With the Chinese Amateur Basketball Open (CBO) having more
enthusiasts and sponsors get involved, officials from the sport's
governing body - Chinese Basketball Administrative Centre (CBAC)
voice the confidence and ambition to further promote the all-nation
amateur basketball competition and attempt deeper reforms on the
sport.
"Though the 2006 season of CBO has not finished yet, we have
learned lots of lessons and also benefit a lot from the reform,"
said Xu Minfeng, director of Development Department of CBAC.
According to Xu, national or international competitions were
usually organized by CBAC before while local basketball
associations were just asked to offer a few assistances.
Now CBO gives a good chance to push the local associations to
help develop the sport.
Xu said CBO gave local associations rights to organize the
competition and also to search for sponsors.
"We adopted a new reform in CBO this year. We are dependent on
local associations to organize whatever kind of amateur basketball
event as a stage of CBO," said Xu. "The associations know the local
situations better than us. And they have better ideas as how to
host a popular event."
The goal, said Xu, is to help every local association become an
entity in the next years. It will be operated independently.
"The goal to make such change is to give local association
freedom and right to develop the grassroots basketball."
Xu said a farmers' basketball competition in Anhui last month
and an overseas' Chinese basketball tournament in Hangzhou,
Zhejiang province last week had made big successes.
"There were so many fans taking part in the competition. We are
pleased to see that local associations play more important roles in
the tournament."
The increasing popularity also tempts sponsors to join in and
CBAC has hired a promotion company to develop the sport's marketing
.
"It is a new attempt to make CBO commercialized. So far the
marketing of the sport is making rapid progress," Xu said.
CBAC is also determined to deepen the reform next year and
believes basketball will become the nation's No 1 sport in the near
future.
"We will take more efforts to develop the grassroots of the
sport and continue to initiate new reforms."
The competition, with games played between teams in different
cities before moving onto provincial competitions, is available to
any Chinese citizen over the age of 18. Those non-Chinese
basketball fans who have remained in China for over one year will
also be able to join in the fun.
Before CBO, CBAC has made a number of reforms in the sport's
premier league - China Basketball Association(CBA).
Fourteen professional clubs split into two conferences - a
seven-team Northern Conference, and a seven-team Southern
Conference. Teams will play each in-conference rival four times
during the 38-game regular-season and non-conference opponents two
times with top four finishers from each conference qualifying for
the eight-team League playoffs.
"To have pro league is not enough. We will invite people from
different field to play the sport. We are exploring a mode as how
to promote the sport in best ways."
(China Daily June 7, 2006)