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From 2 centres to 34, Jr. NBA programme spreads its wings

National Basketball Association (NBA) and Reliance Foundation have been tapping talent across the length and breadth of India through their Junior Programme, which is into its seventh edition this year. In an exclusive chat with DT Next, NBA India Basketball Operations Team Leader Marc Pulles in detail about the programme that was launched in 2013.

From 2 centres to 34, Jr. NBA programme spreads its wings
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Marc Pulles, NBA India Basketball Operations Team Leader

Chennai

Excerpts:


When did the Reliance Foundation Jr. NBA programme take birth and what is its objective going forward?


 The programme is a comprehensive youth development initiative that aims to develop the game at the grassroot level and positively impact the lives of boys and girls in India. Since its launch in 2013, the programme has reached more than 10 million youth from 13,000 schools across 34 cities and trained more than 13,000 physical education instructors nationwide.


Could you let us know about some of the challenges the programme has had to overcome over the last few years?


 We launched the programme in 2013 in two cities and in our seventh year now, we have spread across 34 cities. The challenge has been to cater to the increasing demand as participants request us to conduct the programme in more cities. We get such requests every year and try our best to increase the footprint across the country.


What, in your opinion, are some of the biggest achievements of the programmeso far in India?


 The first-ever NBA game in India between Sacramento Kings and Indiana Pacers on October 4, 2019, was played in front of 3,000 boys and girls from more 70 schools in Mumbai, who are part of the programme. 13 boys from the programme have made it to the NBA Academy India, our player development centre in New Delhi. Two-time NBA champion Kevin Durant and 3,459 Indian children from the program set a Guinness World Record on July 28, 2017, for the world’s largest basketball lesson (multiple venues), in New Delhi.


As far as the ongoing edition is concerned, what is the infrastructural set-up within which the programme functions?


 Returning for the seventh consecutive year, the 2020 edition is expected to engage more than 7 million youths and 8,000 physical education instructors. The programme has already tipped off in over 20 cities. We are conducting the programme using the existing infrastructure in schools, stadiums and grounds and with the support of the Basketball Federation of India (BFI).


The programme hasspread to 34 cities this time around. What are the criterions taken into account while selecting a city?


 The core idea is to take the programme across the country by going to as many citiesas possible. We have kept adding cities every year and stakeholders have welcomed our effortswholeheartedly.

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