It’s been reported that the Gilas Pilipinas brain trust is keen on tapping more players to join the pool, with the magic number pegged at 24. That means that there are still around eleven slots open. Take note that this does not YET include the two naturalized prospects of the team — Javale McGee of the Denver Nuggets and Andray Blatche of the Brooklyn Nets. We’re still not sure if their respective naturalization processes will finish in time for Gilas to include their names in the final 24-man pool.
As of this writing, the 2014 FIBA World Cup Draw is done, and the Philippines has been grouped along with Senegal, Argentina, Puerto Rico, Greece, and Croatia. That, in my opinion, is the second-toughest group of the lot, and making it into the second round will certainly be the tallest task coach Chot Reyes has ever faced. Needless to say, he’ll need all thew support he can get.
This is the last piece in a series of posts detailing the players who can be part of that pool. For each named individual, we will look at the good things he can bring to the pool, his probable role should he get named to the final Gilas lineup, and the possible match-ups he will have at the Asian and world levels.
Today, we’ll talk about someone who has never been part of Gilas. To my knowledge he has, in fact, never been part of any national team. Still, given how well he has performed in the PBA, he is surely one player worth considering for the national pool. To close out this series of posts, we’ll talk about none other than Rain or Shine’s Paul Lee.
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Is Paul Lee worthy to be part of the national pool? (image by Paul Ryan Tan/Sports5) |
What he brings to the table:
There are many things to like about the former UE Red Warrior, but the things I love the most are his ability to create and his absolute fearlessness.
When people talk of international basketball, two things inevitably dominate the conversation — size and shooting. Teams with a good combination of both those factors tend to find success. This is why a slew of naturalized big men have dominated the FIBA Asia landscape in the past decade or so (e.g. Joe Vogel and Jackson Vroman of Lebanon, JR Sakuragi of Japan, Quincy Davis of Taiwan, CJ Giles of Bahrain, etc.). This is also why a country’s best shooters ten to be mainstays of its national team (e.g. Hamed Afagh of Iran, Enver Soobzokov of Jordan, Cho Sung-Min of Korea, Wang Shipeng of China, etc.).
There is one aspect, however, that often gets overlooked, but is actually vital in helping a team succeed. I’m talking about having a “creator” in one’s team. This is the kind of player who usually has great handles, great court vision, and great ability to finish from anywhere on the floor. I remember coach Rajko Toroman using the term “freelance” to refer to this unique skill-set. Successful teams usually have great size and shooting, yes, but many of them also have “freelancers” who are not confined to working within the bounds of the coach’s system.
Samad Nikkhah Bahrami is that guy for Iran. Fad El-Khatib is that guy for Lebanon. Daoud Musa is that guy for Qatar. Takuya Kawamura is that guy for Japan. Lin Chih-Chieh is that guy for Taiwan.
During the Gilas 1.0 days, that role was reserved for Mark Barroca (I remember him dominating in the 2009 FIBA Asia Champions Cup in Jakarta, where Gilas finished fifth with a 5-2 record). JV Casio was the conventional playmaker-shooter hybrid, while Barroca was the one who played the role of the “unpredictable guy” (kind of like what Tyreke Evans does for New Orleans, only Barroca was a lot effective).
Given the current Gilas pool, I believe Lee could fit that role to a T. He could be to Gilas what Bobby Joe Hill was to the 1966 Texas Wester Miners. Are the opponent’s perimeter defenders shadowing our snipers? Put Lee in to break the defense down and open up the perimeter. Is the other team clogging the lane with big men? Put Lee in as an added outside threat who can also put the ball on the floor. Is the other team pressuring our PGs in the backcourt? Put Lee in as an added ball-carrier.
Basically put, Lee is the proverbial wrench or curve ball to the enemy’s otherwise airtight gameplan.
Why he is a good fit for Gilas:
Despite what the last play of Game 3 of the 2014 Philippine Cup Finals might suggest, Lee is great at using screens from up top to 1) beat his man and penetrate, or 2) free himself up for a jumper. Lee isn’t really known to be a pick-and-roll specialist in the same way LA Tenorio is, but the former Bacchus Energy Raider can still utilize those high posts with extreme effectiveness.
Another thing that makes Lee a good fit is his streakiness. Remember Jimmy Alapag hitting nearly a handful of threes against Korea in the 2013 FIBA Asia tourney? Well, I can easily imagine Lee doing that, too! Remember that six-game stretch this conference when Lee hit 22 threes? TWENTY TWO THREES in just 6 games, people. That’s nearly four a game. Imagine him draining those treys with impunity with “Pilipinas” emblazoned on his chest. #Awesomeness
(The caveat, though, is he had 7 games this conference when he missed ALL his threes. Hey, there’s a flipside to everything, right?)
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When Paul Lee catches fire, forget about it. (image by Paolo Papa/Sports 5) |
Potential match-ups:
FIBA-Asia: Ali Mahmoud (LIB), Vishesh Bhriguvanshi (IND), Guo Ailiun (CHN)
FIBA World Cup: Louis Adams (SEN), Dontaye Draper (CRO), Nick Calathes (GRE)
Lee’s biggest adjustment against these guys is, well, he has no international experience, and he has never really played against such high-caliber competition in a compressed amount of time. Having said that, however, I also believe Lee would be more than a match for Mahmoud, Bhriguvanshi, and Guo, while potentially being a pesky foil to guys like Adams, Draper, and Calathes.
Aside from the guys in this series, who else could be good enough for Gilas Pilipinas? Off the top of my head, I’m thinking maybe Joe Devance if he had the proper papers? Hit us up in the comments below.
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Gilas 2015-2016:
BalasC: McGee, Fajardo
F: Aguilar, Sangalang
F: Norwood, Canaleta
G: Chan, Dillinger, Parks
G: Lee, William, Romeo
Plug in Slaughter, DeVance, and Washington for Canaleta, Chan(Slide Gabe to SG) and Romeo(Well, Our SGs(Gabe, Jared, Rayray) can handle the ball pretty well and I think Rayray is a better fit.)
C: McGee, Slaughter, Fajardo
F: Aguilar, Sangalang
F: Devance, Washington
G: Norwood, Dillinger, Parks
G: Lee, William
*Plug in(if eligible)
BalasC McGee
BalasC Fajardo
PF Aguilar
PF Pingris
PF De Ocampo
SF Washington
SF Dillinger
SG Norwood
SG Chan
PG Castro
PG Casio
PG Tenorio
C Slaughter
Sir Enjo, what do you think about non-PBA players? Like Chris Banchero, Ray Parks, Kiefer Ravena?
BalasI think Banchero is skilled enough, given his talent.
Parks has not shown improvement, but it is still worth giving him a shit, since he's still quite young, and very talented. Other FIBA powerhouse teams from Africa, Europe, South America have at least one talented player below 21 yrs in their lineup, and i think it's good in the long run for the team by starting them young.
Ravena i think is good enough if he's given a better role and better teammates in a team.
BalasGood enough for Gilas? He had similar numbers and stats back when he was still playing college ball in US NCAA Div 2
McGee is no longer eyed by Chot because of injury. Maybe Gilas try to lure Big Al Jefferson as I think he will be a good fit for Gilas. Nice low post moves, borderline NBA superstar and haven't played for team USA.
Balaswhy would we get blatche or mcgee haven't played a single second with filipino players, mas ok cguro kung c denzel bowles o kaya c vmack kunin natin na big man sanay na sa larong pinoy tapos fajardo at asi ang backup. sa pf ranidel ping at belga, tapos sf arwin canaleta dilinger sg yap chan norwood lasiter pg tenorio castro resrve thoss japeth barroca jwash at parks
BalasSir, laos na si Asi. We should stick with the current roster of Gilas players, those that played in the FIBA asia. Kesa maglagay ka pa ng mga has beens or untested, na hindi naman ganun kagaling.
BalasEventually, yes, I think Banchero can become an NT-worthy guard. I just limited this to current PBAers only, so he wasn't considered. Perhaps late in 2014 or early in 2015, he can crack the list!
BalasOne problem with Al-Jeff is his age. He can be good maybe for 2-3 years max, and, of course, papayagan ba siya ng Bobcats given how important he is to the team? He's definitely a better all-around player than either McGee or Blatche, but am not so sure he's the perfect choice. When push comes to shove, I think I'll put my money on Blatche.
BalasI'm actually in favor of this. I think Bowles, in particular, can be a superbly prime option. He's young, athletic, and, like what Mr. Soriano said, knows how to play with Pinoys. I hope they leave room to consider him.
Balasgiving him a *shot. Sorry for the typo!
BalasYeah, maybe coaches and other observers would take a closer look at what he can do once he gets drafted in the PBA.
Thanks for the posts, I enjoyed reading all of it!
laos na sa kasikatan oo pero if you look at how he performed in the last conf and wat he brings to the table for the national team may ibubuga pa si asi. chaka when he dons the national colors bigay todo c asi, di naman sya ibababad back up lang 5-8 min per game kaya pa nya. he still has the height bulk and the strength to match up with the big guys from the world.
Balasgud sugestion to start them young, it would build team spirit cguro dapat style team usa ang gawin ng pinas pero sa college tayo bubuo. mga 20-24 man pool na nagprapractice regularly specially yung mga top prospects sa college at pwede din cguro may mga onting hs players.
BalasLee's 18 points and deadly outside shot in his first-ever outing for Gilas (vs Chinese Taipei) already proves his worth to the NT
Balas