TERRENCE34 Posted October 21, 2011 Share Posted October 21, 2011 Wala na masyadong balita tungkol sa Gilas camp. I hope MVP will still continue what he has started - with passion. Quote Link to comment
freemantle Posted October 22, 2011 Share Posted October 22, 2011 Whatever happens I hope their will be continuity in the program. It all depends on SBP officials along with other stakeholders, PBA, NCAA, UAAP and etc., how they will unite as one and prioritize under one cause - our country's honor.. The real supporters, win or lose will continue to support the team. PSSana may hype machine ang gilas tulad ng ABSCBN Quote Link to comment
eduteodoro Posted October 22, 2011 Share Posted October 22, 2011 I hope that the PBA would allow the national team to compete for at least one WHOLE SEASON-- hindi isang conference lang. with that, malamang wala na munang AFC, para may import parati ang ibang teams. KI-adjust na lang sched nila kung may laban sa ibang bansa.. sana, BUOng team, ung mismong team na maglalaro sa Tournaments, hindi ung naglalaro ung mga gaya non-PBA players sabay isisingit weeks before ang actual tournaments ung mga gaya nina Taulava. Paglaruin na sila as a unit sa start pa lang. Quote Link to comment
dunk Posted October 23, 2011 Share Posted October 23, 2011 mas magaling pa ang under 16 natin e. dapat sila ang idevelop. Quote Link to comment
Droidz1979 Posted October 23, 2011 Share Posted October 23, 2011 mas magaling pa ang under 16 natin e. dapat sila ang idevelop. Nasa easy phase pa lang ang under-16 team natin since southeast asian countries pa lang initial na nakalaban nila sa first round. Even Racela was apprehensive by the large margin of wins that they've produced so far since it will be difficult moving forward pag the likes of China na ang makakalaban that features two 7'0' players. Good thing nga ay nag back-out ang team ng Iran and if am not mistaken our recent best finish here is 4th place so don't gloat early. We got lucky that we were not bunched to the group of death although 3 or 4 go-to players last time around was not able to join this team simply because of their commitment to their mother school teams Still, i must agree that their are good players that have the potential down here including the 6'1" Fil-Australian Jordan Heading and a 6'3" local player that played well also. Quote Link to comment
kenichi15 Posted October 24, 2011 Share Posted October 24, 2011 Excerpts from The DEan's article today at Philstrar: Reader Brian Gan recently sent in an e-mail saying in his life, he has written formally only four times – to the United Nations (unspecified topic), then-President Estrada (also unspecified topic), this column (commenting on the Centennial team led by coach Tim Cone in 1998) and once more, this column. Gan described himself as a 38-year-old businessman. Here are excerpts from his latest letter: “It was my father’s birthday last Sept. 27 and as a family tradition, he always would make a wish. Year in and year out, his wish will always be to have better health. This year, he decided to think of country. A first from a man who stopped watching Philippine basketball since China crushed the Robert Jaworski team, 130-65, (at the Asian Games in 1990). My dad, who actually went to Beijing with his friends, felt embarrassed by the loss. They believed the Japanese head coach who boldly predicted the Philippines would win it all. “So after 21 years, my father watched his first Philppine team game versus the NBA All-Stars and was very impressed with the system used by coach Rajko Toroman. Please bear in mind, MVP took a team of discards, not of superstars but players who wanted to play for country. He got a 6-10 guy who never made it to the NBA, used Taulava and three Talk ‘N’ Text players who practiced for the shortest possible time and gave us a chance to take third place (in FIBA-Asia). Do we need Rajko? We do. He is the second coming of Ron Jacobs who coached a team built around Mike Mustre and Art de la Cruz and made them finish third in the PBA. We need the PBA to lend players, train them for how long Toroman wants. Stop our crab mentality and make proper suggestions on how to be better. This is for our country. “Jordan is the second best team in Asia. Toroman showed us we can beat this team. He actually did it in four instances. Japan is our long-time rival and Toroman is unbeaten against Japan. Did we actually think we can beat Iran? I didn’t until Toroman showed his boys and our country that we can. We beat them in the Jones Cup. Against China, we lost by 15 with a 10-man team on China’s home floor. Korea can easily defeat us by 15. Toroman and Smart Gilas led 85 percent of the way but it was not meant to be. Maybe it was good we didn’t win so we can come together as a nation and realize we just need a little more push and cooperation. “Toroman is like Freddie Roach. Manny Pacquiao is a great boxer, he listens to his coach. Lassiter, Lutz, Casio, Tiu, Marcus, Japeth, Mac and the rest all know the value of Toroman. This guy is more Filipino than many of us, he wants his players to sing the national anthem. The PBA’s recent proposal to lend 16 players is flawed because the players can only play in one tournament, meaning FIBA-Asia. But we need to train them to play in other tournaments. Toroman wants to have three months to train his team. Look at Japeth, Lutz and Baracael, all fresh from Gilas, all leading their team in the PBA, an indication of how good Toroman is. I hope Toroman comes back. We need him.” two thumbs up for this observation. Quote Link to comment
rafael77 Posted October 25, 2011 Share Posted October 25, 2011 this team is going somewhere Energen Pilipinas U16 team downs Japan, faces Iraq in q’finalsBy Sid Ventura | Sportsaholic – 15 hours ago EmailPrintThe Philippine under-16 men's basketball team, known as Energen Pilipinas, streaked to its fifth straight victory in the ongoing FIBA-Asia U16 Championships in Nha Trang, Vietnam, beating Japan 83-72 to top its pre-quarterfinal group with a perfect 5-0 record.The win over Japan set up a quarterfinal knockout match on Wednesday against Group E fourth-placer Iraq, the West Asian champion. Should the Nationals get by the Iraqis, they will advance to the semifinals and assure themselves of at least equaling the fourth-place finish of the 2009 team that was led by Kiefer Ravena.After bamboozling their previous four opponents by an average of more than 70 points, the Filipino boys were finally up against an opponent that posed a challenge. Japan, which entered the game also unbeaten in four games, led 22-21 after the first period behind the 11 points of Yusei Sugiura. It was still a close 34-33 score in the Philippines' favor with 3:52 left in the second period when Jay Alejandro poured in 10 points in a 14-3 Energen Pilipinas run that gave the Nationals a 48-36 spread heading into the second half.The Philippines briefly went up by 15 points early in the third period after Rev Diputado's three-point play made it 51-36, but Yudai Baba scored 11 of his 26 points in the next six minutes, including a split that brought the Japanese to within six at 60-54, 3:41 left in the third. The Nationals responded by scoring 10 of the next 13 points to end the third with a 70-57 bulge.Alejandro then put the finishing touches on his 36-point explosion by scoring seven straight points in the fourth, including a triple that gave Energen Pilipinas its biggest lead at 77-59 with only 5:32 left. Japan would get no closer than 11 points the rest of the way.A graduating high school senior at Malayan High, Alejandro went 16-for-28 from the field and helped out on the defensive end with a game-high seven blocks. Diputado, who hails from Cebu, added 14 points. NU's Hubert Cani was the third Filipino in double digits with 10 markers.Energen Pilipinas is missing some key players from San Beda and La Salle Greenhills, the two schools that are disputing the NCAA juniors crown. But they haven't missed a beat so far in these championships.Iraq, though, looms as a rather unpredictable foe. The team won the West Asian Championship, then lost its first game in the tournament to Korea, 70-73. After routing Uzbekistan by 68, the Iraqis fell to West Asia runner-up Lebanon, 68-75. In the second round, Iraq lost to defending champion China by 41, then needed overtime to repulse Group E cellar dweller Chinese Taipei. They clinched the last quarterfinal slot in their group by beating India, 72-64.China was the only other unbeaten team left in the tourney after brushing aside the challenge of Korea, 73-42, in Group E to match the Philippines' 5-0 record. The Chinese will face Saudi Arabia in their quarterfinal match. The two other quarterfinal match-ups will see Japan tackle Lebanon and Korea take on surprise quarterfinalist Indonesia. Quote Link to comment
BrightestStar Posted October 25, 2011 Share Posted October 25, 2011 Chris Tiu will remain the team captain of gilas 2. Quote Link to comment
BrightestStar Posted October 25, 2011 Share Posted October 25, 2011 Nasa easy phase pa lang ang under-16 team natin since southeast asian countries pa lang initial na nakalaban nila sa first round. Even Racela was apprehensive by the large margin of wins that they've produced so far since it will be difficult moving forward pag the likes of China na ang makakalaban that features two 7'0' players. Good thing nga ay nag back-out ang team ng Iran and if am not mistaken our recent best finish here is 4th place so don't gloat early. We got lucky that we were not bunched to the group of death although 3 or 4 go-to players last time around was not able to join this team simply because of their commitment to their mother school teams Still, i must agree that their are good players that have the potential down here including the 6'1" Fil-Australian Jordan Heading and a 6'3" local player that played well also. Some of these young kids will eventually be part of the Smart Gilas squad. That should boost our chances for the Olympics in the future. Quote Link to comment
Droidz1979 Posted October 25, 2011 Share Posted October 25, 2011 (edited) Some of these young kids will eventually be part of the Smart Gilas squad. That should boost our chances for the Olympics in the future. I agree.. they just beat the Japanese team by 11 points (closest margin so far from ave. of 71.5 points for the 5 previous games) and topped Group F and will face the Iraqi team that is ranked no. 4 while advancing to the quarterfinals together with Lebanon and Japan. The team is also lucky to avoid an early showdown with China who has also a 5-0 record and has been very dominant against its opponents in Group E.. The 6'4" local player i was referring to is Prince Rivero who is a member of the National University team that won its first ever junior UAAP crown. Other notable players in the team that are potential Gilas mainstays are Kyles Lao, Rev Diputado, Henry Asilum (dished 7 assist against the Saudi team), Jay Alejandro (Mapua standout who scored 34 points against Japan), Fil-Am Nick Dalafu, Hubert Cani, Tomas Ramos and Fil-Aussie Jordan Heading. FIBA-Asia U-16 notes*: India's 15-year-old, 7-1 Satnam Singh Bhamara has scored 73 points in the last two games, including 41 in a 78-66 loss to South Korea Monday and 32 in another 64-72 defeat to Iraq yesterday...Bhamara's father is reportedly two inches taller than him and his grandma is 6-9 tall...Korean sharpshooter Heo Hoon made his presence felt by firing a tournament best 31 points in a showdown with Bhamara. His father is Korean legend Hur Jae, who steered the Koreans to a bronze medal finish in last month's FIBA-Asia Championship in Wuhan, China. *courtesy of Philstar.com Another player to watch is from Team China is its agile 7'1" center, Zhou Qi (listed as just 15-year old) who is deemed as the next Yao Ming or the next Chinese basketball hope. He scored 19 points while dominating the Korean team with the final score of 73-42 and playing for 16 minutes only. Edited October 25, 2011 by Droidz1979 Quote Link to comment
rafael77 Posted October 25, 2011 Share Posted October 25, 2011 read this article in the papers too this morning. these are homegrown boys! except dalafu and heading. I agree.. they just beat the Japanese team by 11 points (closest margin so far from ave. of 71.5 points for the 5 previous games) and topped Group F and will face the Iraqi team that is ranked no. 4 while advancing to the quarterfinals together with Lebanon and Japan. The team is also lucky to avoid an early showdown with China who has also a 5-0 record and has been very dominant against its opponents in Group E.. The 6'4" local player i was referring to is Prince Rivero who is a member of the National University team that won its first ever junior UAAP crown. Other notable players in the team that are potential Gilas mainstays are Kyles Lao, Rev Diputado, Henry Asilum (dished 7 assist against the Saudi team), Jay Alejandro (Mapua standout who scored 34 points against Japan), Fil-Am Nick Dalafu, Hubert Cani, Tomas Ramos and Fil-Aussie Jordan Heading. FIBA-Asia U-16 notes*: India's 15-year-old, 7-1 Satnam Singh Bhamara has scored 73 points in the last two games, including 41 in a 78-66 loss to South Korea Monday and 32 in another 64-72 defeat to Iraq yesterday...Bhamara's father is reportedly two inches taller than him and his grandma is 6-9 tall...Korean sharpshooter Heo Hoon made his presence felt by firing a tournament best 31 points in a showdown with Bhamara. His father is Korean legend Hur Jae, who steered the Koreans to a bronze medal finish in last month's FIBA-Asia Championship in Wuhan, China. *courtesy of Philstar.com Another player to watch is from Team China is its agile 7'1" center, Zhou Qi (listed as just 15-year old) who is deemed as the next Yao Ming or the next Chinese basketball hope. He scored 19 points while dominating the Korean team with the final score of 73-42 and playing for 16 minutes only. Quote Link to comment
rafael77 Posted October 25, 2011 Share Posted October 25, 2011 read this article in the papers too this morning. these are homegrown boys! except dalafu and heading. I agree.. they just beat the Japanese team by 11 points (closest margin so far from ave. of 71.5 points for the 5 previous games) and topped Group F and will face the Iraqi team that is ranked no. 4 while advancing to the quarterfinals together with Lebanon and Japan. The team is also lucky to avoid an early showdown with China who has also a 5-0 record and has been very dominant against its opponents in Group E.. The 6'4" local player i was referring to is Prince Rivero who is a member of the National University team that won its first ever junior UAAP crown. Other notable players in the team that are potential Gilas mainstays are Kyles Lao, Rev Diputado, Henry Asilum (dished 7 assist against the Saudi team), Jay Alejandro (Mapua standout who scored 34 points against Japan), Fil-Am Nick Dalafu, Hubert Cani, Tomas Ramos and Fil-Aussie Jordan Heading. FIBA-Asia U-16 notes*: India's 15-year-old, 7-1 Satnam Singh Bhamara has scored 73 points in the last two games, including 41 in a 78-66 loss to South Korea Monday and 32 in another 64-72 defeat to Iraq yesterday...Bhamara's father is reportedly two inches taller than him and his grandma is 6-9 tall...Korean sharpshooter Heo Hoon made his presence felt by firing a tournament best 31 points in a showdown with Bhamara. His father is Korean legend Hur Jae, who steered the Koreans to a bronze medal finish in last month's FIBA-Asia Championship in Wuhan, China. *courtesy of Philstar.com Another player to watch is from Team China is its agile 7'1" center, Zhou Qi (listed as just 15-year old) who is deemed as the next Yao Ming or the next Chinese basketball hope. He scored 19 points while dominating the Korean team with the final score of 73-42 and playing for 16 minutes only. Quote Link to comment
Droidz1979 Posted October 25, 2011 Share Posted October 25, 2011 read this article in the papers too this morning. these are homegrown boys! except dalafu and heading. My worry comes from the fact the fact that our tallest and effective player is only a 6'4" kid while China has a 7'1" player on its wings and even India has a decent 7'1" player. Most of our U-16 kids are guards which we already have a glut of talent from the same position right now. Moving forward I think SBP has to start thinking long term right now, Marcus is not that young anymore and we should be looking for a tall back-up naturalized player who is still young and could play early with the core of the future Gilas team for better familiarization. I've attached a photo of Zhou Qi of China who is listed as a 15-year old player although some are saying that he is already 18-year old. Quote Link to comment
junix Posted October 26, 2011 Share Posted October 26, 2011 congratulations to olsen and his boys for another win. rp vs. south korea in the semis. makabawi kaya ang U-16 natin laban sa korea? sana kahit dito man lang makabawi tayo at mabawasan ang mga sama ng loob noon. Quote Link to comment
Droidz1979 Posted October 27, 2011 Share Posted October 27, 2011 congratulations to olsen and his boys for another win. rp vs. south korea in the semis. makabawi kaya ang U-16 natin laban sa korea? sana kahit dito man lang makabawi tayo at mabawasan ang mga sama ng loob noon. Am hoping that they win against Korea too.. Almost the same dapat strategy nila against Japan which is to limit their shooters although Korea is the better team. Good thing din that paiba-iba ang players na pumuputok which means that we are not dependent to one person that makes it hard for our opponents to scout and for their defense to focus or settle into to beat us. Quote Link to comment
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