Naturalized
players to play a big role in FIBA Asia tourney
by rick olivares
When the 27th FIBA Asia
Championship tips off on August 1, one of the players on every team who will
keenly scrutinized are the naturalized players. Because of international rules
that allow the naturalization of players, countries have used that to bolster
or plug holes in their team’s line-ups.
The fortunes of these national teams
will also largely depend on their naturalized players’ performances.
Group
A
The Philippines will take their first
crack at a country with a naturalized player in Jordan’s Jimmy Baxter in their
second outing on August 2.
Baxter is a 6’6” shooting guard/small
forward American from St. Petersburg, Florida who played for South Florida.
Undrafted in the NBA, Baxter played overseas from the time he graduated logging
in frequent flyer miles that from Europe to the Middle East to South America.
He will have to fill some very big
shoes after Rasheim Wright was not invited back. It remains to be seen if Baxter
still has his hops at 32 years of age. But he will be adding some perimeter
scoring for Jordan and coach Vangelis Aleksandris who Baxter used to torch
while playing for Illisiakos in Greece against the latter’s Marousi squad.
The Philippines will also be up
against 6’9” Quincy Davis, a forward/center from Tulane who was naturalized in
June 2013 by Chinese Taipei. Davis is a complete player who can score and
rebound. He also has a nose for offensive boards.
After a World Basketball League stint,
Davis has mostly played abroad and in Taipei for the last two years.
Marcus Douthit will be on his second
FIBA tour of duty for the Philippines. The 33-year old 6’10” center out of
Providence was selected 56th overall by the Los Angeles Lakers in
the 2004 NBA Draft. With players like Chris Mihm, Brian Grant, and Vlade Divac
in the lineup, Douthit saw the writing on the wall and he elected to play
overseas. He has also played for the Air21 Express in the PBA.
With Douthit in the middle, he
provides a sterling defensive presence who can also open the perimeter for
Gilas’ outside shooters with his strong inside game. If he can stay in the game
until the final seconds tick away, Douthit will give the Philippines a fighting
chance to realize its World Championship berth dreams.
Group
B
Japan, a long-time nemesis of the
Philippines, will parade JR Sakuragi, the man formerly known as Milton “JR”
Henderson who has made Japan his home since 2007. The 36-year old Sakuragi, who
took his surname from the popular Japanese manga character in Slam Dunk, is a
UCLA alum and was drafted 56th overall in the second round of the
1998 NBA Draft where he was selected by the Vancouver (now Memphis) Grizzlies.
Standing six feet and eight inches,
Sakuragi plays either forward position or center for Japan.
Of all the naturalized players who
will be seeing action in FIBA, it is Qatar’s Jarvis Hayes who will go in with
the most impressive resume having been drafted 10th overall in the
NBA by the Washington Wizards in 2003, the same class that produced LeBron James,
Dwyane Wade, and Carmelo Anthony among others.
The 31-year old 6’8” Hayes averaged
8.3 points, 3.1 rebounds, and 1.1 assists in a seven-year NBA career that also
saw him suit up for the Detroit Pistons and the New Jersey Nets.
Qatar is hoping that he can provide
some outside shooting for their team that will also be depending on skipper
Yasin Ismail to lead the team.
Lebanon’s Loren Woods will be familiar
to Filipino basketball fans as he has played for Al Riyadi in Beirut since
2010. He has gone up against both versions of Gilas and was a part of that FIBA
Asia Champions Cup side that won the 2011 title in Manila over Mahram of Iran.
The 35-year old 7’2” center who was
granted Lebanese citizenship only in July of this year, was born in St. Louis,
Missouri. Woods played for Wake Forest alongside Tim Duncan before transferring
to Arizona. He was selected by the Minnesota Timberwolves in the second round
of the 2001 NBA Draft; 45th overall. He spent two years with the
Timberwolves before the Miami Heat picked him up. He also suited up for the
Toronto Raptors before he chose the life of an international basketball player.
With Woods at the slot, Al Riyadi won
the 2011 Lebanese League, the FIBA Asia Champions Cup in Manila where they
defeated Mahram, and the West Asian Basketball League for an unprecedented
treble. With veterans Jean Abdelnour and the ageless Fadi El Khatib, Lebanon,
whatever their domestic problems will be a top contender for the title.
Group
C
Korea, already a tough team with its physical
players and plethora of snipers from long range, penciled in its roster a 6’6”
naturalized American Gregory Stevenson.
Stevenson, a Richmond, Virginia alum,
is actually half Korean as he was born to a Korean-American mother. Naturalized
in 2011, the 34-year old forward changed his name to “Moon Tae-Young”.
Tae-Young will add some athleticism
and size to Korea’s wing defense.
Group
D
Kazakhstan will trot out six foot six
Jerry Johnson to be their backcourt general. Johnson played for Rider University
in New Jersey. Johnson has played international ball for the past seven years
and most recently with B.C. Astana Tigers in the Kazakh National League where
they won the championship.
At 31-years of age, the cat quick
Johnson believes that he can play a few more years before he calls it a career.
Of all the last naturalized players
who will be seeing action in the FIBA tourney, Chester Jarrel “CJ” Giles will
be the most recognizable among Filipino basketball fans.
The 6’11” Giles, now at 27 years of
age, after all was the first candidate targeted by the Samahang Basketbol ng
Pilipinas for naturalization. Giles suited up for Gilas in the 2009 Fiba Asia
Champions Cup in Jakarta where he played heroically on an injured ankle. But
his relationship with the coaching staff and team management soured over his
alleged poor work habits. He was soon shown the door, a disturbing trend as he
also left Kansas and Lebanon’s Al Riyadi for similar reasons.
Four years after he first came into
the country’s or even international basketball’s collective consciousness, the
former Los Angeles Laker and Golden State Warriors summer league player, is
back this time with Bahrain that is ranked 75th in the world by
FIBA.
rick you forgot quincy davis of chinese taipei!
ReplyDeletei wish the philippines would just naturalize players. homegrown basketball players have no hope. may magaling mag-dribble, pandak! may matangkad nga, lampa naman.
ReplyDeleteyung pba natin may height limit for imports. kaya naman parang ignorante ang mga local players natin pag may nakakalabang malalaking foreigners.
please don't mention taulava. he never grew up playing here.