Japan’s Hiejima talks about the loss to
Gilas
by rick olivares
It was a disappointed Makoto
Hiejima who faced the Japanese media yesterday after Japan’s 89-85 loss to host
Philippines in the FIBA Asian Qualifiers. Hiejima, Japan’s starting point
guard, tallied 23 points, 4 rebounds, and 2 assists for the match.
The Japanese rallied late in the
match with their naturalized player and former PBA import Ira Brown drilling a
three-pointer from the left corner and Daiki Tanaka scoring two lay-ups to come
within two points, 86-84, with 31 seconds left.
However, Jayson Castro eased the
pressure when he scored on a runner with 12-seconds left to give the
Philippines a four-point cushion.
With Tanaka the hot hand, Japan’s
Argentine head coach Julio Lamas gave the ball to him, but he missed a
three-pointer. Andray Blatche tacked on a free throw for the game’s final
points.
“I think we had a chance,” said
Hiejima some 40 minutes after the game was done. “But we missed many free
throws.” The Akatsuki Five, as Japan’s national team is now called, only hit 24
of 39 free throw attempts.
“What also hurt us was their
offensive rebounding,” added the 6’3” Hiejima who is leading the team in
scoring with 18.5 points and assists with 3.0.
The home side had a huge 19-5
advantage in offensive rebounding that translated into a 21-2 difference in
second chance points.
“We started well and it seemed
unbelievable that we got a big lead against them. We knew that the Filipinos
were going to make their run and they did.”
The Japanese opened the contest
by taking an early 20-4 lead. Gilas responded with a 12-0 burst behind Kiefer
Ravena who scored eight points including two triples.
“Their bench responded and we
committed turnover and I was called for an unsportsmanlike foul and that helped
their momentum.”
“It seemed like we kept chasing
them after they got the lead. When you play the Philippines and teams like
Australia or Iran, you have to bring your best game if you want to beat them.”
“Right now, it is difficult at
0-4, but we cannot be negative about this situation. We have to be positive.
But it is disappointing because three of our four losses have been close games.
The loss to Chinese Taipei hurt but this one does too because we are now in a
very difficult situation. But we have to quickly forget this because we have
two more matches to play (against Australia on June 29 and Chinese Taipei on
July 2). We have to win both if we want a chance. But it is tough.”