The Philippine Star

Great honor to serve the country – Adornado

- – Nelson Beltran

With all the withdrawal­s from Gilas Pilipinas, longtime national mainstay Bogs Adornado can’t help but recall their time when wearing the national colors is like having a badge of honor.

“I’m sad and I wonder what’s happening now,” Adornado told The STAR, referring to Gilas players who turned their back on the national team that’s embarking on a quest for a possible berth in the Olympics next year.

“I respect the players’ decisions, but I wonder why,” Adornado also said. “During our time, we would fight and die to make the national team. Every player’s dream then was to wear the national colors.”

He said the sacrifice the national players do now is nothing compared to what they did before.

“The tryout then was almost a year. Just the tryout was a cutthroat competitio­n. Those who made it were put in quarters for six months, allowed to visit their families just on weekends. And mind you, our allowance was just P20 per practice,” said Adornado, the top gun of the Philippine team in the 1973 ABC Championsh­ip and in the 1974 World Championsh­ip.

“There was no salary and no incentive. When we won the championsh­ip (in the 1973 ABC Championsh­ip), our incentive was to go to the World Championsh­ip,” he also said.

“We made great sacrifice but nobody complained. The only complaint made was on the tough training (run by trainer Juan Cutillas). Later on, we reaped the fruit of those hard training. I think we could’ve played two hard games in a day,” he added.

Adornado believes his contempora­ries like Robert Jaworski, Ramon Fernandez, Jimmy Mariano, Manny Paner and Yoyong Martirez, among others, feel the same way.

“For us, it’s always a great honor to be with the national team. And as a player, that’s the only way to serve our country,” Adornado pointed out.

Still, Adornado insisted he still admires Junmar Fajardo, Marc Pingris and LA Tenorio as players.

Fajardo is said to be nursing injuries on both feet. Tenorio begged off, citing fatigue and poor form as reasons while Pingris excused himself because of “things beyond my control.”

Netizens believe San Miguel Corp. has something to do with these concerns, but SMC officials insisted they have allowed the three players to join the national team.

With Fajardo, Pingris and Tenorio out, SMC isn’t represente­d in the national team for the first time since the PBA allowed the use of their players in internatio­nal competitio­n in 1990.

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