania
and Venezuela , Nigeria
lost its opening game to Venezuela ,
71-69.
Facing a must-win game against Lithuania ,
which sports Toronto Raptor’s forward Linas Keliza ,
Nigeria earned a
six-point win and advanced to the quarterfinals with a higher scoring
differential.
In the final eight, No. 21 Nigeria faced one of the world’s
best teams, No. 4 Greece, and pulled off an improbable 80-79 upset, thanks in
large part to Ade Dagunduro, who scored the team’s last seven points. As the
final whistle sounded ,the Nigerians piled up on center court to celebrate the
victory.
Although a win in the semifinals would have guaranteed the
Nigerians a berth in the Olympics, D’Tigers lost to Russia
before defeating the Dominican Republic
in the third-place game.
“Well if you consider yourself to be a big-time player you
got to relish those moments,” said Ike Diogu, Nigeria ’s
leading scorer during the tournament and seven-year NBA player, in an interview
with FIBA after the game. “I said I’m going to be the one to put the team on
our back, thank goodness the balls went in.”
“We’re going to try and place,” guard Derrick Obasohan said.
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