I found out
on the day itself (Monday, February 18, 2013) that the venue of Gilas
Pilipinas’s second practice was moved from the ancient Ultra/Philsports Arena
in Pasig to the swanky Mall of Asia (MOA) Arena in Pasay.
Okay. No
biggie, right?
It was
actually quite exciting. The Gilas boys were finally going to practice in the
exact venue where they will have to wage war against Asia’s best hoopsters.
This was the first step in making the MOA Arena a true home court for the team.
Again, it was exciting.
It was also
exhausting.
Team Gilas Pilipinas held its second practice earlier this week at the MOA Arena. (image from the Smart-Gilas 2.0 Facebook page) |
This is how
my day went:
- A
long day of teaching at Ateneo High School.
- A
long drive to Taguig to pick up my very pregnant wife (still the MOST BEAUTIFUL
preggy lady ever – check that, the MOST BEAUTIFUL lady period – hi honey you
might be reading this).
- A
long drive to near-Fairview in Quezon City, where we live (we actually had a
stopover at the Teacher’s Village area for early dinner. The drive is typically
so exhaustive that we need to stop and get a quick bite).
- Drank
some water, kissed my baby daughter, brushed my teeth, changed my clothes, then
got into the car to drive ALL THE WAY to Pasay City.
- The
drive wasn’t as bad as I thought. Took me roughly an hour going through
Commonwealth Avenue, Quezon Avenue, España, Quiapo, and Roxas Boulevard to
finally get to the MOA Arena. The traffic wasn’t exactly light, but it was MUCH
WORSE on the opposite lane. Yikes. I’d have to go through THAT on the way home.
Oh well.
- Arrived
at the MOA Arena. Parked the car. Got down. Went to the Employees’ Entrance,
which doubles as the Media Entrance.
- WAS.
NOT. LET. IN.
- My
name wasn’t on “the list.” Only the names of one media outlet’s personnel were
listed along with the members of the Gilas Pilipinas team (players, managers,
etc.).
- Made
some calls, but still no cigar.
- Some
other guys who wanted to observe the practice were let inside because they
“knew someone.” Haaaaay.
- Waited
for about 30 more minutes.
- I
just asked the guard if he could escort me inside, and I’d just talk to one of
the coaches or manages because I KNEW they KNEW I was coming to observe.
- Guard
was awesome enough to oblige. He was being really strict at first because,
well, he was just doing his job after all.
- Got
to courtside and saw one of the team managers. He welcomed me with a smile and
told the guard, “Okay na.”
- Boom.
Finally. Thank you!
- I
guess I officially “know someone,” too. J
Practice was
already commencing, and I was advised to just observe and refrain from taking
pictures or recording video for now – or, at least if I did, not to upload them
or “show them to the world” yet.
I sat down
about three rows from behind the bench. Courtside seats. I would be so lucky to
have the same POV when the 2013 FIBA Asia Men’s Championships begin in August.
The MOA
Arena is famous for being quite possibly the most sophisticated basketball
stadium in the country. Aside from hoops, of course, it has already held other
events like concerts, volleyball games, etc. It has luxury boxes, a plethora of
food outlets, extremely (and I mean EXTREMELY) bright lights, a slew of video
screens, a modern pressroom, spacious locker rooms, and, perhaps best of all, a
20,000-person full house capacity.
In this
evening, however, there weren’t 20,000 people. There weren’t even fifty.
I counted
fifteen Gilas players – Greg Slaughter skipped this session due to injury,
while Sonny Thoss flew to Cebu to be with his ailing father. Coach Chot Reyes
and his staff were all there, along with their respective aids, and, of course,
a handful of media people.
The Gilas
boys were already in the middle of what I could only assume was a dribble-drive
drill. In one play, San Mig Coffee’s Marc Pingris jab-stepped (yes, MARC
PINGRIS can jab-step), handed off to Japeth Aguilar, who made a shuffle pass to
Ranidel De Ocampo. RaniDirk drove then kicked the ball back out to Ping. Ping
drove hard and dished the rock to a cutting Japeth. Aguilar caught the ball,
got vertical, then stuffed it like crazy.
“Sige habang
bata pa!” yelled Ping. Everybody cheered.
In another
play, it was Jimmy Alapag starting everything. He passed the ball to June Mar
Fajardo, who flashed to the free throw line. June Mar handed it off again to
Jimmy, who passed it to RaniDirk at the left wing. RDO drove within 5 feet then
kicked it out to Ryan Reyes on the opposite end. Reyes faked a J, drove inside,
pulled up then passed the ball to Jimmy at the far corner. Alapag quickly
bounced it to a waiting Fajardo under the basket. The 2013 PBA Rookie Draft top
pick received the pass and slammed it with one hand.
Alapag to
Fajardo. Wow. Where else, right?
Ranidel had
a smile on his face at this point. He walked towards Fajardo and gave him a low
five. Before practice began, De Ocampo was dunking the ball himself. According
to Team Manager Butch Antonio, RDO was stuffing it like crazy, doing reverses
and windmills, but only because the rims were not adjusted properly for the
practice session – they were just 9 feet high!
Sir Butch
narrated how he, along with the MOA Arena personnel, had to improvise in order
to readjust the rims to the proper height of 10 feet. Ranidel, naturally,
wasn’t too ecstatic about it. He could still dunk the ball at 10 feet, of
course, but there would no longer be any fancy stuffs, just the
run-off-the-mill jams like what June Mar just did.
I heaved a
sigh. Slogging through all the traffic and enduring the distance at such an
hour was worth it. Seeing these guys – guys who were usually the bitterest of
foes in the PBA – don the same jersey and run the same plays was a treat, nay,
an honor.
I wondered
if I could do this again next week, and the week after that, and the week after
that. Could I continue following the practices? Could I continue braving the
dreaded Manila evening traffic? Could I continue leaving my family for a few
hours every Monday night? Could I commit to this?
And then I looked
at these fifteen guys, the coaches, and the other guys involved with the team. Weren’t
they sacrificing much more? Weren’t they braving the traffic, too? Weren’t they
away from their loved ones as well? Weren’t they committed – all in – in this
thing?
At the end
of this second practice, just like the first one, all the team members trooped
to center court, put their hands in, and coach Chot yelled, “Laban Pilipinas!”
Everyone, in
unison, responded, “PUSO!”
There is no
commitment, after all, without heart.
#parasabayan
diba?
6 Comment
How I wish I could enter their practice..haha..I will behave and not take pics/videos or anything haha =)
BalasI think that should be "Monday, February 18, 2013".
BalasWow, very good article. Naiyak ako haha. Thank you Sir Enzo. :))
BalasKorek! Ack! Thanks for the correction! :)
Balasnext time post some pictures.
Balaswow .. go gilas!!!
Balas