Tokyo 2025: Adhiambo ready to steer Kenya basketball team to deaflympics glory


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Boasting a wealth of experience, which includes playing with
non-hearing-impaired players, 34-year-old Winnie Adhiambo will be one of
Kenya’s key players at the Tokyo 2025 Deaflympics Games set for November 15 to
26 in Japan.
Kenya will be competing in the women’s basketball at the
25th edition of the Summer Games for the third consecutive time after debuting
in the 2017 showpiece held in Samsun, Turkey.
Beyond being the team’s pillar owing to her vast experience,
Adhiambo will also lead from the front as captain, a new role she has fully
embraced.
She has set her sights on guiding Kenya to a historic medal
finish.
“We have been training so hard and our main aim is to make
it to the podium (in Tokyo),” said Adhiambo on the sideline of the team’s
training at USIU-Africa Grounds in Nairobi.
The mother of one said she embraced the sport at the age of
19 after being inspired by friends.
Although she did not enjoy the game at first, her passion
for it grew over time. She features for Footprints in the Kenya Basketball
Federation League.
“At times I have been training with the hearing friends and
also participating in their league. That has been of great benefit to me. For
example, you find that players in the hearing team are very fast so that helps
me to be a good player.
“I also share with my colleague (in the Deaf basketball
team) what I have learned on the other side (KBF),” said Adhiambo, who dreams of
being a basketball coach in the future.
“Kenya’s coach Mary Chepkoi said they settled on Adhiambo as
the team’s captain owing to her leadership skills and courage to compete with
non-hearing-impaired players.
“She is not limited to the Deaf team. She is this person who
is outgoing and ready to compete in any platform, so that's the courage and
leadership we need in the squad,” said Chepkoi who also coached the team in the
2022 Games held in Caxias Do Sul,
Brazil.
In Brazil, Kenya recorded a historic maiden win against the
hosts, a performance they are keen to improve on.
Ahead of the Tokyo Games, Adhiambo said the team needs to
sharpen both their offense and defense as well as work on key drills such as
man marking.
Kenya are in Group “A” alongside giants Italy, Lithuania, and
Australia. According to Chepkoi, the team of 20 players has been training
three times a week—Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.
“Having gotten players from different regions, they have not
been exposed to training, so there are a couple of fundamentals of basketball
that we are still working on,” she said.
“We won one game at that time (in Brazil). We are looking
forward to posting better results this time around. We are looking forward to
picking a win in the group stages,” she said, singling out Lithuania their
biggest threat.
On her part, Christine Kirui, the chairperson of the Kenya Deaf
Basketball Federation, said they expect the team to win a medal in Tokyo.
“As a federation, we are promising Kenyans that when we reach Tokyo in Japan, we are going to get a medal and bring it home. We know that is what will make Kenyans proud, so we will give our best,” said Kirui.
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