Sports

Why Marial Shayok’s basketball story is coming full circle with South Sudan

Former NBA player Marial Shayok says he first fell in love with basketball when he was just a kid, watching his family play in Ottawa’s southeast end.

“My dad and my older siblings, just follow[ing] them around, watching their tournaments … and following their footsteps, I kind of always had all the answers to the test,” recalled the 28-year-old, who went on to play for the Philadelphia 76ers.

In large part, Shayok credits his success to his dad, who played professionally before becoming the family coach, as well as his older siblings, who also went on to play pro.

“Growing up in a basketball family was the biggest blessing I could have asked for.” 

At age 23, Marial Shayok, number 35 in white, was drafted by the Philadelphia 76ers. (AP)

Now, Shayok says he hopes to give back to his family and community back home by donning the South Sudan jersey this week at the FIBA World Cup.

“My dad moving to North America to play basketball and bringing his family with him … and his kids playing basketball [and] now me having a chance to play for our native country — it means the world to my family and to myself.” 

An old portrait of a basketball team.
A Texas college basketball scholarship helped Makur Shayok, top row and third from the left, flee war in Sudan in the late ’80s. (JJ Ngandu/CBC)

Basketball as an escape

For the Shayok family, basketball and home have always been intertwined, sometimes in complicated ways.

Marial’s dad, Makur, fled civil war in South Sudan (then Sudan) in the ’80s through basketball, thanks to a scholarship at Alvin Community College in Texas.

The Shayoks eventually made their way to Ottawa, where Makur turned his focus to passing on the game to his growing family.

“Basketball is something I love so much. And since I’m around, they started playing when they are young, like two, five, six,” Makur explained.

An old portrait and diploma, paired with a sports trophy.
Makur Shayok escaped civil war in South Sudan through a basketball scholarship to a college in Texas, later attending the University of Dayton before moving the family to Canada. (JJ Ngandu/CBC)

“All we did was play basketball, watch basketball. We even had a basketball net in our basement. So it was just all basketball,” added Marial, recalling that every weekend they’d go to the YMCA and watch dad play in the men’s league.

“So my dad was very, very influential in us becoming basketball players.”

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