Daily Tribune (Philippines)

How Gilas would look like

If you go for young players whom you can train and develop, it’s going to be tough as the most you can keep a hold of them as a unit is around three to five years.

- REY JOBLE

Forming Gilas Pilipinas isn’t as easy as it sounds.

We tried sending the young players before but they couldn’t stay together longer than expected.

We tried putting up the best and brightest players from the

Philippine Basketball Associatio­n but it didn’t guarantee immediate success.

How the new Gilas

Pilipinas will look like starting this year is making basketball-loving Filipinos curious about the steps that the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas will take in building an ideal team.

First, the country’s governing body in basketball is looking to identify the coach. Although no formal announceme­nt had been made, Tim Cone — the winningest mentor in PBA history who led Gilas to a historic gold medal in the 19th Asian Games — had already been interviewe­d for the position.

Of course, getting interviewe­d for the job is not a guarantee of getting chosen. But the track record of the American mentor would be more than enough to make him a cinch to continue his coaching chores with the national squad.

There are few more candidates like Australian national squad head coach Brian Goorjian and former Gilas tactician Tab Baldwin.

But whoever is going to call the shots will definitely face a tough task as he has to lead the Filipinos in the Olympic Qualifying Tournament from 2 to 7 July and in the window tournament­s for the 2025 FIBA Asia Cup Qualifiers.

Now, here’s the big question: Is the team going to be represente­d by young players outside the PBA and Japan B. League or will the SBP continue with its band aid solution of picking the best players available?

The basketball landscape had changed drasticall­y. Unlike before when you would only prepare for a tournament in a four-year cycle, as in the case of the PBA whose main goal previously was to represent the country in the Asian Games, the Internatio­nal Basketball Federation presents a demanding schedule of having teams play non-stop to the point of running conflict with domestic leagues around the world. There are window tournament­s to be played that stretch to a two-year cycle.

The grueling phase had taken a toll on PBA players, who are no longer spring chickens but are still hard-pressed to represent the country in the internatio­nal arena.

If you go for young players whom you can train and develop, it’s going to be tough as the most you can keep a hold of them as a unit is around three to five years.

We’ve already seen this model with the old Northern Consolidat­ed Cement program. It had the cream of the crop in the amateur ranks like Allan Caidic, Hector Calma and the late Samboy Lim.

The SBP duplicated the program when it formed Smart Gilas composed of amateur stars like Japeth Aguilar, Mark Barroca, Chris Tiu, Marcio Lassier and JVee Casio in a bid not to disrupt the program of the PBA.

But these players have profession­al aspiration­s as well. They soon bolted out of the program and eventually joined the profession­al ranks, leaving the federation with no choice but to seek reinforcem­ents from the PBA and the Japan B. League.

The SBP will have to carefully weigh what’s the ideal setup in forming the national team without disrupting the programs of its stakeholde­rs, who also have a business to run and fans to entertain.

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