Every nation needs a team kit
An Australian sports apparel company makes shirts for low profile national soccer teams, including a number of African ones.
An Australian sports apparel company makes shirts for low profile national soccer teams, including a number of African ones.
Diego Maradona makes excuses for Morocco's occupation of Western Sahara.
Drogba became one of the most famous footballers of his generation thanks to his time at Chelsea, but he never won a major tournament for his national team.
Next time 'Die Stem' part of the South African anthem plays, the appropriate reaction is to sit down or take a knee.
With the passing of the legendary Mozambican-born Eusébio in 2014, Ronaldo is now the undisputed face of Portuguese soccer.
The highlights of the 2016 Rio Olympics, including why Kenyan athletes were not wearing matching outfits at the opening ceremony.
Or how Africa won Euro 2016 for Portugal.
Muhammad Ali's political life was like his boxing career: as frustrating and contradictory as it was principled and selfless.
Imagine the exposed position black players were in English football in the 1960s: the only black man in the stadium, never mind on the field.
The story of Africa's long-distance love affair with English football, told by fans in Nigeria, South Africa, Kenya & DR Congo.
Recently, Aubrey Bloomfield, a graduate student at The New School, and I wrote a piece for The Nation about a sports boycott as a strategy against the occupation of Palestinian land by Israel. Here’s an excerpt: There appears to be support among Palestinians generally for sporting sanctions against Israel. However, to date BDS has largely been focused […]
Football in Colombia has been, especially since the introduction of pro soccer in 1948, an uncontested panic button for those in power.
The filmmaker, Akin Omotoso, traveled to the 2016 NBA All Star Weekend in Toronto, Canada. This is his diary.
Moghreb Tetouan, now back in Morocco, remains the only African club ever to hold a spot in a top-flight European football league.
The recent explosions in the Stade de France was one of the most surreal things to ever take place in a stadium built nearly two decades ago specifically to house history.
White South African cricket writers should stop commenting on cricket as if the game is apolitical or the national team is still as all-white as when the country was first allowed back into international cricket.
From July 1967 to January 1970, Nigeria was engaged in civil war. Apparently, one person could make the war pause: The G.O.A.T., Pelé.
One key to black style is the fact that, relative to white Americans, black people don’t have much room “for make believe.”
In 1976, the American tennis star, Arthur Ashe, went to play in a tennis tournament in Lagos and promptly found himself in the middle of a coup by Nigeria's military.
The author writes about a fleeting encounter with the former captain of Nigeria's national football team, Sunday Oliseh.