Masai Ujiri (born 1970) is the general
manager of the Toronto Raptors of the NBA. He is a native of Zaria, Nigeria.
The son of a doctor mother and a hospital administrator/nursing
educationist father, Ujiri originally played soccer as a youth before focusing
on basketball. His interest with basketball started as a 13-year old playing
with friends on outdoor basketball courts in northern Nigeria. This interest
would be fed by American sports magazines and VHS tapes of NBA games or
basketball movies. He admired Hakeem
Olajuwon, an NBA star who was born in Nigeria.
Ujiri grew to be 6-foot-4 and emigrated to the United States to play two
years of basketball at Bismarck State College, then transferred
to Montana State University-Billings,
though he left the latter school after one semester. He spent six years playing
professionally in Europe, making 5000 USD a month. After ending a professional
playing career in 2002, Ujiri worked as a youth coach in Nigeria. During an NBA
summer league game in Boston, he met David Thorpe, who eventually introduced
him to college coaches. In 2002, Ujiri was accompanying a young Nigerian player
to a draft tryout in Orlando when he impressed Magic scouting director Gary
Brokaw, who then introduced Ujiri to coach Doc Rivers and GM John Gabriel.
Ujiri then became an unpaid scout for the NBA's Orlando Magic,
paying his own way when he had to and sharing rooms with scouts or players when
he could.
Jeff Weltman, then a young Nuggets executive, introduced Ujiri to Nuggets
GM Kiki Vandeweghe, who then hired Ujiri on salary
as an international scout. After four seasons there, he was hired away by Bryan
Colangelo of the Toronto
Raptors as their Director of Global Scouting. Ujiri became the
Raptors' assistant general manager in 2008 and returned to the Nuggets in 2010,
when he accepted his position as executive vice president in charge of
basketball operations.
He became the first African-born
general manager for an American major league sports team. In 2013, he was named the NBA Executive of the Year. On May 31,
2013, Ujiri signed a 5 year, 15 million dollar deal to become GM of the Toronto
Raptors.
Ujiri has also been the director of the NBA's Basketball Without Borders
Africa program, which promotes basketball throughout the continent. He also
conducts two camps, one for the top 50 players of Nigeria, which is sponsored
by Nestle Milo, and another for African big men, which Ujiri sponsors himself
with help from Nike.
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