logo
Ex-raptors exec Masai Ujiri remains focused on humanitarian work

Ex-raptors exec Masai Ujiri remains focused on humanitarian work

Al Arabiya18-07-2025
Masai Ujiri's July is shaping up to be quite the rollercoaster ride. The recently fired former Toronto Raptors executive is navigating his sudden departure from a franchise where he'd spent 13 seasons while also launching the second edition of his private foundation's Giants of Africa Festival – all within a one-month span. The humanitarian work Ujiri pledged will continue regardless of his employment status.
The British-born NBA executive raised in his father's native Nigeria founded Giants of Africa in 2003 – back when he was just starting off as a scout and long before becoming the first African team president of a professional North American sports franchise. 'It's an obligation for me,' Ujiri said. 'It's a passion.' The foundation's ambitions have risen with his own success. Giants of Africa has reached thousands of campers across 18 countries. It has helped build more than three dozen courts on the continent. High-profile supporters include Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's The Archewell Foundation.
2023's inaugural Giants of Africa Festival united more than 250 boys and girls around a week of basketball clinics life skills lessons and community building that culminated in a concert headlined by South African superstar Tyla. The goal? A borderless Africa as Ujiri likes to say. The festival returns to Kigali Rwanda on July 26 with a lineup featuring Nigerian pop singer Ayra Starr and WNBA great Candace Parker. Two-time NBA Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard – brought to Toronto by Ujiri for the team's championship-winning 2018-2019 season – will mentor campers and train underserved youth. Ujiri discussed the upcoming event and his future with The Associated Press. This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
Q: Why'd you expand Giants of Africa Festival 2025 to 320 young participants from 20 African nations?
A: When we had the last festival we really focused on – whether it was the basketball the life skills the coaching the mentorship – we focused on culture. We focused on the whole ecosystem of how we feel kids need this opportunity to grow. It really inspired us to think about how we bring this to more countries. We're doing this incredible incredible fashion show showing the print the threads of Africa and who we really are. It used to be weird where you'd see somebody wearing cloth from Africa. Now it's part of the fashion. It's part of us. It's just like Afrobeats – it's part of life everywhere. Everybody wants to wear a boubou. You see a lot of fashion designers from all over the world using our prints. We want to showcase that and give these youth the opportunity to see that this is how they can also expand their minds.
Q: How does it feel to see basketball investments lead to the sport growing across the continent?
A: It's been unbelievable. With these camps it started off as basketball development but you've seen that really become something that has really grown even bigger. I saw Pascal (Siakam) I saw (Joel) Embiid I saw all these guys as youth in camps. Seeing them as 15- 16-year-old kids in camp you can't even project. And that tells you how much talent we have on the continent. I always say Africa's biggest jewel is the talent of the youth. One out of every four people in the world are going to be Africans by the year 2050 and the median age is 20. We should be investing on the continent.
Q: How does Giants of Africa use sports to get the youth to consider different careers?
A: I'm the prime example of that. I didn't play in the NBA. I didn't even play high-level college or high-level Europe. The entry point for me was a scout in the NBA. From then on lots of people helped me to create this path that I'm on still. I go back to Basketball Without Borders when the NBA gave me the opportunity to be a director. That has led to me becoming an executive in the NBA. That's the example I want to give. That's why we have so many people coming to this festival to really show these kids – whether it's me or a journalist or a sports doctor or sports lawyer – there's so many careers. And the start is sports and doing it passionately and doing it well.
Q: How did women's empowerment become a focus for the foundation's work?
A: When I first started I was doing boys camps. Not every kid is going to make it to the NBA. So we started focusing on life skills. That was teaching respect honesty being on time. One of the big focuses was respect for women. So I'm challenging these boys but I'm not challenging myself. I can't say women's empowerment and respect women and just do these camps for boys. So we introduced the girls. And it's not 50 boys and 10 girls just for token. It's equality. They all have a basketball and they have the same court time. We can't just say it. We actually have to do it.
Q: What does your recent Toronto Raptors departure mean for your humanitarian work?
A: Job no job wherever I am whatever kind of job I'm doing Giants of Africa is key. The focus will always be that just because I owe it to the youth of the continent. I owe it to the continent. My goal is not how big does Giants of Africa get. I look at it as: how big are these youth going to become? They'll go on to do other things. They could go on to become a president or become a governor or become president of a team. The hope is that this experience here will even make them reimagine many of the things that they want to do. So Giants of Africa will never go anywhere.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Collier scores 30, McBride 24 as Lynx beat Liberty 100-93 in finals rematch
Collier scores 30, McBride 24 as Lynx beat Liberty 100-93 in finals rematch

Al Arabiya

time2 days ago

  • Al Arabiya

Collier scores 30, McBride 24 as Lynx beat Liberty 100-93 in finals rematch

Napheesa Collier scored 30 points and had nine rebounds, and Kayla McBride added 24 points as the Minnesota Lynx defeated the short-handed New York Liberty 100-93 on Wednesday night in a rematch of last year's WNBA Finals. Bridget Carleton made a 3-pointer from the corner with 7:08 remaining in the fourth quarter to give Minnesota a 79-66 lead. She added Minnesota's 14th 3-pointer–on just 27 attempts–less than two minutes later to make it 84-69. Minnesota's lead reached 92-77 before New York scored 11 straight over a two-minute stretch to get within four. Collier ended the run on a three-point play with 50.1 seconds left for a seven-point lead. Collier went 11 of 16 from the field and 6 of 9 at the free-throw line to record her fifth 30-point game of the season for Minnesota (23-5). The Lynx connected on a season-high 15 3-pointers and reached 100 points for the fourth time this season. Sabrina Ionescu countered with 31 points for New York (17-9), which did not have star Breanna Stewart due to a bone bruise in her right knee. Isabelle Harrison added 15 points and Marine Johannes scored 14. Alanna Smith added 12 points for Minnesota, and Carleton and Natisha Hiedeman each scored 10. Courtney Williams had a career-high 13 assists to go with six points and nine rebounds. Collier drained a 3-pointer with 14.3 seconds left in the first half for a 51-42 lead. She scored 19 points in the first half, including the Lynx's final 11 of the second quarter.

Hillmon hits tiebreaking 3 with 2.6 seconds left, scores career-high 21 points as Dream beat Wings
Hillmon hits tiebreaking 3 with 2.6 seconds left, scores career-high 21 points as Dream beat Wings

Al Arabiya

time2 days ago

  • Al Arabiya

Hillmon hits tiebreaking 3 with 2.6 seconds left, scores career-high 21 points as Dream beat Wings

ARLINGTON, Texas – Naz Hillmon made the tiebreaking 3-pointer with 2.6 seconds left and scored 12 of her career-high 21 points in the fourth quarter, leading the Atlanta Dream to an 88-85 victory over the Dallas Wings on Wednesday night. Allisha Gray had 15 points, Brionna Jones scored 14, and Maya Caldwell added a season-high 13 points for Atlanta (16-11). Paige Bueckers scored 21 points for the Wings, nine in the last five minutes, and has 11 20-point games this season. Bueckers hit a 3-pointer that gave Dallas a one-point lead with 2:36 to play. Brionna Jones answered with a bucket inside, but Bueckers was fouled as she made a driving layup and hit the free throw to make it 83-81 with 2 minutes remaining. Te-Hina Paopao hit a driving layup and then made a backdoor cut, caught a pass from Jones, and made a layup to give the Dream a two-point lead with 34 seconds left. Arike Ogunbowale answered with a fadeaway jumper with 21 seconds to go before Hillmon hit the winner. Gray scored 11 points to help Atlanta take a 26-21 lead going into the second quarter. The Wings are 2-13 this season when trailing at the end of the first. Atlanta's Brittney Griner was called for two technical fouls moments apart while arguing a foul called and was ejected less than a minute into the third quarter. Jordin Canada (illness) did not play. Dallas (8-20) went into the game following a 92-82 win over the New York Liberty, the defending WNBA champions. The Wings wrap up a four-game homestand Friday against Indiana, and the Dream take on Phoenix at home.

Mcdonald scores a career-high 27 and the short-handed fever beat the mercury for 3rd straight win
Mcdonald scores a career-high 27 and the short-handed fever beat the mercury for 3rd straight win

Al Arabiya

time2 days ago

  • Al Arabiya

Mcdonald scores a career-high 27 and the short-handed fever beat the mercury for 3rd straight win

Aari McDonald scored a career-high 27 points, Aliyah Boston had 22 points and 12 rebounds, and the short-handed Indiana Fever beat the Phoenix Mercury 107-101 on Wednesday night for their third straight victory. Indiana star Caitlin Clark was sidelined with a right groin injury, and there's no timetable for her return. The Fever improved to 7-7 without Clark this season. Boston scored Indiana's opening 14 points of the fourth quarter for an 88-79 lead. She finished with her fourth straight double-double. Indiana's 10th 3-pointer came on Chloe Bibby's shot from the corner with 5:27 remaining to make it 91-83. Then Sophie Cunningham was fouled while making a 3-pointer, and she made the free throw for an 11-point lead. Cunningham and Damiris Dantas each scored 12 points for Indiana (15-12), which scored 100-plus for the third time this season. Kelsey Mitchell, who scored a season-high 35 points on Sunday, was held to eight points on 3-of-10 shooting. Alyssa Thomas led Phoenix (16-10) with 32 points, 15 rebounds, and seven assists. Kahleah Copper, who played in her 10th game this season, added 22 points, and Sami Whitcomb scored 18. The Mercury have lost four of their last five games. Indiana dominated the second quarter, scoring 35 points to take a 55-50 lead into the break. Phoenix only made one field goal in the final three minutes of the period, with Whitcomb just beating the halftime buzzer on a long 3-pointer. Familiar faces–In the first of three meetings this season, Cunningham faced the Mercury for the first time after spending her first six professional seasons in Phoenix. DeWanna Bonner went against the Fever for the first time since departing the team earlier this season. Bonner went 1 of 4 from the field in 21 minutes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store