The Philippine Star

POC backs Gilas pullout from Asiad

- By NELSON BELTRAN

Philippine Olympic Committee president Ricky Vargas yesterday said he supports Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas’ withdrawal from the coming Asian Games basketball competitio­ns as he understand­s their shift of focus from the 2019 World Cup to the next world championsh­ip that the country is hosting in 2023.

Complex as it may be, Vargas said he accepts SBP’s decision to regroup for the meantime in preparatio­n for an effort to lay down a program beyond 2019. The federation is reeling from the FIBA sanctions suffered in the aftermath of the Gilas-Australia brawl.

Vargas, also the current PBA chairman and former SBP vice chair, hinted at the possibilit­y of bringing back the original Gilas program where the national players are focused on playing for the national team.

“They say they’re regrouping, preparing for an appeal and getting to ready to work on a new program. The most telling is that they’re now looking forward to 2023. They’re no longer focused on 2019. It’s very difficult for them to make that decision. We should take it for what it is,” said Vargas.

“I appreciate the reasons they’re saying. It’s complex, difficult and not popular. But it is what it is,” Vargas also said.

Meanwhile, the Philippine­s will be out for only the second time in 18 editions of the Asian Games. Team Phl was out in the 2006 Doha Games when the Philippine federation was then suspended fom the FIBA rolls.

As Vargas understand­s, it’s not about the compositio­n of the lineup “but the principle close to the heart of the SBP.”

The national cage federation announced the pullout of Team Phl from the 2018 Asiad curiously hours after a press conference to announce the appointmen­t of coach Yeng Guiao and the core of the Rain or Shine team to represent the country in the Jakarta Games.

In a meeting Thursday night, the SBP had a change of heart, deciding against sending the team as “the time and chance to participat­e in the 2018 Asian Games would not be optimal.”

In a three-paragraph statement, the federation stressed, though, that it remains committed to the continuous developmen­t of Philippine basketball and to attain the best possible results for the national team in the global stage.

Meanwhile, they say they will regroup as they try to improve their programs to ensure respectabl­e performanc­e in internatio­nal meets. Vargas stressed the PBA is not to blame. “Very myopic,” said Vargas in his reaction to the PBA bashers in social media.

“First, the reason we came out with the one-team philosophy plus the cadets was because if we put together players from different teams, we have to re-schedule the PBA games, and the PBA has to stop. No. 2, the PBA didn’t stop teams that were willing to lend their players. The PBA was generous to lend a team and re-schedule the games of that team. We just couldn’t reschedule games of all the teams,” Vargas explained.

The SBP had expressed gratitude to Rain or Shine and team owners Raymond Yu and Terry Que for their willingnes­s to represent the country.

Vargas insisted SBP’s decision “is more than basketball.”

“Malalim ang kanilang pinanggaga­lingan and they needed to regroup. They’re hurting,” said Vargas of the federation that lost a handful of players in the aftermath of the Gilas-Australia brawl.

Still to be determined are the players and the coach to be sent to the next windows of the FIBA World Cup qualifiers.

 ??  ?? Ricky Vargas
Ricky Vargas

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