This appears in the Monday, January 20, 2014 edition of the Business Mirror.
A high school basketball story
A high school basketball story
This is a true story about a high school team with actual conversations with players and coaches conducted over the last two days.
by rick olivares
by rick olivares
There’s this high school basketball
team playing in one of the capital’s top leagues. When the school year ends in
March they will be losing nine players to graduation. Of the nine, only one of
them will move up to their senior team’s basketball team.
The rest? “Bahala na kami sa buhay
namin,” tersely said one player from this team. Speaking to a teammate of his, I
learn that some will be going back home to their provinces while the
Manila-based ones will have to look for their own colleges and ask their
parents to pay their way through.
If the “unwanted” feel any envy towards
their teammate who has a guaranteed college scholarship they aren’t telling.
This team is playing a pick up game
against a squad from another league. Their coach didn’t bother to dress the
seniors anymore and instead elevated the aspirants. The holdovers with their
recent additions note that that lucky teammate of theirs is watching from the
stands. They wave at him. One would later say, “I was his teammate. If he goes
on to become a college basketball star or even a PBA player, I can say to my
kids that I played with him.”
That player’s time in high school is
over. This is their time.
There’s potential in these kids, I tell
one assistant coach.
One of them is only in third year high
school but already stands at 6’5”. If he is lucky, he’ll grow a few more inches
and become more desirable in the eyes of college basketball scouts. What in the
world are they feeding this kid, I wonder aloud.
The assistant coach laughs at my remark.
“When I was playing,” he recalls. “I was playing power forward. And I am only
5’11”. Iba na talaga ang panahon.” We share a laugh.
His team wins convincingly over their
opponent but the assistant concedes, “We are far from becoming a team. We won
through individual skills and talent.”
After the game, the player I spoke with
earlier confides in the vernacular, “You want to win a championship but at the
same time you want to show off your skills to the big schools. Sometimes you
cannot help but be selfish.”
He looks almost embarrassed when he
adds, “High school is supposed to be fun but at the same time you are also
playing for your future.”
Towards the end of the scrimmage, he
picks the pocket of the opposing point guard. Clean and fast. He hightails in
down the floor. Only a teammate is ahead of him. He doesn’t pass the ball and
lays it in instead (he nearly got blocked by his opposite number but his difficult
twisting layup finds the bottom of the net).
His coach gets off his seat and roars.
“Pasa mo! Swapang ka talaga.”
The player apologizes to his teammate
on the court who accepts the fist bump. But later, Mr. Selfish admits to me
that he didn’t want to pass the rock. Thus his explanation about “his future.”
As we’re talking post-game, another player,
not a teammate of theirs, walks in in casual clothing. He is one of the top
recruits coming out of high school. Rumors abound about his being pursued by the
top colleges in the country. The rumors, ask this kid I am speaking to, say
that he is asking for the moon and the stars. I chuckle by way of admission. “Wow,”
the kid or Mr. Selfish gushes. I can see it in his eyes that he is picturing
himself in that other players’ shoes.
I tell this kid that the average
playing career in the pros is five years. Not every college star goes on to
have a stellar pro career. Many go undrafted. If they are drafted they are
never guaranteed a slot. Many are of out the pros after a conference or even a
year. They instead hold on to their PBA dream by becoming a practice player or
toiling in the D-League. Some even try their luck overseas with an ABL team.
With the ABL in limbo, the options are fewer. Far fewer.
That is why I reiterate it is important
to graduate and get a degree because not because it is a fallback but it is
your future. The kid seems puzzled. Basketball is his future, he clarifies. Oo
nga naman, I correct myself.
He tells me of his friend who plays for
another college but is in the league where his team competes. His friend says
he only goes to school for practice. What about his studies, I ask. Home study
is the reply.
What the hell. One of the joys of
school is interacting with others, learning with others, working with others,
and forming bonds of friendship. The strains and pressure of sports that is
becoming more high profile by the season has changed the school life and
scholastic sports. I tell this kid I am speaking with not to forget his
studies. He nods but I am not sure if he fully comprehends. After all, what
right do I have to derail him from his single-minded dream of becoming a
college star or even a PBA player?
Our conversation is over as his father
comes down from the stands to pick his son up.
“Twenty points, anak,” he says beaming.
“Kailangan top scorer ka lagi para mapansin ka ng mga ibang team. Wag ka making
sa coach mo. Tama yun hindi mo pinasa yung bola.”
I conclude my eavesdropping. I walk
away shaking my head.
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