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Libya - Africa's-Top-Basketball-Players-to-Watch

Published 1 day ago4 minute read

Africa’s Top Basketball Players to Watch - July 2, 2025

Eurobasket News

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African basketball is experiencing a fresh revitalisation. Although the market has recorded a historically slow rate of growth due to poor infrastructural development, a lack of focus on merchandise, and ineffective marketing, it has seen an increase with the help of grassroots campaigns, improved media, and partnerships with other nations. Similar to the changing landscape of new non-GamStop casino sites providing players with new options on more flexible terms, African basketball is evolving with new opportunities to excite the fans and new talent to challenge the players.

Mohamed Bashir Abdourahman Sadi has been the best basketball player in Libya. The shooting guard, 6’4 Yusuf, has been performing well in Al Ahli Tripoli. AS Douanes and Sagesse SC are not the only teams he has starred in, since he has also played with other teams in Senegal and Lebanon.

As the captain of Al Ahli Tripoli, he led the club to their first continental championship victory as they won the 2025 BAL Championship and became the first Libyan team to ever win the continental championship. He also averaged 12.1 points (ninth in the BAL), 7.8 rebounds, and 2.9 assists in 31 games, and was named to the Second All-BAL Team, as well as to the Second All-Defensive Team.

He has led Libya to the 2023 Arab Nations Championship, where it qualified. During the historic game against Nigeria, Sadi got a triple-double, scoring 24 points, providing 12 assists, and stealing 10 times.

The major role in African basketball is played by Youssou Ndoye. He is a product of Dakar, Senegal, and was trained at St. Bonaventure University in the U.S., and is currently a good defender and inside player. Even though Ndoye himself was not written in 2015, he did bring together a rather coherent career data since then, which began in France, Spain, South Korea, and most recently, Rwanda.

In 2025, he registered with APR in Rwanda to obtain the Basketball Africa League. Although that did not start well, he helped the team finish in position number three as the best team with an average of 9 points and 6.8 rebounds per game. During this same period, interest in African leagues such as Sierra Leone basketball also began to grow, highlighting the continent’s deepening talent pool. He was awarded the All-BAL Second Team and the All-Defensive Second Team during his playing career. One of the trusted players in the Senegal national team is Ndoye, who has played in the Senegal national team in AfroBasket and even in the FIBA World Cup.

More than a player, Ndoye is a sign of the rise of African basketball. His coming back as a player by participating in a number of African leagues underscores the importance of the aged leadership in forming good competitive local teams and leadership of young talent.

The rise of Aliou Diarra is what African basketball is in dire need of. Born in Bamako, Mali, he was initially identified in outdoor courts prior to making a professional debut in 2022 with Stade Malien.

He was a force to reckon with in the Bachelor of Arts and Leisure League (BAL) during his rookie year by piling up 18.3 points, 12.8 rebounds, and 2.3 blocks a game to be voted as the Defensive Player of the Year and also the All-BAL First Team. Diarra was a system part known well because of his explosiveness, rebounding, and shot-blocking. For fans getting started with basketball betting, tracking rising talents like Diarra can offer valuable insight into under-the-radar performances.

His career did not end there as in 2023, he moved to FUS Rabat, where he won the Division Excellence, and was voted as an All-BAL First Team once again. Diarra joined APR Rwanda in the year 2024 and helped the club to a successful time. He not only led his team to a third-place finish in BAL but also, in one game, set an all-time record in blocks (eight) by any player in the club.

In 2025, he set the new records with 17.4 points, 11.6 rebounds, and 3.4 blocks per game and became the second-time Defensive Player of the Year. In most regions of Africa, Diarra is considered one of the most dreaded defenders on the continent, which is an aspect that qualifies the player as a strong pillar in the process of establishing basketball in his home country of Mali, which is only 23 years old.

Libya: Mohamad Haidar (ex Beirut Club) agreed terms with Al Ahly Tripoli

Libya: Mohamad Haidar (ex Beirut Club) agreed terms with Al Ahly Tripoli

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