It’s a rout. It’s a
wrap. It’s history.
by rick olivares photo by mike young/getty images
Dear NBA,
You will have to forgive us Filipino basketball fans
if we weren’t our usual rowdy, energetic, and boisterous selves.
You will have to forgive the 12,885 fans for Tweeting
(now it’s a verb), Instagramming (that one’s now a verb as well), and posting
whatever thoughts and images we could during the first ever NBA Global Game
ever played in the Philippines that ended with a 116-96 blowout of the Indiana
Pacers by the Houston Rockets.
That was it – the first. And you saw it all right. Even
in the end, very few people had left their seats to beat any late night
traffic. Every one at the Mall of Asia Arena hung on to every pass, every
basket, every miscue, every dunk, and every word by every player who set foot
in the country. The fans cheered for all the legends and big names to grace a
NBA hardcourt – Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, Robert Horry, Ron Harper, Clyde
Drexler, and Jalen Rose.
They cheered their lungs out for the stars on the
different teams – Dwight Howard, James Harden, Jeremy Lin, Chandler Parsons,
Danny Granger, and Paul George.
Who said that exhibition games or “friendlies” – the
term outgoing NBA Commissioner David Stern borrowed from football -- are
meaningless?
They are played to prepare for the upcoming season.
Indiana coach Frank Vogel thinks that once Paul
George and Danny Granger find a way to play together, “they’d make a heckuva
tandem”.
Once Omer Asik comes back from injury (calf strain),
Houston will suddenly have a lot of depth, quality, firepower, defense, and
flair with their new-look frontcourt of Dwight Howard, Omri Casspi, and Donatas
Motiejunas.
There was three-pass play where Jeremy Lin cut from
the right side of the baseline to a cutting Ronnie Brewer who drew the defense
before dropping the ball off in one pass to an open Casspi for an and-one that
translated into a 95-82 lead with 6:30 left to play.
Houston stars James Harden and Chandler Parsons
admitted that the presence of their bigs and Howard will free up the shooters
and allow more slashing drives to the basket. “That will open up the spaces for
us,” corroborated Parsons who scored 15-points but hit only one of three from
three-point range.
The Rockets averaged 43.4 rebounds an outing last
season with Asik, Patrick Patterson, Carlos Delfino, and Motiejunas patrolling
that shaded area. That allowed them to run the league ragged with 18.5
fastbreak points a game; second best in the NBA.
“They kept running,” Vogel singled out as one reason
why Houston put away last season’s Eastern Conference Finalist with almost
embarrassing ease. The Rockets scored 26 fastbreak points while ruling the
boards 45-39.
I wondered if the Pacers had tired legs due to jet
lag but Vogel refused to make that as an excuse. “We all had the same flight
schedules,” he said. “It’s simple… the Rockets outplayed us.”
Having said that, Pacers center Roy Hibbert looked
out of shape and more than a step slow.
“That’s why we play these games and that is to get
better,” explained Indiana assistant coach Nate McMillan who I bumped into on
his way out of the arena. “It gives us a better understanding of what areas we
need to work on. There’s more to learn from this loss as opposed to coming out
with a win. We’ll take this and learn.”
Hibbert, an incredible sleeper of a draft pick in
this day and age, as he was selected 17th in the draft by Toronto
before being shipped over for Jermaine O’Neal and the rights to Nathan Jawai
(along with Raptors Rasho Nesterovic, TJ Ford, Maceo Baston), was outplayed by
Dwight Howard who battled foul trouble.
The day before the game, Hibbert and his Pacers
teammates took part in a hour-long NBA Cares event at the arena. The entire
team gamely took part in the event for special children. “I’m getting a
workout,” he blurted out to no one in particular in the media who stood close
to the baseline. The former Georgetown Hoya sweated profusely but he looked to
be having a good time. “But it’s good coz I need it.”
And the Pacers sorely needed Hibbert, power forward
David West, and small forward Danny Granger to get going. Unfortunately, they
struggled for the entire match except for West who eventually got it going
offensively. Without the three playing their usual games, Indiana got pounded
inside by 62 points in the lane by Houston.
Even if Manila took a pounding from a sudden downpour
that had typhoon-like conditions to it, no one left. Everyone was riveted to
the court and first ever NBA Global Game on Philippine soil.
“It was a good experience,” pronounced Rockets head
coach Kevin McHale. “It was a fun night. It had a nice vice; a nice amount of
energy in the arena.”
The cabbie who drove me to work this morning told me
that he cut short his trip last night (that means not earning a few precious
hundred bucks) to catch the game on television. “It was a blowout,” he said in
Filipino. “But that happens. It’s a pre-season game where teams experiment and
work to get in shape and in sync (hindi pa nagkakamoyan). But this match was
fun. We Filipinos are lucky because not every country gets to host a NBA game.”
Who said these pre-season games were meaningless?
I just wish next year if they do come back ticket prices would be lower, mapupuno nila ang MOA Arena and mas kikita pa sila
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