Jayson Tatum misses start of USA Basketball camp in Las Vegas


Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics hoists the Larry O’Brien trophy as he is introduced during the Boston Celtics Victory Event following their 2024 NBA Finals win at TD Garden on June 21, 2024 in Boston, Massachusetts. Maddie Malhotra/Getty Images/AFP

LAS VEGAS — Jayson Tatum of the NBA champion Boston Celtics was not present Saturday for the start of the U.S. men’s Olympic basketball training camp, excused because of personal reasons.

Tatum is expected to join the team by Monday, when it will have the third of its four camp practices in Las Vegas, U.S. coach Steve Kerr said. The team plays its first exhibition on Wednesday against Canada, then leaves Thursday for nearly five weeks abroad — going first to Abu Dhabi for two games, then to London for two more games, then finally to Paris for the Olympics.

The 26-year-old Tatum — one of two Celtics on this U.S. team, along with Jrue Holiday — is seeking his second Olympic gold medal, after being part of the team that won at the Tokyo Games held three years ago.

READ: LeBron James says gold is all that matters at Paris Olympics

Tatum averaged 15.2 points for the Americans in those Olympics, second on the team behind Kevin Durant’s 20.7 points per game.

The Olympics will be the capper of a busy few months for Tatum. The five-time All-Star helped the Celtics win their first NBA title since 2008 last month — then started his offseason by agreeing to a league-record $314 million, five-year extension that could keep him in Boston through the 2029-30 season.

That contract was finalized Saturday, the first day that such a deal could be executed by NBA rule.

“Jayson is a special person and player, and it’s been a thrill for all of us to watch his entire journey in Boston,” Celtics President Brad Stevens said Saturday in a release distributed by the team.

READ: LeBron James says gold is all that matters at Paris Olympics

“He has embraced all that comes with being a great Celtic, and shows consistent and genuine care for every one of his teammates, coaches, and staff across the organization.

Tatum averaged 26.9 points, 8.1 rebounds and 4.9 assists per game this past season for the Celtics, and has averaged 23.1 points, 7.2 rebounds and 3.5 assists in his first seven NBA seasons.

Tatum was in Las Vegas for most of the week prior to the start of the U.S. camp, hosting his own elite camp for select high school and college players. Fellow U.S. Olympian Bam Adebayo was also part of that camp, as were fellow NBA players Paolo Banchero and Chris Paul.



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Shakur Stevenson beats Harutyunyan to keep WBC lightweight belt


Shakur Stevenson, right, punches Germany’s Artem Harutyunyan during the ninth round of a WBC world lightweight championship boxing match Sunday, July 7, 2024, in Newark, N.J. Stevenson won the fight. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

Unbeaten American Shakur Stevenson retained his World Boxing Council lightweight world title with a methodical unanimous decision victory over Artem Harutyunyan on Saturday in Newark, New Jersey.

Stevenson improved to 22-0 with 10 wins inside the distance, making his first defense of the title he won with a narrow decision over Dominican puncher Edwin De Los Santos last November.

That made Stevenson a three-weight world champion, but it was a lackluster showing from both fighters and Stevenson did little on Saturday to quiet critics demanding more fireworks in his last fight under contract to promoter Top Rank.

READ: Shakur Stevenson handles Oscar Valdez in unification bout

After a slow start that left fans at the Prudential Center in Stevenson’s hometown restless, Stevenson began to wear down the Armenian-born German challenger with a series of body shots in the sixth round.

He maintained a measured pace through the 12th, the judges scoring it for the champion 119-109, 118-110 and 116-112.

Harutyunyan, in his first world title bid, fell to 12-2 with seven wins inside the distance.

On the same card, Brazilian Robson Conceicao dethroned WBC super featherweight world champion O’Shaquie Foster with a controversial 12-round split decision victory.

Foster’s jaw dropped in stunned consternation as the scores were read out after a fight in which he — and many onlookers — felt he had done enough against an opponent who didn’t appear to land any damaging blows.

READ: Shakur Stevenson dominates as boxing returns to Las Vegas

But two judges saw the bout for Conceicao 116-112 and 115-113, while the third scored it 116-112 for Foster.

“I do think I was actually the winner,” said Conceicao, a 2016 Olympic gold medallist who improved to 19-2 with one drawn and nine knockouts.

“I tried way more. He didn’t come to fight, he was actually running, running, running, I kept on striking, so I was the winner.”



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Foster fell to 22-3 with 12 knockouts.

“I thought it was a shut-out,” Foster said. “I didn’t get touched but with a head-butt. I don’t know, man … I want a rematch.”

World No. 1 Iga Swiatek blames fatigue for shock Wimbledon exit


Poland’s Iga Swiatek reacts after losing a point in the third set against Kazakhstan’s Yulia Putintseva during their women’s singles tennis match on the sixth day of the 2024 Wimbledon Championships at The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, southwest London, on July 6, 2024. (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP)

Iga Swiatek admitted she was running on empty at Wimbledon as the exhausted world number one suffered a shock third-round defeat against Yulia Putintseva on Saturday.

The top seed’s 21-match winning streak came to a stunning end on Court One as Russian-born Kazakh Putintseva battled to a 3-6, 6-1, 6-2 victory.

Swiatek won a fourth French Open and fifth Grand Slam title last month, but she felt the strain of that clay-court triumph by the time she arrived at the All England Club.

READ: Wimbledon star Swiatek’s a ‘Swiftie’ and she can’t shake it off

Unable to summon up the energy required to subdue the feisty Putintseva, the Polish star once again flopped at Wimbledon, where she has never gone beyond the quarterfinals.

“For sure, I felt like my energy level went down little bit in the second set. I couldn’t really get back up,” she said.

“My tank of really pushing myself to the limits became suddenly empty. I was kind of surprised. But I know what I did wrong after Roland Garros. I didn’t really rest properly.

“I’m not going to make this mistake again. After such a tough clay court season, I really must have my recovery.

“I need to recover better after the clay court season, both physically and mentally. Maybe next year I’m going to take a vacation and literally just do nothing.”

Swiatek, a four-time French Open winner, has never thrived on the All England Club grass.

READ: Swiatek seals place among greats with ‘surreal’ 4th French Open

‘I was playing fearless’

Asked to explain her struggles in south-west London, she said: “Actually, this part of the season is not easy because we’re switching surfaces.

“For me going from this kind of tennis where I felt like I’m playing the best tennis in my life to another surface where I kind of struggle a little bit more, it’s not easy.”

Losing to the diminutive Putintseva was especially painful after their clash at Indian Wells earlier this year.

Putintseva was ticked off by the chair umpire for moving from side to side as Swiatek shaped to serve.

Describing herself as “a gangster on court and angel off it”, Putintseva even threw in a collection of underarm serves.

“Maybe they teach that in Kazakhstan,” a grumpy Swiatek said at the time.

Swiatek was grudging in her praise for Putintseva after their latest meeting, saying: “I totally let her come back to the game in the second set. I shouldn’t have done that.

“I made some mistakes, as well. But for sure, she used her chance.”

Putintseva was also frosty when quizzed on her relationship with her Swiatek.

“No, I don’t know her. She never, at least what I see, she always like in her zone with her team,” she said.

“She don’t talk much to anyone. I mean, I’m not entering that bubble.”

Unlike Swiatek, Putintseva has adapted well to grass and won on the surface in Birmingham just before Wimbledon.

“It just clicked. At some point I was playing fearless,” she said.



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“I have nothing to lose, just go for it. She didn’t lose it. I took it.”

76ers add playoff performer Caleb Martin from Heat


(FILES) Caleb Martin #16 of the Miami Heat celebrates making a basket and getting fouled by the Sacramento Kings in the first half at Golden 1 Center on February 26, 2024, in Sacramento, California. (Photo by EZRA SHAW / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP)

PHILADELPHIA — The Philadelphia 76ers continued to build around their star trio of Joel Embiid, Tyrese Maxey and Paul George with the addition of NBA free-agent forward Caleb Martin, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press on Saturday.

Martin intends to sign the multi-year contract shortly after the league’s moratorium on signings is lifted, said the person who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the deal was not yet official.

Terms were not yet available. ESPN reported it was a four-year deal guaranteed for more than $32 million.

The 28-year-old Martin, who averaged 8.5 points over five seasons, including the last three with the Heat. It was in Miami where Martin developed a reputation for raising his game. He averaged 10 points and shot 35% from 3-point range.

READ: NBA: 76ers make splash with $400M in contracts for Paul George, Maxey

He’ll likely fill a starting spot left open in Philly, where the 76ers have totally revamped their roster after another early postseason exit. They spent more than $400 million to sign George away from the Clippers and keep Maxey, their homegrown All-Star guard, in the fold for five more years. Team President Daryl Morey also signed free agents Andre Drummond and Eric Gordon and re-signed Kelly Oubre Jr.. The win-now moves for a franchise that hasn’t advanced to the second round since 2001 are designed to put them in the hunt with NBA champion Boston and put pressure on New York, Indiana and even Milwaukee to at least remain a threat in the East.

George and the Sixers agreed to a $212 million, four-year free agent contract on Monday and Maxey agreed in principle to a $204 million, five-year extension with the team.

“As long as players are playing at a high level, we’re focused on Joel and Tyrese and we’re focused on now,” Morey said in May at his state-of-the-franchise press conference.

Martin was undrafted coming out of college after stints at NC State and Nevada. He entered the NBA with almost no guarantees. He had to play in the G League. Charlotte let him go after two seasons.

Martin then became the breakout star of the 2023 NBA playoffs when he pushed the Heat to the NBA Finals.

READ: NBA: Buddy Hield traded to Warriors from 76ers

He should enter 2024 as the starting power forward for a franchise that hasn’t won an NBA title since 1983.

Martin averaged 19.3 points on 60% shooting and scored a playoff-career-high 26 points on Boston’s home floor in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals. He was solid in the first two rounds that season against No. 1 Milwaukee and No. 5 New York, averaging 10.8 points on nearly 53% shooting.

Martin’s postseason numbers were exactly what the 76ers looked for as they filled out a roster that was about empty at the end of the season except for Embiid and Maxey. The 76ers also waived forward Paul Reed, the person said.

Under coach Nick Nurse, the 76ers’ roster could look like this: Embiid, Maxey, George, Oubre and Martin in the starting five with Drummond, Gordon, first-round draft pick Jared McCain among the key contributors off the bench. The 76ers already lost through free agency or trade Tobias Harris, De’Anthony Melton, Nic Batum, Mo Bamba and Buddy Hield off last season’s team.

“We’re mostly going to be a veteran-laden team after an offseason where there’s going to be a lot of change,” Morey said in May.



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With roster spots still to fill, Morey isn’t done yet.

Break local record, make semis


Lauren Hoffman is stoked about her Olympic qualification. —LAUREN HOFFMAN/ FACEBOOK

Lauren Hoffman is progressing in every race at a pace she finds encouraging.

Just this year alone, the 25-year-old former Duke University standout wiped out four Philippine records in the women’s 400-meter and 100-m hurdles plus the indoor 400 m and 600 m in a span of five months, three of them accomplished in successive months.

“I intend to make these records even faster. But for now, I’m putting a lot of energy in the 400 (hurdles),’’ said Hoffman, the national champion in the event.

The first-team, all-American at the 2022 NCAA Outdoor Championships in the 400-m hurdles recently punched a ticket to the Paris Olympics and she wants nothing less than another record-breaking feat.

Her plan in Paris is to beat the local record of 56.44 seconds with an eye on making the semifinal.

Hoffman will race in the qualifying heats on Aug. 4 at Stade de France. If she succeeds, she’ll run the semifinals on Aug. 6.

“I qualified for the Olympics. Still feels crazy to say that. I’m feeling beyond blessed,’’ said Hoffman, who joins fellow hurdler John Cabang and pole vaulter EJ Obiena in the French capital.

Duke record holder

At the conclusion of her Olympic qualification journey, Hoffman slid near the cutoff at No. 39 out of 40 qualifiers, but it hardly mattered anymore.

She ran in meets this season in Florida, Texas, Hong Kong, Philippines, Canada and Poland.

“This could not have been done alone. Thank you to everyone who played a role in this crazy journey,’’ said Hoffman, who was supported by ICTSI Foundation and CEL Logistics together with the Philippine Athletics Track and Field Association, the Philippine Sports Commission and the Philippine Olympic Committee.

Hoffman is Duke University’s record holder in the 400-m hurdles (55.67) and champion in the event during the 2022 ACC Outdoor Meet. She likewise holds the national standard in the 100-m hurdles (13.34), 400-m indoor (53.71) and 600-m indoor (1:30.33).

A medal in the Olympics would certainly be a nice ribbon around her already big year, but it will certainly be a rough mountain to scale with a horde of podium contenders above her that count world champion Femke Bol of the Netherlands, Jamaica’s Rushell Clayton and American Shamier Little, among others.



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“For now, I’m gonna celebrate this achievement. All season long I’ll be celebrating small wins, big wins and everything in between,’’ said Hoffman.

Nambatac deal signals TNT transition to young core


Rey Nambatac makes his debut for Blackwater Bossing in the PBA Philippine Cup.–PBA IMAGES

The recent acquisition of Rey Nambatac is seen more as a move to help TNT return to its perch as one of the PBA’s perennial contenders.

But Nambatac’s entry to the Tropang Giga camp from the Blackwater Bossing should also continue the transition to a younger core that would ease the responsibilities of those who brought the franchise to multiple championships.

“That’s the plan really,” TNT team manager Jojo Lastimosa told the Inquirer after the Nambatac deal was given a go-signal by the league last Tuesday.

Getting Nambatac meant that TNT had to give up role player Kib Montalbo, big man Jewel Ponferada and a second round pick in the PBA’s 53rd season Rookie Draft which would likely be held in 2028.

Nambatac’s lone conference with Blackwater resulted in averages of 11.1 points on 35-percent shooting with 2.8 rebounds, 4.4 assists and 1.0 steals in 11 games during the Philippine Cup, showing why he can still produce after his minutes dwindled in his first PBA team Rain or Shine.

He put up 27 in his Bossing debut last February against the Meralco Bolts, and had five games of scoring at least 10 points the rest of the way. His offense at the backcourt position could benefit the Tropang Giga.

And it could also lessen the load carried by longtime guard Jayson Castro, who averaged 12.4 points after playing all 14 games in the Philippine Cup. But TNT knows the 38-year-old Castro needs all the help he can get.

“We don’t have much time for our vets, and we need to transition into younger players,” said Lastimosa.

That transition has been somewhat felt during the recent two-conference season which saw TNT failing to reach the semifinals in both the Commissioner’s Cup and Philippine Cup.

Calvin Oftana has emerged as the Tropang Giga’s go-to-guy on offense, with RR Pogoy, who missed a portion of the Commissioner’s Cup after dealing with a heart ailment, producing numbers as well.

Kelly Williams has taken a bigger responsibility, and has been efficient despite being 42, but TNT missed serviceable frontcourt players due to injuries in Poy Erram and Brandon Ganuelas-Rosser, who was traded from NLEX before the Philippine Cup started.



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De Brito seeks cooperation to solve longtime national team problem


Thi Bich Tuyen Nguyen (No. 10) led Vietnam against the Philippines. —AUGUST DELA CRUZ

Alas Pilipinas coach Jorge Souza De Brito thinks that the way forward for women’s volleyball is for the national program to eliminate a longstanding problem.

“What we really have to do is this training camp in Japan will help us but also we need to have our players more time together to work so we can add something in the system that would be applicable,” De Brito said after the national team dropped a 25-14, 25-22, 25-21 decision on Friday to Southeast Asian (SEA) powerhouse Vietnam in the FIVB Women’s Volleyball Challenger Cup at Ninoy Aquino Stadium.

Alas Pilipinas will have a two-week training camp in Japan starting on July 14 before the team faces SEA Games rivals in the SEA V.League in August.

“Hopefully, we can keep these players since we have 14 days in Japan to practice. We’ll be better, you can make some changes, chemistry will be better because every single day we’ll train together two times a day.”

National team skipper Jia De Guzman also believes in the improvement that can be gained from keeping the national pool core intact.

“We’re going against teams which already grew old with their national teams so for us, our goal is to also grow old together in the national team,” the crafty setter said.

“That’s how longevity [happens], that’s how you build chemistry, that’s how you build a strong team in the long run,” the seasoned playmaker added after Alas finished seventh in the eight-team tourney, just above Argentina.

Keeping players together for continuity has been a problem for high-profile national programs like basketball and volleyball, especially with talents signed to professional clubs or school teams.

From De Brito’s current team alone, standouts Eya Laure and Jen Nierva were not allowed by their PVL club, Chery Tiggo, to join national team practices.

What De Brito hopes is that there will be some sort of agreement that will allow the national pool members to continuously train with the program without interruptions.

“We need the support from the fans, clubs, companies, UAAP board, PVL board and team owners,” he said. “All of us are part of the Philippine environment so we need to work together. We’re not gonna win, we’re not get better without the support.”

“We can’t expect that after one loss, one adversity, we need to switch it up immediately. [We need] to keep the same people, add new people, reinforce the team,” De Guzman said. “That’s how you make a team strong. So hopefully, that’s really what we will achieve.”

Gateway to VNL

Vietnam, led by Thi Bich Tuyen Nguyen’s 30-point explosion, asserted its mastery of the Philippines to reach the semifinals of the tournament that serves as a gateway to the country-hopping Volleyball Nations League (VNL).

The winner of the Challenger Cup earns a spot to next year’s VNL circuit.

After the loss, De Brito said that while the program is gearing for the 2025 SEA Games, his main focus is to develop the current pool and add more players to it.

“It’s [still] far [ahead] to think about but there’s still time to work [with these players],” De Brito said of the SEA Games. “We have one and a half years to do that. Enough time, if we’re supported by the clubs and the schools, then we can do it.” the Brazilian coach told reporters.

De Brito admitted that Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia are still the top three squads in the region. That’s why he seeks to make the most of the longer preparation time with the new breed of national players.



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“It’s always a challenge for us but we’re trying to improve also. What we have to do is play hard and hard and minimize the distance between the No. 4 to No. 3 and then be able to beat them. It’s not a long way but it’s hard. Every step is really hard,” he said.

Gilas ends Olympic bid, but not after showcasing elite program


Dwight Ramos (with ball) rues loss to Brazil, but lauds the national program’s progress. —FIBA.BASKETBALL

There will be chock-full of stories and thought pieces on Gilas Pilipinas’ run in the Fiba Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Latvia.

The Filipinos ended their stint—and their bid to make it to the Paris Olympics—after a 71-60 loss on Saturday to Brazil in the capital city of Riga.

“I don’t know what to say. It’s funny we didn’t expect to be here but then when we got here we’d expect to win. So it’s painful that we didn’t especially having that halftime lead,” national coach Tim Cone said after the game.

READ: Gilas’ Olympic dream ends, bows out of Fiba OQT with loss to Brazil

His players, however, know they earned something from the arduous journey.

Take Kai Sotto, for example.

“I think the basketball world doesn’t give the Philippines much respect,” the 7-foot-3 big man said in an interview with the Olympic Channel.

“I think that’s our job to prove to the world [so] that teams got to respect us more,” he added.

The Philippines wowed global basketball with an 89-80 upset of World No. 6 Latvia and went on to prove that such a triumph was no fluke taking a narrow 96-94 loss to No. 23-ranked Georgia just 18 hours later.

HIGHLIGHTS: Gilas Pilipinas vs Brazil Fiba OQT semifinals July 6

“Now we know we could compete and we know we could play with European guys,” Cone said in an earlier television interview. “It’s just a matter of putting a really good game together.”

They almost did that, this time against a South American superpower ranked 12th in the world.

The Philippines took control of the first half and were up six at the break, before the Brazilians asserted themselves at the start of the third quarter to pull away.

“Them (Brazilians) going on a, what, 12-0 or 14-0 run on us to start the third quarter, was painful to watch. But there’s a reason Brazil’s 12th-ranked in the world and they proved that tonight,” Cone said.

READ: Gilas win over Latvia puts spotlight on Tim Cone’s triangle offense

It was actually an 18-0 run by the South Americans that had the Filipinos’ hopes of an Olympic stint caving in.

“[I]t just takes one night. You don’t show up and you lose. [S]o today we just didn’t play our best and Brazil just beat us,” said guard Dwight Ramos, a Gilas program fixture who finished with 13 points.

But it was also Ramos who earlier gave the Olympic Channel a perspective of what the team was able to do in Latvia.



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“[W]e’re finally making strides, hanging tough with the teams, and beating teams we shouldn’t,” he said. “I think it’s a great feeling, and the progress we’ve been making over the years—I’m glad to be a part of it from the beginning.”

Gov’t must invest and focus on ‘sports economy’, say lawmakers


FILE–The Philippine national team had a four-medal haul in the 2023 Asian Games with pole vault star EJ Obiena and jiujitsu women’s stars Meggie Ochoa and Annie Ramirez leading the way.

Representatives Alfred Delos Santos and Joel Chua push for strengthening “sports economy,” urging different government sectors to support Filipino athletes through various programs and policies.

The two congressmen said that recognizing the sports sector as a sports economy will allow major investments from the private sector and government to pour in to elevate the Philippines’ ranking in the international sports scene like the Olympics.

“Looking to the future, I call for recognition and intensive focus on the sports economy so that sports will be among the same category of national development priorities as agriculture, services, manufacturing, infrastructure, and information technology,” said deputy minority leader Alfred Delos Santos in a statement.

READ: Paris Olympics-bound athletes are ready and equipped, says PSC chief

“By treating the sports sector as a sports economy, the government and private sector can pour into it the massive investments needed to elevate the Philippines to a sports powerhouse in Asia and the world. Only with massive investments can we sustainably level up our medal harvests in the Olympics, world championships, and regional competitions,” Ang Probinsyano Partylist solon Joel Chua expressed.

While donations and sponsorships pour in for Filipino athletes, the lawmakers said that these are “not enough and short term, and not sustainable.”

READ: How Atletang Ayala supports Olympic hopefuls

While Filipino athletes are preparing for the Paris Olympics, Chua called on the National Economic Development Authority (NEDA) to include sports in the trade and investment chapter.

“To the NEDA, I appeal that they recognize, promote, and support the Sports Economy. The Philippine Development Plan mentions sports only five times in its human resource chapter, and none of those five times are about sports as human capital, investment, or economic activities. In the trade and investment chapter, there is zero mention of sports as an economic or investment sector,” he said.

The Ang Probinsyano Partylist solon also urged the Board of Investment on the creation of a local industry that will massively produce high quality equipment for the sports sector. He also nudged the Department of Finance to craft policies “that promote investments in sports as human capital” to further invite companies engaged with sports to register in the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Chua further stated that major investment in sports will extra boost the efforts of the sports community in the country.

READ: Track stars could up number of PH bets in Paris to 23

“I commend the ongoing efforts of Gilas Pilipinas, the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas, the Philippine Olympic Committee, and all the other sports groups. They are doing the unenviable and herculean tasks needed in Philippine sports. Their plans and programs need the super boost and upsizing that only massive investments can produce.”

The Philippines could have as many as 23 athletes competing at the Paris Olympics set from July 26 to August with hurdlers John Cabang and Lauren Hoffman and sprinter Kristina Knott just awaiting confirmation of inclusion.

Gilas Pilipinas is also looking to book a trip to the Paris Games via the Fiba Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Riga, Latvia. Gilas is two wins away from an Olympic berth, facing Brazil later at 8:30 p.m. for a spot in the OQT final.



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READ: Gilas faces Brazil with Paris Olympics just two wins away


For the complete collegiate sports coverage including scores, schedules and stories, visit Inquirer Varsity.

Now we know we can compete


Coach Tim Cone and Gilas Pilipinas ends its Fiba OQT campaign with their heads held high despite falling short of advancing to the final. –FIBA PHOTO

Still reeling from Gilas Pilipinas’ loss to Brazil that ended the Nationals’ bid to make the Paris Olympics, national coach Tim Cone on Saturday said there is still something pleasant to take away from the campaign.

“It’s hard to talk about this after you lose but it’s a growth experience for us,” Cone said on the heels of a 71-60 defeat at the hands of the World No. 12 Brazil in the semifinal of the Fiba Olympic Qualifying Tournament (OQT) in Arena Riga.

“It’s, kinda like a ‘now we know’ moment, ‘Now we know we can compete. So now, how [do] we get that next step in so we can get a little better—and not just compete, but win?”

HIGHLIGHTS: Gilas Pilipinas vs Brazil Fiba OQT semifinals July 6

Like many in the Gilas Pilipinas’ quarters, Cone believes that the Riga campaign replenished the program’s belief in itself.

In just the past week, the Philippines toppled World No. 6 Latvia on its home turf and less than 24 hours after that threatened a tall, No. 23-ranked Georgian team that was fighting for life.

Gilas Pilipinas Fiba OQT run Paris Olympics Brazil in the semifinals Tim Cone

Gilas Pilipinas ends it Fiba OQT run and dreams of making it to the Paris Olympics with a loss to Brazil in the semifinals. –FIBA PHOTO

More than the tactical lessons, it’s the confidence manufactured off those games that will spur Gilas Pilipinasas it turns its sights on the next dream in Qatar where the next Fiba World Cup will be played and berths to the Los Angeles Olympics will be dangled.

“Playing this kind of tournament, where you’re playing 3 games in 4 days, it just gets harder and harder every game. These are things that we’ll need to adjust to,” Cone said.

READ: Gilas win over Latvia puts spotlight on Tim Cone’s triangle offense

“We didn’t expect to be here but once we’re here, we expected to win. It’s an incredible disappointment for us and we’re not going to jump up and down and say, ‘Yay, we did our thing and everybody was proud of us.’ Hopefully, that doesn’t get into our mindset,” he added.

“We need to keep pushing and moving forward, getting better.”



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