Being an NBA fan in India even a decade ago was an isolating experience. With few live games and little information, the world’s biggest basketball league may well have been on another planet.
That has been changing since the NBA set up an office in India in 2011 and began implementing developmental programs to nurture the sport. The league’s latest outreach effort was last week’s three-day visit by Golden State Warriors superstar Kevin Durant.
“It is great to have someone like Kevin Durant come here. It means that we matter enough that the NBA is sending its best player to India,” said Preshit Pawar, a member of the NBA Academy in the New Delhi suburb of Greater Noida, where all 21 of India’s top teenage basketball prospects have been training since the facility opened in May.
After a welcome party hosted by Bollywood star and NBA fan Abhishek Bacchan, Durant got down to the business of promoting basketball, taking part in a practice session with the NBA Academy players and then running drills with thousands of kids in a record-breaking event. He wrapped up his trip with a visit to India’s must-see tourist attraction.
Durant helped set a Guinness World Record by leading basketball drills with 3,459 youngsters simultaneously participating. About 800 were present at the NBA Academy itself, with the rest joining in by satellite from the cities of Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad and Kolkata.
Durant conducted a short training session with the NBA Academy’s players, focusing on a pick-and-roll drill that the academy staff had been running over the past month.
Many of the kids in the hall for the record-breaking drills — some of them as young as 6 — won’t pursue the game very seriously, but that wasn’t entirely relevant. These were drills intended to get kids excited, and Durant got them excited.
Durant autographed Warriors jerseys after a news conference at the NBA Academy.
One fan brought a painting of Durant to the NBA Academy and got it signed.
Keeping up enthusiasm in the wake of Durant’s appearance will be crucial if basketball is to secure a permanent place in the Indian sporting consciousness. “Just a buzz around basketball is growing every single day,” Durant said just before the lesson. “The game of basketball is growing.”
Durant was just as interested in the Taj Mahal as any other tourist visiting the magnificent structure, which was built in the 1600s as a tomb for the beloved wife of Shah Jahan.
When he first arrived at the Taj Mahal, Durant went unrecognized. With visitors from across the world converging on this iconic symbol of India, his anonymity didn’t last long. At one point he was recognized by a group of American tourists. “Hey KD! KD!” they yelled, and he waved back.
Durant eventually got what is a must-have picture for tourists — an optical illusion of him holding up the Taj by the finial above its central dome. It was a perfect way to end this India sojourn — two icons of their respective countries sharing the frame together.