Puerto Rico reaches final for first time


Puerto Rico celebrates after beating Belgium in the semifinals of the FIVB Volleyball Challenger Cup.-MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

MANILA, Philippines — Puerto Rico finally earned a shot at the gold of the FIVB Women’s Volleyball Challenger Cup (VCC) after sweeping Belgium, 25-19, 25-15, 25-16, in the knockout semifinal on Saturday at Ninoy Aquino Stadium,

After settling for bronze in 2018 and 2022, the new breed of Puerto Ricans made their first VCC final, inching a win closer to its maiden Volleyball Nations League appearance next year as they take on the winner of the Czechia-Vietnam semis game later on the day.

Paola Santiago and Grace Lopez carried the cudgels of Puerto Rico with 11 and 10 points, respectively, to pounce on the undermanned Belgium, which missed stars Britt Herbots and Silke Van Avermaet.

READ: FIVB Challenger Cup: Puerto Rico ousts Kenya, advances to semis

“It feels great. We’ve been working all summer for this and now we’re prepared for tomorrow that’s the final,” said the 18-year-old Lopez, who has been sensational in the VCC Manila ahead of their final game on Sunday at 6:30 p.m.

Lopez, who had nine digs, believed their floor defense, service, and attack as they outplayed the Belgians with a 41-26 spiking disparity were the key to their success.

“We were locked in since the beginning. We had good serves, good defense, good attacks, and I think that’s what made us get the win,” she said.

Stephanie Rivera chipped in seven points and 11 digs, while setter Wilmarie Rivera had 15 excellent sets and 17 digs on top of two points.

No one from Belgium scored in double figures with Pauline Martin leading the way with nine points as they committed a total of 28 errors.

Belgium eyes a bronze medal against the loser of the other semis pairing.



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De Brito says Alas has ‘enough time’ in bid for SEA Games podium


Alas Pilipinas in a huddle during the FIVB Volleyball Challenger Cup.-MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

MANILA, Philippines — After facing powerhouse Vietnam in the FIVB Women’s Volleyball Challenger Cup, Alas Pilipinas coach Jorge Souza De Brito is not looking too far ahead in their medal quest in next year’s Southeast Asian Games in Thailand.

Vietnam, led by Thi Bich Tuyen Nguyen’s 30-point explosion, asserted its mastery of the Philippines,  25-14, 25-22, 25-21, on Friday at Ninoy Aquino Stadium to advance to the Challenger Cup semifinal and move two wins away from qualifying to next year’s Volleyball Nations League.

Losing to the region’s powerhouse anew, De Brito is not yet gauging Alas’ chances of ending a 20-year medal drought in the biennial meet next year as he focuses on developing the pool he has, hoping to add more players and keep the program intact for the 2025 SEA Games.

READ: Jia De Guzman stresses on continuity for Alas Pilipinas

“It’s far to think but there’s still time to work [with these players]. 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.

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

De Brito admitted 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. 

“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.

Despite a one-and-done Challenger Cup stint, De Brito was still pleased with the performance of his team after Vietnam fielded Trần Thị Thanh Thúy in her first game since her injury to stave off Alas’ gallant stand in the last two sets.

READ: Alas Pilipinas loses to Vietnam, bows out of FIVB Challenger Cup

“When you see your opponent putting their best player to play, it means that you’re going up that’s what I told my players inside, we did a good job that they have to put their first six to play against us,” De Brito said.

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

The Brazilian coach, who steered the Philippines with an AVC Challenge Cup bronze medal last May, hopes to have this training pool and add more players for the program’s continuity.



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“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. It’s a step-by-step process,” he said. 

“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. It’s good, much better.”

Brazil braces for ‘highly technical’ Gilas in Fiba OQT semifinals


Coach Aleksandar Petrovic and Brazil face Gilas Pilipinas in the Fiba OQT semifinals in Riga, Latvia. –FIBA PHOTO

MANILA, Philippines–Brazil knows the caliber of the Gilas Pilipinas team that stands in the way of its goal to qualify for the Paris Olympics.

Brazil and the Philippines square off in the semifinals of the Fiba Olympic Qualifying Tournament (OQT) in Riga, the penultimate roadblock to securing one of the remaining spots for the Paris Summer Games.

Game time is at 8:30 pm with a victory sending either team into the Fiba OQT Final against either Latvia or Cameroon.

SCHEDULE: Gilas Pilipinas at Fiba OQT semifinals 2024

Coach Aleksandar Petrovic characterized fellow coach Tim Cone and the Filipinos, who have so far surprised the tournament–and themselves, as a “highly technical” team and he knows his team will have its hands full trying to contain them.

“The Philippines is a completely different team to [Cameroon]. It’s a highly technical team with excellent players who play one-on-one, four or five of them play more than 33 minutes,” said Petrovic after Brazil lost to Cameroon early Friday but still wound up as the top team in Group B.

Gilas Pilipinas tim cone latvia Philippines Fiba OQT schedule

Gilas Pilipinas coach Tim Cone during a Fiba OQT Riga game against world No. 6 Latvia. –FIBA BASKETBALL

Gilas Pilipinas will lean on its trusty hero Justin Brownlee against the world No. 12, while the Brazilians tout several NBA talents led by their main man Bruno Caboclo.

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

But the lack of winning history and the disparity in the world rankings shouldn’t faze Brownlee and Gilas Pilipinas, who have shown they have what it takes to beat higher-ranked teams after upsetting world No. 6 Latvia and eliminating No. 23 Georgia just a few days ago.

The Philippines has never beaten Brazil in any of their meetings in the 20th century between the 1950s to the 1970s. The last time these two teams faced off was in the semifinals of the 1978 World Championship for Men.

Saturday’s game will be an entirely different story for both sides.

“We are two games away from our dream so we need to forget who is not anymore with us. We need to find our energy, we need to find a way how to beat Philippines,” said Petrovic.



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Jia De Guzman stresses on continuity for Alas Pilipinas


Jia De Guzman and Alas Pilipinas during a game against Vietnam in the FIVB Challenger Cup in Manila.–MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

MANILA, Philippines — Jia De Guzman emphasized the value of continuity for the Alas Pilipinas’ program after Vietnam reasserted its mastery of the Philippine squad in the FIVB Women’s Volleyball Challenger Cup.

The new breed of national players couldn’t stop Vietnam as it ended the host’s world stint in just one game with a 25-14, 25-22, 25-21 win on Friday at Ninoy Aquino Stadium.

Losing eight in their last eight meetings just showed how the Vietnamese built a formidable team through its continuity and the commitment of its national team members. 

READ: Vietnam star T4 all praises for Jia De Guzman, Alas Pilipinas

And for De Guzman,  it’s what Alas needs to reach greater heights and match the level of Vietnam and other Southeast Asian rivals.

“We’re going against the teams who grew up together inside the national team. That’s also our goal, to grow old together in the national team. That’s how you build longevity, that’s how you build chemistry, that’s how you build a strong team, in the long run,” said the Alas team captain in Filipino. “We can’t expect that one loss or one adversity would lead to changes. Keep the same people, add new people, and reinforce the team. That’s how you make a team strong. Hopefully, we will be able to do that.”

Ahead of their road to the Volleyball Nations League qualifiers, the Philippine National Volleyball Federation added Alyssa Solomon, Bella Belen, Jema Galanza, and Tots Carlos. But only Galanza and Belen joined the squad with Solomon still recovering, while Carlos was ruled out of the tournament.

The Philippines put up a gallant stand against the SEA Games silver medalist and AVC Challenge Cup champion Vietnam but it wasn’t enough to extend its Challenger Cup campaign to the semifinal as the eight-time PVL Best Setter stressed the point of improvements for their squad.

“We still have a lot to improve individually and as a team. Coach has always told us many times to be patient with ourselves and with the team. With Vietnam and more experienced teams, we’ll go through this. It’s just they really stuck together all throughout these years so that’s what we need to do,” she said. 

READ: Alas Pilipinas loses to Vietnam, bows out of FIVB Challenger Cup

De Guzman, who led Alas to a historic bronze in the AVC Challenge Cup last May, remained proud of her team for standing their ground against the SEA powerhouse, led by Thi Bich Tuyen Nguyen’s 30-point explosion.

“I’m very proud of the girls because they fought for every point, and until the end. We gave our best and In terms of experience, we still lack but we know that eventually, we will reach that level,” said the Creamline Cool Smasher, who played in Japan V.League with the Denso AiryBees. “We have to take all the learnings from every game, win or lose.” 

“Everyone’s really communicating and adjusting in-game. So you can see the improvement in our chemistry. All we have to do is retain the team, keep playing together, and hopefully, next time we face Vietnam, we’ll play better.”



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De Guzman and the Filipino Spikers fly to Japan next week for a training camp before seeing action in the SEA V.League in August.

“In the SEA V.League, we will face the teams from SEA Games.  After today’s game, we go back to the drawing board, we go back to training, improve what we can from this game, individually and as a team,” she said.

Franz Wagner sign largest contract in Orlando Magic history


Orlando Magic forward Franz Wagner (22) makes a move against Cleveland Cavaliers guard Darius Garland, right, during the first half of Game 4 of an NBA basketball first-round playoff series, Saturday, April 27, 2024, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux)

Franz Wagner has agreed to the largest contract in Orlando Magic history, a five-year extension that will be worth at least $224 million, a person with knowledge of the negotiations told The Associated Press on Friday.

The contract value could reach $270 million if he becomes supermax eligible, said the person who spoke on condition of anonymity because the agreement cannot yet be announced.

The NBA offseason moratorium on such moves gets lifted Saturday.

READ: NBA: Jonathan Isaac agrees to $84 million deal with Magic

Wagner has averaged 17.8 points in his three seasons with the Magic. He averaged 15.2 points as a rookie before climbing to 18.6 and 19.7 over the last two seasons, respectively.

The 22-year-old forward who helped Germany win the World Cup last summer and is slated to play at the Paris Olympics starting later this month has teamed with Paolo Banchero to give the Magic one of the league’s top young frontcourts.

Wagner, who played at Michigan, has started all 231 of his appearances with the Magic, a team coming off a Southeast Division title and the franchise’s first playoff berth in four years. Orlando pushed Cleveland to a seven-game series before losing in the first round.

Wagner’s extension begins with the 2025-26 season.



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Team USA arrives for camp in Las Vegas ahead of Paris Olympics


FILE–Team USA head coach Steve Kerr, left, talks to his assistant coaches Erik Spoelstra and Tyronn Lue during the Fiba World Cup in Manila. Team USA is back together again, this time eyeing a fifth consecutive gold medal at the Paris Olympics later this month.–MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

LAS VEGAS — There’s something that Kobe Bryant once said that has stuck with U.S. men’s Olympic basketball coach Steve Kerr and seems especially important now.

It was about how other nations have made big strides in basketball, how the gap between the rest of the world and the U.S. is closing and how that’s been a great thing for the NBA. And Bryant’s response, paraphrased, was basically, “so what?”

His point: If everyone else is getting better, then the U.S. better find ways to do the same.

READ: LeBron, Steph Curry ‘excited’ to join forces for Paris Olympics

“Maybe we’ll show that one to the guys,” Kerr said. “I love that. And it has to be our attitude this summer.”

After months of planning, it’s time for the U.S. Olympic team — one that will go to the Paris Games later this month seeking a fifth consecutive gold medal — to take the floor. The first practice for the squad is Saturday, the start of a four-day training camp before its exhibition opener against Canada on Wednesday.

Players began arriving Thursday in Las Vegas; Stephen Curry was the first to check in for camp, perhaps underscoring how anxious he is for what will be his first Olympics. The 12 players have all known each other for years, but the task of becoming a team starts in earnest Saturday.

“I feel like it starts when it gets there, because that’s when you really see each other eye-to-eye,” said Bam Adebayo, who is seeking his second gold medal after winning one at the Tokyo Games three years ago. “You have those conversations, you have those many conversations within what we’re going through, what we’re trying to do. And that’s when it’s time to really be honest about what we want to do.”

That part is easy: Win gold.

The how-to-do-it part, that’s the key.

Last year brought another humbling World Cup experience for the U.S.; after finishing seventh in 2019, the Americans were fourth at Manila. But the argument — or justification, for lack of a better word — for those stumbles was that the U.S. wasn’t sending the best possible roster to those tournaments. Getting the big names like Kevin Durant and LeBron James for the Olympics, that’s one thing. Getting them for the World Cup and asking them to represent their country in back-to-back summers, that’s something else.

Tyrese Haliburton and Anthony Edwards were on that World Cup team last summer and were picked for this Olympic team as well.

“Obviously, last year we didn’t do what we wanted to do,” Haliburton said. “And that was frustrating because any time you get to represent USA Basketball, the expectation is to win. And we weren’t able to do that.”

READ: Wembanyama ‘can’t wait’ for France-USA showdown at Paris Olympics

This team was put together with a very different ending in mind. James is back on the Olympic team for the first time since 2012 and seeking a third gold, Durant is going for what would be a men’s Olympic record fourth basketball gold, and five other players — Adebayo, Devin Booker, Jrue Holiday, Jayson Tatum and Anthony Davis — each have one. The first-time Olympians are Haliburton, Edwards, Curry, Kawhi Leonard and Joel Embiid, someone who the U.S. convinced to play despite a strong push by France for the Philadelphia star to represent the host nation in Paris.

As far as choosing a starting lineup, good luck.

“It’s a good problem to have,” Kerr said. “I’m guessing that all 12 players on this roster will be in the Hall of Fame someday. So, how do you pick five out of 12? The idea is, you find combinations that click, and you find two-way lineups that can be effective at both ends. Our big job in Las Vegas is to find five-man combinations that fit and to just ask all 12 guys to fully commit to the goal of winning a gold medal no matter what it looks like, no matter who’s playing.”



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The Americans play their first exhibition against Canada in Las Vegas, then have games at Abu Dhabi (against Australia and Serbia) and London (against South Sudan and Germany) before the Paris Games start. The U.S. opens Olympic play July 28 against Serbia and will also have group games against South Sudan and the winner of Sunday’s qualifier in Puerto Rico — either Mexico, Lithuania, Italy or Puerto Rico.

“We’ve got 39 days or so to get locked in to go get this gold medal, 12 amazing, talented guys ready to come together for one goal,” Curry said when he arrived to check in for camp. “I’m hyped for it all.”

Luka’s Slovenia, Giannis’ Greece meet in KO duel


FILE–Slovenia’s Luka Doncic #77 of the Dallas Mavericks and Greece’s Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks embrace after the game at American Airlines Center on February 03, 2024 in Dallas, Texas. The two international superstars meet again, this time in the Fiba Olympic Qualifying Tournament. Sam Hodde/Getty Images/AFP

Luka Doncic and Giannis Antetokounmpo have faced off nine times in their NBA careers, and those games have never disappointed.

They go head-to-head again Saturday — but like never before.

Doncic and Slovenia will play Antetokounmpo and Greece in one of the eight semifinal games of the Olympic qualifying tournaments that are taking place to determine the last four berths in the men’s basketball field for the Paris Games. The game in Piraeus, Greece, is the first time the two megastars will face one another while representing their senior national teams.

READ: Fiba OQT: Doncic, Antetokounmpo shoot for last shot at Paris Olympics

“We’re looking forward to this,” Slovenia coach Aleksander Sekulic said.

The last time Doncic and Antetokounmpo played head-to-head was Feb. 3, when Antetokounmpo scored 48 points for Milwaukee, Doncic finished with 40 for Dallas, and the Bucks prevailed 129-117.

It was the seventh consecutive time in a Luka vs. Giannis matchup that both played and finished with at least 27 points. Antetokounmpo has scored at least 28 in all nine of his outings against Dallas when Doncic plays.

“Both teams have the same goal,” Sekulic said. “Of course, the home team is the favorite. But I think we can also go into this game knowing we have chances to win. As I always say, you’ve got to show it on the court.”

The game is also a chance for Doncic to play against a team coached by one of his heroes. He has called Greece coach Vasilis Spanoulis one of his idols; Doncic wears jersey No. 77 now because Spanoulis wore No. 7 as a player.

READ: Wembanyama steals show for France in Paris Olympics warmup

“He just showed a lot of players how to play basketball,” Doncic said.

The winner of the Greece-Slovenia game takes on either Croatia or the Dominican Republic in Sunday’s tournament final, with the Paris Olympics berth going to the winner.

A look at the other semifinal matchups, broken down by site:

Riga, Latvia

The matchups: Latvia vs. Cameroon, Brazil vs. Philippines.

Outlook: All six teams in the Latvia qualifier went 1-1 in group play. Montenegro and Georgia were eliminated before the semifinals because of the point differential tiebreaker. Brazil last made the Olympics in 2016, the Philippines last made it in 1972, Latvia’s last appearance was 1936, and Cameroon has never reached the Olympic stage in men’s basketball.

Quotable: “We’re very process-driven. You know, we want to just stay on what’s right in front of us. We don’t want to look at the end game and think, ‘Wow, what happens if we can make it to Paris?’ Obviously, the country would go bonkers. They would go absolutely crazy. But you know, that’s a long way away.” — Philippines coach Tim Cone.

Valencia, Spain

The matchups: Spain vs. Finland, Bahamas vs. Lebanon.

Outlook: Spain and Bahamas went 2-0 in group play and would seem favored to advance to Sunday. Spain is seeking a seventh consecutive Olympic berth. Finland hasn’t gotten there since 1964, while Lebanon and the Bahamas have never qualified. But the Bahamas — with NBA players Deandre Ayton, Buddy Hield and Eric Gordon leading the way — has easily its best shot.

Quotable: “The chance to play in an Olympics would be a dream come true.” — Hield.

San Juan, Puerto Rico

The matchups: Puerto Rico vs. Mexico, Italy vs. Lithuania.

Outlook: These four nations have a combined 34 past Olympic appearances, and this one might be the most unpredictable bracket left. Puerto Rico hasn’t qualified since 2004 and the home-court edge could be the deciding factor; seven of its last eight games with Mexico have been decided by 10 points or less. Italy and Lithuania haven’t met at the senior national level since 2019.



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Quotable: “We’ve had a rivalry for a lot of years and we have to know this team of Mexico maybe doesn’t have the big names, but they have warriors.” — Puerto Rico coach Nelson Colon.

Courageous Alas Pilipinas runs smack into brick Vietnam wall to bow out


Sisi Rondina leads Alas Pilipinas in scoring in the loss. –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

Alas Pilipinas gave it a gallant go on Friday night but still fell to powerhouse and world No. 34 Vietnam, 25-14, 25-22, 25-21, to bow out of contention after just one game in the FIVB Challenger Cup at Ninoy Aquino Stadium.

Thi Bich Tuyen Nguyen demolished the Philippine defense and came away with 30 points, all but three of them on attacks as the Vietnamese closed the doors on the Filipinos while advancing to another knockout game opposite the Czech Republic slated Saturday.

Sisi Rondina had 15 points, Angel Canino contributed 12 and the Filipinos played their hearts out defensively but still couldn’t solve the Vietnamese puzzle. Vietnam, the recent AVC Challenge Cup champion where Alas finished an all-time best third place, has beaten the Philippines in all of their matches for the last three years running.

“During a huddle, Jia (de Guzman) told us to not think of anything else and just show what we can do,” Rondina said in Filipino as the squad bowed out with its head held high. “Even if we fell short, our fight was still there and we gave it our best until the end.”

Still a good fight

The 24-year-old Nguyen was a one-woman wrecking machine that the Filipinos had no answer to as she drilled the cross court kill that put the Vietnamese at match point.

Still, it was a good fight that the Philippines put up, as it even led by a point late in the third set with De Guzman orchestrating the offense well and Fifi Sharma and Thea Gagate manning the net with some authority.

The loss ended Alas Pilipinas’ bid to qualify for the Volleyball Nations League next year, even as the Czechs will have a chance to keep on playing after scoring a 25-15, 25-22, 25-16 win over Argentina in the first game.

Belgium and Puerto Rico will battle it out in the other semifinal pairing after sweeping their respective opponents on opening day.

Canino looks at the loss in a different way.

“Like what I always say, we really didn’t lose,” said Canino, the AVC Challenge Cup Best opposite spiker. “We won’t be going home defeated because we always learn something, especially now that we fought Vietnam [hard].

“So we feel like we know where we are at and what else we can improve on as a team.”

Alas’ next tournament will be the Southeast Asia V.League in August where it would be looking to bounce back.



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“We really wanted [to continue playing in the next few days] because we were given time to prepare even though it was [still] short,” Canino added. “You may not see it, but the dedication of everyone was there so we really wanted to play in this tournament longer.”

Thompson bids farewell to Warriors after exit


Klay Thompson #11 of the Golden State Warriors reacts after missing a shot against the Sacramento Kings in the second half during the Play-In Tournament at Golden 1 Center on April 16, 2024, in Sacramento, California. (Photo by EZRA SHAW / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

SAN FRANCISCO, United States — Klay Thompson paid tribute to his former Golden State Warriors teammates on Friday, July 5, in a heartfelt farewell to the club.

Thompson, 34, left Golden State this week in free agency after spending the entirety of his 13-season NBA career with the team.

A key part of Golden State’s championship-winning seasons in 2015, 2017, 2018, and 2022, Thompson is reportedly set to join the Dallas Mavericks next season.

Thompson, widely regarded as one of the greatest shooters in basketball history, said in a message on Instagram that he had been “honored” to play for the franchise.

READ: Klay Thompson is leaving the Warriors

“There are not enough words and images to convey how I really feel about y’all,” Thompson wrote. “From the bottom of my heart, thank you so much for the best times of my life.

“I really just wanted to be the best I could be and help bring as many championships as possible to the region.

READ: NBA: Klay Thompson wants to decompress before free agency

“The best part was not the rings though, it was the friendships I made that will last a lifetime.

“My family and I would like to thank all of the amazing people who work tirelessly to make the @warriors organization world-class.

“Don’t be sad it’s over, be happy it happened. Until we meet again. Sea captain out,” Thompson concluded, signing off with the affectionate nickname acquired due to his habit of commuting to Warriors home games at their waterfront arena on his personal pleasure boat.



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With second pick, Bossing looking to bolster PG spot


RJ Abarrientos during an open training with the Jones Cup bound Strong Group Athletics team. -SGA PHOTO

Blackwater, which recently traded Rey Nambatac to TNT, is looking to use the PBA Rookie Draft as an avenue to get someone to replace the southpaw guard.

“We are definitely looking into improving our team in the point guard position,” coach Jeff Cariaso told the Inquirer on Friday after the league officially released a list of 70 players initially qualified for the proceedings set July 14 at Glorietta in Makati City.

The Bossing will select after the Converge FiberXers, who own the top overall pick by virtue of having the lowest combined finish during the 2023-24 season that had just two conferences.

Converge had said that the process of selecting the player it feels as the one who could turn the franchise around would be a difficult one after a number of talented prospects were able to beat Thursday’s deadline.

Among the last-minute applicants was Ateneo product Kai Ballungay, joining a cast of notable draftees like Justine Baltazar, Sedrick Barefield, Dave Ildefonso, RJ Abarrientos and Caelan Tiongson.

Last Tuesday saw the Bossing deal Nambatac to the TNT Tropang Giga in exchange for Kib Montalbo, Jewel Ponferada and a future draft pick, ending a short stint for the ex-Rain or Shine mainstay who played for them only in the Philippine Cup.

Nambatac was acquired from the Elasto Painters last February.

The team’s needs

If Blackwater’s needs are asked, the prospect of having Abarrientos or Barefield—if Converge passes on either or both—is enticing. But there’s also the other thought of picking the best available talent.

“We are happy to see there are options to select from, so we’ll continue to do our homework on these guys while we look forward to the PBA combine,” said Cariaso.

The combine is set July 10 and 11 at Ynares Sports Arena in Pasig City, a two-day event required of all draftees, barring any valid excuses.

The list is significantly lower from a field of 128 that entered the draft last year, with 79 of them getting selected.

Terrafirma selects third followed by Phoenix, NorthPort, NLEX, Rain or Shine (back-to-back picks), Magnolia, Barangay Ginebra, Meralco and San Miguel Beer.

Most of the draftees are coming from the UAAP and NCAA while 19 Fil-foreigners also placed their names in the pool.



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Under league rules, players considered Fil-foreigners only need to submit a Philippine passport to be considered eligible.