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Beirut, Lebanon, where former NBA basketball players fulfill hoop dreams

Former NBA basketball players are finding new fame in Beirut, Lebanon, where a ban on attending soccer matches, for fear of clashes, has boosted the American sport's popularity.

Former Los Angeles Laker C.J. Giles was surrounded by fans of Beirut鈥檚 Al-Riyadi team after a victory in February. A number of former NBA basketball players are finding new fame in Beirut, Lebanon, as the sport grows in popularity.

Sam Tarling

April 6, 2010

鈥 A local, slice-of-life story from a Monitor correspondent.

Madison Square Garden it is not. But, like the landmark New York arena, Al-Riyadi club鈥檚 modest, dilapidated, West Beirut gymnasium serves as a final destination for American hoop dreams.

American basketball players have long been exports to Europe and the Far East, seeking fame and fortune in lieu of obscurity and insubstantial paychecks in the NBA鈥檚 development league. But recently, the Middle East has turned out to be a surprisingly successful market.

鈥淭he Americans have a big impact,鈥 says Kervork (who declined to give his last name), a fan of Antranik, a team associated with Lebanon鈥檚 large Armenian community. 鈥淲ithout them, it wouldn鈥檛 be fun to watch basketball in Lebanon,鈥 he says.

The US players quickly notice the cultural differences. Fans chain-smoke when their team is down, posters of political figures replace retired numbers hanging from the banisters, and riot-gear-clad members of Lebanon鈥檚 armed forces patrol the stands with stockless AK-47 assault rifles. In a league where most teams are aligned with sectarian or political groups, the soldiers are necessary to keep the tensions of rival fans at bay.

Joe Vogel, the center for Beirut鈥檚 Al-Riyadi team, made a career out of playing abroad after an injury dashed his hopes of playing in the NBA. In Lebanon, Mr. Vogel is content 鈥 he even acquired Lebanese citizenship. 鈥淲e get treated like kings over here 鈥 everybody knows us because we鈥檙e on TV,鈥 Vogel says.

While soccer may be the Middle East鈥檚 most-loved sport, fans in Lebanon are generally barred from attending matches, with authorities fearing clashes. This ban 鈥 along with a presence of basketball in the country since 1890 鈥 has helped boost basketball鈥檚 popularity here.