The Philippine Star

Pinoy among coaching imports

- By JOAQUIN M. HENSON

CHANGSHA – There’s a Filipino among six foreign coaches at the FIBA Asia Championsh­ips here starting today. He’s Paul Advincula who was once on coach Boysie Zamar’s staff at the University of the East and now calls the shots for Malaysia.

Advincula, 51, took Malaysia to second place at the recent SEABA Championsh­ips and booked a ticket to the FIBA Asia Championsh­ips where the winner will represent Asia at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

The other foreign coaches are Serbia’s Rajko Toroman for Jordan, Germany’s Dirk Bauermann for Iran, American Jerry Steele for Palestine, Greece’s Vasilis Fragias for Qatar, American Tab Baldwin for the Philippine­s, Serbia’s Veselin Matic for Lebanon and Advincula.

At the 2013 FIBA Asia edition in Manila, the foreign coaches were Serbia’s Sasa Nikitovic for Bahrain, Greece’s Panagiotis Giannakis for China, American Scott Flemming for India, Slovenia’s Memi Becirovic for Iran, Greece’s Evangelos Alexandris for Jordan, Italy’s Matteo Boniciolli for Kazakhstan, American Tom Wisman for Qatar and Serbia’s Nenad Krdzic.

Toroman, 60, has been the most successful of the coaches in FIBA Asia. He led Iran to the 2007 title and earned a ticket for the national team to the 2008 Olympics. Toroman honed his skills as an assistant coach with the Yugoslavia­n national squad and later coached in Poland, Belgium, Holland, Cyprus, Hungary and China.

Baldwin, 57, brought New Zealand to the semifinals of the 2002 FIBA World Cup. He also coached at the FIBA World Cup in 2006 for New Zealand and in 2010 for Lebanon. His biggest moment came when he led Jordan to an 88-84 win over Iran at the 2011 FIBA Asia Championsh­ips. Baldwin also once coached Malaysia so his resume is packed with progress reports from all over the globe.

Matic, 55, was the Polish and Iranian national team coach before taking over the Lebanon reins in 2009. Bauermann, 57, has coached in Germany, Belgium, Greece, Lithuania, Poland and Russia. NBA star Dirk Nowitzki was on the German national squad that Bauermann piloted to eighth place of 24 at the 2006 FIBA World Cup and to 10th of 12 at the 2008 Olympics. Fragias, 54, will make his debut as a national team coach with Qatar. He has coached in Cyprus, Greece and Ukraine.

The Philippine­s’ easy draw in the first round may not be a blessing after all. A FIBA official said the other day it could backfire on Gilas because if the Philippine­s finishes first or second out of Groups A and B, its opponent from Groups C and D in the knockout quarterfin­als could be extremely dangerous. The lightweigh­t contenders in the preliminar­ies may not prepare the Philippine­s for the grind ahead.

Group A is made up of Iran, Japan, Malaysia and India. Group B is composed of the Philippine­s, Palestine, Kuwait and Hong Kong. Making up Group C are South Korea, Jordan, Singapore and China. Finally, Chinese-Taipei, Lebanon, Qatar and Kazakhstan will play out of Group D. The top three finishers of each group advance to the second round. The top four from Groups A-B and the top four from Groups C-D move on to battle in the knockout quarterfin­als. Four survivors will face off in crossover pairings in the semifinals where the winners will dispute the vacant throne.

Because Groups C and D are loaded with tough teams, the Philippine­s must be ready to eventually face the fast and the furious. From Groups A and B, the shoo-ins to advance to the knockout quarterfin­als are Iran, the Philippine­s and Japan. From Groups C and D, the teams with high hopes of moving forward are South Korea, Jordan, China, Chinese-Taipei, Lebanon, Qatar and Kazakhstan. That means if Gilas finishes No. 2 behind Iran, it will battle No. 3 from Groups C and D. It’s a situation where three countries are shoo-ins for four slots in Groups A and B while seven teams are jockeying for position for four tickets in Groups C and D. “Any of those seven countries could be No. 1 or No. 2 or No. 3 or No. 4 so Gilas will find it

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