The BAL, an initiative by the NBA to grow the game in Africa, was originally scheduled for its debut in March 2020, but, just weeks before tip off in Senegal, the coronavirus pandemic made that impossible. Now, more than a year later, a condensed and
bubbled version will take place in Kigali, Rwanda, over the last two weeks in May, starting on the 16th.
As a result of the long delay, the Hoopers' training schedules and protocols were changed, the team had to pivot away from the players they initially wanted to fill their Foreign Player quota, and had to deal with the new reality of having to play without fans within a bubble.
In spite of all those disruptions, Odaudu believes that the break, and all the resulting changes, have put the team in a better position to compete than they were a year ago, as it allowed the team more time to get their house in order.
Each team is allowed a quota of four foreign players to strengthen their roster, and Odaudu said that the postponement had allowed his team a chance to acquire much better players than they had last year.
"I think our chances have actually gone up because in my own opinion, I didn't think we got the best of the foreign players that we were trying to get last time out," he told ESPN.
"We didn't get the best because time was short, it was rushed. But now, we have made some solid signings, people who will actually make an impact on the team."
Hoopers have signed Nigeria and former NBA guard
Ben Uzoh, along with the American duo of Taren Sullivan and Chris Daniels. And while they had the misfortune of signing and then losing another Nigeria star in Festus Ezeli due to injury, his replacement is Uganda international Robinson Odoch Opong, who was highly-coveted by other BAL teams.
"I'm bursting with excitement now thinking of what these guys can add to the people that we have already on the team," Odaudu said.
"I am very excited seeing how far they can go because our chances are higher now than it was Pre-COVID."
Last year, Rivers Hoopers would have gone into the competition as the team with the least amount of actual game time. The official Nigeria Basketball Premier League has been in limbo for going on three years due to an ongoing court dispute between the two factional leadership groups.
This would have provided a clear disadvantage for the team, playing against teams that had league minutes behind them. The postponement changed all that, and now Odaudu says the team actually has a fighting chance.
He added: "I would say it has actually been a blessing in disguise. [Aside from] the signing of the foreign players, we were going to play against people who had been playing actively in their leagues in various countries.
"But we are all now on the same level and that is a good thing for us."