Spectacular visit to Cape Verde for Naismith Trophy
PRAIA (Cape Verde) - The Trophy Tour presented by J9 arrived in Cape Verde. International basketball's biggest prize was photographed at famous sites and with the country's leaders.
PRAIA (Cape Verde) - After qualifying for the FIBA Basketball World Cup for the first time, the African nation of Cape Verde became a stop on the Trophy Tour presented by J9.
The Naismith Trophy arrived on the island nation and was photographed in front of famous sites like the Statue of Cesaria Evora, the Cape Verdean singer-songwriter who received a Grammy Award in 2004 for her album Voz d'Amor.
Nicknamed the "Barefoot Diva" for performing without shoes, the "Queen of Morna" came to international prominence in the 1990s. She passed away in 2011.
Naismith Trophy at the Statue of Cesaria Evora
Cape Verde Basketball Federation President Mario Correia, national team coach Emanuel Trovoada and team captain Fidel Mendonca were with the Naismith Trophy as it was taken to various locations.
In the Bay of Mindelo is a cultural and creative, triangular platform known as the Mansa Floating Hub, which is where a snap of the Naismith Trophy was also taken.
The Mansa Floating Hub in Mindelo Bay
Another iconic location in Cape Verde is the Farol de Dona Maria Pia, which was built in 1881 and named after the Portuguese queen. It's tough to beat the scenic views of the coastline that one gets from this lighthouse.
Farol de Dona Maria Pia
The Royal Fortress of San Felipe, which dates back to the middle of the 16th century, was constructed to defend the main Peruvian port and the city of Limi from pirates and corsairs during colonial times.
The Royal Fortress of San Felipe
A photograph of the Naismith Trophy was also taken before the Amilcar Cabral Memorial (below). Cabral was a Bissau-Guinean and Cape Verdean agricultural engineer, political organizer and diplomat. A pan-Africanist and intellectual nationalist revolutionary poet, he was murdered 50 years ago.
Cape Verde President José Maria Pereira Neves also greeted Correira, Trovoada and Mendonca and had a photograph taken with the Naismith Trophy, as did Cape Verde Prime Minister José Ulisses de Pina Correia e Silva at a separate location.