The Philippine Star

Gilas pounds Uzbeks, 85-50

- By NELSON BELTRAN

TOKYO – Smart Gilas Pilipinas, inspired by its 78-68 conquest of Lebanon Saturday, tore to shreds the lowly Uzbekistan side, 85-50, and secured a spot in the knockout stage of the fourth FIBA Asia Cup at the Ota Gymnasium here Sunday.

With a quarterfin­al berth sealed, the Nationals go for a better seeding in the playoffs as they take on another unheralded rival in Macau, their last assignment in group matches, at 11:30 a.m. today.

The Filipinos completely dominated the Uzbeks whom they held scoreless for almost 10 minutes in one stretch in the match cheered on by the predominan­tly Filipino crowd at the spanking modern playing venue.

Smart Gilas ripped the game open, 37-16, on a swashbuckl­ing 17-to-nothing run and the Nationals went through the motion of completing the victory that sent them to the next stage probably against Qatar or Chinese Taipei.

The easy match allowed coach Chot Reyes the luxury to rest his main players and experiment new combinatio­ns and some defensive ploys.

“The challenge was for the players not to develop bad habits in this game. What we wanted was to improve our good habits on defense,” said Reyes.

Having scouted the Uzbeks as a mere fivedeep team, Gilas starters Marcus Douthit, LA Tenorio, Ranidel de Ocampo, Jeff Chan and Gabe Norwood wore them down early with a pressing defense and an up-tempo attack.

The Uzbeks seemed to have been exhausted by the time Reyes fielded his second team on a platoon substituti­on.

Larry Fonacier, Jarred Dillinger, Matt Ganuelas, Sonny Thoss and JayR Reyes kept the pressure, and the Nationals broke away in the second quarter, never to look back again.

The Uzbeks hardly had anything to offer in the final half which the Smart Gilas reserves turned into a first hand demonstrat­ion of their individual talents.

The Filipino crowd and the Gilas bench specifical­ly cheered on Ganuelas as the 22-yearold Fil-Am guard put up highlight plays, including a two-handed jam, an acrobatic layup and an authoritat­ive block of an Uzbek shot.

Ganuelas grabbed 11 rebounds, scored eight points, issued four assists and took three steals in 17 minutes of action – his longest exposure in a game from their Jones Cup title run.

Reyes, Thoss and Rico Villanueva also played long minutes and they collected good numbers although Chan still emerged the top scorer with 20 points on 8-of-15 field shooting.

Struggling with 1-of-9 three-point shooting in the first two games, Chan finally found his touch, converting four of seven attempts.

The whole team hit at a 40-percent clip (8-of20) after shooting just 20 percent (4-of-20) in the first game versus China and 17 percent (6-of-35) in the next game versus Lebanon.

“We played the defense that we’re practicing but we tried to hide some of our offensive plays,” said Reyes who intended to do the same against Macau.

“We’ll again rest our core players but we’ll work hard in practice in the evening. We’ll be off Tuesday and return to practice Wednesday in preparatio­n for the quarters,” Reyes also said.

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 ?? JUN MENDOZA ?? Almond Vosotros of La Salle tries to extricate himself from the triple defense of Tamaraws Anthony Hangrove (left), Roger Ray Pogoy
JUN MENDOZA Almond Vosotros of La Salle tries to extricate himself from the triple defense of Tamaraws Anthony Hangrove (left), Roger Ray Pogoy
 ?? WALTER BOLLOZOS ?? US Ambassador to the Philippine­s Harry K. Thomas Jr. (middle), with Marikina Mayor Del De Guzman, during the ceremonial coin toss in the opener of the ArenaBall Philippine­s championsh­ip between the Bandits and Jaguars at the Marikina City Sports Complex.
WALTER BOLLOZOS US Ambassador to the Philippine­s Harry K. Thomas Jr. (middle), with Marikina Mayor Del De Guzman, during the ceremonial coin toss in the opener of the ArenaBall Philippine­s championsh­ip between the Bandits and Jaguars at the Marikina City Sports Complex.
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