First Saudi NCAA basketball player talks to Arab News about his influences

The 22-year-old sophomore at George Washington University in Washington D.C. is a member of its NCAA basketball team, the Revolutionaries. (VIA @SaudiEmbassyUSA)
Short Url
Updated 22 December 2025
Follow

First Saudi NCAA basketball player talks to Arab News about his influences

  • Student Mohamed Saeid Binzagr credits his family, coach, and an accident playing football
  • The National Collegiate Athletic Association is the primary governing body for American college sports

CHICAGO: Student Mohamed Saeid Binzagr’s desire to impress his father motivated him to become the first Saudi to play for the National Collegiate Athletic Association, he told Arab News. 

The NCAA is the primary governing body for American college sports that regulates more than 1,000 member universities and colleges.

The 22-year-old sophomore at George Washington University in Washington D.C. is a member of its NCAA basketball team, the Revolutionaries.

“I’m a guard, and honestly, any role that I can help impact on winning is a role I’ll take,” said Binzagr. “My role is to impact the team in winning on and off the court, pushing them in practice, being a positive influence, cheering them on, working hard.”

He is where he is at today thanks to love for his family, a Saudi coach, and a chance accident when he was playing football with friends.

“Basketball isn’t a growing sport back home. It was never that big. It’s always been football. But my dad studied in the US and fell in love with the game of basketball,” Binzagr said.

“As a kid, I wanted to learn how to play basketball to play with him. So as a 7, 8-year-old I’d watch YouTube videos on basketball.”

He said his first basketball trainer, Mohanad Shobain, became his “mentor,” adding: “I joined his academy, played, evolved, and learned the game through him.”

The COVID-19 pandemic interrupted his plans to attend college so he took an extra year as a postgraduate student at Cushing Academy in Boston in order to play basketball and try to impress scouts and coaches.

He then attended Marymount University in Arlington, where an informal game of footballresulted in him tearing his ACL and meniscus, requiring medical rehabilitation.

That is where he met basketball star Alex McLean, a former trainer for the Washington Wizards, who oversaw Binzagr’s rehabilitation and introduced him to Chris Caputo, head coach of the Revolutionaries men’s team.

McLean “helped me grow. He helped me with my rehab. He has helped me on and off the court and took me in with his family as if I was one of his brothers,” Binzagr said, adding that since joining the Revolutionaries, he has received many queries from young people, including in Saudi Arabia.

“It didn’t hit me until I was having a bad day, opened my phone and saw a message from a kid back home telling me that I inspired him. His dream is also to play in the NCAA and he wants to be my rival, which is great to see,” Binzagr said.

“I’m doing something special if I can impact a kid’s life into staying disciplined, staying grounded, and showing him that anything is possible. That’s a good feeling, and I hope to continue doing that.”


South Africa do not fear Salah or Marmoush, coach Broos says

Updated 25 December 2025
Follow

South Africa do not fear Salah or Marmoush, coach Broos says

  • South Africa’s Belgian coach said he will not use a special approach to contain Salah or Marmoush
  • “We are focused on no one. The most important thing is ⁠the team,” Bross said

RABAT: Coach Hugo Broos said South Africa do not fear Egypt’s Premier League contingent, Mohamed Salah and Omar Marmoush, ahead of their Group B clash in the Africa Cup of Nations on Friday.
Manchester City forward Marmoush scored the equalizer against Zimbabwe, before a late strike from Liverpool’s Salah secured a 2-1 win in their opening game in Morocco on Monday.
South Africa beat Angola by the ⁠same score in their Group B opener thanks to Lyle Foster’s screamer.
South Africa’s Belgian coach said he will not use a special approach to contain Salah or Marmoush.
“We are focused on no one. The most important thing is ⁠the team,” Bross, who led Cameroon to the 2017 edition title over Egypt, told a press conference on Thursday.
“We all know how good Salah is, we all know how good Marmoush is and we all know how good Trezeguet is and other players. They are such a good team. Why should we focus on one player? We ⁠have to be prepared to beat the team.”
The last meeting between the two sides in AFCON ended in South Africa’s favor, after they beat the hosts of the 2019 edition 1-0 in the Round of 16.
“We have to put Egypt in difficult (situations) and you can only do that when you use your quality and the players you normally use,” added Broos.