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Chinese Basketball Association (organisation)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National governing body of basketball in China
For the Chinese professional men's basketball league, seeChinese Basketball Association.
Chinese Basketball Association
中国篮球协会
AbbreviationCBA
Formation1956
HeadquartersDongcheng,Beijing,China
Location
Region served
 China
Official language
Chinese
Guo Zhenming
Executive vice chairman
Li Jinsheng
Parent organization
State General Administration of Sports
WebsiteCBA(in Chinese)
RemarksRemarks(in Chinese)

TheChinese Basketball Association (simplified Chinese:中国篮球协会;traditional Chinese:中國籃球協會;pinyin:Zhōngguó Lánqiú Xiéhuì), often abbreviated asCBA, is a national non-profit sports organisation inChina. It representsChina in theInternational Basketball Federation (FIBA) andFIBA Asia, as well as the sport ofbasketball in theAll-China Sports Federation.

Governance

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Basketball in China is officially governed by both theChinese Basketball Management Centre (CBMC), a division of theState General Administration of Sports and the CBA, which is the nationwide non-governmental sports organisation and non-profit association that manages the country's premier CBA League (and not the same as this organization). In practice the same officials are at both organisations, ensuring government control of the supposedly commercial operation.[1]

Chinese basketball legend and formerShanghai Sharks ownerYao Ming has long held ambitions to reform the structure of Chinese basketball to address shortcomings in team management, development, training and facilities and to make it more commercially successful. As a member of theCPPCC he has each year since 2013 proposed reforms, unsuccessfully.[1]

In February 2017 at the CBA national congress, Yao was unanimously elected president of the association – the first time a non-official had ever taken up the post. Five days after taking up the post, Yao submitted a proposal to theChinese Basketball Association comprising three major reforms: split the league into two conferences and increase the number of games; limit the time that players spent training for the national team and adopt the invitation system used by the NBA; and put a cap on the court time of non-Chinese Asian players.[1]

The plan was reportedly rejected and hushed up.[1] However, at least one of the proposals was eventually implemented—an expansion of theCBA league schedule from 36 to 46 games.[2]

References

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  1. ^abcdIt’s Yao Ming versus the officials in his effort to reform China’s basketball scene, HKFP, 19 March 2017
  2. ^Prewitt, Alex (27 June 2019)."One Big Dream: Yao Ming Wants to Make Chinese Basketball Global".Sports Illustrated. Retrieved27 June 2019.

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