Table of Contents
Nigeria’s U18 AfroBasket camp has opened in Benin City as the Nigeria Basketball Federation builds a boys’ team for upcoming continental qualifiers. The pre-selection camp brings together young prospects to be assessed before the squad is trimmed for competition.

The exercise marks an important step in Nigeria’s youth basketball pipeline, aimed at identifying talent early and preparing it for the demands of international play.
Inside the U18 AfroBasket camp
The NBBF U18 boys’ pre-selection camp runs from 24 June to 3 July 2026 at the Indoor Hall of the Samuel Ogbemudia Stadium in Benin City. Over the period, coaches will evaluate players across several days of training and assessment.
The camp is led by Coach Ikima Michael and his technical crew, who are tasked with judging technical ability, physical readiness and discipline. Those criteria will guide the selection of the final group expected to carry Nigeria’s hopes.
The road to the qualifiers
The camp is preparation for the FIBA Africa U18 Zone 3 qualifiers, the gateway to the wider U18 AfroBasket competition. The qualifying tournament is set to be held in Burkina Faso, where the team will test itself against regional rivals.
Strong performances at this level can shape the futures of young players, offering exposure to higher-quality opposition and the structures of national-team basketball. For many in the camp, it is a chance to make a lasting impression on selectors.
A diaspora component
Beyond the home-based camp, the NBBF plans to run a training camp for diaspora players in Chicago from 23 to 25 July 2026. Tapping into Nigerian talent abroad has become a recurring strategy across the federation’s programmes, broadening the pool of available players.
Combining home-based prospects with diaspora talent can strengthen a squad’s depth and athleticism. The approach reflects a wider effort to make Nigerian youth teams more competitive on the continent and beyond.
Why youth basketball matters
Investing in age-grade teams helps secure the long-term future of Nigerian basketball, feeding the senior national setup with developed talent. The U18 level, in particular, is where many future stars first announce themselves to scouts and federations.
Developing the next generation
Age-grade camps are a proving ground where coaches assess not only skill but also temperament, work rate and the ability to absorb instruction. The days spent together in Benin City give the technical crew a chance to see how players perform under sustained scrutiny before final selections are made.
Nigeria has a strong basketball tradition and a deep pool of talent at home and abroad, which the federation continues to tap. Identifying and nurturing players early helps ensure a steady flow of athletes capable of competing at continental and global levels in the years ahead.
For the young players involved, the camp is both an opportunity and a test. Those who impress could earn places in the squad bound for the qualifiers, a step that can open doors to scholarships, professional pathways and future national-team selection.
With the Benin City camp under way and qualifiers on the horizon, attention turns to which players will make the cut. Viorah TV will follow Nigeria’s U18 AfroBasket preparations and report verified updates as the squad takes shape ahead of the tournament in Burkina Faso.