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'Blessed' - From tennis prodigy to basketball star
'Blessed' - From tennis prodigy to basketball star

BBC News

time07-04-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

'Blessed' - From tennis prodigy to basketball star

Few of us sports enthusiasts can claim to have mastered one sport. Josh Ward-Hibbert has conquered man himself refutes that idea, preferring to describe himself as "blessed", but the evidence is clear. A Grand Slam tennis champion as a junior, Ward-Hibbert has gone on to become a Great Britain international at 31, Ward-Hibbert is a key part of the Newcastle Eagles basketball team aiming to conquer new ground in Europe, thrilled at what life has given him."I feel blessed," he told BBC Sport. "There are lots of super-talented people who play some sports and you hear commentators say, 'That kind of athleticism, they could be good at this or this.' "My parents and coaches made it possible for me to do both." On Tuesday, Ward-Hibbert's sporting journey has him to Bratislava in Slovakia as the Eagles compete in the European North Basketball League Final play Polish side Dziki Warsaw in the semi-final, with the chance to face either Inter Bratislava or Romanian side CSO Voluntari in the the Eagles and Ward-Hibbert have a raft of domestic winners' medals, but winning a European trophy is a new frontier, and they are determined to add to their is further proof of how the Mansfield-born athlete has been excelling since he was up, Josh's life was packed with sport. Parents Michael and Shelley would be ferrying him from tennis practice to the basketball court most nights a did not pressure him to pick one over the other, while coaches worked to accommodate each had been part of the England Under-16 basketball team, but when the time came to choose, he opted for tennis. Melbourne magic with best mate Close friendships were formed as Ward-Hibbert travelled the world playing tennis, and in 2012 he reached the pinnacle as he teamed up with Liam Broady to win the Australian Open junior doubles turned professional and won one singles title and 13 doubles titles on the ITF Futures circuit, including five with Broady and four with Lloyd Glasspool, another who is now a regular on the main ATP doubles he struggled to progress beyond that, and at 22 he decided to step away from tour life to go to Loughborough University to further his education."There were a few things that happened in my personal life, and I had a little injury that kept recurring and was not going away how I wanted it to," he said. "Everything just combined to put me to a tipping point."Tennis is a super-tough sport, physically and mentally. You are always travelling, you are constantly living out of a suitcase. "No matter where it is, you have got to live it. It's difficult, it's very much a lifestyle, 45, 50 weeks of the year."But Ward-Hibbert would not be without his tennis career."It is an amazing sport. There were so many highs, it taught me so much as a person, and the kind of person I am today is from the journey I had. "I'm definitely glad I had that journey. It would be remiss not to say I wish I had got to world number one, but that wasn't in my path."I got to win a Grand Slam with one of my closest friends still to this day. That is a memory I am never going to forget." Shooting hoops again Ward-Hibbert had not played any basketball for a few years, but while at university, his love was playing a few games for Derby Trailblazers to getting his eye back in with a friend who had come over from America, he was recruited by the Leicester Riders in the British Basketball League."I just wanted to figure out my next move and the basketball thing just fell," he said."I picked up the ball and just ran with it, and I've been running ever since. I kept having opportunities and big decisions to make and a lot of positive things have happened from that."I love basketball the same as I love tennis, so it was going from one love to another love."From that point, success and Ward-Hibbert, who measures 6ft 5in (1.96m) in height, have gone hand in picked up seven trophies with the Riders and then three more from a stint with London Lions before heading north to join the Eagles in 2023."I always believed in myself as a basketball player," he said."I believed I had good ability, kept working hard and doing the best thing I could whilst also studying, and a lot of great things happened. "I've represented my country, I've got a lot of accolades and trophies in the British game, and hopefully there are plenty more to add, too." Can Eagles extend Newcastle glory? In January, Ward-Hibbert helped Newcastle win the SLB Trophy, beating Bristol Flyers in the final for the club's first piece of silverware since was a 28th trophy for the most successful British club, but now they want European with the city's football team ending a 70-year wait to win a cup final at Wembley last month, the basketball team are determined to ride that wave."The legacy of Newcastle Eagles doesn't need to be spoken about, it's massive," added Ward-Hibbert."But we feel as a team, we are trying to establish our own legacy. We are paving the way this season, winning the cup, adding another trophy to the organisation. "We've won the group in the European North Basketball League, the first British team to ever top a group in a European competition. "We're already setting legacies in that regard, but to come away with the trophy is something that we are striving to get to. "All the players and staff want to come back to Newcastle and say we won that trophy. "We want to bring something back, the same way the football team did." Tennis or basketball? Ward-Hibbert's love for both sports is clear. And when basketball takes a break in the summer, he will still be tempted to pick up a tennis racket and send down a few which is better? Winning as an individual or being part of a winning team?"Winning something amazing and celebrating in the locker room with all the guys in basketball is an unbelievable feeling," he said. "That is special, but then you have a long, gruelling tennis match and the second after winning that last point to win the match, that feeling is pretty unrivalled."Tennis is an individual sport but there is so much camaraderie in it with your coach, physio, strength and conditioning coach, other players you are travelling with. "Regardless of what was happening, if I wasn't playing, I always wanted to see my friends do well and I am pretty sure it was vice versa."There was so much camaraderie and a real team aspect to it. It's the same with basketball, but on the flip side, a lot of players have probably been on teams where there is not a lot of camaraderie and felt solo and isolated."It's an interesting debate, but for me it's completely situational."

'More to come' as Newcastle make European semi
'More to come' as Newcastle make European semi

BBC News

time19-03-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

'More to come' as Newcastle make European semi

Newcastle Eagles are "not satisfied yet" after making the semi-finals of the European North Basketball Eagles defeated defending champions Bakken Bears 93-73 at home to win 177-160 on aggregate, having lost the first leg in Denmark are aiming for their second trophy of the season, having won the Super League Basketball Trophy in January."This was one of our goals, to move forward in this competition," Josh Ward-Hibbert told BBC Look North."We're a stage closer but I don't think anyone's satisfied yet. With the team we've got, this is what we're planning for." The Final Four takes place on 8-9 April with the venue to be decided once all the finalists are known. Success in the SLB Trophy over Bristol Flyers was a 28th piece of silverware for the most successful men's franchise in British basketball. But all of those have come on the domestic front, so winning a European trophy would be new ground for the Eagles, led by ex-Great Britain head coach Marc 31, contributed 14 points at the Vertu Motors Arena as the English club convincingly overturned a three-point deficit against Bakken, the team who beat them at the same stage of this competition last now it leaves the guard and the rest of his team-mates chasing history. "It's something the club hasn't done before, so it's an amazing achievement," Ward-Hibbert added."Just the event and the whole few days that it's taking place over is going to be something amazing. "I can't wait to get my teeth stuck into it and hopefully come back with a couple more wins."

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