Dubai Telegraph - Knocked out but heads high: S.Sudan cheers defeated basketball team

EUR -
AED 3.850348
AFN 71.723895
ALL 98.294224
AMD 409.351011
ANG 1.894111
AOA 956.029757
ARS 1055.883554
AUD 1.619223
AWG 1.889522
AZN 1.777975
BAM 1.955088
BBD 2.121928
BDT 125.584292
BGN 1.955092
BHD 0.395156
BIF 3104.769976
BMD 1.048278
BND 1.415085
BOB 7.262391
BRL 6.093018
BSD 1.050918
BTN 88.586758
BWP 14.337782
BYN 3.439348
BYR 20546.257908
BZD 2.118429
CAD 1.474351
CDF 3009.607446
CHF 0.928639
CLF 0.037143
CLP 1024.902007
CNY 7.602168
CNH 7.614606
COP 4616.408703
CRC 537.009671
CUC 1.048278
CUP 27.779379
CVE 110.224882
CZK 25.280074
DJF 187.141887
DKK 7.458608
DOP 63.357545
DZD 140.37812
EGP 52.030461
ERN 15.724177
ETB 131.513834
FJD 2.3852
FKP 0.827424
GBP 0.833727
GEL 2.861712
GGP 0.827424
GHS 16.499995
GIP 0.827424
GMD 74.427574
GNF 9055.704052
GTQ 8.111048
GYD 219.869975
HKD 8.157336
HNL 26.580326
HRK 7.477642
HTG 137.931114
HUF 410.474365
IDR 16692.262133
ILS 3.819759
IMP 0.827424
INR 88.418148
IQD 1376.698932
IRR 44119.425234
ISK 145.102983
JEP 0.827424
JMD 165.9496
JOD 0.74354
JPY 159.908067
KES 136.097678
KGS 90.989726
KHR 4218.50486
KMF 491.589818
KPW 943.450221
KRW 1463.585741
KWD 0.322524
KYD 0.875781
KZT 524.74901
LAK 22997.629698
LBP 94111.946668
LKR 306.038613
LRD 188.641341
LSL 19.016379
LTL 3.095294
LVL 0.634093
LYD 5.142128
MAD 10.535166
MDL 19.20601
MGA 4907.213952
MKD 61.519065
MMK 3404.767562
MNT 3562.050167
MOP 8.423934
MRU 41.801185
MUR 49.090767
MVR 16.195629
MWK 1822.336736
MXN 21.683886
MYR 4.673751
MZN 66.979036
NAD 19.016379
NGN 1768.980499
NIO 38.675923
NOK 11.709171
NPR 141.738412
NZD 1.788552
OMR 0.403573
PAB 1.050923
PEN 3.965757
PGK 4.236458
PHP 61.717921
PKR 292.004421
PLN 4.305106
PYG 8201.015128
QAR 3.831805
RON 4.976495
RSD 116.991014
RUB 110.593948
RWF 1447.97299
SAR 3.938531
SBD 8.795675
SCR 14.277076
SDG 630.536598
SEK 11.519428
SGD 1.411874
SHP 0.827424
SLE 23.796749
SLL 21981.88023
SOS 600.58141
SRD 37.114327
STD 21697.247753
SVC 9.195653
SYP 2633.830942
SZL 19.022077
THB 36.377322
TJS 11.229313
TMT 3.679457
TND 3.320991
TOP 2.455176
TRY 36.326625
TTD 7.145399
TWD 34.079245
TZS 2772.696661
UAH 43.665607
UGX 3893.582877
USD 1.048278
UYU 44.7837
UZS 13467.098465
VES 48.949441
VND 26641.99718
VUV 124.453726
WST 2.926365
XAF 655.718342
XAG 0.034415
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.833025
XDR 0.803907
XOF 655.718342
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.991017
ZAR 19.065568
ZMK 9435.766903
ZMW 28.979453
ZWL 337.545238
  • SCS

    -0.1800

    13.54

    -1.33%

  • BCC

    -4.0900

    148.41

    -2.76%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    24.43

    -0.61%

  • CMSC

    -0.1600

    24.57

    -0.65%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    13.24

    -0.98%

  • RIO

    -0.9500

    62.03

    -1.53%

  • BCE

    -0.3900

    26.63

    -1.46%

  • RBGPF

    60.1000

    60.1

    +100%

  • NGG

    -0.4300

    62.83

    -0.68%

  • GSK

    -0.1300

    34.02

    -0.38%

  • BTI

    0.3800

    37.71

    +1.01%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    6.78

    -0.29%

  • BP

    -0.3600

    28.96

    -1.24%

  • AZN

    -0.0400

    66.36

    -0.06%

  • RELX

    0.2400

    46.81

    +0.51%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    8.86

    -0.56%

Knocked out but heads high: S.Sudan cheers defeated basketball team
Knocked out but heads high: S.Sudan cheers defeated basketball team / Photo: Peter Louis GUME - AFP

Knocked out but heads high: S.Sudan cheers defeated basketball team

As the final whistle rang out, signalling South Sudan's defeat to Serbia and their elimination from the Basketball World Cup on Wednesday, diehard fan Deng Makuc said he was disappointed but proud.

Text size:

"We have shown (the world) that it's not only the war that we have in our country, but we can do better in other fields," the Juba resident told AFP.

Ranked 62 in the world, the South Sudanese side stunned China to claim their first-ever victory on Monday during their World Cup debut in Manila -- offering their citizens a rare respite from the long-running crises facing the young country.

The impoverished, violence-wracked nation won independence from Sudan in 2011, before descending into a five-year civil war that killed nearly 400,000 people between 2013 and 2018.

South Sudan played their first official international basketball game just six years ago.

Hopes were high on Wednesday as hundreds of fans gathered at the Nimra Talata basketball stadium in the capital Juba to cheer the team, blowing vuvuzelas and donning the colours of the national flag while a giant screen broadcast the action from the Philippines.

Even the 115-83 loss by their team, which is nicknamed the Bright Stars, did little to dampen their spirits.

"For me as a person, I do not care about the outcome. What I care about is the way they have played, the way they have tried and the way they have put us on the map in the world of basketball," Mary Nyanut told AFP.

"I know the best is yet to come," she added.

Others hailed the team's defeat of China earlier in the week.

"We were able to play with the giants of the world," said Paul Isaac.

For "a small country like South Sudan to come and win against China, this is huge", he added.

- 'The world will know us' -

The team's rise has been masterminded by Luol Deng, former Chicago Bulls player and now president of the country's basketball federation.

As the team's coach during the qualifiers, the charismatic double NBA All-Star led the team to a historic qualification for the World Cup.

Currently the assistant to head coach Royal Ivey during the World Cup, he is aiming to secure the team a place in the Paris Olympics which will be awarded to the best of five African nations, with Cape Verde, Egypt, Ivory Coast, Angola also in the running.

One of the poorest countries on the planet despite large oil reserves, South Sudan has spent almost half of its life as a nation at war and continues to be roiled by outbreaks of politically motivated ethnic violence.

But its basketball dreams have brought South Sudan together, with several fans telling AFP the nation was standing as one to cheer the team.

"As you can see, there is no tribe, there is no what, people are coming together to support their team," said Hillary Gaga Michael.

"South Sudan's image in the outside world has been best known for bad things such as war and conflict, (but) our boys there... did remarkable things," he added.

"It is really historic for us as South Sudanese," he told AFP.

"Now the world will know us as basketballers."

strs-amu/txw/bsp

A.El-Sewedy--DT