South Sudan basketball win unites âevery single tribeâ
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Bul Kuol plays his professional basketball in Australia, the country where he grew up as a refugee
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Published
South Sudanâs victory over Puerto Rico in the Olympic menâs basketball competition has âunitedâ the country, according to forward Bul Kuol.
The Bright Stars, 33rd in the world rankings, opened their Group C campaign with a 90-79 win over their higher-ranked opponents on Sunday.
The result has been a huge source of pride for the worldâs newest nation â on what was the teamâs first appearance on the Olympic stage.
âIt brings us together,â said the 27-year-old after the match.
âNo matter what tribe youâre from or what youâre facing â adversity, the war, or whatever.
âItâs like every single tribe, every single town has been united.â
Carlik Jones led South Sudanâs scoring stats with 19 points, with Kuol adding 12 of his own along with three assists and three rebounds.
âItâs a massive win for us at our first ever Olympics,â he said.
âTo get it done in the first game, it sets the tone for what weâre trying to do.â
Like many of the players in the squad, civil war in South Sudan meant Kuol spent part of his childhood growing up in a refugee camp before moving from Kenya to Australia in 2006 when he was nine years old.
He believes the teamâs maiden success in Paris is helping the nation write a new, more positive chapter in its history.
âItâs a new beginning for all of us. The next generation now has a platform to grow on â and this is it right here.â
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Published6 days ago
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âIt means everythingâ
Peter Jok scored 11 points and grabbed six rebounds in the win over Puerto Rico
Peter Jok, one of the veterans in the side, agrees that South Sudanâs basketball heroics continue to paint the country in a âpositive lightâ.
âIt means everything,â said the 30-year-old.
âThatâs why weâre going to keep working hard, keep going and try to represent back home for everybody to be proud and stay together.â
Jok, who plays for the Ottawa Blackjacks in the Canadian Elite Basketball League, was also delighted by the way in which South Sudan successfully executed their strategy against a team who beat them at last yearâs Fiba World Cup.
âWe owe them,â he said.
âFrom the start, we were ready to go. Iâm glad we got the win.
âNow, weâre going to celebrate the game today and move on. Weâve got to be ready for the USA in a couple of days.â
South Sudan face the reigning Olympic champions on Wednesday before finishing off Group C against Serbia on Saturday.
A third-place finish in the group could be enough to advance to the quarter-finals.
With one victory already in the bag, Kuol has one eye on progressing.
âOur goal is to advance to the second round. Today was a good step forward.â
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Published20 July
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