Can the Philippines be beaten in Seaba caging?
by rick olivares
A Fiba official asked me during
the course of the Seaba tournament, “What will it take for these Southeast
Asian teams to beat the Philippines? The Filipinos are altogether on another
level from these guys.”
In my opinion, the answer doesn’t
lie in a program, naturalizing players, or even updating their training
methods.
The answer to that question is a
fundamental one – you have to love, live, breathe, eat, and crap basketball
like Filipinos.
Until you (to our Southeast Asian
neighbors), it’s like playing catch up. It’s not easy.
By the same token, you guys love,
live, breathe, eat, and crap football that is why you are good at the Beautiful
Game and we are the ones trying to catch up.
There’s talent in the other
countries’ national squads. Some are fundamentally good – close to robotic even
-- but most lack that mid-air improvisation that Filipinos learned from playing
the game on virtually every kind of surface or area available. Diskarte as it
is said colloquially.
I recall how former Philippine
national coach Rajko Toroman had a drill where players would take odd and
off-balanced shots. As the Serbian coach reasoned out with me before, “In
basketball, there is a lot of improvisation. When you drive, you get bumped,
when you take a jump shot – you get bumped or fouled – and you have to try and
finish he play.”
It is no different from how
football is played in their countries – not necessarily on the pitch – on roads,
grasslands, cement courts, rice paddies.
There needs to be a love for the
game.
If you look at the Vietnam Men’s
Team competing in Manila, it is only center Nguyen Van Hung who stays to watch
the other matches. Well, he’s older than most his teammates. While other know
LeBron James or Kobe Bryant or Steph Curry, his favorite player is well… old
school for millennials. “Michael Jordan,” he says proudly.
One team competing in this Seaba
championships has this very bad habit of smoking after games and smoking after
practice.
There definitely has to be
discipline.
One coach said there isn’t anyone
he can talk to about basketball where he currently is at the moment. “They
practice, show up for a game and when those two hours are done, they forget the
game. Here in Manila… it’s basketball nirvana for me.”
The current dominance or program
does mean the Philippines is infallible. As the saying goes, “bilog ang bola”
and anything can happen. But a loss is like an aberration here in Southeast
Asian. Beyond this region, there are no guarantees.
But it all starts with a love for
the game. A passion for it.
The Fiba official countered my
answer with this… “If they do develop that passion or as you put it, ‘they
love, live, breathe, eat, and crap basketball – can they defeat the
Philippines?”
My answer, “Sure they can. The
ball is round. But assuming their program bears fruit in 10 years’ time, I
wonder where the Philippines will be by then.”
Maybe another level.
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