The Philippine Star

Gilas wakes up in third quarter to blast Qatar

Blazers seek solo third vs struggling Cardinals

- By NELSON BELTRAN

College of St. Benilde tries to recover from a heartbreak­er of a loss the last time out as it faces Mapua, aiming for solo third even as Perpetual Help and Arellano U clash in a crucial match in the NCAA men’s basketball tournament at the Filoil Flying V Center in San Juan today.

The Blazers missed grabbing third place after Fil-Am Justin Gutang’s basket at the buzzer was nullified after a series of video replays, enabling the San Sebastian Stags to steal a 66-65 victory last week.

The loss kept St. Benilde in joint third with Letran, which also dropped a 68-74 decision to San Beda, at 7-4. But the Blazers are keen on getting back on track with a victory over the struggling Cardinals in their 2 p.m. encounter.

“We’d like to move forward and try not to be affected that much by what had happened,” said CSB coach TY Tang.

Gutang actually churned out a careerbest 25 points against the Stags, including 16 in the last 10 minutes, only to see his effort fall short with that controvers­ial loss.

Still, the Blazers are fancied to get past the Cardinals, who, however, are going all out to keep whatever slim chance they have on a 3-8 slate.

Meanwhile, the Altas and the Chiefs clash in what promises to be a fierce duel of teams seeking to keep their respective Final Four hopes alive. Perpetual is in fifth with a 5-5 mark while Arellano is just behind at 4-6. They tangle at 4 p.m.

Edgar Charcos will make a muchawaite­d return for the Las Piñas-based school after missing three games due to a hyperexten­ded knee.

Team Philippine­s fired bricks in the first half of a game that lacked the luster and the roar and cheers of the sixth man, but gained its composure in time and played true to form in the third quarter to stop Qatar in its tracks and claim an easy 92-81 win and firm up its FIBA World Cup bid at the Smart Araneta Coliseum last night.

The Nationals churned out a superb second half to make up for their woeful game in the first 20 minutes of play, and stayed at third place in Group F in the FIBA Asia WC qualifiers on their 11-point drubbing of the Qataris before a little less than 100 souls and over 15,000 empty seats at the Big Dome.

“It’s kind of surreal. It felt really weird you’re playing in your home country, in the home stadium and there’s nobody cheering for you. I think it affected us,” said national coach Yeng Guiao.

But after a while, the Nationals got used to the atmosphere in this closeddoor game, and got to make the necessary adjustment­s to make the crucial turnaround that carried Team Phl to a fifth win against three losses through the fourth window of the FIBAWC eliminator.

Team Phl closed in on Iran (6-2) which dropped a 56-70 loss to Japan (4-4) over in Tokyo.

Meanwhile, Australia sustained its rampage and virtually clinched a berth in the 2019 China world joust on a 94-41 rout of Kazakhstan that jacked up its record to 7-1.

The Nationals applied a pressing defense and ran at every opportunit­y on offense to overcome an early 17-point deficit and get back on track following back-to-back losses to Australia and Iran.

Alex Cabagnot and Japeth Aguilar scored 16 points each to pace the Nationals who would not allow themselves to lose the game.

“Alam namin mahirap matalo sa sariling bahay natin,” said Beau Belga, also a catalyst for Team Phl in this game with11 points, six rebounds, three assists, three blocks and one steal in 18 minutes of action.

The national coach acknowledg­ed the great effort of his team, saying “they really didn’t want to lose.”

“The first half was just really bad, especially the shooting percentage from the three-point area. To think that we have the best shooters in the land, it’s an aberration, hangover from the Iran game, nagtuloy-tuloy ang alat,” said Guiao on their 1-of-15 clip from beyond the arc in the first two quarters.

“Meanwhile, as big as Qatar was, I felt what really gave them the lead in the first half was their three-point shooting (7-of-13). It’s not really their size, it’s their incredible shooting,” Guiao added. The scores: PHILIPPINE­S 92 – Aguilar 16, Cabagnot 16, Pringle 13, Belga 11, Lee 8, Wright 6, Lassiter 5, Sangalang 5, Erram 4, Thompson 3, Taulava 3, Norwood 2.

QATAR 81 – Mohammed MY 26, Al-Rayes 17, Ngombo 17, Khalid 10, Mohammed MH 4, Abdelbaset 3, Gueye 3, Abdelhalee­m 1, Avdic 0, Lashin 0.

Quartersco­res: 15-26, 39-52, 67-64, 92-81.

 ?? JUN MENDOZA ?? Stanley Pringle soars past Mohd Yousuf Mohmmed of Qatar for a shot during first half of their FIBA World Cup qualifier last night at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.
JUN MENDOZA Stanley Pringle soars past Mohd Yousuf Mohmmed of Qatar for a shot during first half of their FIBA World Cup qualifier last night at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.
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