How Gilas can play Iraq
by rick olivares
The 2017 FIBA Asia Cup has been
marked by one surprise after another.
The win heard all around Asia was
the Philippines upending China. How about Iraq tripping Qatar? How about those
young New Zealand Tall Blacks taking down seeded Lebanon?
And now, mere days after almost
everyone shaking their head that the Philippines would get knocked out of the
group stage, Gilas Pilipinas is shooting for the Group B lead and a chance to
move into the next stage of the competition.
Standing in the Philippines is
Iraq. It isn’t a lowly side Gilas will be facing. It is one tough and bruising
team that is climbing up the West Asia standings. They battled the Philippines
tough in the recent William Jones Cup. And they look to continue to do the
same.
Iraq is a defensive squad – aside
from the physicality of their defense, they bettered Qatar in the steals and
blocks department (12-6 and 5-0 respectively). Despite grabbing fewer defensive
rebounds, 26-34, they scored more fastbreak points than Qatar 14-12.
Their weakness is inside the
paint, hence scoring fewer points inside and less rebounds.
Iraq is kind of new to
basketball. Like other newcomers, they opt to shoot from the outside. Three of
their key scorers – naturalized player Kevin Galloway who began playing for
them last year with the FIBA Asia Challenge Cup in Iran and shooting guards
Karrar Hamzah and Hassan Abdullah – jack up a lot of three-pointers.
Iraq collectively attempted 33
shots and only hit 11 (33%). In the three days of competition, the only team to
attempt more shots from that distance was Australia (35 attempts and that was
their second game – a 99-58 obliteration of Hong Kong. Against Qatar, Iraq
attempted 33 shots. So you know the three is a major weapon in their arsenal.
They keys – offensively -- again
for a victory by the Philippines is for the outside shooting to click and win
the inside game.
The inside battle is crucial. If
Raymond Almazan, Christian Standhardinger, and Japeth Aguilar can score inside
and turn the lane into a no-fly zone, the Philippines can run. And they can
throw taller defenders against the shooters.
The uptempo game suits the
Philippines. But as in the case of the win versus China, the halfcourt game –
especially against a younger and inexperienced Chinese side – can work their
way as well.
Defensively, if Gilas can stop
Iraq from getting good outside looks that takes away a huge chunk of their
offense. The onus is on Iraq’s Turkish head coach Mustafa Derin to devise a way
to beat the Filipinos’ disciplined and organized defense. If he can get his
bigs to play strong inside, if he can get Galloway untracked and attacking the
basket instead of attempting jumpers – that will could cause problems.
Derin has worked wonders with his
home country’s national side as an assistant and head boss of their Under-18
squads that have had podium finishes. Getting his team to the next round will
be a huge feather on his cap.
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