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To slay a giant
Reflections on an amazing run by Gilas Pilipinas
words, pictures and videos by rick olivares
When both the Philippine and Iranian basketball teams
stood in front of their respective benches for the playing of their respective
national anthems, that presented a pre-game opportunity to size up the two
squads physically from afar.
“Man,” I remember thinking to myself. “The Iranians
are so much bigger. We’re going to need to move that ball around real quick,
make sure we hit our shots, and play real smart to beat these guys.”
It isn’t that I didn’t know that fact. I’ve seen this
Iranian team since 2007 and knew how they were so much bigger, athletically
gifted, and skilled than many other teams. It’s a thought that comes to the
mind time and again and I am sure not only the coaches and the players but just
about everyone with some connection to the game.
Did I think we could beat the Iranians? Yes, of
course.
No, I am not into crack. But sports history is
littered with the corpses of heavy favorites who were upset by the most
unlikely of contenders.
Remember 23rd ranked Robin Soderling who
prior to the 2009 French Open had never won a third round match at the French
Open? He defeated number one ranked Rafael Nadal who was never defeated much
less challenged en route to four consecutive titles at Roland Garros. But Soderling
defeated the Spaniard in four sets in their fourth round match up.
There was James ‘Buster’ Douglas, a 42-1 underdog
against the unbeaten Mike Tyson heading into their February 11, 1990 bout.
Douglas, knocked Tyson out in the 10th round despite also being sent
to the canvas by a huge haymaker from the erstwhile champ. Douglas’ win remains
the biggest boxing upset of all time.
There was also the US Olympic Hockey Team composed of
amateur players and college stars that defeated the heavily favored Soviet
Union, 4-3, during the 1980 Winter Olympics in a game that has been dubbed,
‘The Miracle on Ice’. Imagine that, the big bad Red Machine that had won so
many titles were upended by a scrawny but no less scrappy team.
And perhaps closer to home, there was the Philippine
Men’s Football Team that defeated defending champion Vietnam, 2-0, in the 2010
Suzuki Cup. That win caused a football revival in the country that has gone
unabated to this day.
Things had fallen into place for an incredible finish
for the Philippines.
Lebanon, one of the stronger Middle Eastern teams,
was suspended by FIBA. They were bracketed with the Philippines in Group A
along with Chinese Taipei, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia.
Jordan was missing several key veterans and were
practically fielding a young team. They were beatable.
Chinese Taipei was cause for concern and they showed
it by beating the home team on their home court.
Into the second round, Japan was another team with
all sorts of internal issues. These were further magnified when they were blown
off the court by Gilas.
Against Qatar, some coaches wondered how the dribble
drive offense would work against a team that was tall and athletic. My gut feel
was we’d beat them because I felt that they weren’t particularly concerned
about their defense. And if the Philippines could play an uptempo game, these
guys were goners. And it was so.
China was hurting with Yi Jianlian not 100%. Furthermore,
the Chinese had not embraced Panagiotis Giannakis’ European style that it to
spread the minutes and shots around. It took a while for the Chinese to embrace
previous head coach Bob Donewald’s defense-first style of play that was once
infamously rebutted by Wang Zhizhi’s statement of “This is China. We don’t play
defense.” But Donewald won the Asian Games championship so there was some buy in
to his style of play.
However, when China suffered their FIBA Asia opening
day loss to Korea and lost a succeeding one to Iran that really hurt the morale
of this team and their faith in Giannakis.
This is where I believe that on basketball terms, we
are fine with having a local as a head coach. It is common now for Filipinos to
study the game abroad and to transfer that knowledge on the grassroots level. How
many times have I heard local coaches pooh pooh some seminar from a foreigner
because they’ve either been implementing that for years and they know it’s not
something new? Whether it’s valid or not, that’s one case. You can only play
basketball in few new ways. If anything, it’s a new wrinkle here and there.
When China was struggling, I wondered how Giannakis
would be able to inspire the players. For one, English isn’t his natural
language. So is it with the players. They have a translator but what gets lost
in translation?
Someone who speaks the same language can reach into
the deepest recesses of a compatriot. Someone who knows the players on a
personal level. Someone who knows the heartache of previous losses. Someone who
knows what buttons to push. And love him or hate him but the best person for the job was Chot Reyes.
The team assembled by Reyes might have been
imperfect in some form but for the moment, for who is available, for the
system, it is just right.
This is of course not to say that a foreign coach
cannot get the job done. Some things work while some don’t. It just the
circumstances people find themselves in.
And that leads me back to the circumstances Gilas
Pilipinas found themselves in.
The opportunity presented was to demolish these myths
that we cannot regain out lost stature in the basketball world.
And those myths crumbled. Not only for us but also
for other countries ensuring a very memorable tournament.
Prior to China’s match versus Chinese Taipei, Chinese
journalists asked Giannakis if he was aware of the fact the they had not lost a
game to what they consider a renegade province. Ever. FIBA may try to be
politically correct but inside the media room, you can hear it first hand from
my counterparts from Taiwan about how they are looked down on by the mainlanders. The game obviously meant much for national pride.
So China fell to Chinese Taipei and Lin Chih Chieh’s
scream after hitting a huge three-pointer for a dagger to the mainland will
remain one of the games’ most indelible images.
Now that served as a precursor for what was to come
for the home team.
In the knockout stages, Kazakhstan, that had always
given the Philippines trouble, was dispatched in devastating fashion.
With the first chance to bag a slot at going to
Madrid, standing in Gilas Pilipinas’ way was long-time nemesis and tormentor,
Korea. The Filipinos played a strong endgame to repulse Korea that put on a
spectacular shooting display that reminded the old timers of ghosts of defeats
past. It was especially sweet to do it in front of a home crowd that knew all
too well the heartache that the Koreans have inflicted through the years.
Chot Reyes said that the objective was a slot to
Spain. That had been achieved. The dream now was to win the championship
against mighty Iran, the class of Asian basketball for about seven years now.
Without the injured Marcus Douthit, our chances of an
upset went from doable to almost impossible.
When Gilas started out like a house on fire and Iran
in a state of panic (watch how Samad Nikkhah Bahrami constantly berated his
teammates for theirs and his own miscues) were we going to witness our own miracle?
It was the player’s craftiness, derring-do, and
timely three-point bombs that had us in the fight early on. I have to say that
those ticky tacky and even spotty calls hurt us. What was especially
frustrating was the fact that Iran is a good team that does not need help from
the officials.
For the second consecutive game, we had officials
stop the clock and seem to be in disagreement over a call. What gives? Do the
powers that be fear a basketball revolution should this nation of over 7,000
islands win the FIBA Asia Championship?
Can you imagine that, an upstart Philippine team,
beating Iran for the title? That would upset the balance of power. That would
send ripples all over the region. That would have home countries look at how
the Filipinos turned the Mall of Asia Arena into a bastion of nationalism and a
killing field for teams that were taller and even more experienced and funded.
They would look for their own versions of Jason Castro, LA Tenorio, Jimmy
Alapag who courageously and fearlessly drove down that lane and laid those
balls in for buckets against much taller foes. If other countries had drums and
vuvuzelas, we had chants of “Laban Pilipinas”, “De-fense” and “Ga-ry Ga-ry”. There's a lesson in there as well. And imagine how many Filipinos would have named their offspring born this August of
2013 ‘Gabriel’, ‘Lewis Alfred’, ‘Jeffrey’, ‘Japeth’, ‘Marcus’ or even ‘June
Mar’ to name a few? It is still not too late though.
But the players got tired from pushing and battling
behemoths. The shots began to fall short. Once Iran got their groove, they
never surrendered the lead.
As the game wore on, Gilas battled back. And I am
sure that all over the land, people wondered, “What if this PBA player was
allowed to suit up?” Sorry now. You missed the bus. You’ll have to wait for the
next one.
“What if Marcus Douthit had played?” Maybe we
would have had a fighting chance.
As for me, it isn’t misplaced faith that I think we
could have upended Iran. All tournament long, we had been demolishing those
myths one after another. It was that same belief by the coaches and the players saw them
overcome those long odds, naysayers, doubters, and terrible officials to book
tickets to Spain.
Now I am sure that after this, people are also
wondering, “I can’t wait to see where we go from here.”
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Additional reading material and videos!
For other FIBA Asia stuff including stories on other teams and their fans, go to the home page of the blog and the link at the bottom of the page that says OLDER POSTS.
For other FIBA Asia stuff including stories on other teams and their fans, go to the home page of the blog and the link at the bottom of the page that says OLDER POSTS.
Former San Beda Red Lion Jake Pascual and former Letran Knight Kevin Alas talk about Gilas Pilipinas and playing for the national team
Looking at the Mythical Five selection of the 2013 FIBA Asia Championships
Gilas Pilipinas exclusive video of locker room scenes one and two
We're going to Spain!
Olsen Racela thanks Gilas Assistant Coach Nash Racela for Korea win
Japeth Aguilar's third quarter dunk vs Korea
Chot Reyes talks about the importance of Marc Pingris to Gilas
An emotional Ranidel De Ocampo breaks down
New York Knicks scout Gary Boyson is looking at some players at FIBA Asia. You think Jason Castro has a chance?
My favorite players of this 2013 FIBA Asia
Check out this video of the parking lot scene after the championship game vs Iran.
Gilas Pilipinas exclusive video of locker room scenes one and two
We're going to Spain!
Olsen Racela thanks Gilas Assistant Coach Nash Racela for Korea win
Japeth Aguilar's third quarter dunk vs Korea
Chot Reyes talks about the importance of Marc Pingris to Gilas
An emotional Ranidel De Ocampo breaks down
New York Knicks scout Gary Boyson is looking at some players at FIBA Asia. You think Jason Castro has a chance?
My favorite players of this 2013 FIBA Asia
Check out this video of the parking lot scene after the championship game vs Iran.
THIS CONCLUDES MY COVERAGE OF THE 2013 FIBA ASIA CHAMPIONSHIPS.
HOPE YOU ENJOYED THE STUFF I PUT OUT ON BLEACHERS BREW.
THANK YOU!
I did not think we could beat them after it was announced Marcus was out, but I wanted Gilas to win.
ReplyDeleteWe need 2 naturalized Centers in Spain!
If we were able to score Threes in bunches just like we did against Kazak and Korea, the game would have been close. And with the crowd behind the team, we may have gone on to score the biggest of upsets.
ReplyDeleteA 3-point shooting center would be a good addition for Spain.
Time to develop a sniper. Congressman Puno is willing to naturalize an alternate center. Marcus is not getting any younger.
ReplyDeleteI also felt that had the offense clicked as it did against Kr and Kaz, the game could have gone single-digit either way. Good effort nonetheless.
Well, after ages, the (re)new(ed) kids on the block have arrived. It will be a learning experience come Fiba World. And it's an odd feeling for China not to qualify. But I heard from Mr. Henson that the wildcard slot is up for grab in Asia...thru bidding. Wow! How ridiculous is that? It'd be interesting to see if China has the resolve (resources, no doubt) to outbid the Petro-rich middle easterners. Till then.