Bruised and Beaten,
but Nigerians Are Unbowed
The buzzer sounded the end of the fairy tale, and the
Nigerian team limped off the court in slow motion, unwilling, unable to let go.
As they filed into the tunnel, the crowd stood in unison and cheered the team
they call D’Tigers.
D’Tigers lost against on Monday, this time to France ,
standing ovation notwithstanding. To their list of firsts — first Olympics
appearance, first Olympics victory — they had added something less historic:
their first Olympic exit.
The run ended with the point guard in the hospital, with
Sunday’s leading scorer nursing a broken toe, with only eight players healthy
enough to practice. It ended with another comeback against a France
team stocked with N.B.A. players. It ended with another round of questions
about what it meant, a basketball team from Nigeria
here in the Olympics.
Afterward, not even the D’Tigers could make sense of the
events of the past six weeks. On one hand, with a roster cobbled together at
the last minute, they toppled established international teams — Lithuania ,
Greece and the Dominican
Republic — just to qualify. It was not
hyperbole to say they inspired a nation.
On the other, they finished Olympic group play with a 1-4
record, lost to the United States
by a whopping 83 points and endured racist chants and a rash of injuries.
Disappointment mixed with pride.
“People think that was the goal for us, to get here,”
forward Derrick Obasohan said. “It wasn’t. Coach said we were the first African
team to win an Olympic game. We earned respect, but. ...”
His voice trailed off. The man Obasohan called Coach, Ayodele
Bakare, sat nearby. He looked tired, his eyes bloodshot, his shoulders slumped.
He spent the morning at a hospital with Tony Skinn, the guard who led George
Mason on that magical N.C.A.A. tournament run in 2006.
Skinn had surgery for a torn quadriceps on Monday, his
teammates said. It surprised no one that Bakare went to see him.
For weeks, he and his staff performed so many jobs they
forgot where one ended and another one began.
Bakare, the coach of the Ebun Comets in Nigeria ’s
professional league, constructed the roster on the fly. He built the team
around Ike Diogu, a former Arizona State
star, and Al-Farouq Aminu, a forward for the New Orleans Hornets. Bakare
managed to find 10 players with college basketball experience to fill the
roster out.
He later traded his general manager cap for his coach’s one,
and after less than a month of practices, Bakare took that makeshift team to Venezuela ,
where, Diogu said, “we were just supposed to come in and get blown out.” Only
D’Tigers stunned three opponents.
Diogu said the local crowd embraced the Nigerians, and
although Diogu heard from his brother about celebrations in Nigeria ,
reality awaited, so many tasks and not a single person with experience to
perform them.
Only Nigeria
did not simply show up for its first contest and ask for autographs from its
opposition. In the first game, D’Tigers defeated Tunisia ,
jumping ahead early and holding on late.
A country in turmoil rallied around the team that had been
introduced six weeks earlier. Bakare’s voice mail filled.
Hiccups followed. A fan from Lithuania
was fined for making Nazi gestures and yelling monkey chants during a
Lithuanian victory. The United States
scored 156 points against D’Tigers, the most ever in an Olympic game.
Yet Nigeria
refused to yield. It stormed back against France
on Monday, behind 35 points from Chamberlain Oguchi, he of the broken toe.
Bakare said that as D’Tigers tied the game late in the fourth quarter, he
wanted to yell, in reference to the United States
coach, Mike Krzyzewski: “Bring on Coach K! We want a rematch! Tonight!”
Afterward, unbroken, Bakare and his players dared to dream.
This summer, the run, allowed them that.
They noted the injuries that plagued them, the way the
roster thinned. They talked about the limited time they spent together, how,
come the African championships next summer, much more could be accomplished.
Bakare guaranteed Nigeria
would improve more than any Olympic team over the next four years.
“You haven’t seen the last of Team Nigeria ,”
Obasohan said.
Players and coaches decided Monday to leave the cosmic
questions, the what it meant, for later. Most planned to visit Skinn at the
hospital, then scatter back across the world.
Bakare called the reaction in Nigeria
uplifting, but said he received negative phone calls, too. Diogu hoped his play
over the past six weeks had earned him another shot at the N.B.A. Obasohan
wanted to return to his 3-month-old son, Darren, before he returned to Spain in
one week for another season.
The three of them sat in a circle, in the near empty news
conference room, as if competing to look most tired. The experience that
inspired others had drained the men involved. Bakare even said he would
consider stepping down as the coach, perhaps in 30 days.
“Nigeria
basketball has come of age,” he said. “Nigeria
basketball doesn’t need me anymore.”
His players quickly dismissed that notion. Bakare, their
coach, general manager, insurance agent and travel secretary, embodied what
D’Tigers became over the past six weeks. Not simply a basketball team. A
historic one.
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