Originally posted by greenarcher
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PBA 48th season
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Just look at the rosters in the preseason games. So many players who are MPBL level but have made it to PBA teams. Looks like we are having a legit "brain drain" and talent exodus. Its only a matter of time when fans will stop watching altogether. You have 3 loaded teams and the rest are just decoration.
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Great idea, this could expand the PBA's reach outside the country. they should play in Hong Kong as well. Hope that the Gins-Bay Area Dragons rivalry could end up or be bigger than the Manila Classico. (Macau Classico sounds better)
PBA better not screw this up,this is a golden opportunity. plus BAD in the PBA raises the level of competition.
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Originally posted by CoJ View Post
shows you the level of competition for bigs in the PBA (w/o imports). Only Cstan is the viable threat to junmar.
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Originally posted by CoJ View Postgood for the board to realize that they can’t stop players from going abroad
https://www.spin.ph/basketball/pba/p...ibextid=Zxz2cZ
BUT the catch here is that these surplus of talents are really not at par with those who will be / currently playing abroad.
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Originally posted by CoJ View Postgood for the board to realize that they can’t stop players from going abroad
https://www.spin.ph/basketball/pba/p...ibextid=Zxz2cZ
"Zorilla at the same time, pointed out the league has certain rules on eligibility and considers players who finished their collegiate careers, one who already plays pro ball both local and international at a young age, and even the ‘hardship rule’ in which players are allowed to turn pro once he turns 19, are all considered eligible."
Does this mean that any 19-year-old can declare for the draft? The current rule says that 19-year-olds must have had at least two years in college first before being able to declare.
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Originally posted by IPC View Post
I saw this interesting bit.
"Zorilla at the same time, pointed out the league has certain rules on eligibility and considers players who finished their collegiate careers, one who already plays pro ball both local and international at a young age, and even the ‘hardship rule’ in which players are allowed to turn pro once he turns 19, are all considered eligible."
Does this mean that any 19-year-old can declare for the draft? The current rule says that 19-year-olds must have had at least two years in college first before being able to declare.
5-11/12 years old - kinder - grade 6
12-18/19 years old - grades 7-12
18-19 years old and older - college
Another thing to consider is the cutoff age which means that anyone below 5 years old or born before a specific date cannot be enrolled for kinder. It means that some will start their schooling at age 6.
In my opinion to what Atty. Zorilla said, it is highly unlikely for a 19 year old student to complete two years in this current K-12 set-up, unless the child is accelerated because he is super smart which I doubt if he will aspire to become a basketball player. We are talking about what is usual.
A 19 year old student might be a freshman or is currently in his 2nd year which means that he has yet to complete his 2nd year.
I assume that Atty. Zorilla is basing the rule in the old system.Attack
defend
Unite
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Originally posted by CoJ View Postcompetition brings the best out of our bigmen, Imagine Junmar playing against 2 big imports instead of lording over unskilled stiffs like Samigue Eman or a aging Eric Menk. Instead bigs in the league would have no reason to improve since their slots are secured, unlike their wing and guard counterparts.
For starters, the 2nd import slot could be given to a FSA if the league doesnt want OP imports that could humiliate the league. This could also be helpful if we want to file FIBA exemptions (establish residency) esp if the FSA is here prior turning 16
and for those who will get displaced by additional imports, heck the minimum pay of the pba could be matched by mpbl and ligang labas anyway. Plus the East Asian diaspora opens roster spots anyway
I think the consistent presence of strong imports would have had him train differently. He's great even in import conferences, I understand that. But still, I think the focus would be more on touch, skill, and agility. Even if he liked rice, he would still retain agility with the right training program.
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Originally posted by Money View Post
I think the PBA just realized that there is still a surplus of talents here in the PH even though there are players opting to play abroad.
BUT the catch here is that these surplus of talents are really not at par with those who will be / currently playing abroad.
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Originally posted by IPC View Post
I saw this interesting bit.
"Zorilla at the same time, pointed out the league has certain rules on eligibility and considers players who finished their collegiate careers, one who already plays pro ball both local and international at a young age, and even the ‘hardship rule’ in which players are allowed to turn pro once he turns 19, are all considered eligible."
Does this mean that any 19-year-old can declare for the draft? The current rule says that 19-year-olds must have had at least two years in college first before being able to declare.
on the otherhand, players who did not enter/attend/play for college basketball may enter the league at age 22. (the Kai Sotto provision)
link:
The PBA on Saturday announced numerous amendments to its policies, one of which involves the age requirement of possible draft applicants. From 21 years old, the league has decided to lower it to just 19, provided that the athlete has spent several years in college. Deputy Commissioner Eric Castro explained their reasoning behind the change […]
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Originally posted by CoJ View Post
its on the PBA on how they will market these players for them to generate revenue, lets be honest, player development is barely the concern of the PBA anyway
It’s impossible to compete with the B.League and KBL in terms of salary package. Pros will always choose the option with the most money.
We will never run out of hoops talents. If foreign leagues want to sign the Ravenas, Ramoses, Sottos, and Baltazars who are under contract, then the PBA can take advantage of this by allowing contract buyouts to make profit.
This is basically how teams in Europe make money: selling players to richer leagues.
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Originally posted by CoJ View Post
its on the PBA on how they will market these players for them to generate revenue, lets be honest, player development is barely the concern of the PBA anyway
well i think it is Ginebra who is only marketable to the fans. But they only have 15 slots to fill in.
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