BIBC 2025

Mabika and Bravehearts itching for continental competition

BRAVEHEARTS Women’s Club have made the BASMAL domestic championship their own for over five years, and their success has heightened the team’s ambition. The desire to compete now stretches beyond the home comforts of Malawi and into the continental realm. With the FIBA Zone 6 (Southern Africa) Women’s Basketball League Africa Qualifiers likely to take place this year, that dream could soon become a reality for the Bravehearts.

One of the club’s most experienced players, Tadiwa Mabika from Zimbabwe, shares the club’s ambition of stepping into the bigger arena of club basketball.

It also helps that the 24-year-old Mabika knows a thing or two about top-level basketball. In her mid-teens, she represented Zimbabwe at the 2017 U16 Women’s AfroBasket. Six years later (2023), she would suit up for her country’s senior national team in the Zone 6 FIBA AfroBasket Qualifiers.

Mabika Zimbabwe 2017 U16 AfroBasket
Tadiwa Mabika in the colours of Zimbabwe at the 2017 U16 AfroBasket. Pictures: The BTO and FIBA

Mabika, who spoke a day (Sunday 31 July) after her club won back the recently concluded Bravehearts International Basketball Challenge (BIBC), intimated her desire to return to playing in the upper reaches of African basketball.

“As an individual, it’s something I aspire to. I consider it the highest level of basketball. That is something I want to compete in for experience and exposure,” said the BIBC MVP. “I think it will be a learning experience. Hopefully, if we get another opportunity, we can do better. Then we will know what we are getting ourselves into. So as a team, I believe we all share that ambition. Even if it takes time to get there.”

From her own experience with Zimbabwe’s senior national team and playing club basketball in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Mabika says her Bravehearts teammates should prepare themselves for an aggressive approach from their potential opposition.

“It is going to be hard. It is going to be tough. Having played with the national team and my experience in the DRC, there is a certain level of physicality that teams play with, so we must be prepared for that,” said 24-year-old Mabika. “The one disadvantage we have is the lack of height, so we must utilise what we have to our advantage. So, if you are short, you must be quick and be able to outrun the bigger players.”

Apart from capturing the national championship and winning the BIBC, the Bravehearts women’s team has triumphed in recent tournaments held in South Africa this year. Mabika says those wins at the Ashraaf Loedewyk and Wits Lady Bucks tournaments down South were a confidence booster. But she correctly pointed out that they will need better competition to compete against much stronger teams.

“Winning in South Africa is a confidence booster. But we should not be overconfident because we won tournaments over there. Qualifying for the WBLA requires playing against much better competition. The BIBC is a much stronger competition because it brought teams from outside Malawi, which was good for us,” said Mabika.

Tadiwa Mabika
Bravehearts player Tadiwa Mabika looks forward to competing in the Zone 6 Qualifiers.

The power forward feels the Zone 6 qualifiers will bring together a mix of players that will allow her to expand on her playing repertoire.

“I have never played in the club qualifiers. I have only played with the national team, and it was good exposure. But I think playing in the club qualifiers will be different because clubs can sign players from overseas. It will be a completely different level and an important learning curve for my career. I look forward to that,” said Mabika.

Mabika’s ambition is undeniable, and with Bravehearts determined to compete on the continent, the experience of the Zimbabwean power forward will count.

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Bravehearts duo benefit from club’s scholarship program

SPORTS in Africa are seldom seen as a pathway to opening doors to education. However, one of the clubs working to change the narrative is Malawi’s Bravehearts Basketball Club, which operates through their scholarship program. Two hoopers who have experienced the impact of the program are Mtendere Manyozo and Hope Chimwaza.

Identified for their basketball talent and academic excellence, interestingly, the basketball bug bit late in their lives. Before switching to basketball, Manyozo was a netball player, while Chimwaza played football.

Chimwaza is a first-year university student who harbours dreams of graduating to the Brave Hearts senior team, picked basketball as a 15-year-old, and when the world was going through the most.

“I was a football player because of my dad. Before I discovered I could play basketball, I loved football. I started playing basketball at the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Chimwaza. “I have grown to love it, and it has made me more focused.

Mtendere Manyozo 2025 BIBC
Mtendere Manyozo believes Bravehearts is ready to venture into continental basketball. Pictures: Supplied

Originally from Blantyre, Chimwaza joined Brave Hearts in 2022, while still a high school pupil. He says changing from football to basketball was not an easy leap.

“It was hard changing sports. I think the levels of physicality were different. That was the biggest change for me,” said Chimwaza.

Manyozo, in her final year of Business Administration, explained that she started the game late in life. “I used to be a netball player. I got into basketball once I started college, I was 19 at the time. That was in 2020. After a year, I joined the Brave Hearts program,” said Manyozo, the Bravehearts women’s team captain. “It was a hard change, now it has become a part of my lifestyle.”

Both players spoke in the same vein that the scholarship program has lifted the financial burden on their families.

“Basketball has been a blessing in my life. Bravehearts has paid for my schooling since form four, and they are still doing it now, which is a good thing for me and especially my parents,” said Chimwaza. “They handle other things, such as paying school fees for my siblings.”

On the court, Manyozo has won multiple domestic championships with Brave Hearts, and while she enjoys putting the team on the map, she has also appreciated the relationships she’s built.

“It’s been great contributing to the team’s success. It’s been an important part of my life and career,” said Manyozo. “It has given me a chance to know people. To form friendships here at home and outside. Another thing is that the club is ambitious, and it has brought players from outside the country to build on its success. It’s been great for me to be part of this process.

Chimwaza, on the other hand, has dreams of being part of the successful men’s senior team and aspires to compete in international competitions.

“I want to move up to the men’s team. I am working hard to make that dream come true. Every time I get an opportunity to be around them, it motivates me,” said Chimwaza. “Our senior team gets a lot of exposure because they travel. I would really help the team get to the Basketball Africa League.

“Last year they made it to the Elite 16. I would like to see them go further this year.”

Hope Chimweza 2025 BIBC
Hope Chimweza says basketball has given him more focus.

Manyozo also looks forward to the potential for her and her teammates to play in continental competition. “As a team, we would be happy to get an opportunity to play in bigger competitions. We have won almost everything in Malawi,” said Manyozo.

The duo of Manyozo and Chimwaza are entering different points of their playing careers, but their objectives remain the same. To continue putting Bravehearts on the map.

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The BIBC tournament opening eyes to basketball in Malawi

BRAVEHEARTS owner Griffin Kalua’s love for basketball courses through his veins to the extent that, while planning a major tournament in his country, Malawi, he still made time to take a trip to neighbouring Mozambique for a youth team tournament. Ahead of the fifth edition of the Bravehearts Basketball International Challenge, BIBC (August 28-31), he embarked on a journey with the Bravehearts U18 men’s and women’s teams to a tournament in Mozambique, from which they returned on Sunday.

Despite his busy schedule, Kalua professes love of the game, which includes creating opportunities for young talent to thrive.

“Passion and commitment. I have loved basketball since I was introduced to it many years ago. Working with young athletes and helping them achieve greatness on and off the court is my ministry. It’s something that I dedicate myself to,” said Kalua.

BIBC 2025
Last year’s BIBC women’s tournament champions were UNILIL Ark Angels from Malawi. Pictures: Supplied

Just as he is hands-on with the club’s programs, he will adopt a similar approach with the upcoming tournament. The BIBC is a tournament Kalua conceptualised to grow the Brave Hearts brand.

“The BIBC challenge was a door for the world to know about Malawi’s basketball. It is a way of showing my players that there is more out there,” said Kalua. It is also a chance for our fans to watch international basketball. But my aim is for the players to aspire for more in this game.”

The growth of the tournament is also significant for Kalua, as teams from Kenya and Angola will travel to Malawi for the two-day event.

“When you come, you will understand what the BIBC is doing for Malawi basketball. There will not be an empty seat at the venue, I doubt you will find a seat,” chuckled Kalua. “Kids look out for this tournament for inspiration. It’s a chance for them to watch the best in Africa. For the first time, we have teams from Angola, Kenya and South Africa.”

Another advantage of the tournament is that youngsters have a platform to exhibit their talent.

“I intend to introduce a youth category for agents to use the tournament to scout young talents,” said Kalua.

BIBC 2025
Zambia’s Matero Magic won the BIBC last year.

With continental qualifying tournaments like the Road to BAL and the FIBA WBLA being around the corner, Kalua also emphasised that the tournament will serve as part of the Bravehearts’ preparation.

“For our men’s team, we have invited a couple of American players and a player from Zambia to see if we can have them for the Road to BAL,” said Kalua. “On the ladies’ side, we have a player from Zimbabwe and another from Kenya that we are having a look at. If they fit the team, then we can consider them for the qualifiers.”

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