2021 BAL season

The 2021 BAL season, also known as BAL Season 1, was the inaugural season of the Basketball Africa League (BAL). Established as a joint effort between the National Basketball Association (NBA) and FIBA, the BAL is the highest tier continental league of Africa, replacing the FIBA Africa Basketball League.[1] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the BAL held its inaugural season one year later as planned, with the season beginning in 2021.[2][3] Initially the league planned to play in six venues in six countries; however, due to the pandemic the season was held in a bio-secure bubble in Kigali, Rwanda. The season began on 16 May 2021 and ended on 30 May 2021.[4]

2021 BAL season
The Kigali Arena in Kigali hosted the entire competition
LeagueBasketball Africa League
Season2021
Dates16 – 30 May 2021
Number of games26
Number of teams12
Regular season
Season MVPWalter Hodge
(Zamalek)
Finals
ChampionsEgypt Zamalek (1st title)
  Runners-upTunisia US Monastir
Third placeAngola Petro de Luanda
Fourth placeRwanda Patriots
Statistical leaders
PointsTerrell Stoglin (AS Salé)30.8
ReboundsIbrahima Thomas (Police)12.0
AssistsMyck Kabongo (Ferroviário)6.8
Records
Biggest home win47 points
GNBC 66–113 US Monastir
(12 May 2021)
Winning streak6 games
Zamalek
Highest attendance1,789
US Monastir 63–76 Zamalek
(30 May 2021)
Seasons

The qualifying rounds for the season were held from 16 October to 21 December 2019, with national champion of each African country has the opportunity to qualify through the qualifying rounds. Meanwhile, six national champions directly qualified for the regular season to make a total of twelve teams in the main tournament.

Zamalek won the first-ever BAL championship after beating US Monastir in the finals and going undefeated over the season.[5]

Organisation

The plans to establish the BAL by FIBA and the NBA were first revealed in February 2019 during the 2019 NBA All-Star Game.[6]

In August 2019, the seven host cities for the BAL season were announced.[7] Additionally, it was revealed that the inaugural BAL Final Four would be played in the Kigali Arena in Kigali, Rwanda. BAL president Amadou Gallo Fall, later announced at the NBA All-Star 2020 Africa Luncheon in Chicago, that the season was planned to tip off on 13 March 2020.[8] On 20 February 2020, it was announced that the 12 teams were to be drawn in two conferences, named the Sahara and Nile Conferences.[9]

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic

On 3 March 2020, the BAL announced it was postponing its inaugural season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[10] The decision was made following recommendations of the Senegalese government.

In November, the start of the inaugural season was delayed for a second time and the new season was moved to a later to be announced date in 2021.[11] In March it was announced the league would commence in May 2021. The complete event was rescheduled to be held in the Kigali Arena and the regular season changed its format from two groups to three groups of four.[4] All twelve teams were hosted in a bio-secure bubble in which all players were regularly tested for COVID-19. All games were broadcast live by ESPN Africa.[12]

Qualification

The twelve teams for the inaugural BAL season had to qualify in their domestic competitions to be able to play in the league, similar to other FIBA-organised competitions. Six teams qualified directly as their national champions while an additional six teams qualified through regional qualifying tournaments.

Direct qualification

FIBA announced that the national champions of six member associations would be directly qualified for the regular season. These teams are from countries which are also hosts cities for the regular season, except for Final Four host Rwanda.[7] On 23 October 2019, AS Douanes won the Senegalese national championship, becoming the first club to qualify.[13]

Directly qualified teams
No.CountryTeamNotes
1  AngolaPetro de LuandaDirectly Qualified
2  EgyptZamalek
3  MoroccoAS Salé
No.CountryTeamNotes
4  NigeriaRivers HoopersDirectly Qualified
5  SenegalAS Douanes
6  TunisiaUS Monastir

Qualifying tournaments

Each of the FIBA Africa member associations was able to register one team from its country to participate in the qualifying tournaments. A total of 31 teams played in the first round, which was divided into six groups in six different host cities.[14] The qualification tournaments started on 16 October and will end 21 December 2019.

Teams and countries playing in the 2020 BAL Qualifying Tournaments
No.CountryTeamNotes
1  AlgeriaGS PétroliersQualified
2  BeninASPAC
3  BotswanaDolphins
4  BurundiDynamo
5  CameroonFAP
Qualified
6  CAFAbeilles
Withdrew
7  ComorosUsoni
8  DR CongoASB Mazembe
9  EthiopiaHawassa City
10  GabonManga
11  GhanaBraves of Customs
12  GuineaSLAC
13  Ivory CoastABC
14  KenyaKPA
15  LiberiaNPA Pythons
16  LibyaAl-Nasr Benghazi
No.CountryTeamNotes
17  MadagascarGNBC
Qualified
18  MalawiBrave Hearts
Withdrew
19  MaliAS Police
Qualified
20  MozambiqueFerroviário de Maputo
Qualified
21  NamibiaLions Club
22  NigerAS Nigelec
23  RwandaPatriots
Qualified
24  SeychellesBeau Vallon Heat
25  South AfricaJozi Nuggets
26  South SudanCobra
27  TanzaniaJKT
28  UgandaCity Oilers
29  ZambiaUNZA Pacers
30  ZimbabweMercenaries
31  Equatorial GuineaVirgen Maria de Africa

Teams

Qualified teams

TeamHome cityQualified asQualified on
US MonastirMonastir, TunisiaWinners of the 2018–19 Championnat National A1 May 2019
ZamalekCairo, EgyptWinners of the 2018–19 Egyptian Super League4 May 2019
Petro de LuandaLuanda, AngolaWinners of the 2018–19 Angolan Basketball League25 May 2019
AS SaléSalé, MoroccoWinners of the 2018–19 Division Excellence30 May 2019
AS DouanesDakar, SenegalWinners of the 2019 Nationale 1 season23 October 2019
Rivers HoopersPort Harcourt, NigeriaWinners of the 2019 NBBF President Cup17 November 2019[15]
GS PétroliersAlgiers, AlgeriaWest Division winners30 November 2019[16]
FAPYaoundé, CameroonWest Division runners-up30 November 2019[16]
AS PoliceBamako, MaliWest Division third place1 December 2019[17]
PatriotsKigali, RwandaEast Division winners21 December 2019
GNBCAntsirabe, MadagascarEast Division runners-up21 December 2019[18]
Ferroviário de MaputoMaputo, MozambiqueEast Division third place22 December 2019

Personnel and sponsorship

TeamHead coachTeam captain
AS Douanes Pabi Gueye[19] Alkaly Ndour
AS Salé Said El Bouzidi[20] Zakaria El Masbahi
AS Police Babacar Kanouté[19] Badra Samaké[21]
FAP Lazare Adingono[22] Ebaku Akumenzoh
Ferroviário de Maputo Milagre Macome[19] Custódio Muchate
GNBC Lova Navalona Raharidera[19] Francis Mory
GS Pétroliers Sofiane Boulahia[23] Mustapha Adrar
Patriots Alan Major[24] Aristide Mugabe
Petro de Luanda José Neto[25] Leonel Paulo
Rivers Hoopers Ogoh Odaudu[19] Belema Alamin
US Monastir Mounir Ben Slimane Radhouane Slimane
Zamalek Augustí Julbe[22] Haytham Elsaharty

Foreign players

In line with league rules, each BAL team was allowed to have four foreign players on its roster, including only two non-African players.

Team
Player 1Player 2Player 3Player 4
AS Douanes Chris Cokley[26] Hassan Attia[26] Mohamed Sadi[26]
AS Salé Ra'Shad James[27] Terrell Stoglin[28] Johndre Jefferson[27]
AS Police Ibrahima Thomas[27] Jawachi Nzeakor[29] Mylo Mitchell[27]
FAP Abdoulaye Harouna[30] Marcus Thomas[30] Matthew Hezekiah
Ferroviário de Maputo Adjehi Baru[31] Álvaro Calvo Masa[31] Demarcus Holland[31] Myck Kabongo
GNBC Cameron Ridley[32]
GS Pétroliers
Patriots Jermaine Cole[33] Bush Wamukota[34] Brandon Costner[33]
Petro de Luanda Ryan Richards[35] Antwan Scott[27]
Rivers Hoopers Robinson Opong[36] Chris Daniels[37] Taren Sullivan[37]
US Monastir Ater Majok[22] Wael Arakji[22] Chris Crawford[27]
Zamalek Chinemelu Elonu[38] Michael Fakuade[39] Walter Hodge[22] Mouloukou Diabate[40]


Venues

Location of venues of the 2020 BAL season.
Red: Sahara Conference; Yellow: Nile Conference; Grey: Playoffs & Finals.

On 1 August 2019, the NBA announced the seven host cities for the regular season.[7] Six cities in six countries would host the regular season games, with three assigned to each conference. The Kigali Arena in Kigali, Rwanda was announced as venue for the inaugural Final Four. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak, it was later decided that the entire event was to be played at the Kigali Arena.[4]

Proposed venues of the inaugural BAL season before the format change
ArenaCapacityLocation
Dakar Arena
15,000
Dakar, Senegal
Cairo Stadium Indoor Halls Complex
16,500
Cairo, Egypt
Salle El Bouâzzaoui
2,000
Salé, Morocco
Kilamba Arena
12,270
Luanda, Angola
Kigali Arena (Final Four)
10,000
Kigali, Rwanda
National Stadium
3,000[41]
Lagos, Nigeria
Mohamed-Mzali Sports Hall
4,075
Monastir, Tunisia

Schedule

PhaseRoundDraw dateGames
QualifyingFirst round9 October 201915 October – 3 November 2019
Elite 1621 November 201926 November – 22 December 2019
Group phase29 March 202116–24 May 2021
PlayoffsQuarter-finals26–27 May 2021
Semi-finals29 May 2021
Final and third place30 May 2021

Qualifying tournaments

The official reveal of the Basketball Africa League logo during the qualifiers in Kigali

In the qualifying rounds, 32 teams from 32 countries participated in the West and East Division. The first round began 15 October and ended 3 November 2019, with sixteen teams advancing to the second round. The second-round games began 26 November and will end 22 December 2019, with six teams qualifying for the regular season.

Rosters

Transactions

Group phase

BAL players wearing masks due to the measurements taken against COVID-19 at the tournament

The group phase began on 16 May 2021 and ended on 24 May 2021. Initially, it was planned that in the regular season, the twelve teams would play in two Conferences with six teams each. Each team would play five games, one against each opponent, inside its conference. The top three teams from each conference would advance to the Super 6.[42] The regular season would be played in six arenas divided over the African continent.[42]

The format was changed to a group phase as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, which was completely played at the Kigali Arena. In three groups of four each team plays the other one time and the first, second and best third-placed teams advance to the playoffs.[4]

Group A

PosTeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification USM PAT RIV GNB
1 US Monastir330303211+926Advance to playoffs91–75
2 Patriots (H)321236223+13583–6078–72
3 Rivers Hoopers312210251−41470–99
4 GNBC303207271−64366–11369–80
Source: BAL
(H) Hosts

Group B

PosTeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification PDL ASS FAP POL
1 Petro de Luanda330247208+396Advance to playoffs97–7884–66
2 AS Salé321253260−7587–8488–79
3 FAP312235218+17464–6687–65
4 AS Police303210259−493
Source: BAL

Group C

PosTeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification ZAM FVM ASD GSP
1 Zamalek330254181+736Advance to playoffs71–5597–64
2 Ferroviário de Maputo321229218+11588–74
3 AS Douanes312230250−20462–8694–76
4 GS Pétroliers303213277−64373–86
Source: BAL

Ranking of third-placed teams

PosGrpTeamPldWLPFPAPDPtsQualification
1B FAP312235218+174Advance to playoffs
2C AS Douanes312230250−204
3A Rivers Hoopers312210251−414
Source: BAL

Playoffs

All eight qualified teams from the group stage were ranked and seeded to determine the match-ups. The play-offs games were played in a single-elimination format.[4][43] The playoffs began on 26 May and ended on 30 May 2021 with the 2021 BAL Finals.[44]

Bracket

 
QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinals
 
          
 
27 May
 
 
1
US Monastir
86
 
29 May
 
8
AS Douanes
62
 
1
US Monastir
87
 
27 May
 
4
Patriots
46
 
4
Patriots
73
 
30 May
 
5
Ferroviário de Maputo
71
 
1
US Monastir
63
 
26 May
 
2
Zamalek
76
 
2
Zamalek
82
 
29 May
 
7
FAP
53
 
2
Zamalek
89
 
26 May
 
3
Petro de Luanda
71Third place game
 
3
Petro de Luanda
79
 
30 May
 
6
AS Salé
72
 
4
Patriots
68
 
 
3
Petro de Luanda
97
 

Final standings

PositionTeamRecord
1 Zamalek6–0
2 US Monastir5–1
3 Petro de Luanda5–1
4 Patriots3–3
5 Ferroviário de Maputo2–2
6 AS Salé2–2
7 FAP1–3
8 AS Douanes1–3
9 Rivers Hoopers1–2
10 AS Police0–3
11 GS Pétroliers0–3
12 GNBC0–3

Awards

Statistics

The following were the statistical leaders in 2021 BAL season.[49]

Individual game highs

CategoryPlayerTeamStatistic
Points Terrell StoglinAS Salé40
Rebounds Jone PedroPetro de Luanda17
Ibrahima ThomasAS Police
Assists Myck KabongoFerroviário de Maptuo12
Steals Mokhtar GhyazaUS Monastir5
Blocks Anas MahmoudZamalek5
Three pointers Radhouane SlimaneUS Monastir6
Aristide MugabePatriots

Team statistic leaders

CategoryTeamStatistic
Points per gameUS Monastir89.9
Rebounds per gameFAP42.0
Assists per gameUS Monastir24.4
Steals per game11.0
Blocks per gameRivers Hoopers5.3
Turnovers per gameGS Pétroliers22.0
Fouls per game25.7
FG%Zamalek49.9%
FT%Ferroviário de Maputo78.9%
3FG%US Monastir36.1%

Controversies

The BAL has faced criticism by The Guardian over its close ties with the Rwandan government in organising the league, using the league as a vehicle for sportswashing by Rwandan President Paul Kagame, pointing to ongoing repression and human rights abuses under his regime.[50]

On May 10, 2021, American rapper J. Cole signed a contract with the Rwanda-based Patriots.[51] In three games with the team, he scored five points, had three assists and five rebounds in 45 minutes of gameplay. Terrell Stoglin of AS Salé states about the signing: "For a guy who has so much money and has another career to just come here and average, like, one point a game and still get glorified is very disrespectful to the game. It's disrespectful to the ones who sacrificed their whole lives for this."[52]

References