Philippines shocks and awes Iraq
by rick olivares
It’s a term Iraq knows all too
well. After the intense Allied bombings that signaled the start of the invasion
of Iraq in 2003 – a military doctrine known as “shock and awe” – 14 years
later, their national basketball team got a Philippine version of it.
After a battle of attrition in
the first half that saw the Philippines take a slim 32-31 lead, Gilas proceeded
to drop a 24-4 bomb that virtually ended the match right there in the third
period.
Unlike the match against China
two days earlier where The Filipinos were careful enough to not let another
lead slip away as what nearly happened against China two nights ago.
Furthermore, it was a bigger lead that they nursed – 23 points.
How did they take victory #2?
It started out this way… with Christian Standhardinger’s defense on
Keith Galloway.
The latter, who is the
naturalized player of Iraq shot and bulldozed his way to most of his points in
the first half. He almost single-handedly put all of the Philippines’ bigs in
foul trouble.
Come the third period,
Standhardinger didn’t give Galloway room to shoot or even drive. The
American-Iraqi only had two attempts and they were from three-point distance.
He missed both. With his shot unable to fall, he didn’t even get a chance to
attack the basket because Standhardinger pushed he far from his comfort zone.
Part of the story in the China
win was winning the inside game that allowed the shooters to get some space and
looks. While Terrence Romeo and Matthew Wright gave the Philippines it’s lead
in the first half – one they would not surrender – it was Standhardinger who
gave the team the impetus to pull away with his inside game.
Romeo led Gilas in scoring with
17 points while the impressive Standhardinger added 16 points (off 60%
shooting) and 7 rebounds. Think that was good? Against China, the Fil-German
hit 75% of his shots.
A formidable one-two punch in the
making?
My take on a team that likes to
jack it up from the outside more than score from the inside is – they aren’t
skilled enough to attack off the dribble. And when you take away something they
like to do which is in this case – bombard from the outside -- they panic.
With Galloway unable to fire
away, Iraq wilted. With center Mohamed Al-Khafaji fouling out, there went two
of their options. Iraq isn’t deep or talented enough to mount a sustained
challenge from a dangerous foe like the Philippines.
Live by the outside shot; die by the outside shot.
Iraq attempted eight triples in
the first period and made two. They fired up another seven in the second and
missed all of them. They threw six more in the third and they only hit one –
and that was like a good 26 feet out or a step back more. Come the fourth, they
went 2-6 from that range for a poor total of 6-29 and 20% shooting.
That is terrible however you look
at it.
In contrast, the Philippines was
12-29 for 41%.
When it counted the most,
Terrence Romeo and Matthew Wright hit one each in the waning minutes of the
second period that allowed the Philippines to take a one-point lead, 32-31.
In the third period, the
Philippines went 2-6, and in the pay-off period when Iraq tried to mount a
semblance of a rally, the nationals still outshot Iraq 4-8.
On a day where the other
Filipinos struggled, Romeo, Standhardinger, and Gabe Norwood gave the team
balance, firepower, and defense.
RP blows out Iraq for 2nd
FIBA Asia win
The coast is clear for an
incredible finish in the group stage. The Philippines takes on winless Qatar in
its third assignment of the group stage while Iraq and China battle for second
place.
Incredible. Barely a week ago,
the prognostications proved dim. And I will go back to my interview with
Norwood a few hours before they flew to the Middle East – “the conditions are
right to shock the world.”
Your opening statement is crass, irresponsible and insensitive.
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