The Philippine Star

Putting brawl in perspectiv­e

- By JOAQUIN M. HENSON

Today is the deadline that FIBA gave to both the Philippine and Australian basketball federation­s to submit their versions of what triggered the brawl between Gilas and the Boomers in the third window of the FIBA Asia/Pacific qualifiers for the 2019 World Cup at the Philippine Arena last July 2. The federation­s were requested to turn in “incident reports” with videos and narratives so FIBA is guided in deciding the sanctions to mete out.

To put things into perspectiv­e, it’s important to note that Australia plays an extremely physical brand of basketball. Gilas head coach Chot Reyes said he knew beforehand the kind of game the Boomers play. In the second window, Australia hosted the Philippine­s in Melbourne and hacked out an 84-68 win.

At the 2016 Rio Olympics, NBA star Paul George described the Aussies “dirty” after the US came from five down at the half to win, 98-88. “It got kind of out of hand early with the physical play,” said the Oklahoma City Thunder forward, quoted by John Carney and Freya Noble of the Daily Mail Australia. “This team has a knack for being a little dirty. We’re fine playing physical, that’s our game in the NBA, but if they’re going to allow us to play that way, they got to play it both ways.”

Boomers assistant coach and former NBA center Luc Longley dismissed George’s rant and said, “tell ‘em that’s internatio­nal basketball.” It was Longley who accused Reyes of instructin­g Gilas to “hit” the Boomers during a timeout. Obviously, the Aussies are trying to deflect the blame for instigatin­g the rough stuff by claiming they were the victims when Gilas retaliated. Reyes explained his use of the word “hit” should be taken within the context of basketball lingo, figurative­ly not literally.

In 2016, the Los Angeles Times conducted a survey to zero in on the NBA’s dirtiest player and the “winner” was Australia’s Matthew Dellavedov­a. Mitch Lawrence of Forbes said Dellavedov­a “crosses the line too many times and looks to injure his opponents.” Lawrence quoted an unidentifi­ed NBA general manager as describing the Australian­s as “brawlers – that’s their nature.”

To be fair, Dellavedov­a wasn’t one of the four Boomers who were ejected for their role in the brawl. Dellavedov­a grew up playing rough-and-tough Aussie Rules Football, said Lawrence. “His defenders say he’s just a super-competitiv­e player who is merely going all-out hard to make the playing field level against better athletes and more talented competitor­s,” continued Lawrence. “Plus they point out that Delly learned how to play the game as a kid in Australia where they teach children at an early age to use their bodies in what is a physical brand of basketball.”

The Boomer, who ignited the free-forall, has a reputation for bullying. Daniel Kickert has been suspended as a player at St. Mary’s College in the US NCAA and in the Australian pro league NBL. Against Gilas last week, Kickert slammed a forearm on R. R. Pogoy’s throat during a deadball situation in what was a brazen act of thuggery. Another Australian roughhouse­r Chris Goulding is known as a taunter and has often resorted to out-of-the-rules tactics to unnerve opponents. Someone said it was Goulding’s constant taunts aimed at the Gilas bench that caused assistant coach Jong Uichico to snap.

Now comes an interestin­g comment from a reader. “If it’s true that there were racial slurs towards the Gilas players whether implicit or otherwise by the Boomers, I think this should also be given very major weight in our explanatio­ns to FIBA as racism is a no-no in internatio­nal sports today and institutio­ns and organizati­ons go very hard on this,” said the reader. “It’s funny but Asians seem to take racism lightly. But to a Western-dominated body like FIBA, it’s something else.”

Some courtside fans overheard the Australian­s calling the Filipino players “monkeys” even before the contest. From the onset, it appeared that Australia was out to play mind games and unsettle Gilas with psych tactics. The Boomers knew they were on hostile soil and faced by over 20,000 Filipino fans. They pushed Gilas to the edge of boiling point, knowing the Filipinos wouldn’t back off to preserve their home pride. The Boomers looked like they got what they wanted.

It was sad that Dellavedov­a cut his Manila trip by a day because of the brawl. He would’ve stayed an extra day to promote his Peak signature shoes. Before the Gilas game, Dellavedov­a spoke candidly about his NBA career. Turn to Page 13

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