Moral wins don’t count for Gilas in OQT buildup


Gilas Pilipinas’ June Mar Fajardo and Justin Brownlee flank as Turkey player during a tune-up game in Istanbul ahead of the Fiba OQT. –TURKEY BASKETBALL FEDERATION

Gilas Pilipinas wasn’t too keen on framing Friday’s valiant stand against Turkiye as a moral victory.

And for good reason.

“We only have one shot at [making] it to the Olympics, and we cannot be satisfied with [a result of] almost winning,” team manager and national assistant coach Richard del Rosario said in a bulletin released by the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas following an 84-73 defeat at the hands of the World No. 24 hosts in Istanbul on Friday.

“While others may see it as a satisfying first game, our team mindset is: Almost is not enough,” he added of the friendly that had the Philippines dropping to 1-1 in its series of preparatory games geared towards the Olympic Qualifying Tournament (OQT) in Riga, Latvia, set July 2.

With just 11 players making the trip, Gilas managed to keep it close with the Turks for most of the contest at Besiktas Akatlar Culture and Sports Complex. But saddled with frosty shooting and fouls, the Nationals eventually kissed their hopes of taking down the Dev Adam side preparing for the EuroBasket.

Justin Brownlee and June Mar Fajardo starred for the Filipinos, with the naturalized ace turning in 21 points and the PBA’s seven-time MVP chipping in 17 points and 11 rebounds.

Young and towering big man Kai Sotto was limited to just seven points, no thanks to fouls that shelved him with three minutes remaining. Fellow cornerstone Dwight Ramos managed to toss in just four points as he focused on playmaking, further highlighting gaps left by the absences of AJ Edu and Scottie Thompson—two mainstays grounded by injuries.

Cold shooting

The Filipinos hit only five triples while the Turks converted 14 of their own, which could very well be a preview of how OQT host Latvia and Georgia would take on Gilas in Group A of the Riga showcase next week.

“We had our first taste of the type of opposition we will be facing in the OQT,” said Del Rosario. “We move on to the next game with a [more firm] belief that we can hold our own against higher-ranked teams with a real chance of reaching our mission of making it to Paris.”

Foes priming up

Gilas’ unsatisfied outlook may be warranted, especially with how the Philippines’ OQT assignments are faring in their respective preparatory matches.

Latvia, the sixth finest squad on the planet, gave its home crowd a preview of how well they could play on both ends with an 84-63 rout of Egypt behind Charlotte Hornet Davis Bertans and now-healthy Arturs Zagars. And they did so without Boston Celtics big man Kristaps Porzingis, who will be out for about six months after going through foot surgery.

The Latvian power forward suffered a “rare” leg injury in Game 2 of the NBA Finals earlier this month and will go under the knife to repair the problem.

“The injury doesn’t allow for consistent play at the level required for Olympic competition. Surgery will be performed in the coming days, and further updates will be provided when available,” the Celtics said.

They may have won in runaway fashion, but national coach Luca Banchi—as if putting opposing nations on notice—feels his squad has so much more to offer.

“It wasn’t our best game, but there were good episodes both for individual players and for the whole team when we found our rhythm,” he said in a report published by the Latvian Basketball Association. “We will try to take the next steps forward in Tampere.”

Georgia may have lost in their last two friendlies, bowing to Italy, 79-68, and then narrowly to Cameroon, 67-66. But a closer look at those defeats shows the Crusaders—especially NBA players Sandro Mamukelashvili and Goga Bitadze—thriving under the system brought by new Serbian coach Aleksandar Dzikic.



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Gilas moves to Poland; Latvia, meanwhile, tackled Finland in Tampere; while Georgia played Egypt on Friday night (both Manila time) for their final tune-up matches. —with a report from AFP

Olympic medalist, golfers hike PH team count to 20


Kayla Noelle Sanchez of the Philippines is seen during the 19th Asian Games Women’s 400m Freestyle Swimming Final held at the Hangzhou Olympic Sports Centre Aquatic Sports Arena in Hangzhou, China. Sanchez finished with a time of 54.69 seconds. (Photo by Luis Veniegra / SOPA Images/Sipa USA)No Use Germany.

Double Olympic medalist Kayla Sanchez will bring more prestige to a Philippine delegation brimming with potential podium finishers like her in the grandest sports showpiece on earth.

Sanchez, a silver and bronze performer in the swimming relay events of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics while carrying the Canadian colors, now represents the Philippines and will showcase her worth in the women’s 100-meter freestyle while Jarod Hatch, bronze medalist in the men’s 50-m butterfly of the Southeast Asian Games last year, likewise made it to the glitzy French capital.

They both qualified through universality with Hatch seeing action in the 100-m butterfly.

“[W]e’re expecting more. We’re chasing history and we’re setting the ante higher,’’ said Philippine Olympic Committee president Abraham “Bambol” Tolentino, whose goal is to surpass or match the nation’s one-gold, two-silver and one-bronze medal output in Tokyo.

The latest batch of Olympic qualifiers brings to 20 the number of Filipinos who will compete in Paris. And while Sanchez represents a foreign ace flying back to represents her roots, the Olympic roster will also feature two Filipinos who were once members of the national team but are now representing other countries.

Golfer Yuka Saso, a two-Major winner who played for the Philippines in the Tokyo Olympics, qualified for Japan this time while fencer Maxine Esteban, a multi-World Cup medalist for the country who was once the highest-rated Filipino in the world rankings, will compete in the French capital representing Ivory Coast.

In Saso’s place, two Filipino golfers will vie for medals in Paris, Bianca Pagdanganan and Dottie Ardina.

The two standouts were part of the names released by the international golf federation as the official qualifiers for women’s golf, along with Saso.

Two-time judo Olympian Kiyomi Watanabe was also added to the Philippine roster after qualifying through the continental quota.

The Filipino-Japanese from Mandaue, Cebu, secured one of the two Asian quotas in the women’s -63-kg division after ranking No. 92 in the world.

Meanwhile, in athletics, at least three to four tracksters could join pole vaulter EJ Obiena in the biggest track and field spectacle in the world. INQ



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