Business World

FIBA Esports Open III to feature 60 national teams

- S. Murillo Michael Angelo

WHEN the third edition of the Internatio­nal Basketball Federation (FIBA) Esports Open tips off on Friday, April 16, it will feature an expanded field of 60 national teams.

The number is up from the 38 in the previous iteration of the tournament which gathers top esports teams in the world, including from the Philippine­s.

As in the second FIBA Esports Open, there will be six regional conference­s.

Six teams will battle it out in the Southeast Asia, Africa, and Middle East conference­s while North & Central America will have eight sides. South America will have seven teams while 27 will play in the Europe Conference.

For the first time, the North & Central America and Europe Conference­s will consist of two divisions: Current Generation (PS4) and Next Generation (PS5).

Group stage games are scheduled for Friday and the best-of-three Play-Off series will follow on Saturday and Sunday.

There are three different weekends for the FIBA Esports Open III. Starting the competitio­n off will be the Southeast Asia, Africa, Middle East Conference­s on April 16-18, to be followed on April 23-25 by the North & Central America (Current Generation) and Europe (Current Generation).

The Open concludes May 7-9 and will involve North & Central America (Next Gen), Europe (Next Gen) and South America.

The tournament will mark the third straight time that the Philippine­s will take part in the Open.

Team Philippine­s, or “E-Gilas,” was among the winners in the first edition of the FIBA Esports Open held in June, ruling the Southeast Asian conference by sweeping Indonesia in their five-game series.

In the second edition in November, it finished runner-up to Australia in the reconfigur­ed Southeast Asia/ Oceania conference. The E-Boomers swept the Filipinos in their best-ofthree finals.

For the aboutto-start tournament, E-Gilas will have to contend against an expanded field which is divided into two groups.

The Philippine­s is in Group I with Vietnam and Maldives while Group 2 features Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and Mongolia.

Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas officials shared to BusinessWo­rld that E-Gilas will be composed of “practicall­y the same team” that saw action in the second edition. As part of its preparatio­n, the team has been having “friendlies” with the other countries in the lead-up.

For the Africa Conference, meanwhile, competing are the Ivory Coast, Egypt, Tunisia, Gabon, Togo, and Madagascar.

The Middle East has Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Syria, Lebanon, Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates.

North & Central America Current Gen will see Barbados, Costa Rica, Honduras, and Mexico fight it out while in the Next Gen it will be the United States, Canada, Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico.

South America, for its part, has Argentina, Uruguay, Guyana, and Colombia (Group 1) and Brazil, Venezuela, and Chile (Group 2).

Europe Current Gen has Latvia, Ireland, Estonia, and Poland in Group 1, Russia, Ukraine, Andorra, and Armenia in Group 2, Cyprus, Bosnia & Herzegovin­a, Serbia, and Iceland in Group 3, and Austria, Lithuania, Montenegro and Portugal in Group 4.

For Europe Next Gen, meanwhile, are Turkey, Switzerlan­d, Denmark, and Slovenia (Group 1), Germany, Spain, Luxembourg, and France (Group 2), and Italy, Great Britain, and Belgium (Group 3).

All games, just like in the previous editions, will be available on FIBA’s digital channels with live content being streamed across Facebook, Twitch, and YouTube channels.

In coming up with the FIBA Esports Open, the world basketball governing body looks to add further dimension to it as an organizati­on while also affording the basketball community more action amid the coronaviru­s pandemic. —

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