Tag: 2026 Commonwealth Games

  • Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games: Nigeria set for Men’s 3×3 Basketball debut 

    Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games: Nigeria set for Men’s 3×3 Basketball debut 

    Nigeria will make history at the Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games after being confirmed as one of three debuting nations in the men’s 3×3 basketball event, alongside Guyana and Malaysia.

    The announcement was made by the Glasgow 2026 Organising Committee on February 3, underscoring Nigeria’s expanding presence on the global basketball stage.

    The fast-paced 3×3 basketball competition will run from July 24 to July 29, 2026, at the SEC Centre in Glasgow. Played with three athletes per side on a single hoop, the format features a 12-second shot clock, 10-minute games, or ends when a team reaches 21 points—making it one of the most dynamic disciplines on the Games programme.

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    As Africa’s top-ranked men’s basketball nation, Nigeria is expected to leverage the Games to showcase its depth and adaptability in the rapidly growing 3×3 format. Kenya will be the only other African country in the men’s event, having previously debuted at Birmingham 2022.

    Following a successful outing at the Birmingham Games, where eight teams competed in each gender, 3×3 basketball has been expanded to 12 teams per category at Glasgow 2026—reflecting its rising popularity and strong global reception.

    Several nations, including hosts Scotland, Australia, New Zealand and Jamaica, will field teams in both the men’s and women’s competitions.

  • 2026 Commonwealth Games: Team Nigeria’s lifters chase  tickets  to  India

    2026 Commonwealth Games: Team Nigeria’s lifters chase  tickets  to  India

    The chase for tickets to the 2026 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow has begun in earnest as Team Nigeria’s weightlifters  hits  Ahmedabad, India,  for the 2025 Commonwealth Weightlifting Championship.

    The competition is the official qualifiers to next year’s  Glasgow Commonwealth Games slated to hold between   23rd July  and 2nd August 2026a such, Nigeria has sent a  strong weightlifting contingent to battle for as many slots as possible for the  23rd  edition of the Commonwealth Games.

    Among the team’s standout athletes are Ruth Asuquo Nyong and Edidiong Umoafia from Akwa Ibom. Asuquo, competing in the women’s 48kg category, is making her championship debut, while Umoafia, a bronze medallist at the 2022 Birmingham Commonwealth Games, returns to the international stage in the men’s 71kg category after first qualifying in 2021.

    The full Nigerian contingent in Ahmedabad includes: Omolola Onome (women’s 53kg);Favour Agboro (men’s 65kg); Rafiatu Lawal (women’s 58kg);Ruth Ayodele (women’s 58kg);Islamiyat Yusuf (women’s 69kg);Adeda Adelaka (men’s 79kg); Sarah Matthew (women’s 77kg);Brenda Uchenna (women’s 86kg);Mary Osijo (women’s +86kg) and Lucky Joseph (men’s +110kg)

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    With a mix of rising stars and seasoned lifters, Team Nigeria is determined to secure as many qualification spots as possible and continue the nation’s proud tradition in Commonwealth weightlifting.

    The contingent paid special tribute to the President of the Nigeria Weightlifting Federation (NWF), Dr. Ibrahim Abdul Aladi, whose fatherly leadership and strategic planning ensured that the team was adequately prepared both physically and mentally for the qualifiers.

     “Dr. Aladi made sure everything was in place. From training facilities to nutrition and morale, he treated us like his own children,” said a senior lifter. “His efforts gave us the edge and the confidence we brought to India.”

    Nigerian weightlifting team also expressed deep appreciation for the unwavering support and timely intervention of the National Sports Commission, under the visionary leadership of Chairman Mallam Shehu Dikko and Director General Bukola Olopade.

  • Glasgow confirmed  for 2026 Commonwealth Games

    Glasgow confirmed  for 2026 Commonwealth Games

    Glasgow has been confirmed as the host city for the troubled 2026 Commonwealth Games, which will be a slimmed-down version of the multi-sport event.

    The future of the 2026 Games was thrown into doubt when the Australian state of Victoria, the original hosts, withdrew last year, citing rising costs.

    But the Scottish government effectively gave the green light to Glasgow last month and the Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF) announced on Tuesday that the 2014 hosts will stage the next Games, from July 23 to August 2, 2026.

    The Games will feature just 10 sports compared with the 19 on show at the 2022 edition in the English city of Birmingham.

    Para sport will once again be fully integrated as “a key priority and point of difference for the Games”, with six para sports included on the programme.

    The schedule will feature athletics and para athletics, swimming and para swimming, artistic gymnastics, track cycling and para track cycling, netball, weightlifting and para powerlifting, boxing, judo, bowls and para bowls, as well as 3×3 basketball and 3×3 wheelchair basketball.

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    Among the sports missing out compared to the 2022 Games are triathlon, diving, hockey, T20 cricket, squash, badminton and rugby sevens.

    Around 3,000 athletes are expected to compete from up to 74 Commonwealth nations and territories.

    The CGF said Glasgow 2026 would deliver more than £100 million ($130 million) of inward investment into the city, with no need for public funding.

    Australia will provide part of the finance after Victoria pulled out, citing a projected cost of more than A$6 billion ($4 billion).

    “On behalf of the entire Commonwealth sport movement, we are delighted to officially confirm that the 2026 Commonwealth Games will take place in the host city of Glasgow,” said CGF chief executive Katie Sadleir.

    Britain and Australia have staged five of the past six editions between them, but Sadleir believes a slimmed-down model will increase the potential pool of future hosts.

     “The 2026 Games will be a bridge to the Commonwealth Games of tomorrow,” said Sadleir, adding Glasgow’s ”sustainable model” would increase “the scope of countries capable of hosting”.

    Commonwealth Games Scotland chairman Ian Reid said it had not been easy to decide which sports to include.

     “I think everybody recognises that these events need to be more affordable, lighter and we would have loved to have all of our sports and all of our athletes competing but unfortunately it’s just not deliverable or affordable for this timeframe,” he told the BBC.

    But Sadleir, speaking at an event in Glasgow on Tuesday, insisted sports dropped from the Glasgow schedule could return at subsequent Commonwealth Games.

     “It’s always a very difficult decision when you have to decide which sports are in the programme and which sports are not,” she said.

     “Every time we run a Games, we only have two compulsory sports, athletics and swimming, and the rest are all up for that discussion and negotiation between the host and the Commonwealth Games Federation.

     “To the sports (missing out) it must be incredibly disappointing, but what I must say to you is that because you’re not in the programme for 2026 does not mean that you’re not a key sport for us in the future.”

    The Commonwealth Games, held every four years, evolved out of the British Empire Games and is still made up mainly of countries and territories once subject to British imperial rule.