Originally posted by tomcat
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Philippines Senior National Team Thread Vol. IV
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Originally posted by dominique View Posta young Eric Menk..
Originally posted by analyzed View Postthe thing is he's legitimatly big... pictures with him compared to Dave is he's a good 2 inches taller (at least 1 1/2) additionally while not fast for a Filipino carrying that weight (he's wide) he is quite mobile... and lastly while his handles are not tight (yet) for a 6' 5 Pinoy they're advanced . you really cannot go wrong with him in the next 3 years.. even if he doesn't improve drastically.. (oh he's only 20 or 21 - so reallistically given it's only now that he's playing in the Philippines and learning they style- he actually has the biggest room for figuring out - how to be effective , the others have already maximised that aspect. - this guy is still figuring it out... which is scary when you think about it
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Originally posted by astigram043 treys a game is actually good specially on high accuracy. I will not go for volume shooters like ritualo coz, like what I've said earlier, those type of players make Kai less effective. If your team relies on volume shooters, you got to have hustling bigs to pick up their misses. I think aj is a very good complement to kai's game. Surround them with good spot up shooters and a real point guard and we'll be good to go
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Originally posted by astigram04I'll sound like a broken record already but I'll say it again anyway, get shooting coaches from Korea. They're efficient and don't cost a fortune. Lineup all our young players and let these coaches evaluate those who has the potential. Then subject the entire NTs to undergo training too. Either we find our next caidics or just improve the outside shooting of the entire teams"How small ball works: Tall Skilled beats small skilled every time,but small skilled beats tall stiff every time" - Kevin McHale
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Originally posted by lurklurk View Postnot too keen on this comparison, i feel like its based more on built instead of playstyle. Dwight is definitely a wing player no question.
Really interested how he will match up with paras (will test his physical tools) and abando as well (will test his skills/iq).
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Originally posted by astigram04I'll sound like a broken record already but I'll say it again anyway, get shooting coaches from Korea. They're efficient and don't cost a fortune. Lineup all our young players and let these coaches evaluate those who has the potential. Then subject the entire NTs to undergo training too. Either we find our next caidics or just improve the outside shooting of the entire teams
I'm sure if a korean coach will serve our country, he will be bash on korea, or worse revoke his citizenshipLast edited by mathematicianrcg; 02-19-2020, 03:31 PM.
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Originally posted by astigram04That's why some people are called professional
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Originally posted by astigram04And maybe it's just us but them, they don't really see us as their rivals. I think we've only beat them once in the past years or maybe even over a decade already
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Originally posted by astigram04Lol will that be really necessary? I think the Koreans have been learning to speak English already. Last decade pa yata uso na online English tutorials sa mga Koreano. Maybe if you're hiring shin dong pa pero head coaching nmn yta ang Career nun
https://www.rappler.com/sports/by-sp...ball-dominance
FEU are reaping the rewards of building a program the right way. There is really nothing particularly trailblazing or innovative about how FEU became the 400-pound gorilla of Pinoy youth football. They simply decided to recruit high school kids to get them playing and growing up side-by-side as they segued to the collegiate game. Add a world-class mentor with Kim Chul Su, have them train on a proper pitch, and FEU just had to wait for it all to come together.
FEU just may be the closest thing the Philippines has to a football academy, where promising young kids study while honing their craft in a very serious environment. The product is a juggernaut that will surely help bolster the national team for years to come.
But the real sensei of FEU is Kim. His English is halting at best, but he must know how to wring every ounce of quality from a promising kid. Vince Santos, FEU football head, said that Kim insists that every FEU player master a set of twenty “foundation skills.” But his playbook goes a lot, lot deeper than the basics
In one of the games last season I saw an FEU player trap the ball with his butt. It was one of the strangest things I had ever seen on a football field. That player was then substituted soon after. I asked Chy Villaseñor, an FEU player sitting out this season, if Kim yanked him because he was upset about his showboating.
“Ah hindi,” answered Villaseñor dryly. “Siya (Kim) ang nagturo nun.”
(Oh no, he taught us that.)
The Tamaraws love their quirky, unorthodox Korean mentor and Giganto said it best after the title-clinching triumph.
“Bininigay niya ang lahat sa team, kahit may ibang issue o health problem,” says the striker.
“Tinuro niya na kung gaano ka-husay ang leader, ganyan din dapat ang team. Itinatak ko yan sa puso ko.”
(He gives everything to the team even when he has health problems or other issues. He teaches that how good a leader is, that's how good his team should be. I have etched that on my heart.”)
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