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Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Smart Gilas: A refuge for the controversial and the unwanted
Wednesday, March 17, 2010 |
Posted by
zilljanmark

source: Rick Olivares - sports
THERE is nothing textbook about the formation of a national team. Each and every one has its one unique peculiarity, character and different sets of circumstances that add to the drama.
THERE is nothing textbook about the formation of a national team. Each and every one has its one unique peculiarity, character and different sets of circumstances that add to the drama.
For the Smart Gilas Pilipinas National Team, well, even
if patterned after the fabled Northern Consolidated Cement team of the
1980s, there’s no template for it.
After
Jakarta, the team made a triumphant return to the country. But the
college basketball season was on and only four players stayed behind to
continue to train—Chris Tiu, Jayvee Casio, Mac Baracael and Jason
Ballesteros—as they had finished their schooling. The rest went back to
their college teams, while CJ Giles tried out for the Orlando Magic’s
roster.
In that time, Chris Lutz flew in for two weeks to work
out and scrimmage with the team. Along with former University of Santo
Tomas (UST) Tiger Emerson Oreta who worked out with Gilas, they played a
steady steam of exhibition matches and surprisingly did well, beating a
number of pro teams that had their full complement of players.
In the
international front, national team duties were temporarily taken over by
the Powerade team of all-pros that would compete in the Southeast Asia
Basketball Association and Fiba- Asia Men’s Basketball Championship in
Tianjin, China.
The other collegiate members of Gilas, for five months,
ran other systems and were used rather differently and, by the time of
their reentry into the national squad, there was difficulty in
assimilating oneself again. Never was this more evident than with Dylan
Ababou, who played the four-spot with UST (since they lacked a deep
bench) and won the University Athletic Association of the Philippines
Most Valuable Award at that. With his return to the nationals, he looked
lost and out of sync. He had bulked up in a different way that made him
slower.
The team, meanwhile, picked up Japeth Aguilar who
stirred a hornet’s nest when he was drafted No. 1 overall by the
Philippine Basketball Association yet refused to sign a contract with
Burger King, the team that drafted him. Aguilar had played for Powerade
and its coach Yeng Guiao, who once mentored the six-foot-11 player’s
father, Peter, when he was playing for Swift in the then-Philippine
Amateur Basketball League.
Aguilar left the Ateneo Blue Eagles
after two years to play for Western Kentucky in the US NCAA. There was
hope that he could be the first pure Filipino to play in the National
Basketball Association (NBA) but injuries kept him from getting valuable
playing time and as a result, with not many opportunities, he returned
to the Philippines to join Powerade in particular.
He has so
much potential and possesses hops uncommon to local big men. But his
skills and mental acumen for the game have not yet caught up.
While in
Tianjin, Guiao oft chastised him after losing focus on the floor: “You
should have stayed with Ateneo. You would have learned more from Norman
Black.”
Criticism isn’t new to Aguilar, but he found himself
increasingly missing playing with his contemporaries rather than
grizzled veterans. He sought to escape playing for Burger King and
instead suit up for Gilas. It not only infuriated Burger King and PBA
executives.
It isn’t uncommon for PBA draftees not to be signed up,
but for a No. 1 overall pick to spurn a club was unheard of and
downright unthinkable. The fact that Aguilar wanted to join Gilas gave
rise to conspiracy theories with regards to the Samahang Basketbol ng
Pilipinas (SBP) where some believed that Executive Director Noli Eala
was using the national sports association and the national team to get
back at them for his dismissal as league commissioner.
It was far
from the truth, but it wouldn’t be the first time the accusation was
hurled against Eala.
In the meantime, Giles returned after
an unsuccessful bid with Orlando. The deal with the
American was, he could play for an NBA team provided that he play in the
requisite tournaments for Gilas.
Whether sound or not, it has never
happened before that a candidate for naturalization would commit to
three years to the Philippine national team. In the PBA, imports sign up
anywhere from weeks to at most four months. So everyone was treading
uncommon ground.
But Giles loved Manila. Maybe even too much because,
after a while, he became a nocturnal creature, and that put him on a
collision course with Rajko Toroman who was a stern disciplinarian.
Giles resented the constant scolding by the Serb who took affront at the
American’s irresponsibility.
With the college basketball season
winding down, Toroman verbally wished for the addition of three amateur
standouts in Ateneo’s Rabeh Al-Hussaini, University of the East’s (UE)
Paul Lee and University of Cebu’s Junmar Fajardo. Al-Hussaini was the
only one who signed up while Lee, through UE coach Lawrence Chongson,
declined in order to concentrate on the Red Warriors’ Philippine
Basketball League club, Cobra Energy Drink.
Fajardo was a little more complex.
His Cebuano handlers said that they wanted him to finish his schooling,
yet others wondered if their association with the disenfranchised
Basketball Association of the Philippines was the cause of the player’s
unavailability for the SBP-sponsored national squad.
As much as
Gilas was a three-year project, most, if not all, the players’ contracts
were not drawn up for the long haul. The national team’s composition
was an ongoing process where players would be added while some removed
either to stay in the national pool or to make way for other players. In
spite of that knowledge, the players got along famously.
In the case
of Ababou, the re-entry of the college players threw the rotation and
system into chaos.
Gilas cocaptain Mark Barroca returned earlier than
expected after he left his Far Eastern University team following
game-fixing allegations by school officials. Gilas officials, led by
team manager Butch Antonio, picked up a disconsolate Barroca on a day
when the rains were falling and the last commissioner of the
Metropolitan Basketball Association summed up the team’s recent
troubles: “Gilas had become a refuge for the controversial and the
unwanted.”
A dark cloud hung over Gilas. As the rain would soon
turn into a deluge.
(to be continued)
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