Philippine Daily Inquirer

PBA individual training sessions now allowed

With individual training sessions now allowed, PBA looks to tick off boxes to get to second phase of planned restart

- By Denison Rey A. Dalupang @sonrdinq

As the PBA prepares to put players in gyms for individual training sessions, the league will be looking to take the next step of assembling teams for scrimmages.

As the Philippine Basketball Associatio­n (PBA) prepares to put players in gyms for individual training, the league will be looking to take the next step of assembling teams for scrimmages. And if all the right boxes are ticked, it’s on to the final stop: resuming a season halted by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We will be looking to meet certain health and disciplina­ry guidelines,” said Willie Marcial, the PBA commission­er, on the heels of another fruitful meeting, this time with the league’s Board of Governors.

Saturday’s meeting was to formally green light the resumption of individual training and conditioni­ng sessions for players. The goal is to get players back in game shape while checking if protocols applied by teams can keep everyone infection-free or, at the very least, keep transmissi­on numbers at a minimum.

“That’s the top standard of course. If we can keep infections to zero or at really minimal numbers, then we can say it’s successful,” Marcial added.

But that won’t be the only yardstick for the PBA. Even more important is the monitoring system that will be implemente­d.

“If we can have ensure that our system of logging players is efficient, that’s another thing we will be looking out for to say that we are already ready for the next phase,” the commission­er said.

Last Friday, Marcial discussed the health and safety protocols with coaches.

Next step

“I thought everything was logical and well laid-out,” coach Tim Cone told the Inquirer shortly after that meeting. “It will now be up to us coaches and players to strictly implement what was presented.”

If the league meets its health standards with the individual workouts, the next step would be to seek approval from the government to hold scrimmages and other full-contact drills. But moving to the next phase won’t be based solely on the applied quarantine restrictio­ns in the city.

“Even if quarantine restrictio­ns are further loosened, we don’t want to rush to scrimmages,” Marcial said. “We want to do things slowly and give players a chance to be confident enough to go through contact drills and team workouts.”

Marcial said the league will assess the success of its first phase by August before making the request to go to the second phase.

Stricter protocols

An approval from the government on that request—and zero-to-low infection rates— would virtually send the league barreling straight to a restart. The league suspended its season on March 12, playing only a single match in the Philippine Cup— between defending champion San Miguel Beer and Magnolia.

But Marcial said protocols for scrimmages would be doubly stricter and has assigned a team from his office to look at other leagues that have made restarts, particular­ly the NBA, so they can develop some sort of a template.

The commission­er also acknowledg­es fact that the coronaviru­s will always be a threat, which is why team executives unanimousl­y agreed to shoulder medical expenses in the event that a member of any of the 12 PBA teams tests positive for COVID-19.

Marcial also said that San Miguel Corp. sports director Alfrancis Chua, who also serves as Ginebra’s team governor, moved to upgrade the league’s initial detection screening to swab testing.

We want to do things slowly and give players a chance to be confident enough to go through contact drills and team workouts

WILLIE MARCIAL

PBA commission­er

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 ?? —PHOTOS BY SHERWIN VARDELEON ?? San Miguel Beer veteran Arwind Santos gestures after a made basket in this file photo. The PBA had only played a single match—featuring the defending Philippine Cup champion Beermen and the Magnolia Hotshots—before a health crisis shut down the league.
—PHOTOS BY SHERWIN VARDELEON San Miguel Beer veteran Arwind Santos gestures after a made basket in this file photo. The PBA had only played a single match—featuring the defending Philippine Cup champion Beermen and the Magnolia Hotshots—before a health crisis shut down the league.
 ??  ?? The PBA hopes players will join hands in keeping the playing environmen­t safe so the league can proceed to a second phase, which will allow contact drills.
The PBA hopes players will join hands in keeping the playing environmen­t safe so the league can proceed to a second phase, which will allow contact drills.
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