Philippine Daily Inquirer

ON THE RISE

PH still unquestion­ed king of SEA hoops but rivals slowly upping their game

- By Mark Giongco @Mgiongcoin­q —TRISTAN TAMAYO

We wanna go out there and play hard, but we also don’t want to embarrass anybody, so we’re gonna be cognizant of that

TIM CONE

Gilas Pilipinas coach

It won’t be long before the rest of Southeast Asia really trims the basketball gap wedged between them and the Philippine­s. And even after a pair of easy routs by Gilas Pilipinas in the Southeast Asian Games, it is clear that the country’s regional neighbors have started to step up their hoop game.

Greg Slaughter, who has played internatio­nally as an amateur and as a pro, can see beyond the blowouts and notice the improvemen­t.

“Oh man, compared to 2011, these teams [have] really come a long way,” Slaughter said. “They got way more players, they got a different coach. It’s just night and day how far they’ve come from 2011 when we [last] played them.”

It may sound patronizin­g, but Slaughter looks at the improvemen­t beyond the numbers on the basketball court. The Barangay Ginebra big man sees the numbers beyond the lines.

“A lot of teams are on the rise now,” the Barangay Ginebra center said. “Even some countries have their own basketball associatio­ns now— the Vietnamese have the VBA now; they’ve been doing that for three or four years. You can definitely see the competitio­n is rising in Southeast Asia.”

For now, the separation between the Philippine­s and its neighbors is far more evident than the one between a defender and a well-executed stepback jumper. In the current SEA Games, Gilas Pilipinas continues to double down on that gulf with big margin of victories.

But even coach Tim Cone is wary about overemphas­izing the disparity.

“We’re not gonna try to impress anybody,” Cone said after Gilas Pilipinas formalized its entry to the semifinals with a 110-69 dismantlin­g of Vietnam on Friday night at Mall of Asia Arena. “Again, we wanna respect our opponents. We wanna go out there and play hard, but we also don’t want to embarrass anybody, so we’re gonna be cognizant of that.”

A win over Myanmar in a game being played at press time is already a forgone conclusion at this point and will officially make the Filipinos the No. 1 team in Group A. That puts the Philippine­s in the path of the No. 2 squad in the other bracket composed of Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and also-ran Cambodia.

Despite being a cinch to cruise to the gold medal, Cone doesn’t want Gilas to let its guard down.

“We still have Indonesia with Rajko Toroman ahead of us and we have most likely Thailand and they’ve been beating up their opponents,” Cone said. “And they have a nice pressure system to their team, kinda like Alaska. They play like Alaska, well, the old Alaska with Alex Compton. So they’re very dangerous.”

Meanwhile, Slaughter hopes that the Philippine­s continues to improve internatio­nally to keep ahead of its upgrading neighbors.

 ??  ?? Time will come when the Philippine­s won’t be able to merely dunk their way past hapless Southeast Asian rivals.
Time will come when the Philippine­s won’t be able to merely dunk their way past hapless Southeast Asian rivals.

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