where 400 kids from across the continent experienced four days of joy the city of Porto-Novo welcomed 400 children and 13 coaches from across Africa for the 2025 edition of the African Mini Basketball Convention Following the successful 2024 convention held in Madagascar where the Beninese Basketball Federation hosted this inspiring 4-day event organized by the FIBA Regional Office in Africa with the support of the FIBA Foundation is part of a broader effort to strengthen the Mini Basketball movement across the continent Children aged 5 to 12 took part in a wide range of fun and educational activities learning the importance of good health and well-being and the fundamentals of basketball in a playful and inclusive environment the convention served as a training ground for coaches who were equipped with the tools and philosophy needed to promote Mini Basketball in their home countries Practical and theoretical sessions were led by FIBA experts Guillermo Calvo of Spain and Alkaya Touré of Mali Their guidance provided valuable insights into child-centered coaching and sustainable program development “Their mission is to take what they’ve experienced here and recreate it back home,” said Calvo “That’s how the Mini Basketball philosophy truly grows—by adapting it to local contexts and communities Calvo emphasized the joy the sport brings to young players “It’s about helping kids discover the fun and energy in basketball The real impact of this movement is visible in their smiles the learning continues even after the event Among the participating delegates was Tionge Tracy Kambalame from Malawi who spoke with enthusiasm about her experience: “The kids learned quickly and showed real enthusiasm This camp has been a great opportunity for everyone to grow together I’m grateful to the Malawi Basketball Federation and FIBA for making this possible.” Member of the FIBA Central Board and President of the Development program at the FIBA Regional Office in Africa “We are now in the sixth edition of this convention which speaks volumes about its relevance and popularity,” he said Former French international player Ian Mahinmi proudly attended the convention as an ambassador and valuable tips that inspired and delighted all the participating kids Team sports such as basketball bring communities together and teach valuable life lessons I believe that the more kids play basketball equipment was donated to the Beninese Basketball Federation to support the ongoing promotion of basketball across the country Building on the momentum of the Porto-Novo forum and respective National Federations will keep working together every year to organize regional Mini Basketball Conventions around the globe and to expand the Mini Basketball Movement The FIBA Foundation is the social and legacy arm of FIBA that addresses the role of sports particularly basketball in society preserving and promoting basketball’s values and its cultural heritage The FIBA Foundation believes that basketball has the power to empower and inspire youth and facilitates this by implementing Basketball For Good projects around the world Sie haben erfolgreich Ihre Einwilligung in die Nutzung von Transfermarkt mit Tracking und Cookies widerrufen Sie können sich jetzt zwischen dem Contentpass-Abo und der Nutzung mit personalisierter Werbung November 1986 — Wolves are in a poor run of form, low on confidence, short on goals, play Chorley in the FA Cup and sign a new striker January 2021 — Wolves are in a poor run of form, low on confidence, short on goals, play Chorley in the FA Cup and sign a new striker The bloke they signed in 1986 did all right. Stephen George Bull was his name, you may have heard of him. He scored 306 goals in 561 appearances and transformed the fortunes of a club Willian Jose won’t one day have a stand named after him at Molineux He won’t be named as the club’s vice-president he won’t be able to walk into any pub in Wolverhampton and have his drinks bought for him (white wine with ice if you ever see Bully in Oddfellows) But if he scores even one-twenty-fifth of Bull’s goals in a Wolves shirt (about 12) during his five-month loan from Real Sociedad 12 goals would practically guarantee a permanent move to Molineux in the summer They’re not paying a loan fee for the now 29-year-old who they first seriously looked at in 2017 when they were still a Championship club Jose spent the first few years of his truncated career being perennially loaned out (for lofty fees) by Uruguayan side Deportivo Maldonado who bought him in 2011 with seemingly no intention of ever fielding the player themselves (a common arrangement at the club) Jose was loaned to Sao Paulo, Gremio and Santos in Brazil, then Real Madrid (mostly playing for their B team), Real Zaragoza and Las Palmas in Spain, with the latter being his most successful season, scoring nine goals in 30 La Liga appearances in 2015-16 He finally found a home at Real Sociedad in the summer of 2016 via a £5 million permanent move — and since then he’s scored on a regular basis essentially just under a goal every two games (0.47 goals per 90 minutes in La Liga over his four-and-a-half campaigns with Sociedad) With the assistance of Jorge Mendes (who isn’t Jose’s agent) the two clubs were extremely close to agreeing a deal so much so that Jose had said his goodbyes in San Sebastian with Sociedad reportedly wanting more than Tottenham were willing to pay (the suggestion was they fell short of his £25 million valuation) why on earth is Jose being allowed to leave for five months After three years of being a regular starter his appearances this season have often come off the bench But while Jose’s influence has dwindled at Sociedad that doesn’t mean he can’t be a success at Wolves For a start, Wolves aren’t a pressing team. In a ‘pressing’ Premier League table (which judges the number of passes the opposition plays before a team performs a defensive action to try and win the ball back), Wolves are 15th, with buzzing high-pressers Leeds and Liverpool at the top Nuno Espirito Santo has tinkered with the team’s style this season but Wolves still look at their most comfortable when they sit deep in a solid defensive shape allow the opposition to play and then counter them at pace through skilful isn’t anywhere near Jimenez’s level in terms of linking play being an aerial presence and scoring goals Patrick Cutrone has been recalled from his loan to Fiorentina but he doesn’t appear to be the answer either His playing style has similarities with Jimenez’s, but a more direct comparison might be with Chelsea’s Olivier Giroud not that mobile or quick but comfortable with his back to goal unselfish and capable of scoring a variety of goals bustling centre-forward who has a knack for getting on the scoresheet but not replicated those performances on a weekly basis he’s not been hugely popular with Sociedad supporters not helped by reportedly refusing to play in a Copa del Rey game last January when Spurs came calling 62 goals in 170 appearances is a good return for a club that’s finished can play long passes and through balls and he strikes the ball powerfully and with conviction Jose receives the ball just inside the opposition half and spots the run of Adnan Januzaj… It’s a perfectly weighted through ball and Januzaj should score Jose comes deep for the ball and spots Nacho Monreal to his right… He plays a first-time pass with the outside of his right boot… And Monreal and Jose both sprint forward on the counter but Jose makes it look effortlessly easy with His first-time cross is on a plate for Mikel Oyarzabal including headers (a third of his 15 goals in 2017-18 were with his bonce) but a decent proportion come from powerful often on the half-turn and usually involving good movement wraps his leg around the ball and strikes low and true across the goalkeeper His most recent goal for Sociedad came in midweek it has to be his piece de resistance in the Basque derby against Athletic Bilbao author of Morbo: The Story Of Spanish Football and a regular watcher of Sociedad believes the team’s style of play hasn’t suited Jose in the past two seasons “When he first arrived – and indeed for the first two seasons – he was pretty spectacular,” Ball says “We were coming out of the David Moyes phase and he proved a useful link between defence and attack able to drop off but also much more inclined to get on the end of stuff “We also had great crossers in those days (such as Xabi Prieto) which might explain his drop-off in form in the past two seasons When former manager Eusebio left (in March 2018) Imanol Alguacil changed the pattern of play to a high press packing the midfield with attack-minded players who needed the strikers to be in the area and losing their markers in a variety of positions – but he didn’t seem to be up for it but I would temper those stats by describing him as a ‘man of phases’ He can be wonderful for six months and disappear for the next six but there doesn’t seem to be any particular explanation for his inconsistency I just think he failed to adapt to the new system.” Ball believes Jose’s strengths can transfer to the Premier League if Nuno can get the best from him “I think he wants to feel as though he’s the main man “Nuno is a good man-manager and speaks his lingo – it could work It enables the midfielders to move up and gives time for the full-backs to overlap and his passing is good He’s got a great shot on him too if he works the position but he’s strong and the Premier League won’t intimidate him even if he is a bit fazed by the speed of it at first Plenty for Nuno to work with and mould into his philosophy but if he can hit the ground running and replicate his best goalscoring form The history of enslaved Africans in Brazil is one of horrific exploitation and violence but also of heroic resistance and anti-colonial struggle Nowhere is this as clear as in the experiences of the 16th century settlement of escaped slaves which fought for survival and independence against colonial powers Tratado dos viventes: Companhia das letras (São Paulo: Companhia das Letras jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_2').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_2' }); The numbers portray in a frighteningly patent way the magnitude of the slave-trading enterprise Behind the numbers were the lives of millions of Africans who made history both in what was to become Brazil as well as in Africa Black people kidnapped from Africa cannot be reduced to these staggering numbers; at every moment they asserted themselves as agents of their own lives The degree of violence and oppression they suffered is immeasurable The responses of enslaved Black women and men to this violence and oppression are part of the tradition of all oppressed peoples and classes of the world This can be seen quite clearly if we examine certain aspects of Brazil’s main quilombo or settlement of escaped African slaves: Palmares Slavery had a profound impact on Africans’ way of life Capitalism made its entry into Africa through the captivity of its people Black women and men in Africa reacted to this process in different ways as part of a complex of possibilities that we do not yet fully understand Their forms of social organization were diverse The enslaved people who arrived in Brazil mostly came from West Africa — as was the case of those who ended up in the northeast specifically in Bahia — and from Central Africa To grasp the dimension of the changes caused by oppression and the violence of slavery one must explore this diverse universe of African cultures the tradition of resistance we examine here does not begin with the arrival of enslaved people to Brazilian ports we will limit our discussion to just a small Africans responded to slavery by adopting or reinforcing a nomadic way of life with the aim of defending themselves against traffickers After listing some of the impacts of the arrival of commercial capital to Africa and its relationship with nomadic life jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_3').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_3' jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_5').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_5' But like all quilombos in Brazil and elsewhere in the Americas one can only understand its existence and resistance for such a long time by examining its relationship with nearby cities and farms the enslaved people of the senzalas (slave camps) The people of Palmares not only occupied physical space but also an intricate and decisive network of relations with the colony; these took many forms the exchange of goods and information and the kidnapping of enslaved men and women The escape of enslaved people was part of the colonial reality and plantation owners and authorities were forced to adapt to it The plantation owners’ cries for greater security from the government were often answered with eloquent words and chasing after slaves was an expensive endeavor which is why it was the private responsibility of plantation owners when it came to just a few captives There was never a political-social balance in the colony It was necessary to adapt to these precarious conditions which meant seeking to destroy the quilombos when they emerged as a significant threat and to soften the repression when the risk was not as great Palmares became a source of tension for the colony: jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_6').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_6' jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_7').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_7' the experience of 1624 merely highlighted an understanding that seemed to be widespread among slaves: Holland had no more to offer than Portugal The residents of Palmares used the conflict between Holland and the colony to strengthen their positions bands of armed enslaved people kept the two armies under constant pressure This even led to diminished hostility between the armies the mood of the last Portuguese people who still resisted in the village of Porto Calvo bordered on despair They began to systematically intercept trains from Bahia carrying food and ammunition for the troops It was only in May 1636 that an expedition led by Bahia’s sergeant major severely disrupted the activities of Black guerrillas The conflict came to have a profound impact on the arrival of enslaved people Palmares would be the most significant domestic concern of Dutch Recife Pernambuco was valuable precisely because of the relationship between slavery and sugar The destruction of Palmares was thus strategically essential The Dutch took the confrontation with Palmares to a new level The repression would increasingly take place in the woods near Serra da Barriga It would take 50 more years to destroy Palmares the recovery of Recife by the Portuguese and especially from 1660 onward A combination of repressive methods was implemented in the 1660s.8All governors of Pernambuco were assigned the primary task of destroying Palmares It could be said that the governors’ balance sheets depended to a great extent on the degree of destruction inflicted on Palmares jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_8').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_8' }); The colonizers sought to use nearby settlements as a base for supplies for expeditions and to force the movement of Palmares into the interior and amnesty was granted to prisoners who took part in the campaigns against Palmares The destruction of bushland relatively close to Palmares and the reinforcement of the siege on the settlement led to a more direct struggle between them and the military expeditions The always complex and intricate relationship between Serra da Barriga and the cities became more intense In a confrontation with an important expedition of more than 300 men launched by the authorities of Serinhaém who was still a military leader under the command of Ganga Zumba The result of that expedition was the murder of Palmares residents sick and wounded soldiers and a defeat of the people jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_9').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_9' The mocambos defended themselves against the heightened attacks with bushland guerrilla tactics and with the improvement of their own fortifications through a greater social division of labor jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_10').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_10' With the reinforcement of military expeditions, albeit at a high cost to the colony and its provinces, Palmares was increasingly under threat.11“The wars against the people of Palmares in the 1670s and 1680s began to weaken Palmares several military leaders were arrested and killed The constant and necessary displacements of the people of Palmares undermined their resistance There was no time to plan further evacuations and reorganize their economy.” Ibid jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_11').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_11' intensified under the command of Antônio Vieira who was believed to protect those dedicated to the destruction of Palmares which had already made some headway in the mid-1660s and the demarcation of their lands by the Crown Captives who fled to Palmares were to be handed over to the authorities and the residents of Palmares would be considered vassals of the king and this acceptance was fiercely opposed by an important leader of the resistance named Zumbi An irreparable division emerged in the heart of Palmares under the impact of the peace treaty and the continued expeditions jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_12').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_12' Ganga-Zumba was appointed general of the Crown and was followed by several mocambos to Cucaú He feared internal reprisals and retaliation by the people of Palmares: Several, in fact, abandoned the mocambo of Cucaú and joined the ranks of Zumbi. The leader’s fears were justified: Ganga-Zumba ended up being poisoned and many of his followers were executed.13Ibid jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_13').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_13' Freitas goes so far as to assert that the followers of Ganga Zumba were actually supporters of Zumbi who had devised a plan to destroy Cucaú and assassinate Ganga Zumba as well as all those who agreed with the terms of peace.14Freitas jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_14').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_14' jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_15').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_15' the colony needed to serve its purpose better than ever the district of Pernambuco no longer achieved the same levels of productivity as before Sugar production was undergoing a significant crisis in the late 17th century largely because the Dutch were expelled and settled in the Caribbean where they began to produce sugar under better conditions Palmares had come to symbolize Pernambuco’s problems and had to be destroyed The Crown had always kept a watchful eye on Palmares King Pedro II had not yet given up on the possibility of a peace agreement His intention was to seek an agreement once more Souto Maior was appointed governor of Pernambuco on February 19 with the express aim of reaching a peace agreement with the people of Palmares The proposal was embraced by the sugar mill owners who understood that any attempt at peace had failed in 1678 More than a century before Toussaint L’Ouverture corresponded with Napoleon the king of Portugal sent Zumbi a letter seeking to get him to accept a deal: jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_16').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_16' We have no knowledge of a reply from Zumbi his response was imbued with what he understood as the spirit of the French Revolution in the colonies — freedom — which led him to wage a national war of liberation against the French Empire had nothing to offer the people of Palmares he took advantage of the governor’s policy by sending counterproposals for an agreement which he deliberately substituted for new ones when they were accepted He certainly used this opportunity to buy time and rebuild his forces jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_20').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_20' jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_21').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_21' the idea resurfaced of using people of São Paulo for local repressive expeditions Militias were formed that eventually proved capable of causing great damage to Palmares but they were unable to totally destroy them The fame of the Paulistas as hunters of runaway slaves and destroyers of quilombos was already at its peak in the colony Yet the interests in Palmares were diverse The colonizers agreed it had to be destroyed but what to do with the lands was another story There were a number of soldiers and plantation owners who claimed the land as part of their payment for previous expeditions The eagerness to destroy Palmares placed Paulistas in an advantageous bargaining position The leader of the São Paulo expedition that would ultimately defeat Palmares was Domingos Jorge Velho He achieved this with a troop of almost a thousand men an “uprising of Janduí indigenous people in Rio Grande do Norte” led the Paulistas away from the region They returned to Pernambuco to attack Palmares only in 1691 jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_22').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_22' jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_24').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_24' jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_27').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_27' The increased firepower was made possible by the arrival of cannons and 200 men on February 3 An additional barrier was built from the 4th to the 5th when Zumbi discovered that the barrier had been built at dawn on the 5th he ordered that the person responsible for surveillance be beheaded He was certainly aware of the magnitude of the threat an evacuation of Palmares was quickly prepared jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_28').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_28' The victory of the Paulistas was celebrated with the ecstatic colonial authorities “The governor proclaimed his exultation: ‘It did not seem appropriate to delay the report to Your Majesty of the glorious restoration of the Palmares This happy victory is valued no less than the expulsion of the Dutch and so it was celebrated by all these peoples.’” jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_29').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_29' jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_31').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_31' Governor Melo e Castro said that ‘Zumbi fought valiantly and desperately not wanting to surrender even to his companions it was necessary to kill them and only the one got caught alive.’ Afterwards Furtado de Mendonça [the Paulista responsible for the expedition] said that when he saw the ‘Black man dead quite dead,’ he thanked God for the glory he had achieved.” jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_33').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_33' the colonial authorities of Pernambuco would continue to receive news of mocambos established there in the mountainous regions where the people of Palmares had once lived.” jQuery('#footnote_plugin_tooltip_14246_1_35').tooltip({ tip: '#footnote_plugin_tooltip_text_14246_1_35' Palmares would continue to represent the greatest threat of Black resistance in the imaginations of the colonial authorities It was thus considered essential to prevent the emergence of a new Palmares an insurmountable barrier for colonial elites Not only in Brazil but in all of the Americas Palmares did not end with Velho’s expedition It survived in the minds of the colonial elites terrorizing them with the constant reminder of what was possible The fear of the spread of new uprisings like that of Palmares throughout Brazil would continue to haunt the colonial authorities inspiring the repressive policies of the colony (and the empire) until the end of slavery Notes[+] Trump’s first 100 days have shown that “peace through strength” is fundamentally an experimental It is not at all peaceful or as strong as its proponents claim Trump’s zigzags on tariffs could undermine his credibility in an escalating trade war with China which threatens to violently “decouple” the two economies Despite claiming to offer an alternative to Shawn Fain's chauvinistic defense of U.S Sean Crawford and Labor Notes are just putting forward a slightly more progressive vision of business unionism workers across the world turned out to organize and demonstrate against the growing global threat posed by Trump and the Far Right The United States has already killed hundreds of civilians in its imperialist bombing of Yemen the Trump administration is indicating that it may back a ground invasion threatening to throw the country into a civil war Leftists who claim the mantle of internationalism must speak out against the reactionary nationalism that the Russian and Ukrainian regimes are using to crack down on dissent and left organizations rallied across the United States showing the widespread anger at Trump’s reactionary agenda To defeat the Far Right workers and students need to organize from below — not rely on the Democratic Party that sabotages labor and capitulates to the right Born in Porto Calvo on the eastern coast of Brazil on 23rd November 1991 Willian Jose da Silva began his youth career with Alagoas club Clube de Regatas Brasil before moving to Sao Paulo-based outfit Germio Barueri in the Brazilian top-flight Having progressed through the club’s junior set-up he made his first team debut in August 2009 coming on as a substitute as his side fell to a 2-1 Serie A loss to Botafogo he became a regular in the Barueri side the following season scoring six times in the league championship but his goals were not enough to help the club avoid relegation Jose’s goalscoring record earned him loan moves to several clubs across the Brazilian top-flight Gremio and Santos during the next two years with the latter move being his most prominent as the then-20-year-old spent one season with the club which is famed for being the home of footballing legend Pele Jose played 23 matches in Serie A and scored five times as the team finished seventh in the 2013 Campeonato Brasileiro championships It was during this time when Jose received his first international honours with Brazil as he was a member of both the FIFA U20 World Cup and South American Youth Championship winning squads Jose took his first steps in European football at the beginning of the 2013/14 season as he signed a six-month loan deal with Spanish giants Read Madrid Having to settle for a place with the Galaticos’ reserves Jose played a bit part in five Segunda Division matches before being given a chance from the ofset against Recreativo de Huelva scoring a hat-trick in a 3-2 win which saw the striker called up to the Madrid first-team making his one and only appearance for Los Blancos in a 20 minute cameo as he replaced fellow Brazilian Casemiro during a La Liga clash with Celta de Vigo Although his time at Madrid was cut short in June 2014 Jose remained in Spain with second-tier side Real Zaragoza including two in the play-off semi-final second leg against Girona to help overturn a 3-0 loss in the first leg the team missed out on promotion to La Liga in the final to Las Palmas as Jose’s strike was not enough to see his team avoid losing out on away goals But it was with the victors of the final where Jose got his first real crack at the top-flight and found fame by scoring equalising goals against Barcelona and former employer Real Madrid yet his team would end up on the wrong side of 2-1 defeats on both occasions Jose had rarely spent more than a season at the same club but that was all to change when he signed a five-year deal with another La Liga outfit Jose became a regular starter at the Basque club scoring 12 goals in his first season with the team – his best league return in his career – as he led Socieded into sixth place in the table and a spot in the Europa League But that record was quickly bettered during the following campaign as well as five in six Europa League matches as Sociedad finished second in their group before falling out of the competition in the Round of 32 The goals continued in the subsequent years with his brace in Sociedad’s Copa del Rey third round win over Cordoba on Wednesday evening being the perfect way for him to sign off from the club 2024-25 Wolves Home Shirt - Adult Buy 2024-25 Wolves Home Shirt - Adult Now 2024-25 Wolves Home Shirt - Junior Buy 2024-25 Wolves Home Shirt - Junior Now 2024-25 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Adult - Ls Buy 2024-25 Wolves 3rd Shirt - Adult - Ls Now 2024-25 Wolves 3rd Baby Kit Buy 2024-25 Wolves 3rd Baby Kit Now Registration has been successfully completed Make a new account if you don't have one yet Puedes ver la versión Española de BeSoccer.com You can see the English version of BeSoccer.com Vous pouvez voir la version French de BeSoccer.com Puoi vedere la versione Italian su BeSoccer.com Você pode ver a versão Brasileira de BeSoccer.com.