Leicester Riders are about more than just basketball. The club has been around since 1967, and beyond the professional game, they’ve become part of the community. Their players don’t just hoop, they walk into schools to teach children financial literacy, how to stay healthy and how to protect their mental health.
“The organisation is somewhere to go to enjoy, engage, be employed,” says chairman Kevin Routledge. Basketball is the vehicle. “You can’t win them all the time, can you? You have to wake up the next day in spite of the loss and do things positively. Give something back.”
Their charity, Leicester Riders Foundation, has done just that. It delivers a range of programmes focused on youth engagement, education, health and social inclusion, working closely with schools, local authorities and community organisations.
“In 2016 the foundation set up a company to build and operate an arena, and we were the first to do that,” says Routledge. The 2,500-capacity indoor arena has become a community focal point. “It’s used by the college next door, for big basketball matches, darts, snooker, boxing, and other shows that come and go.”
Big Issue Invest (BII) has been a funding partner to Leicester Riders Foundation and a proud supporter of the organisation’s growth since 2019.
Through this partnership, BII is helping to enable a sport-led model of community development – one that not only creates positive opportunities for young people but also strengthens the long-term social infrastructure of the region. In recent years, residents have been fighting to keep Leicester’s community hubs open as playgrounds and youth spaces have faced closure. A recent report in the Leicester Gazette highlighted a loss of safe spaces for young people in the city.
