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
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