I think if we ask 10 coaches to choose between a 3-week preparation period & a 3-month preparation period, I think 20 coaches would prefer the latter hands down. No coach on his right mind would prefer a shorter preparation period.
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"A king may move a man, a father may claim a son, but that man can also move himself, and only then does that man truly begin his own game. Remember that howsoever you are played or by whom, your soul is in your keeping alone, even though those who presume to play you be kings or men of power, when you stand before God, you cannot say, 'But I was told by others to do thus,' or that virtue was not convenient at the time. This will not suffice." - King Baldwin IV
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Originally posted by JAMSKIE View PostI think if we ask 10 coaches to choose between a 3-week preparation period & a 3-month preparation period, I think 20 coaches would prefer the latter hands down. No coach on his right mind would prefer a shorter preparation period.Philippine Malditas to FIFA Womens World Cup 2023
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Originally posted by JAMSKIE View PostI think if we ask 10 coaches to choose between a 3-week preparation period & a 3-month preparation period, I think 20 coaches would prefer the latter hands down. No coach on his right mind would prefer a shorter preparation period.
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Originally posted by Giannis34GOD View Post
I think that is not the reason, The reason was they are not familiar w/ FIBA rules... They struggled how FIBA officiating back then... Most of those players are not fit also in FIBA style likes of Menk, Helterbrand, Ritualo, Dela CruzTo becomes Asia's Best, we need to compete against the World's Best..
1 Big 4 small > 5 out offense.
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Originally posted by reamily View PostI dont think they struggled, its just that they were already scouted, renren was shootingthrees left and right in some games..If they kept him low profile he wouldve get pressured to perform same with danny seigle..
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Originally posted by Giannis34GOD View Post
Ritualo was only 1 way player, No defense (I would rather picked Yap over him, better defender than him)... Helterbrand is just annoying player, Too much dribbling, If social media was exist back then, He will get bashed from the fans, Same what Kiefer receiving last few years in Gilas, The flow of the game disrupts with him as floor general (I remember what Chino says to him "Sige dribol pa, dribol pa, walang puntos yan")... Dela Cruz was too out position with RP team before, Too slow at SF while too small at PF... Same with Menk.. Danny Siegle was shell of former self, bothered by multiple injuries... Kelly Williams, Asi, Alapag, Caguioa and Raymundo were bright spots of 2007 batch... They should kept them after 2007 onwards, alongside young Norwood that time...
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Originally posted by JAMSKIE View Post
But I think the main reason for most Asian countries (as well as countries in Europe, Americas & Africa) scheduling their pro leagues' off season during the months of June, July, August & September is so that such scheduling would synchronize with that of FIBA. In this way, their respective national teams would be available during the June to September period where most FIBA & other international tourneys are held.
Even the Latin American countries which have tropical climate same as the Philippines schedule their pro leagues' off season during the June to September period.
I remember in the mid-2000's the PBA under Commissioner Noli Eala modified its calendar in that the PBA off season was set from July to mid-September. I remember, we were able to send PBA-select national teams in tournaments like the Jones Cup, Brunei Cup, the Las Vegas Summer League, etc., then we were able to tune-up with other foreign & national teams (I remember we tuned up with the Lebanese National team). It was possible simply becoz it was PBA off season during those period. Sadly, PBA reverted to its old calendar.
We do know that, FIBA window dates are just 2 games in less than 4 days during FEB, JUNE, NOVEMBER and FEB again to alternate the Continental Cups (FIBA Asia Cup, in our case) and the World Cup in a cycle that resets before the Olympics, all taking place between JULY and SEPTEMBER. FIBA doesn't really care about the SEA Games or the Asian Games because the only thing that matters to them is sending countries to the Olympics whether as hosts, the top one or two (Americas and Europe) placing countries per continent in the World Cup, and the four OQT winners.
The Continental Cups are nothing more than ranking points to FIBA while the pre-qualifiers sort of replaced every regional like SEABA before. There's really no point for FIBA to sanction tournaments where Gilas plays Cambodia with just one of their seven imports, Myanmar, or Laos where the outcome is obvious so might as well put them all in their own little windows (guess when... FEB, JUNE, NOVEMBER, and FEB again) and find out who makes it. In our region, it was Guam, Thailand, Mongolia, and HK. Iraq, Qatar, UAE, and Palestine came out from the other side.
That said, every single basketball-playing country will have to adjust. Eala in 2007 had the right idea in terms of acutally synchonizing it with the major FIBA tournaments, but y'all know the PBA board was and still is full of shit when it came to FIBA events, because their focus is generating revenue in a league where nobody really gives a damn apart from Ginebra and more people watch college basketball and women's pro volleyball... and end up getting bigger venues and primetime tv/streaming scheds. That's not FIBA's problem anymore. I don't expect Gilas to lose, despite the mess in the PBA... but at least there's a platform for mere pre-qualifiers to earn their right play better teams and improve every cycle.
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Originally posted by JAMSKIE View PostI think if we ask 10 coaches to choose between a 3-week preparation period & a 3-month preparation period, I think 20 coaches would prefer the latter hands down. No coach on his right mind would prefer a shorter preparation period.
Not a fan of long prep mode,nobody in the FIBA member nations have that much time nowadays,since alot of the best players now play beyond the borders of their countries,some rules has to change,the PBA should implement soome FIBA rules,not all of them but some for familiarization.The team should have a 16 permanent players that will compete during tournaments,and if no major tournaments during their hiatus,then some practice time while off season.A three week prparation is as long as everybody in the roster are basketball fit,and knows the system very well.
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Originally posted by paolylo View Post
Nope. The logic behind the scheduling the tournaments are the four seasons. Feb to early March is normally still winter in most countries (when winter games are held) and it's the absolute best time to have local basketball games being a strictly indoor sport, but unfortunately it's a PBA offseason in-between conferences. FIBA put window dates on it whether for friendlies or qualifiers regardless of how other leagues are scheduled.
We do know that, FIBA window dates are just 2 games in less than 4 days during FEB, JUNE, NOVEMBER and FEB again to alternate the Continental Cups (FIBA Asia Cup, in our case) and the World Cup in a cycle that resets before the Olympics, all taking place between JULY and SEPTEMBER. FIBA doesn't really care about the SEA Games or the Asian Games because the only thing that matters to them is sending countries to the Olympics whether as hosts, the top one or two (Americas and Europe) placing countries per continent in the World Cup, and the four OQT winners.
The Continental Cups are nothing more than ranking points to FIBA while the pre-qualifiers sort of replaced every regional like SEABA before. There's really no point for FIBA to sanction tournaments where Gilas plays Cambodia with just one of their seven imports, Myanmar, or Laos where the outcome is obvious so might as well put them all in their own little windows (guess when... FEB, JUNE, NOVEMBER, and FEB again) and find out who makes it. In our region, it was Guam, Thailand, Mongolia, and HK. Iraq, Qatar, UAE, and Palestine came out from the other side.
That said, every single basketball-playing country will have to adjust. Eala in 2007 had the right idea in terms of acutally synchonizing it with the major FIBA tournaments, but y'all know the PBA board was and still is full of shit when it came to FIBA events, because their focus is generating revenue in a league where nobody really gives a damn apart from Ginebra and more people watch college basketball and women's pro volleyball... and end up getting bigger venues and primetime tv/streaming scheds. That's not FIBA's problem anymore. I don't expect Gilas to lose, despite the mess in the PBA... but at least there's a platform for mere pre-qualifiers to earn their right play better teams and improve every cycle.
I don't buy the reasoning that these pro leagues around the world has this calendar because of the 4-season climate in non-tropiical countries like US, Canada & Europe. Remember that Latin American countries like Brazil, Puerto Rico, Mexico which have tropical climate also have pro leagues which have off seasons in the June to September period. Same goes with most African countries which don't have a 4-season climate.
As you mentioned, every single basketball playing country have to adjust to the FIBA calendar, but the thing is, I think this calendar by most pro leagues around the world which set their pro leagues' off season during the June to September period had been there long long time ago. Its not like these pro leagues made the adjustment some 7 or 8 years ago. This calendar have been there since time immemorial.Last edited by JAMSKIE; 02-20-2024, 12:58 AM."A king may move a man, a father may claim a son, but that man can also move himself, and only then does that man truly begin his own game. Remember that howsoever you are played or by whom, your soul is in your keeping alone, even though those who presume to play you be kings or men of power, when you stand before God, you cannot say, 'But I was told by others to do thus,' or that virtue was not convenient at the time. This will not suffice." - King Baldwin IV
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Originally posted by JAMSKIE View Post
But I think the main reason for most Asian countries (as well as countries in Europe, Americas & Africa) scheduling their pro leagues' off season during the months of June, July, August & September is so that such scheduling would synchronize with that of FIBA. In this way, their respective national teams would be available during the June to September period where most FIBA & other international tourneys are held.
Even the Latin American countries which have tropical climate same as the Philippines schedule their pro leagues' off season during the June to September period.
I remember in the mid-2000's the PBA under Commissioner Noli Eala modified its calendar in that the PBA off season was set from July to mid-September. I remember, we were able to send PBA-select national teams in tournaments like the Jones Cup, Brunei Cup, the Las Vegas Summer League, etc., then we were able to tune-up with other foreign & national teams (I remember we tuned up with the Lebanese National team). It was possible simply becoz it was PBA off season during those period. Sadly, PBA reverted to its old calendar.
My point is everything originated from the US. And in the US it's a winter sport.
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Originally posted by JAMSKIE View Post
I think you are not getting my point bro. What I'm implying is that most pro leagues around the world have calendars which set their off season during the June to September period to synchronize with the FIBA calendar which holds their tournaments (I mean tournaments per se & not window qualifiers) during this period.
I don't buy the reasoning that these pro leagues around the world has this calendar because of the 4-season climate in non-tropiical countries like US, Canada & Europe. Remember that Latin American countries like Brazil, Puerto Rico, Mexico which have tropical climate also have pro leagues which have off seasons in the June to September period. Same goes with most African countries which don't have a 4-season climate.
As you mentioned, every single basketball playing country have to adjust to the FIBA calendar, but the thing is, I think this calendar by most pro leagues around the world which set their pro leagues' off season during the June to September period had been there long long time ago. Its not like these pro leagues made the adjustment some 7 or 8 years ago. This calendar have been there since time immemorial.
In the PBA's case, it's the uniqueness of sharing venues and potentially losing profits to college basketball from September to December (if we stricly follow the traditional PBA scehdule, All-Filipino usually starts mid-January and they still go on breaks during Holy Week, off-conferences in May and between August to September, another break during the Holidays... then the off-season. Talagang lugi sila sa Governor's Cup when it comes to venues and it doesn't help that there's now Women's volleyball. In the unlikely event of qualifying for the Olympics, the PBA has to do something about Commissioner's Cup just to form a team. At least this season, that's over thanks to the World Cup and the Asian Games and they gotta deal with when to actually start the All-Filipino Cup.
Their scheduling mess is easier done by an AI scheduling software that we use in the airline industry than in practice because you're not convincing the dipshits in the PBA board to have games in a crap 2000-seat venues with only livestreaming and no primetime TV coverage just so that this league with only a dozen teams play 3-4 times a week like during a finals series instead of 2 max and use the time saved in making time for FIBA Windows and tournaments instead of doing special seasons and cancelling entire conferences. Punyeta, wala namang manonood ng Blackwater vs Converge so why all those days off between practice and games? PBA teams look way more spoiled than those in Korea and Taipei. Japan looks even more professional than the NBA because they do back-to-backs in the same venue and it saves them time.
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Originally posted by thatweirdguy View Post
The same sentiment me and friends back then. Would rather much have Yap than Ritualo who's more versatile on offense and better defender ( not saying he's good but Ritualo was really bad). Helterbrand too was an eyesore
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Originally posted by Metta View Post
Everyone synchronized with FIBA. And who did FIBA synchronize with.
My point is everything originated from the US. And in the US it's a winter sport.
Botttomline is, almost all pro basketball leagues have adjusted to synchronize with the FIBA calendar except our beloved PBA & as we are all aware of, this is among the biggest hindrance that keep us from forming a strong & well prepared national team."A king may move a man, a father may claim a son, but that man can also move himself, and only then does that man truly begin his own game. Remember that howsoever you are played or by whom, your soul is in your keeping alone, even though those who presume to play you be kings or men of power, when you stand before God, you cannot say, 'But I was told by others to do thus,' or that virtue was not convenient at the time. This will not suffice." - King Baldwin IV
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Originally posted by Metta View Post
Everyone synchronized with FIBA. And who did FIBA synchronize with.
My point is everything originated from the US. And in the US it's a winter sport.
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