As smartphone penetration increases in Africa, American basketball has locked down a deal to bring more games to these devices.
The National Basketball Association and Econet, a
telecommunications company, have signed a multiyear partnership to bring
more sports coverage to sub-Saharan Africa starting in the 2016-17 NBA
season, the organizations announced Thursday.
Econet will broadcast over 500 games next season on its
satellite-based network as well as internet and mobile offerings. NBA
content will air in English-, French- and Portuguese speaking
countries on pay television channels, such as Econet Media’s Kwesé
Sports channel. Other content will be distributed for free. Econet will
broadcast regular-season and playoff games as well as the NBA draft. The
network will also produce original NBA content.
Econet has more than 9 million subscribers as of last year, according to its financial reports. One in nine households are connected to the internet in sub-Saharan Africa, according to the 2015 Broadband Progress Report
by the United Nations’ Broadband Commission. Not every connection is
able to keep up with the bandwidth requirements of watching video,
however.
But the NBA hopes it will reach a much larger audience in
the nation. “This historic partnership will deliver the NBA to a region
with more than 900 million people and reflects our commitment to
partnering with leading African companies to grow basketball across the
continent,” said Amadou Gallo Fall, the NBA vice president and managing
director for Africa, in a statement.
NBA content will also be available through a new website,
NBA.com/Africa. The site will host video highlights, sports-related news
and statistics and scores. The site will also host an official fantasy
game. Econet users can also subscribe to receive highlights and other
original content on mobile.
The NBA hosted its first game in Africa on Aug. 1, 2015 at Ellis Park Arena in Johannesburg.
Photo: NBA
This deal is NBA’s largest effort to bring coverage to
sub-Saharan Africa, a country they have been working to expand in
especially over the last decade. The NBA opened an office in
Johannesburg, South Africa in 2010 and has held more than 100 events in
30 countries since then. For example, the NBA organizes junior leagues
in Mozambique, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda.
The league hosted the first NBA game on the continent as
part of its Basketball Without Borders Africa initiative last August.
The outreach program, started in 2003, has reached more than 1,000
players and has helped eight draft into the NBA. Last season, the league
had 10 African-born players, a record, according to the rosters on
opening day.
“Following the success of our first NBA game in Africa last
summer, we look forward to working with Econet Media to engage and grow
our fanbase across the region,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in a
statement.
Indeed, the audience is already growing. For instance, the NBA Africa Facebook page
grew by 150 percent over the last year and currently has over 475,000
likes. That’s far from the more than 29 million likes on the NBA page,
but a sign that there is enthusiasm in the region and one that Econet
hopes to foster in its exclusive deal.
Prior to the partnership with Econet, the NBA streamed games
on SuperSport, a satellite TV broadcaster. Econet helps the NBA access a
mobile audience, which continues to increase in Africa. However, more
people in Africa own regular cell phones compared to a smartphone.
The news of its expansion in Africa comes just a week after
the NBA released a new mobile app for its audience in China through its
partnership with Tencent. “We have an incredibly broad, diverse and
hungry fan base in China for all things NBA,” NBA China CEO David
Shoemaker told IBT.
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