FERWABA
FEDERATION RWANDAISE DE BASKETBALL
mercredi 2 mars 2016
mardi 9 février 2016
mercredi 3 février 2016
mardi 26 janvier 2016
vendredi 22 janvier 2016
mardi 19 janvier 2016
jeudi 14 janvier 2016
lundi 21 décembre 2015
mercredi 5 juin 2013
Young Coaches Trainings Module- 1 Closing Ceremony
All 37 young coaches with Minispoc representer , FERWABA's staff ,the trainer LOUAMBA BALEKETA BLAISE from FIBA |
This 4th June 2013 ferwaba has closed the trainings of young coaches which were directed by the expert from FIBA LOUAMBA BALEKETA BLAISE ,in ten days of lecturing,practices and evaluations ;the young coaches have received certificates and messages from FERWABA's leaders.
Uwanjye Munyaneza Hyvette one of young coaches on her side she said that the trainings are very important for rwandese coaches and players for it will encrease their knowledge "we need to get the national team players,and international from our coaching" she encouraged Rwandan women and ladies to like and practice basketball both coaching and playing.
From left Louamba Baleketa Blaise the trainer ,Uwanjye Munyaneza Hyvette receiving Her certificate /photo FERWABA |
From right Nkusi Aime Khalim receiving his certificate/photo FERWABA |
During this ceremony trainees were told to practice what their have got and build the kids in order to have the foundation of basketball in Rwanda from young people.the vice president of ferwaba Jean Claude Murigo mentioned :"the trainings and certificates are not enough ,the important thing is to practice what you have learn't here and we need an annual evaluation from expert LOUAMBA in order to find what to improve in your coaching skills".
FROM LEFT FREDDY MAKUZA FROM FERWABA STAFF GIVING THE AWARD TO LOUAMBA BALEKETA BLAISE /photo FERWABA |
In young coaches tranings closing ceremony also the trainer expert Louamba Baleketa Blaise have received an award from the Rwandese Basketball League FERWABA and other gifts from the young coaches.37 young coaches who got certificates have got the module one which contains the category of coaching kids from 8 to 15 years old these trainings started from 26 May and ended on 4th June 2013.
PRO/FERWABA
mardi 28 mai 2013
LE STAGE DES ENTRANEURS YOUNG COACHES-MODULE 1
La
Fédération Rwandaise de Basketball (FERWABA) organise du 26 Mai au 4
Juin, un stage des Entraineurs YOUNG COACH- Module 1 à Kigali sous la
direction de l'Instructeur Entraineur de FIBA Afrique Blaise Louamba
Balekata.
Le stage se déroule dans la salle du Lycée de Kigali (LDK) enregistre la participation de trente (30) Entraineurs des Ecoles Primaires et Secondaires, Entraineurs des Jeunes ainsi que les Entraineurs des Clubs seniors.
www.ferwaba.blogspot.com
Le stage se déroule dans la salle du Lycée de Kigali (LDK) enregistre la participation de trente (30) Entraineurs des Ecoles Primaires et Secondaires, Entraineurs des Jeunes ainsi que les Entraineurs des Clubs seniors.
www.ferwaba.blogspot.com
vendredi 19 avril 2013
CLOSING DAY OF BASKETBALL HOLYDAYS CAMP U16 ORGANISED BY FERWABA
FROM RIGHT DUSABIMANA ERIC COACH WITH ALL THE PARTICIPANTS OF THE BASKETBALL CAMP ORGANISED BY FERWABA |
FELICIEN VITAL one of young trainees said that this camp helped him to improve his talent and that he will continue to do his practices at school in order to get the maximum he needs in basketball knowledge. ISHIMWE FIONA explained that the camp has helped them to building their good attitudes ,good relationship between them because they from different parts of the country who pass their holydays in Kigali and preparing them to play in coming competitions and mainly their talent as the target of the camp.
UNDER 15 BOYS IN YOUNG PLAYERS CAMP |
As cleared by UMUTOKAMBALI MOISE in charge of young players in FERWABA and the head coach of basketball RWANDA national team, he that the young players in numbers were 70, 20 girls , 30 boys aged between 16 17 age ,and 20 boys who have under 15 age ,he also added that some of challenges they met were the time where the holydays was genocide comemoration week where some of young players out of Kigali were not present,and they couldn't have enough time to teach the young trainees.
YOUNG PLAYERS GIRLS WITH THEIR COACH HABIYAMBERE PATRICK |
He said also that other problem was the rain ;the matter of non covered playground IFAK nad LDK was the big problem that pushed them to shift to NPC Gymnasium in order to achieve what they started and at the end he explained that the rest is to be in contact with their schools so that they can continue the practices because they saw that the young players from different schools are zealous to play basketball.
YOUNG PLAYERS BETWEEN 16-17 AGE IN CAMP WITH THEIR COACH |
The 70 young trainees were selected from the last 2012 camp of in the whole country of RWANDA,ferwaba added and choosed from a camp done in 2012 the objectives of this camp were to follow up FERWABA has organised a 10 days basketball camp wich would take place at Lycee de Kigali and IFAK (KIMIHURURA) the climate didn't allow this to be because the last days the camp were done in NPC gymnasium.
The camps for young players are planned to be in holydays in following up and developping talents of young players,develop their knowledge and skills of the game,and to raise the level of their individual perfomances,increase knowledge of coaches in relation to their daily coaching activities in basketball,and encourage coaches to organise "camps".
ferwaba.blogspot.com
IMYITEGURO Y'IGIKOMBE CY'IMIKINO NYAFURIKA IREGEREJE
BAMWE MU BAKINNYI BAKINA MU RWANDA UBWO BAKINAGA ALLSTRARS GAME /PHOTO FERWABA |
Nkuko biteganyijwe mu kwezi kwa Gicurasi/2013 hagiye kuzatangira imyitozo ku kipe y’igihugu y’umukino w’intoki ( Basketball) mu rwego rwo kwitetegura imikino Nyafurika izaba muri Kanama muri uyu mwaka.
Nkuko byatangajwe n'umutoza ukuru w'ikipe y'igihugu Mutokambali Moїse; yavuze ko mu kwezi kwa Gicurasi ari bwo hazatangizwa imyiteguro ku mikino Nyafurika izaba muri Kanama muri Cote d’Ivoire mu kugirango bazabashe kwitwara neza.
UMUTOZA W'IKIPE Y'IGIHUGU YUMUPIRA W'INTOKI MOSES MUTOKAMBALI/PHOTO ARCHIVE |
Nkuko akomeza abivuga iyi myitozo ikaba ngo ikazajya ikorwa kabiri mu cyumweru kuko bazaba barikubarizwa mu makipe bakiniramo kuko bazaba barigukina.
Umutoza mukuru wikipe y'igihugu y'umupira w'intoki MUTOKAMBALI MOSES akaba yatangaje ko hazahamagarwa abakinnyi bagera kuri 18 babarizwa mu makipe akina shampiyona mu Rwanda; binyuze mu biganiro hagati y'abahagarariye abo abakinnyi mu makipe babarizwamo
Nyuma yo kwegukana itike yo gukina imikino y’igikombe cy’Afurika mu mikino y'akarere ka gatanu yaberaga muri Tanzania (zone 5) ,iyi kipe ikaba iri kubarizwa mu itsinda B rigizwe na makipe y'ibihugu nka Tunisia; Bourkinafaso ndetse na Maroc.
ferwaba.blogspot.com
mardi 16 avril 2013
Umukinnyi Gisembe ni muntu ki?
Who was Gisembe, the basketballer?
Espoir players and officials after winning the playoffs final trophy
last month. The club is favourite to win the Gisembe memorial tournament
in June. The New Times/P. Muzogeye
|
EMMANUEL NTARUGERA a.k.a Gisembe was a basketball player for the current national basketball league Espoir and the national team. He was among the club players, who never survived the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi.
According to the vice chairman of Espoir basketball club Henry Pierre Munyengabe, Gisembe was born in 1961 in Nyamirambo, a surbub of Kigali. He was an open-minded sportsman and used to enjoy the company of young children, he said.
The vice chairman of Espoir basketball club Henry Pierre Munyengabe |
Gisembe, who stood at 2 meters, left behind a widow and three children.The Gisembe Memorial Tournament was initiated in 1996 in honour for the departed star as well as his fallen teammates. Upon inception, Espoir lifted the title for two consecutive times – 1996 and 1997. In 1998, 1999 and 2000, the tournament was won by APR basketball club.
In 2001, the tournament attracted regional clubs such as Urunani of Burundi which went on to win it that year. APR won it again in 2002 before DR Congo’s Goma Bulls took it the following year.Espoir bounced back to lift the title in 2004 before APR dominated from 2005 to 2009. Munyengabe added that the club lost 18 players during the Genocide and they are still working hard to build a strong team again.
This season, Espoir won the national league and playoffs title unbeaten, setting a new record. This year’s Gisembe memorial tournament will be held in June, but no dates have been set yet.
newtimes.co.rw
Espoir to honour 18 players killed in 1994 Genocide
Espoir lost nearly 20 players during the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi. The team is organising a
tournament in honour of the fallen players. The New Times / File.
Espoir Basketball Club will honour eighteen of their players who were killed during the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi when they host their annual Tournoi Memorial Gisembe later this year.
Among the players killed during the Genocide include Emmanuel Ntarugera who was commonly known as Gisembe.Richard Mutabazi, the secretary of Rwanda Basketball Federation and a member of Espoir club, said that the club lost close to 18 players, unknown number of fans and administrators during the mayhem of 19 years ago.
“Most of the players who were killed featured in the senior and junior teams as well. The club also lost fans and other club administrators,” added Mutabazi.Being a member of Espoir club, the club decided to establish the Gisembe Memorial Tournament as a way of honouring the fallen victims.
In general, the basketball fraternity lost many players and fans such as Gisembe, Rugamba Gustave, Rutagengwa Mayina Amable, Rubingisa Emmanuel bitaga Mbingisa, Kabeho Augustin bitaga Tutu, Olivier Munyaneza alias Toto, Umutoza Nyirinkwaya alias Damien, Théogène Mutijima alias Riyanga, Murenzi J.M.V, Hitimana Nice and Twagiramungu Félix alias Rukokoma. Others Mutarema Védaste, Mukotanyi Désiré, Rutagengwa Jean Bosco, Majoro, Munyawera Raymond, Gatera Yves ndetse, and Kabayiza Raymond who was the founding member of the club.
newtimes.co.rw
Basketball became my refuge after Genocide, says survivor
Kalima Kizito a previous confence as a peace activitist in the US. AS
an orphan without a home and family to turn to, Kalima D. Kizito used
basketball to overcome the horrors of the 1994 Genocide against the
Tutsi.
Kizito who lives in indiana, USA told Times Sport in an exclusive interview over the weekend on how he survived death four times after being struck by machetes in his birth place Nyanza, Southern Province during the Genocide
“April 1994, I lay bleeding in a ditch littered with dead bodies, after being struck by a machete, staring at the sky waiting to die. Surviving four times near death situations, I hid in swamps where I spent two months before I was liberated by RPF/Inkotanyi.”
“As an orphan without a home and family to turn to, sport became my refuge.”
Hobby
He lamented that as a teenager towering at nearly 6’6 (2 meters) during the Genocide, he had no aspirations of playing sports professionally.
“Back then sports was merely a hobby. I was extremely passionate about sports. I remember making a soccer ball out of plastic bags and rubber bands as a young boy, playing volleyball and soccer regularly with kids in my neighborhood and going home at night covered in dirt after playing any sport.”
While he loved sports, he never saw it as a means to an end. “I longed to be a judge or a university professor as my father was a well-respected educator and a community leader.”
“My family history was rooted in academia. Though tall and athletic, each of my nine siblings focused not on building their muscles, rather they sought to enlighten their minds.”
The Genocide and the sequence of events completely changed his outlook and ultimately his destiny. “After losing my parents, a sibling, countless aunts uncles and cousins during the Genocide I found myself isolated and angry.”
The only refuge left for him was sports. “I had heard of this game called basketball as a child. However, I had never picked up basketball until after the Genocide.”
After reading and learning about athletes such as Dikembe Mutombo, Manute Bol and Hakeem Olajuwon, he began to realise the power that this sport had in terms of offering opportunity to young talented African athletes.
Basketball
After the Genocide, he convinced a local NGO to give him a ball and began to immerse himself into the sport.
“I lived, breathed and ate basketball. My efforts and passion led me to play for Progressive High School in Bweyogerere, Kampala in Uganda as well as a basketball club called the Falcons.”
“We did not possess the fancy uniforms that I saw on TV or play in the fancy wooden courts as professional American basketball players did.”
“Our passion was undeniable. Each day I woke at dawn, went to school, then walked several kilometers each day only to engage in grueling practice. My efforts paid off in the form of an opportunity to come to America.”
Fast forward to July 1998, Kizito was standing 6’9’’ (2.06 meters) on board a 747 British Airways headed to the US.
When asked how he was able to get the lifetime opportunity, he only answered with one word, Basketball.
His basketball career continued through high school in Chicago, Illinois, USA and he was being recruited by many major colleges and university.
However, his citizenship status hindered him from playing in a division one school. “Still determined I ended up playing at Indiana University South Bend, until I was ultimately permanently sidelined due to an injury when I ruptured my Achilles tendon.
“I was devastated. Basketball had been my therapy. I had replaced the images and horrors that I had witnessed during the Genocide with the high I felt when I played the game I loved.”
“My height was my main undoing during the Genocide but it had also allowed me opportunities beyond my wildest dreams.”
Gradually, he learned that he could find happiness in other areas when he married and adopted two young Rwandan Genocide survivors who needed a permanent home and a loving family.
“I currently pour my energy into sharing my story of survival in an effort to encourage and inspire others. My love for the game that changed my life, however, remains strong.”
“I continue to feel a sense of euphoria when I step on the court. Watching basketball at any level, played by anyone, men, women, children, domestic, international, still brings me joy.”
“While basketball does not wholly define me as a person, it is certainly an undeniable part of me. I survived the Genocide by the grace of God. I believe that God had a larger purpose for my life.”
IMPACT
Kizito further adds that the game he loved helped him overcome the after effects of Genocide. “Rather than turning to drugs, alcohol, or the streets I turned to sports and I am happy to say that basketball saved my life.”
The 34-year-old, holds a bachelors degree in Criminal Justice and currently works as a Senior Case Manager for IMPACT program which is a government sponsored scheme that helps ex-offenders and low income families to become self-sufficient economically through job training and job placement.
He is also the co-founder of Amahoro Project for Forgiveness and Reconciliation, a grass roots movement that focuses on removing all obstacles to genuine reconciliation.
newtimes.co.rw
Kizito who lives in indiana, USA told Times Sport in an exclusive interview over the weekend on how he survived death four times after being struck by machetes in his birth place Nyanza, Southern Province during the Genocide
“April 1994, I lay bleeding in a ditch littered with dead bodies, after being struck by a machete, staring at the sky waiting to die. Surviving four times near death situations, I hid in swamps where I spent two months before I was liberated by RPF/Inkotanyi.”
“As an orphan without a home and family to turn to, sport became my refuge.”
Hobby
He lamented that as a teenager towering at nearly 6’6 (2 meters) during the Genocide, he had no aspirations of playing sports professionally.
“Back then sports was merely a hobby. I was extremely passionate about sports. I remember making a soccer ball out of plastic bags and rubber bands as a young boy, playing volleyball and soccer regularly with kids in my neighborhood and going home at night covered in dirt after playing any sport.”
While he loved sports, he never saw it as a means to an end. “I longed to be a judge or a university professor as my father was a well-respected educator and a community leader.”
“My family history was rooted in academia. Though tall and athletic, each of my nine siblings focused not on building their muscles, rather they sought to enlighten their minds.”
The Genocide and the sequence of events completely changed his outlook and ultimately his destiny. “After losing my parents, a sibling, countless aunts uncles and cousins during the Genocide I found myself isolated and angry.”
The only refuge left for him was sports. “I had heard of this game called basketball as a child. However, I had never picked up basketball until after the Genocide.”
After reading and learning about athletes such as Dikembe Mutombo, Manute Bol and Hakeem Olajuwon, he began to realise the power that this sport had in terms of offering opportunity to young talented African athletes.
Basketball
After the Genocide, he convinced a local NGO to give him a ball and began to immerse himself into the sport.
“I lived, breathed and ate basketball. My efforts and passion led me to play for Progressive High School in Bweyogerere, Kampala in Uganda as well as a basketball club called the Falcons.”
“We did not possess the fancy uniforms that I saw on TV or play in the fancy wooden courts as professional American basketball players did.”
“Our passion was undeniable. Each day I woke at dawn, went to school, then walked several kilometers each day only to engage in grueling practice. My efforts paid off in the form of an opportunity to come to America.”
Fast forward to July 1998, Kizito was standing 6’9’’ (2.06 meters) on board a 747 British Airways headed to the US.
When asked how he was able to get the lifetime opportunity, he only answered with one word, Basketball.
His basketball career continued through high school in Chicago, Illinois, USA and he was being recruited by many major colleges and university.
However, his citizenship status hindered him from playing in a division one school. “Still determined I ended up playing at Indiana University South Bend, until I was ultimately permanently sidelined due to an injury when I ruptured my Achilles tendon.
“I was devastated. Basketball had been my therapy. I had replaced the images and horrors that I had witnessed during the Genocide with the high I felt when I played the game I loved.”
“My height was my main undoing during the Genocide but it had also allowed me opportunities beyond my wildest dreams.”
Gradually, he learned that he could find happiness in other areas when he married and adopted two young Rwandan Genocide survivors who needed a permanent home and a loving family.
“I currently pour my energy into sharing my story of survival in an effort to encourage and inspire others. My love for the game that changed my life, however, remains strong.”
“I continue to feel a sense of euphoria when I step on the court. Watching basketball at any level, played by anyone, men, women, children, domestic, international, still brings me joy.”
“While basketball does not wholly define me as a person, it is certainly an undeniable part of me. I survived the Genocide by the grace of God. I believe that God had a larger purpose for my life.”
IMPACT
Kizito further adds that the game he loved helped him overcome the after effects of Genocide. “Rather than turning to drugs, alcohol, or the streets I turned to sports and I am happy to say that basketball saved my life.”
The 34-year-old, holds a bachelors degree in Criminal Justice and currently works as a Senior Case Manager for IMPACT program which is a government sponsored scheme that helps ex-offenders and low income families to become self-sufficient economically through job training and job placement.
He is also the co-founder of Amahoro Project for Forgiveness and Reconciliation, a grass roots movement that focuses on removing all obstacles to genuine reconciliation.
newtimes.co.rw
vendredi 5 avril 2013
MURATUMIWE MWESE MU IRUSHANWA MPUZAMAHANGA "MEMORIAL GISEMBE "
Mu rwego rwo kwibuka no kunamira aba basketteurs by’umwihariko n’Abanyarwanda bose muri rusange bazize Jenoside yakorewe Abatutsi muri 1994, Umuryango ESPOIR ku bufatanye na FERWABA barategura irushanwa mpuzamahanga MEMORIAL GISEMBE ku nshuro yaryo ya 16 ku mataliki ya 07-08-09/06/2013 kuri petit stade Amahoro.
Hategerejwe imikino mu bagabo, abagore ndetse n’abasheshe akanguhe.
Amakipe y’i Bugande, i Burundi no muri DRC azaza asanga ayo mu Rwanda.
Uretse imikino, hazabaho ibindi bikorwa bigendanye n’iyo gahunda.
dimanche 31 mars 2013
Uko amakipe y'ibihugu yatomboranye mu gikombe cya AFROBASKET 2013
Mu muhango wabereye i Abidjan muri Cote d'Ivoire, U RWANDA rwatomboye guhatanira mw'itsinda rya kabiri (GROUP B) riyobowe na Tunisie (ifite n 'igikombe cy'Afrika, 2011), Bourkina Faso (igiye kwitabira iki gikombe bwa mbere mu mateka), ndetse na Maroc.
Umukino wa mbere (match d'ouverture) uzahuza Cote d'Ivoire na Algerie.
Imikino y'u Rwanda iteye itya:
21/08/2013: RWANDA - BOURKINA FASO
23/08/2013: MAROC - RWANDA
25/08/2013: TUNISIE - RWANDA
Iyi mikino ikazaba guhera tariki 20 kugeza ku ya 31 kamena 2013, i Abidjan mu gihugu cya Cote d'Ivoire.
S/A Mutabazi Richard
samedi 30 mars 2013
APR BBC WOMEN YEGUKANYE IGIKOMBE CYA PLAYOFFS
Byari ibyishimo ku bakinnyi ba APR BBC ku bw'igikombe cya Playoffs batsindiye |
Nkuko byatangajwe n'umutoza w'iyi kipe Mbazumutima Charles ngo ikipe y'ubumwe yaramugoye kuko ifite abakinnyi binararibonye ariko akaba yarabatsindishije condition physique(Imbaraga) kuko ku bijyanye na tekiniki iyi kipe y'UBUMWE ikomeye cyane ,akaba ngo azakosora muri saison itaha mu rwego rwo gushobora gukina neza birushijeho.Mu magambo ye akaba yaragize ati:"Dufite abana bakiri bato kandi bashoboye ahubwo igikenewe n' abatoza beza bagomba gukoresha abo bana,bakabikora babakunze kandi bakabaha icyizere"
Abakinnyi ba APR BBC WOMEN mu myitozo mbere yo gukina. |
Uyu mukino utari woroshye na gato ukaba ukaba waragaragayemo ingufu ku makipe yombi kuko watangiye aya makipe arushanwa amanota make,ariko biza kurangira APR y'abagore itsinze amanota 47 kuri 34 y'UBUMWE. Charles MBAZUMUTIMA .akaba avuga ko iyi nstinzi ayikesha ingufu ndetse n'uburyo akorana n'abakinnyi be.
Uhereye iburyo n'umutoza wungirije wa APR BBC Nkusi Aime Khalim,hagati umuyobozi Mukuru wa APR,ibumoso umutoza mukuru wa APR Mbazumutima Charles |
Uyu mukino ukaba wariwabanjirijwe n'umukino wabahataniraga umwanya wa gatatu aho RAPP na NUR byakinnye bikarangira RAPP itsinze kaminuza nkuru y'urwanda ku manota 55-35 yegukana yegukana umwanya wa gatatu nyuma yo kuyitsinda imikino 2 kuri umwe.
Abambaye icyatsi ni RAPP BBC WOMEN abambaye umweru ni NUR BBC WOMEN |
UWASE DENISE
IBYARANZE UMUKINO WA ALL STARS GAME,KURI UYU WA GATANU
Amakipe yombi mbere yo gukina abambaye umweru ekip A abambaye umuhondo ekip B |
Kuri uyu wa Gatanu Werurwe 2013 kuri petit stade amahoro haberebereye umukino wa all stars game wateguwe n'ishyirahamwe ry'umupira w'intoki(FERWABA),ukaba warugizwe ni'bikorwa bitandukanye,ndetse witabirwa n'abantu batari bake dore uyu mukino uba urimo abakinnyi bazwi ndetse bigaragaje mu ma club babarizwamo.
Uyu mukino wahujwe na ekipe yiswe A na B aho ekipe A yaje gutsinda ekipe B ku manota 68 kuri 62 ya ekipe B,Uyu mukino ukaba waje kugaragaramo ubuhanga butandukanyemu gutera Dunk,ndetse n'amanota atatu ,mu barushanyijwe hakaba Haje guhembwa kandi abakinnyi bagaragaje ubuhanga bukomeye nk' umukinnyi Buzangu Mike usanzwe ukinira KBC yazaga kurusha abandi gutera Dunk naho Rafiki Muhamed ukinira APR agatsinda mu kwinjiza amanota atatu .
Uyu mukino wa all stars game wari witabiriwe n'abantu batari bake. |
Nkuko bayatangajwe n'umuyobozi mukuru w'ishyirahamwe ry'mupira w'intoki mu RWANDA (FERWABAa) Mugwiza Desire uyu mukino wateguwe mu rwego rwo gufasha abatoza kureba abakinnyi bazakoresha muri afrobasket izaba mu kwezi kwa munani,yagize ati:"ubutaha tuzarushaho kuyitegura neza kugira ngo abakunzi ba basketball barusheho kwishima,kandi Turifuza ko abakunzi ba basketball bagaruka ku bibuga "
Umuyobozi mukuru w'shyirahamwe ry'umupira w'intoki mu RWANDA MUGWIZA DESIRE |
Ikipe B ikaba yarigizwe n'abakinnyi nka: 1. Hakizima Lionnel(apr BBC), 2.Uwizeye Placide(Espoir bbc),3.Kurimushi Patrick(Rusizi bb),4.Buzangu Mike (KBC),5.Barame Aboubakar(csk bbc),6.Habineza Jean Louis(espoir bbc),7.Kubwimana Ali(KBC),8.Ruzima Guillaume(CSK BBC),9.Karekezi Pascal(Espoir ),10.Uwimana Sankara(KBC),11.Kabange Kami(Espoir ),12.Bunene Omar Gedega(CSK),13.Niyonkuru Pascal(APR),14. Murihira Theotime(APR).ikaba yaratojwe na CLIFF OWUOR usanzwe utoza APR BBC.
Nkuko usanga mu gihugu cya Reta Zunze Ubumwe z'Amerika (USA) aho abakinnyi bava iburasirazuba bahura n'abava iburengerazuba,ishyirahamwe ry'umupira w'intoki rikaba ryarateguye uyu mukino wa allstars game abakinnyi bagaragaye muri aya makipe abiri yakinnye akaba batoranyijwe hakurikijwe uko bitwaye muri shampiyona.
Uwase Denise
jeudi 28 mars 2013
lundi 25 mars 2013
Umwanya Wa Gatatu Nta kipe yabashije Kuwegukana Hagati Ya RAPP Na NUR:Hateganyijwe undi mukino kamarampaka.
Nkuko byagaragaye ku munsi wa gatandatu RAPP ubwo yakinaga nikipe ya NUR byaje kurangira kaminuza nkuru yurwanda itsinze ikipe ya RAPP ibitego 51 kuri 38,ibi ntibyakomeje gutya kuko ku munsi wa kabiri wirushanwa RAPP yigaranzuye ikipe ya kaminuza ikayitsinza ibitego 50 kuri 25 bya kaminuza nkuru y'urwanda.
Iyi mikino yombi ikaba yararangiye nta kipe nimwe itsinze imikino yombi hakaba hateganyijwe undi mukino uzazihuza izatsinda ikaba ariyo izegukana umwanya wa gatatu bikazabera rimwe n' umukino w' APR n'UBUMWE aho aya makipe azaba ahatanira umwanya wa mbere ku itariki ya 30 werurwe 2013 habaye nta gihindutse.
UWASE DENISE
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