Episodios

  • Inside Paris Basketball with Isaiah Denzel, Sebastián Herrera and Francesco Tabellini
    Apr 12 2026

    This time, we are in Paris, inside the Adidas Arena, at the heart of one of Europe’s fastest-rising basketball clubs. For one night, we stepped into the noise, the lights, the music and the emotion surrounding the current French Betclic Elite champion Paris Basketball, a team trying to create not just wins, but a real culture.


    In this episode, you will hear Isaiah Denzel, a fashion influencer from Paris, on the way basketball and style now feed each other in the city. You will hear Sebastian Herrera, the captain, on the club’s identity, the fans, and the energy that makes this team different.And you will discover Francesco Tabellini, who spent nine months as head coach, speaking about fight, effort and the connection between the players and the crowd. This is more than a game-night report. It is a snapshot of a club, a city and a movement.This is Paris Basketball. This is The Free League.


    Thanks to the Paris Basketball for inviting me in their wonderful arena. Thanks to the two team Paris Basketball and ASVEL Lyon Villeurbanne. Thanks to Clara Desfoux.


    Photo : Nadir Hifi, best scorer in the current EuroLeague 2025/2026, warming up.


    Audio, text and photo by David Glaser

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    17 m
  • Randoald Dessarzin : The Jurassian Foxes Coach Who Refused Limits
    Mar 15 2026

    Randoald Dessarzin is, before anything else, a Jurassian. The Pully-Lausanne Foxes head coach carved from the stubborn rock of his region, driven by an unwavering belief in basketball as both a craft and a calling. He is the coach who once carried the modest BC Boncourt squad to the highest levels of Swiss professional basketball. That achievement opened the doors of the storied JDA Dijon, in France’s top league, launching him into a journey marked by triumphs and turbulence.


    Looking back, he speaks calmly of the storms that sometimes circled his career toward the end of his Burgundy chapter. He himself never felt personally endangered by the media squalls. What troubled him, rather, was the thought that his young children, fortunately still too small to read the papers or hear schoolyard whispers, might one day feel the weight of those public tempests.


    During a season that had begun with promise (five wins, one loss, tied with Cholet) tragedy struck. A young prospect of the club, Jonathan Bourhis, also a member of the French junior national team, died in a car accident. When the sporting management refused to allow the entire team to attend the funeral, permitting only two foreign players to go, the decision tore the locker room apart. Two camps emerged, bitter and irreconcilable. Dessarzin never managed to heal the wound. It remains a dark memory in a long career that nevertheless carried him to the European Cup and later to Africa, where he led the Ivory Coast national team.


    He reflects on how the modern basketball game demands as much psychology as strategy. Once, players simply followed directions. Now they question everything, search for shortcuts, enter the business world of agents at fifteen, and chase personal statistics, with defense, the invisible currency of champions, too often left in the shadows. He misses the earlier era, when loyalty to a club had weight and the horizon of a career was not constantly shifting.


    Interview by David Glaser

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    32 m
  • Mouna Skaria: Bringing a New Basketball Venue to the Pully Lausanne Foxes
    Mar 13 2026

    Mouna Skaria, a dermatologist and surgeon based in Vevey since 2005, entered basketball largely through her children, who joined the club in 2016, shortly before the formation of the Pully Lausanne Foxes in 2017. What began as volunteer work, from helping at club events to fundraising and managing teams, evolved into leadership roles, culminating in her becoming president five years later.


    Under her guidance, the Foxes have developed a more strategic vision, strengthened marketing and communication, and built a strong volunteer base, 60% of whom are women. This inclusive environment has created a unique energy that drives the club forward.


    A major challenge for the Foxes is accommodating young players. Despite a Swiss Olympic label and programs from U6 to U23, plus senior teams, several hundreds children are reportedly on waiting lists due to limited facilities. Mouna Skaria emphasizes that growth requires better infrastructure.


    More professionalism ahead


    Financially, the Foxes operate on a modest budget of around 350,000 francs, far below larger Swiss clubs such as Fribourg or Geneva. Yet, the team’s cohesion and dedication allowed them to finish third in the national championship last season. The President envisions further professionalization, possibly converting the club into a joint-stock company to increase investment capacity and staff professionalism.


    The Foxes have expanded sponsorships from zero to more than thirty-five partners and continue to enhance the fan experience with events, VIP subscriptions, and growing merchandising. Skaria also stresses the educational and social role of basketball, teaching discipline, respect, and teamwork while fostering community solidarity, recently reinforced after the tragic loss of a young player followind the fire of the Bar Constellation in Crans-Montana the 1st of January 2026.


    Looking ahead, her ambitions are clear: to win a national championship and establish a modern basketball arena in Lausanne, complete with fan zones, VIP areas, and community spaces, securing the Foxes’ place in the city’s sporting and social life.

    Interview by David Glaser.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    28 m
  • Miloš Jovanović : The Referee Bridging 5x5 and 3x3 Basketball
    Mar 6 2026

    International referee and lifelong basketball enthusiast, Miloš Jovanović moves between two worlds: traditional 5x5 basketball and the fast‑growing 3x3 format. Originally from Serbia and now based in Switzerland, he explains how an unexpected calling led him to officiate at the highest level. With a mix of physical preparation, strict rule mastery, and sharp on‑court communication, he describes a demanding role that is often underestimated. In this interview, he also reflects on the rapid rise of 3x3, a spectacular discipline booming in Switzerland and across the world.


    Interview by David Glaser.


    Read it on suississimo.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    30 m
  • Miguel Font : How Geneva Became the Birthplace of World Basketball
    Feb 25 2026

    When I meet Miguel Font on an early December morning, the encounter feels almost disarmingly simple. We meet at the Patrick Baumann House of Basketball in Mies, just outside Geneva—a place that quietly houses the heart of global basketball governance. Despite basketball being the world’s second most popular team sport, with more than 3.3 billion fans worldwide, the sport remains oddly misunderstood in Switzerland. Yet here, a dozen kilometers from Geneva, sits the epicenter of its international memory.


    The House of Basketball itself is a striking architectural gesture: shaped like a hand, its curves and structure subtly echo the geometry of a net. Far more than an office building, it is a cultural arena. The ground floor unfolds like a miniature world museum of basketball—objects, photos, documents, shoes, posters—each fragment narrating how the sport grew across continents and generations. At its core lies the world’s largest basketball library, open to researchers and curious visitors alike. Moving through the building feels like walking through the sport’s DNA.


    Guiding this universe of stories is Miguel Font, FIBA Foundation Historical Curator. Spaniard by nationality, multicultural by upbringing, and international by vocation, Font embodies the borderless nature of basketball itself. Born in Madrid to Moroccan and Portuguese parents, he grew up “in the streets,” as he likes to recall, the fifth of seven children. Basketball offered him structure and belonging. With characteristic humor, he describes himself as “short, overweight, and a very bad player,” yet he became a coach at just fourteen—later working in wheelchair basketball and spending more than twenty years on the sideline.


    What ultimately shaped his path was not athletic ambition, but curiosity. Font began collecting stories, objects, archives, and memories—anything that testified to the way basketball shapes people’s lives far beyond the court. This passion naturally aligned with the FIBA Foundation, where he now oversees the Cultural Heritage Unit. From Mies, his team manages collections, exhibitions, archives, research initiatives, and the storytelling arm of an organization that connects more than 200 national federations.


    For Font, basketball is a cultural phenomenon before it is a sport. Sneakers that became icons of music and street culture, films that shaped collective imagination, political histories embedded in games, Cold War narratives playing out on the court—his work curates all these intersections. One of the Foundation’s major projects, From the Court to the Big Screen, draws on hundreds of films to explore basketball’s cinematic life.


    Walking with Font through the House of Basketball feels like being guided by someone who not only knows the sport but feels its pulse. He speaks with equal passion about James Naismith’s legacy, the 1989 turning point that opened FIBA to professional players, the rise of 3x3 basketball, and the incredible multicultural ecosystem that now surrounds the game. His perspective is global yet grounded, historical yet forward-looking.


    “History teaches humility,” he tells me. Basketball, in his view, is a lens through which to read the 20th century—and perhaps to glimpse what comes next. In many ways, Miguel Font is not just a curator of basketball’s past. He is one of the storytellers shaping how the world understands the game’s future.


    David Glaser

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    20 m
  • Aner Levron : From the Kibbutz to Fribourg Olympic
    Feb 14 2026

    Aner Levron grew up in a kibbutz in the Upper Galilee, a world shaped by nature, community, and simplicity. This environment forged his values: solidarity, effort, belonging—and a love for basketball. Now 41, he is assistant coach at Fribourg Olympic, after spending 19 years travelling through Europe as a professional player, mainly in Germany but also in Austria and Italy. His journey was made possible partly thanks to his German roots: his grandparents were born in Germany before fleeing the country, allowing him to obtain a German passport and explore Europe.


    Levron’s career unfolded across seventeen cities. Not a star, but a hardworking, selfless player, he built balance on the court and uplifted teammates. A standout game in Germany, where he scored 27 points and was named MVP, symbolized a personal reconciliation with a complex past marked by Jewish history.


    Since settling in Switzerland, he has become a central figure at Fribourg Olympic. Known for his “tough love” philosophy, he acts as a bridge between players and coaches—strict, supportive, available at any hour. He has lived intense moments with the club, including a memorable Europe Cup quarter‑final in Thessaloniki.


    The war in Israel deeply affected him, especially the attacks on kibbutzim. Yet he holds on to the hope of peace. Today, in Fribourg, he continues to grow, teach, and help others evolve, his journey still unfolding.


    By David Glaser

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    42 m
  • Sebastiano De Martis: A Life Shaped by Basketball
    Feb 12 2026

    From the small gyms of Monthey and Vevey to the electric atmosphere of an Olympic 3×3 final in Paris, Sebastiano De Martis has lived basketball from every angle—player, referee, and coach. What began as a childhood passion in Wallis became a lifelong compass, guiding him through the Swiss leagues and beyond.


    He played for Vevey Basket and Blonay Basket until age nineteen, before discovering officiating at twelve, climbing all the way to the national level in 5×5 and later becoming a leading Swiss referee in the fast‑paced world of 3×3. Coaching followed naturally: after working with youth teams—including a young Jonathan Dubas—he took charge of Romanel-sur-Lausanne’s second team in the 3rd League, bringing intensity, analysis, and a distinctly Italian tactical culture inherited from his Sardinian and Pugliese roots.


    For De Martis, tactics are intelligence: understanding opponents, reading defenses, and teaching players to see the game’s hidden details. As he observes Swiss basketball’s growth—boosted by names like Sefolosha and Capela—he believes the next step is investing again in 5×5 while nurturing the booming 3×3 scene.


    His career is filled with vivid memories: the EuroLeague Final Four in Belgrade, a thunderous Crvena Zvezda game, an encounter with Joakim Noah in Orlando, and that unforgettable Olympic final where he calmly watched a Dutch friend sink the winning shot.


    With the poise of a referee, the intensity of a player, and the vision of a coach, Sebastiano De Martis remains anchored by a simple conviction: on the court or on the bench, the team always comes first.


    By David Glaser

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    38 m
  • Julija Matic : A "Swiss Sniper" with Elfic Fribourg
    Feb 9 2026

    In its very first interview, The Free League introduces Julija Matic, a 19-year-old basketball talent whose journey bridges Switzerland and Serbia. Born and raised in Switzerland to Serbian parents, Julija discovered basketball at age ten thanks to her older brother Geo, who first brought her to the playground. What started as sibling support quickly became a lifelong passion shared by the entire family.


    After early years playing with boys in Ticino, Julija’s career took a decisive turn through summer camps with Red Star Belgrade, her father’s beloved club. Her shooting skills—earning her the nickname “the Swiss Sniper”—and her all-around game helped her rise through Serbia’s youth system, from U16 to U18 and eventually to the first team. Serbia also shaped her mentality: competitive, emotional, and resilient.


    Now back in Switzerland with Elfic Fribourg, Julija has established herself as a versatile, vocal player who contributes far beyond scoring—through defense, rebounds, assists, and key moments in EuroCup competition. She proudly represents the Swiss national team while remaining aware of the contrasts between Swiss and Serbian basketball, particularly in intensity and fan support.


    Grounded by strong family ties, lasting friendships from her Red Star years, and a clear love for the game, Julija keeps her ambitions open but focused. For now, Fribourg feels like home, and her goal is simple: finish the season strong and keep pushing toward the highest level possible.


    By David Glaser

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    25 m