GAROUA, Cameroon (Army News Service) -- American and Cameroonian soldiers come from entirely separate parts of the world with distinct cultural differences. But on Friday, they discovered something in common -- the urge to beat their respective country's air force when given the chance.
A few days before, members of Task Force Toccoa, a 101st Airborne Division-led unit based in northern Cameroon, built a basketball court with freshly painted lines and hoops weighed down by concrete blocks next to an active runway.
They then invited Cameroon military members from the local area for a basketball game to help foster better cohesion.
"This is a chance for us to work side by side in something that is lighthearted," said Maj. Max Ferguson, who heads the task force that supports Cameroon's fight against Boko Haram, a violent extremist group in the country's far north region.
"We can get to know each other on a personal level," he added, "and we can learn to respect each other for our individual talents and not because my country told me to work alongside yours."
Wearing his black exercise uniform with "Army" in bright yellow letters, Pfc. Darian Hampton, who does security missions for the task force, joined a group of Cameroonian soldiers from the local gendarmerie unit, the country's paramilitary force.
While many of the host nation players spoke French, Hampton said there was still a universal language out on the court.
"It was a little different than playing back at home, because you can't communicate with them," said Hampton, a 22-year-old from Hagerstown, Maryland. "But with sports, there's still a language without even speaking to each other. You can speak with the eyes, hand gestures and give them a thumbs up and they'll understand."
Hampton, who played college ball for Robert Morris University in Pittsburgh, helped lead his team to a 62-43 victory over a team of U.S. and Cameroonian airmen.
No matter the country they were from, players said, the friendly rivalry between the army and air force was alive and well.
"The rivalry is everywhere, and it's always nice to play against them," Col. Nicholas Ngepi, the gendarmerie unit's chief of staff, said of his air force counterparts. "It also feels good [to beat them]."
One of Ngepi's troops, Alexis, had the game's only slam dunk, which fired up the crowd of about 50 Americans and Cameroonians at the task force's contingency location, situated on the Garoua air base.
"I appreciated the game," he said. "I didn't expect to see so much enthusiasm from the players and Americans."
Alexis, whose favorite NBA player is Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder, said he has always admired the game, which is not as popular as soccer in his country.
"I never dreamed I could play with Americans one day," he said. "I'm happy I came."
After the game's initial success, there's talk of extending the bilateral competition to soccer. Hampton said he'd be on board for it.
"They live and breathe it," he said of soccer. "That would be pretty nice to play a sport that we're not used to playing every day."
If that happens, the U.S. troops will have to be more prepared since many of the Cameroonian players performed better than expected during the basketball game.
"I think everyone just assumed that the U.S. players would carry the day going into today's game," Ferguson said. "When it comes to soccer/football, we will definitely try to keep up with them."
As for the basketball game's final score, Ferguson said that wasn't the point of having it.
"Who cares who won today," he said. "I was happy to see great plays on both sides, [and] it well exceeded my expectations for cohesion."
(Follow Sean Kimmons on Twitter: @KimmonsARNEWS)
Social Sharing