Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Improving the PBA Live Broadcast

Let's face it...not since the days of Joe Cantada has the PBA had a commanding presence in its broadcast booth. He had the rare blend of a huge, baritone voice, intellect, yet passion for the game. A few times he was quite funny as well and even challenged the players on his broadcasts when they weren't doing so well.

Photo by Al Shaver
Fast forward twenty years later and the PBA has not found the same magic with its group of broadcasting panel. I would have to say the last play-by-play announcer that made me watch the game even if I didn't know who was playing was Chino Trininad. Then he left for the PBL and that's that. Though he didn't have the deep baritone voice that play-by-play commentators need, he had that quick wit and could transfer from English to Tagalog in a snap. He knew street words on basketball whether they were streets from Tondo or New York. I don't have the stats for the broadcasts but I can't imagine they are higher now than before. In short, he made the game exciting yet funny, and he was good at it. It didn't matter who his color person was, he carried the broadcast. And his color commentators got excited broadcasting along side him as well. You had to bring your "A" game talking with him.

I've heard the current broadcasters and unfortunately they just don't fly for me. They try. No one faults them for that. But it's just not there. No, Boom Gonzales is not the next Joe Cantada. He tries, but no dice.

Based on thousands of NBA broadcasts I've seen in a lifetime, and hundred of football broadcasts I saw while living in Latin America, here are the basic requirements for an interesting broadcast:

1-) Play-by-play announcer with a deep, baritone voice, but can speak as fast as the ball moves. But important, he has to have genuine PASSION for the game.

2-) This announcer should prepare, prepare, prepare-- he should know his data, player names, favorite moves, and industry statistics, etc.

3-) He should also set-up his color commentator like the point guard that carries the ball most of the time, and dishes it off to his color partner to finish at the right time.
Photo by Francis CHICK HEARN'

4-) He may be allowed to disagree with his color partner once in a while. Many a times the best part of watching a Laker game for me was watching the great Chick Hearn and Stu Lantz go at it. This especially helps when the game is boring such as blowouts or non-bearing games.

5-) The color commentator MUST and I repeat, MUST be an expert. Meaning: he either PLAYED the game at the highest levels, or COACHED the game at the highest levels. Having international experience would even help-- as he'd be able to compare one style of play to another (and we're not just talking NBA here.)

6-) As with NBA broadcasts of ESPN with Mark Jackson and Jeff Van Gundy, a combination of two color commentators have helped: one elite player, and one elite coach. This is actually the best as we see the vantage points from two parties most actively involved in any game.

7-) In their broadcasts, Van Gundy and Jackson do go at each other once in a while. It just adds to the entertainment and hey-- basketball is entertainment isn't it?

8-) Courtside reporters should ask the players questions that make them think. Don't spoonfeed the answers within the questions.

9-) Stick with one, at most two sets of broadcasters. It's confusing watching a PBA game and figuring out who's playing for who, who's coaching for who, and who the hell is broadcasting. Oh. Sev Sarmenta. I thought he was doing volleyball? The best games I watched in the PBA was turning the telly on, and knowing Joe and the Doctor would be in front of our faces. Its confusing! New teams, new players, new broadcasters...it's like watching an NCAA game.

10-) More statistics, less talk. More scouting reports, less opinion. New broadcasters, new experts. I'm sorry, but Sev Sarmenta and the "Dean" have seen their better days. Their broadcasting ways and knowledge of the game is obsolete. I love'em, but there's nothing they say I can't find on the internet.
Photo by Minnie at Disney World (2)

And please...no more cheezy nicknames! Please! Captain Braveheart? The Aerial Voyager? What is this  the Disney Channel?





Wednesday, March 23, 2011

PBA Addict? Your not alone. PBA die-hards profess loyalty on Twitter:

Photo by chillihead
                                         

itsmeChamF #100factsaboutme (8) I'm a basketball fanatic! =) Certified PBA and NBA lover! Go SMB! Go Spurs! :)


iamshaynelinden @sidindin @rygine08 Napanood niyo? Nag-adik ako sa PBA! HAHAHA!


sainesainesaine i forgot to watch PBA!my goodness!:| 2nd game naaa..


iNadinne Late to tweet. But better late than never: Gilas now lost a game. That just makes the conference more exciting. #pba


palomaesmeria Watchin PBA on tv :p at last I'm done with work!



PBA Ginebra

 PBA and the Barangay Ginebra Gin Kings

Photo by Air21 Express
                                  

Whatever the PBA does, Ginebra San Miguel "gin kings" will always be its biggest draw. Something about the never-say-die spirit of Ginebra Kings basketball, the Ginebra players, and the legacy of the team founded by Robert Jaworski-- seemingly always the underdog-- this is one team anyone can root for.

As with great teams, great players are the foundation of the Barangay Ginebra Kings. Fans don't just remember the games played, but the players and the personalities behind them. Here are the top Ginebra Kings players that die-hard Ginebra fans will always remember:

1-) Robert Jaworski - "The Living Legend" -- need we say more? His career though as a senator need I say less.

2-) Rudy Distrito - "The Destroyer" -- literally.

2A-) Dante Gonzalgo - "The Co-Destroyer" -- Instead of drawing up a play, Jawo would motion his forearm forward and say, "Dante....alam mo na yun ha?"

                                                                                        
Photo by Timmy
3-) Dondon Ampalayo - "The Magic Man" -- too bad injuries curtailed what could have been a hall of fame career. As Michael Jackson sang: "Gone too soon."
                                       



Photo by nukeit1
                                                 
4-) Noli Locsin - "The Tank" -- who can forget the "Tank" barelling through post players twice as big, then finishing it off with a spin move gay DI's would be proud of? Philippine Charles Barkley as far as I'm concerned.












Photo by "I fall, yet I salute you with+my+oven+mitts"
5-) Terry Saldana - "The Injury" -- don't even look at that video you'll lose all appetite for watching and playing basketball. I said no. Don't do it! Crunch!                                                           

6-) Bal David - "The Flash" -- couldn't shoot to save his life but boy he'll have that bank shot preserved in PBA history.

7-) Chito Loyzaga - "The Dynamite" aka "The Great Wall" -- would make Alvin Patrimonio bounce sideways  playing defense with his tummy then would go down and hit a three while fixing his red headband. Man those were the days.

8-) Jayvee Gayoso - who remembers his nickname? Had a good run for a while. All I remember was he kept on running. Would make a good guest for "Nasaan na kaya sila?"

9-) Mark Caguioa - "The Sparkplug" -- How clutch he has been in his career is how much of a choker Miller has always been. That's why the latter's not on this list.

10-) Jayjay Helterbrand - who would've thought he'd win MVP?

Some notable players casual fans might not remember playing for Ginebra...

1-) Joey Marquez - parlayed a pathetic basketball career into a cash windfall show business career and even more amazing wealth care of wonder brooms from Paranaque. Also known for spreading diseases to Presidential daughters and sisters.

2-) EJ Feihl - the half-German, half-Filipino will forever go down in the annals of PBA history as a 100% flop having been shouted at by the Living Legend with: "Ang laki mong T - _ - E!" As Wilt Chamberlain said: "Who roots for Goliath?"

3-) Mukesh Advani - left everyone still wondering to this day what an Indian did in the PBA?

4-) Dennis Carbonilla - I have an autograph. That's how I remembered.

5-) Joey Loyzaga - "The Lifesaver" -- more remembered for his advance party tummy and dating Gretchen Barreto-- (first dibs?) when she was a sophomore in CSA where the team would practice-- than for anything else.

6-) Marlou Aquino - "The Skyscraper" -- instantly brought Ginebra back to respectability ala Tim Duncan for the Spurs. After he left Ginebra never really had a decent big man. Wonder what he could still do for Ginebra Kings basketball if he teamed up with Menk and the three MVP guards of Helterbrand, Miller and Caguioa.

7-) Vic Pablo - "The Kontrabida" -- 1994 #1 draft pick (the first of 3 consecutive picks: Pablo, Feihl and Aquino) who refused to play for Barangay Ginebra.

8-) Benjie Paras - Yes the "Tower of Power." The category is players that fans won't remember playing for Barangay Ginebra. Who could forget the holdout in 1994 where he refused to go back to Shell and told the world of his wish to play for the Gin Kings, while the first pick Pablo didn't want to play for them at all. Too bad there are these things called contracts. Nothing like a few Shell gas stations to ease the pain.

9-) Alex Crisano - more tattoos than games played and/or free throws made. Looked more like he should be up in the bleachers than on the court. Might be the only Ginebra Kings player actually crazier than Barangay Ginebra fans.

10-) Vince Hizon - "The Prince" -- too goodlooking to have played for Ginebra. Unlike most Ginebra players, he doesn't look like he can drink Ginebra. Known for that sweet J and running after courtside reporters and proposing to them courtside.

11-) Romulo Mamaril - will be remembered as the tallest player in PBA history during the 80's with a height of 6 feet, 6 inches. Sadly, that's all he'll be remembered for. At least the genes are improving-- but not much.

12-) Robert "Dodot" Jaworski Jr. -- father and son hugged each other tightly after having been picked in the second round of the draft of the PBA-- as if some other team was going to pick him. With his political career showing the same results as his basketball career, his greatest legacy will be how in hell did he convince Mikee AND make her give up showbiz?! 
Photo by "Wrestling Head Grab"


13-) Wilmer Ong -- a yes just mentioning his name makes me laugh. Had only one purpose when entering a game: inflict pain; play basketball when necessary -- especially when the referee is looking. Proof that skills are not always necessary in the Philippine Basketball Association.


                                                                
14-) Benny Cheng -- see #13. Wilmer Ong with a jumpshot. The Bushwackers like the PBA has never had before-- and probably never will with the advent of Fil-Ams.

Boy wouldn't it be fun to see the Barangay Bushwackers again?


Photo by lucha mucha 

***


PBA Games

In a debate over drinks with some friends, the conversation naturally moved towards a common passion: Philippine basketball and what it takes to succeed globally as a team and for the Filipino individually. Because to this day, no Filipino has stepped into an NBA hardcourt. Heck, a Japanese player has beaten us. Here were the factors discussed and the questions I had raised against them...

1. Filipinos just lack the height: "If we were taller we would win."
The most common sentiment/surest conclusion for most Filipinos.
If there was a world championship-- 6 feet and below, would the Philippines win against the U.S.?
Even if we make it 6'1" and below (so we could include James Yap), does a lineup of Yap, Baguio, Helterbrand, Tenorio and Willie Miller win against a lineup of Nate Robinson, Jameer Nelson, Chauncey Billips, Mike Bibby, TJ Ford and Earl Boykins? Hell we could even cheat and throw in Taulava in there, would we still win?

2. Even if we had height.
The Chinese team is taller than the American team. Do these Asians, that have similar genetic profiles to Filipinos, win against the Americans?

3. "We don't have an NBA player that could carry the RP team."
The Chinese team has Yao Ming, the tallest of all NBA players. Plus they have that other seven-footer to play power forward. Have they won? Nash is a two-time MVP. Where's the Canadian team?

4. The Philippine team lacks coaching: "If we were only taught to play the game right."
If Phil Jackson coached the RP team, and Riley, Poppovich, Rivers and Larry Brown were on his staff--winners of 22 NBA championships-- will the RP team win?

5. Lack of international exposure: "All our players do is play locally and get together only when a big international tournament starts." 

Once again, the Chinese team sets the benchmark-- their team is unified, it is the priority over their pro teams, and they have travelled together extensively for years since youth basketball. Where are they?
I see three basic problems with Fiipinos and basketball.

1-) We have the height for point guards.

2-) Everybody is a points guard but nobody has a jumper-- which makes us predictable defensively because defenders can just sag and wait to block your shot when you get to the paint. Most, if not all, are slashers. Not too many outside shooters.

I cannot emphasize this enough because even the best of slashers, eventually took their game to the next level when they armed themselves with not just a jumpshot but a fadeway jumpshot. From MJ, to Kobe, McGrady, Carter, Lebron, and now Durant-- the best players have that unguardable fadeaway. This is what most Filipinos fail to see. Steve Nash? Best fadeway in the business. His is exaggerated. But he makes it look so easy. And the proof is in the pdudding: how many MVP's?

I noticed one consistent trait PBA imports have: a jumpshot. Even the big guys that are hired to play center and grab rebounds, 9/10 can shoot. And the best imports have the best fadeways.

3-) Nobody can pass.

Our model should be Steve Nash-- 6'3", passes like Magic, shoots like Bird. Once again-- 2 MVPs to prove it.
Why don't we have an NBA-bound player in the RP?

Because no one likes to pass, and no has that unstoppable, fadeaway jumpshot.

How do I know? Because after 10 years of playing ball in the streets, I ended up joining a team coached by a pro. He put the brakes on me, told me I was a points guard, and that I needed to pull up more and hit that J instead of driving into the land of the trees all the time.  He told me the only way I would play was if I passed more and played defense first. I got benched and 4 games into the season I quit.

I am the reflection of RP basketball.

Maybe that's why I also play baseball and soccer? (At least I don't get benched while playing both!)

Three of the most violent things I've done in my life: play baseball in the diamonds of the USA, play basketball with the blacks in the hardtops of LA, and play soccer in the streets of Brazil.

Maybe, just like our Japanese and Korean counterparts, the Philippines should also start looking into these two sports where Filipinos could succeed a little more because gravity is more in the points guard's favor.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

PBA Philippines

10 Reasons Why I've Lost All Interest in the PBA


Some of the best memories of my youth was watching Ginebra San Miguel. I loved that team as much as I loved the Lakers. Fast forward decades later, it is unfortunate my passion has remained for only one team. Ginebra fans will know Terry Saldana, Dondon Ampalayo, Romulo Mamaril, Dennis Carbonilla, Joey and Chito Loyzaga, Dante Gonzalgo, Leo Isaac and of the course the Living Legend Robert Jaworski. I distinctly remember watching a live Ginebra game in Ultra where the little-used Joey Marquez dunked the ball (at a time when dunking happened twice a year)! I can honestly say after that last championship game of Ginebra versus Shell when Distrito hit that fadeaway, falling to the ground, game-winning shot, I've lost all interest with the PBA. The players suck, the Fil-Americans are here because they can make a living but can't cut it in the States, and the coaches are getting old.

Here are the ten reasons why I've abandoned our beloved PBA:

1. No one's got a jumpshot -- If you'll notice, there's one primary difference between imports and locals-- all imports have a go-to jumpshot. Need proof? Who's the best shooter in the league? Who's next after James Yap? Allan Caidic?

2. Boring commentators -- Joe Cantada and Andy Jao was still the best tandem. Quinito Henson is getting old, his analysis are for first graders, and he doesn't look like he's held a ball in his life. Sev Sarmenta is older. They had a good one in Chino but unfortunately he's nowhere near the PBA right now.

3. Musical chairs-- it used to be Chito Loyzaga and Alvin Patrimonio played for one team  and went head to head till they retired. Ronnie Magsanoc and Benjie Paras were happy with their franchise and Shell franchises. Today's players change jerseys faster than I can change channels away from the PBA.

4. No rivalry -- the NBA was revived from the pits in the late 70's to greatness in the 80's because of three words: Lakers versus Celtics

5. No iconic players -- Sonny Jaworski. Need I say more?

6. Geographic Dyslexia -- It's called the Philippine Basketball League. Since when is the Philippines comprised of Alaska, San Miguel and Meralco? The PBA has become a marketing arm for the filthy rich companies. It needs to update it's business model to reflect their brand name-- the Philippines. The MBA had it right when Cebu, Pampanga, Davao, Manila, and the entire Philippines had teams. Los Angeles Lakers. Boston Celtics. New York Knicks. Get it? It's not the General Electric Lakers.

7. Fil-Ams...sure they've raised the quality of play. But their chest thumping glorifies the self and selfishness of the American game-- all that the Filipino culture is NOT about. Give me the Ginebra vs San Miguel  or Ginebra vs Purefoods rivalry anyday-- when the rivalry was bigger than the players. When the matchups took over the fans' imaginations-- Loyzaga vs Patrimonio, Loyzaga vs Ramon Fernandez, Paras vs Cuenca! Ironically, who are the two most popular players right now? That's right: James Yap and Mark the Spark. 100% Filipino blood. That tells you something about your market and who they can relate to, who they see themselves in. How classy was it when Alvin Patrimonio put his head down right after scoring on Chito "The Great Wall" Loyzaga's tough D, and ran right back on defense. Then the Dynamite would go right back at him and shoot a 3 off the Captain?

8. Identity Crisis-- Mega Derby? Red Bull? Meralco? Talk and Text? Air 21? Powerade? I don't know which is more confusing-- following  players or following jerseys. You see an NBA game televised from afar, within 5 seconds I know what team's playing, and what star player to locate.

9. American plays, Filipino bodies-- at the end of the day, Filipino basketball is patterned exactly after American basketball. As the Asian games have told us since 1990, this has not been the right way to go. The Filipino game is not lacking in flash, but embarrassingly weak in fundamentals. Maybe that's why the top Asian teams have the fugliest looking shots but they all go in. Ours is the opposite. For every air-bending shot of Cyrus Baguio, there's no complementing unstoppable fadeaway like James Yap's. Yes Kobe Bryant would be Baguio and Yap rolled into one: at 6'7".

10. Coaches-- the local coaches are as scientific as your high school basketball coaches. When you talk about about Phil Jackson, Gregg Poppovich, Doc Rivers and Larry Brown-- who are the expert Filipino coaches? Who did they learn from? What international competitions have they won?

At the end of the day, it's RIVALRY that makes basketball exciting. Even if you didn't follow the NBA in the 80's, you knew that if you watched the NBA Finals in the 80's something would happen. Somebody would get knocked down, somebody would make a game-winning shot, somebody would go home crying. But you had to pick a side. You couldn't just watch the games, you had to identify yourself as a Laker or Celtic.

In today's PBA game, the musical chairs of players, team names and coaches dilute the league because it eliminates all rivalry. And the lack of geographical homes-- Araneta and Cuneta but most games in Manila-- make it worse. Shall we call it the Manila Commercial Basketball League instead? But please...don't call it the PBA. A milk team going against an electricity distributor with a bunch of players that have lived here for years but can't speak a lick of Tagalog is not my idea of a rivalry. Sure Toyota vs. Crispa worked in the 70's-- but what business in the 70's still followed the exact same business model now? If you need the perfect example, what's the biggest basketball rivalry in the Philippines? Is it in the PBA? Exactly.  Archers and Eagles will get everyone picking a side even if they weren't Archers nor Ateneans to begin with. That's what rivalry does. It gets people interested, it captures imaginations, it makes us forget about our problems for two hours.
What if...Manny Pacquiao built a team-- the Saranggani Boxers. How good would his team be knowing he's got the money to buy all the top players? What would that do to promote local tourism and jobs? Will we finally care where in the map Saranggani is? How would that unite the Saranggani people?

And then his friend Chavit Singson decided he wouldn't get left behind and put up the Ilocos Tigers (since he has a collection in his own zoo). Would you watch that game? Which side would you choose? How nervous would the players be not wanting to lose the game for their owner?

Now that sounds like a Philippine Basketball Association to me.