Nation at a Glance — (08/29/18)
News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.
News stories from across the nation. Visit www.bworldonline.com (section: The Nation) to read more national and regional news from the Philippines.
THE PESO strengthened versus the dollar on Tuesday following the speech of the Federal Reserve chairman as well as the trade pact between US and Mexico.
The local unit closed at P53.325 against the greenback on Tuesday, up 14 centavos from the P53.465 finish on Friday.
The peso traded stronger the whole day, opening the session at P53.36 per dollar.
It climbed to as high as P53.32, while its intraday low stood at P53.42 versus the US currency.
Dollars traded climbed to $640.85 million from the $421.05 million that switched hands before the three-day weekend.
A foreign exchange trader said on Tuesday that the dollar “just moved weaker across the board so the peso just followed suit.”
“We’re seeing support level at P53.30 starting to break, so I think there’s a momentum for the dollar-peso to strengthen,” the trader said in a phone interview.
The trader added that the global move of the dollar was lower following the speech of Fed chair Jerome Powell on Friday.
Speaking at a research symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Mr. Powell said that “further gradual increases in the target range for the federal funds rate will likely be appropriate” as the economy remains strong.
“Not much change really. They are projecting two more rate hikes, but some investors are expecting a more hawkish stance,” the trader added.
“We saw profit-taking on the long dollar position. The dollar is correcting at the moment.”
Meanwhile, UnionBank of the Philippines chief economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion said the market was “stable” with the latest developments on global trade, particularly on the news of trade pact between the US and Mexico.
Reuters reported that the two countries reached a deal to overhaul the North American Free Trade Agreement, with Canada expected to also agree to the new terms to preserve the three-nation pact.
For Wednesday, Mr. Asuncion and the trader said they expect the peso to move between P53.20 and P53.40 versus the dollar. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal with Reuters
LOCAL EQUITIES jumped on Tuesday, benefiting from the return of investors after a long weekend alongside gains recorded across international markets.
The bellwether Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) climbed 1% or 78.14 points to 7,844.61 Tuesday, August 28, while the broader all-shares index likewise gained 0.64% or 30.31 points to 4,759.13.
“As largely anticipated, the local bourse cruised through Tuesday’s session entirely in green, driven by the return of both local and foreign participants to the market following the long break,” Regina Capital Development Corp. Investment Analyst Rens V. Cruz II said in a mobile message.
The main index reflected the positive finishes seen abroad, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average firming up 1.01% or 259.29 points to 26,049.64. The S&P 500 index edged higher by 0.77% or 22.05 points to 2,896.74, while the Nasdaq Composite index had an uptick of 0.91% or 71.92 points to 8,017.90.
Southeast Asian stock markets also edged higher on Tuesday as concerns over global trade war eased after the United States and Mexico made a deal to overhaul the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
“Moreover, the optimism that spread across markets Tuesday, August 28, from the preliminary agreement between US and Mexico on NAFTA certainly set the tone for the local benchmark’s opening, while the return of domestic funds and investors buoyed trading throughout,” Mr. Cruz added.
Papa Securities Corp. trader Gabriel Jose F. Perez also attributed the PSEi’s increase to optimism in international markets.
“Recall that US markets surged [on Monday], with the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq even making new highs, on the back of developing news on a trade deal between the US and Mexico,” Mr. Perez said in an e-mail.
Back home, most sectoral indices stayed in positive territory, led by the mining and oil sector which rose 1.84% or 181.59 points to 10,018.40. Financials followed with a 1.67% increase or 30.11 points to 1,827.17, while holding firms went up 0.9% or 68.71 points to 7,677.39.
Property also increased 0.76% or 29.91 points to 3,935.01, while industrials added 0.59% or 67.53 points to 11,333.34.
The services counter was the lone sub-index that ended in the red, albeit with a minimal loss of 0.01% or 0.19 point to 1,546.15.
Some 1.55 billion issues valued at P7.65 billion switched hands, up slightly from Friday’s P7.22 billion. Advancers outpaced decliners, 112 to 94, while 38 issues remained flat.
Foreign investors returned to the market, with net purchases reaching P474.40 million versus a net outflow worth P398.89 million in the previous session.
“Moving forward, we anticipate developments from US markets [on Tuesday] which might have a hand again in how our index fares [on Wednesday]. Look out as well for foreign flows as these have recently dictated the PSEi’s movement,” Mr. Perez said. — Arra B. Francia with Reuters
By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter
EARLY Philippine Basketball Association Governors’ Cup leaders Phoenix Fuel Masters and Alaska Aces collide in the main game today at the Smart Araneta Coliseum in a match that will also see former Aces star Calvin Abueva take on his former team for the first time.
Meeting after they parted ways in the in-between conference break, Mr. Abueva looks to help Phoenix (2-0) get the better of Alaska (2-0) in their scheduled 7 p.m. encounter and keep their unblemished record intact in the season-ending PBA conference while sending the Aces to their first defeat.
The Fuel Masters are off to a solid start in the ongoing tournament led by returning import Eugene Phelps.
Mr. Phelps has been steady for Phoenix, averaging 40 points, 16 rebounds and six blocks in their victories over Columbian Dyip and NorthPort Batang Pier in that order.
Mr. Abueva, too, has kicked off his new journey with the Fuel Masters on the right foot with all-around numbers of 12 points, 9.5 rebounds, four assists, two blocks, and 1.5 steals per game. These are apart from the energy and hustle he gives coming off the bench for the Louie Alas-coached team.
Also having it steady for the Fuel Masters are Matthew Wright, Jason Perkins, LA Revilla, and RJ Jazul.
Against Northport on Sunday, Phoenix was just unrelenting as it raced to a 132-91 victory to make it 2-of-2 in the Governors’ Cup.
Facing his former team for the first time, Mr. Abueva said he is looking forward to the game and expects it to be an exciting contest.
“It’s a good matchup. It’s going to be an exciting game. Looking forward to enjoying it,” said Mr. Abueva of his highly anticipated first encounter with Alaska, where he spent his first six years in the PBA and won a championship with.
EXTENDING THE STREAK
Alaska, on the other hand, seeks to extend its good start that has seen it make a strong case as one of the teams to watch out for.
The Aces have been doing it with a balanced attack with import Mike Harris leading the charge.
Mr. Harris, making his first tour of duty in the PBA, is posting numbers of 19.5 points and 19.5 rebounds per contest.
Backstopping him are guards Simon Enciso (20.5 ppg) and Chris Banchero (14 ppg, 9.5 apg and 6 rpg) and forward Vic Manuel (14 ppg and 6.5 rpg) to help the Aces to their good start.
Like Phoenix, Alaska is coming off a huge victory over TNT Ka-Tropa, 125-96, on Sunday where it dominated all throughout the match, towed by the hot shooting of Mr. Enciso, who hit nine triples in the game.
That fiery shooting against the KaTropa earned Mr. Enciso the player of the week honors.
“We hope to sustain the kind of character we showed today in our next games,” Alaska coach Alex Compton said after their win over TNT.
“Our focus now is on Phoenix because they are also playing well. We will prepare against them,” he added.
Playing in the 4:30 p.m. opener, meanwhile, are the NLEX Road Warriors (1-2) and Columbian Dyip (0-2).
NEW YORK — World number one Simona Halep was swept aside 6-2, 6-4 by 44th-ranked Kaia Kanepi on Monday, the first top-seeded woman ever to lose in the US Open first round.
It was a second straight first-round exit at Flushing Meadows for Romania’s Halep, who dropped her opening match to Maria Sharapova last year.
The French Open champion had no answer for Kanepi’s powerful groundstrokes.
The Estonian fired 26 winners to Halep’s nine, and even her 28 unforced errors weren’t enough to derail her challenge as she brought the rallies to quick ends and remorselessly punished Halep’s second serve.
“Yesterday I thought I have beaten just once the world number one, today I had another chance,” said a beaming Kanepi, who defeated then No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki in Tokyo back in 2011.
Kanepi, whose six Grand Slam quarter-final appearances include a run to the last eight in New York last year, earned a second-round meeting with Swiss qualifier Jil Teichmann, a 6-3, 6-0 winner over Dalila Jakupovic.
WILLIAMS GETS WARM WELCOME
Serena Williams took the first cautious step towards a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam title with a 6-4 6-0 first-round win over Magda Linette on Monday as an excited US Open crowd welcomed the new tennis mother back to the ‘Big Apple’.
It was not the imposing performance many have come to expect from Williams as the six-time champion continued to scrape the rust off her game following the birth of her first child.
The manner of the victory, however, mattered little to a home crowd that was just happy to see her back on court after sitting out last year.
“It is such a great feeling to be back out here,” said Williams. “It is one of those feeling I only get here in New York.”
Telling the crowd that her spirit was broken after not saying goodbye to her daughter Olympia before leaving for her match, Williams displayed little appetite for a fight during an uneven opening set until she finally seized control with a break to go up 4-3.
Williams, the winner of 72 career singles titles, has the ability to sense when she has an opponent on the ropes and moved in quickly to deliver the knockout punch, breaking the 68th ranked Pole to open the second.
While her game might not have been firing on all cylinders her ruthlessness remained razor sharp as the American showed no hesitation storming through second set finishing off her opponent with a thundering ace.
The Williams sisters bridged the afternoon and evening sessions on a steamy Arthur Ashe with Venus providing the opening act of the twin bill, grinding out a 6-3 5-7 6-3 victory over another former champion, Russian Svetlana Kuznetsova, before handing the stage over to her younger sibling.
The wins put the sisters on a collision course, leaving them just one victory away from a third-round showdown.
While Venus remains a potential obstacle standing in the way of a 24th Grand Slam, Serena’s path to the final was cleared of another major hurdle earlier on Monday when world number one Simona Halep was upset by Estonia’s Kaia Kanepi.
It might not have been a stylish win over Linette but it was nonetheless a stylish display by Williams.
As always, the fashion conscious Williams created a buzz as she appeared from the players tunnel under a spotlight wearing a leather style jacket over a frilly off the shoulder tennis dress and fishnet compression tights designed to help circulation and avoid blood clots. — AFP/Reuters
THE Philippines’ Eric Shawn Cray placed seventh in the finals of the 400m hurdles on Monday extending the medal struggles of the country’s athletics team in the ongoing 18th Asian Games in Indonesia.
With less than a week left in the quadrennial continental sporting meet, the Philippine athletics team is still in search of its first medal and now risking extending its medal drought at the Asiad some more.
The last time Philippine athletics won a medal at the Asian Games was in 1994 in Hiroshima, Japan, where Elma Muros won a bronze in long jump.
Up against a top class field, Mr. Cray, a two-time Southeast Asian Games champion, found the going tough in the 400m hurdles at the Gelora Bung Karno Main Stadium on Monday night.
Cray, the oldest in the field at 29 years old, submitted a time of 51.53, which was even slower than his 50.54 in the semifinals.
Also failing to snatch a medal was marathoner Mary Joy Tabal, who finished 11th in her event on Aug. 26.
The reigning Southeast Asian Games marathon champion clocked 2:51:41 in the ultra competitive marathon competition, failing to crack the top 10 and finishing the race 16 minutes and 50 seconds behind champion Rose Chelimo of Bahrain (2:34:51).
“I really tried my best, but the other runners paced themselves well,” said Ms. Tabal after her run, where she nonetheless wound up as the best Southeast Asian finisher.
Decathlete Aries Toledo, meanwhile, was not able to finish his event on Sunday because of an injury to his elbow.
Veteran long-jumper Marestella Torres-Sunang, for her part, finished ninth in her event on Monday while Filipino athletes in the women’s 100 meters, men’s 400 and 800 meters and men’s 110m hurdles were not so lucky as well.
Mr. Cray will again try his luck in striking a medal in the 4×100 relay with Anfernee Lopena, Clayton Bautista, and Trenten Beram on Thursday.
Trenten Anthony Beram and fellow Filipino-American Kristina Knott, meanwhile, were still battling in the 200 men’s and women’s events yesterday.
On Friday, EJ Obiena plunges into action in the men’s pole vault.
Meanwhile, Team Philippines as of 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday stood at 19th place in the medal standings with three gold medals and 12 bronzes. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo
THE Philippine women’s volleyball team tries to fashion out an upset when it battles powerhouse China in their quarterfinal match at the 18th Asian Games in Indonesia today.
Set for 8 p.m. (Manila time) at the Gelora Bung Karno Tennis Indoor, the Filipinas try to hold their own against the Chinese spikers, the Olympic champions, and book a place in the semifinals of the event in Jakarta.
The Philippines earned a quarterfinal berth after finishing as the fourth best team in Pool A with a 1-3 record, its lone win against Hong Kong in straight sets, 25-18, 25-21 and 25-22, on Aug. 23.
The win was the first time in volleyball for the Philippines in the Asian Games in 36 years.
It then followed it up with a spirited showing against host Indonesia on Aug. 25, where it went all out before bowing in four sets, 25-20, 25-20, 24-26 and 25-22.
Alyssa Valdez led the Philippines against Indonesia with 16 points and 14 excellent receptions, followed by Jaja Santiago with 12, Kim Fajardo seven, Maika Ortiz and Mylene Paat with six apiece.
“I think the team did well against Indonesia as the players showed that they can still elevate their game. We just have to lessen our errors, especially in service. We hope to correct them by our next game,” said national team coach Shaq Delos Santos as he assessed their performance in the last game.
Waiting for the Philippines is China, which has been rock solid in the tournament, topping Pool B in the preliminary round with a 5-0 record and sans dropping a set along the way.
China’s balanced attack is led by Zhu Ting, who is averaging 13.4 points per game.
The winner between China and the Philippines faces off in the semifinals with the victor of the quarterfinal pairing of Japan and Kazakhstan. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo
By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter
WHAT was a roller-coaster ride in the opening round of Season 94 of the National Collegiate Athletic Association for the Arellano Chiefs swung to a win in the end after they ended their first-round assignment with a 76-72 victory over the Perpetual Help Altas on Tuesday at the FilOil Flying V Centre in San Juan City.
Had it slow to start the contest, the Legarda-based Chiefs used a strong effort in the middle quarters to make the game close in the end and did enough of a push to pull off the win, their fourth as opposed to five defeats midway into the tournament.
Arellano struggled to get its offense going in the opening quarter, trailing 19-8 at the end of the first 10 minutes.
It, however, would find its mark in the second and third frames, outscoring the Altas, 43-34, to narrow its deficit to just two points, 53-51, heading into the final quarter.
In the fourth, both teams had it back-and-forth, fighting to a levelled count, 67-all, with less than four minutes to play.
A three-pointer by Arellano guard Levi Dela Cruz broke the tie, 70-67, with three minutes to go.
Perpetual Help tried to claw its way back and was rewarded for it when Rey Peralta drained a triple of his own to tie the knot at 70-all at the 1:22 mark.
The tie was short-lived though as nine seconds later Maui Sera Josef handed the lead back to the Chiefs, 72-70, with a bucket inside the paint.
Arellano forced Perpetual Help to a passing error moments later, leading the latter to commit a foul on Adrian Alban.
But Alban opened a window for the Altas when he split his free throws for a 73-70 count with 24 ticks to go.
Jasper Cuevas immediately answered for Perpetual Help with a breakaway layup to come within a point, 73-72, with 18 seconds left.
The Altas attempted to steal the ball from the Chiefs off an inbound play but instead was forced to foul Kraniel Villoria when they failed to.
Villoria calmly sank both his charities to give his team more breathing room, 75-72, with 15 seconds remaining on the clock.
Perpetual Help attempted to go to its big man Prince Eze to come closer as time wound up but could not complete a pass amid a tight defense from Arellano, sealing the win for the Chiefs.
Villoria led Arellano with 15 points, followed by Sera Josef with 14 and Dela Cruz with 12.
Eze, meanwhile, paced Perpetual Help (5-4) with 22 points and 25 rebounds while AJ Coronel added 12 points.
“This was a big win for us after a tough loss we had last time around against San Beda. After that game, the players were down as their pride was hurt. This was a good rebound for us as we end the first round,” said Arellano coach Jerry Codinera, referring to their 98-79 loss to the San Beda Red Lions on Aug. 24 where star guard Robert Bolick scored 50 points for the defending champions in the win.
“We had a slow start in this game (against Perpetual Help) but good thing we came back and kept our focus,” he added.
Zurich, Switzerland — Nespresso maker Nestle on Tuesday said it has sealed a deal to market the products of US coffee giant Starbucks around the world, outside of its cafes.
Swiss food giant Nestle, which also produces Nescafe instant coffee, had announced in May it would pay $7.15 billion (6.13 billion euros) for the rights to market Starbucks coffee globally.
Under the deal, some 500 Starbucks employees in the United States and Europe will join Nestle, the Swiss company said in a statement.
“With Starbucks, Nescafe and Nespresso we bring together the world’s most iconic coffee brands,” Nestle CEO Mark Schneider said.
“The outstanding collaboration between the two teams resulted in a swift completion of this agreement, which will pave the way to capture further growth opportunities,” he added.
According to the statement, the deal will significantly boost Nestle’s portfolio in North America.
Bloomberg News said Nestle has struggled in the US for years.
Under Schneider’s leadership, Nestle has made coffee a key priority in its growth strategy, particularly in the US.
Since the CEO took over in January 2017, the group has bought a majority stake in California-based high-end brand Blue Bottle Coffee and acquired Texan brand Chameleon Cold Brew.
Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson said his firm is also set for a major boost under the deal.
“Bringing together the world’s leading coffee retailer, the world’s largest food and beverage company, and the world’s largest and fast-growing installed base of at-home and single-serve coffee machines helps us amplify the Starbucks brand around the world while delivering long-term value creation for our shareholders,” Johnson said. — AFP
JAKARTA — North Korea’s athletes are not only scooping record numbers of medals at the Asian Games, they are winning hearts with an unprecedented charm offensive and will go home as heroes — rewarded with new cars and houses.
At the weightlifting competition which concluded Monday with an eighth gold — smashing North Korea’s previous best of four in 2014 — the team’s attitude has been the polar opposite from Incheon four years ago.
There, every medallist trotted out a well-worn script of thanking leader Kim Jong Un for his inspiration to reporters before being whisked away.
But over eight days at the Jakarta International Expo their athletes have gone off-piste to talk frankly about their nerves, fears, emotions, and life back home while mingling freely with spectators and reporters.
They even were joined by the South Korean weightlifting team to celebrate the end of the competition with an unprecedented joint team photo.
“I think we have shown the world that the people of Korea are the greatest as one,” +75kg winner Kim Kuk Hyang told AFP after posing with her South Korean counterparts, an astonishing statement from a North Korean given that the two countries have technically remained at war for the past 65 years.
Then she was off to grab tiny 4ft 7in (140cm) Ri Song Gum, the 48kg class gold medallist, and carry her aloft around the stage with the pair laughing, joking, and punching the air.
SELFIES AND SMILES
Hardly a single request for a selfie by a fan or Games volunteer has been turned down — most have been accommodated with huge smiles. At the 2014 Asian Games none was entertained.
The shackles are off, athletes are revelling and happy to reveal their personal stories for the first time.
Om Yun Chol even thanked South Koreans for helping him to win 56kg men’s gold.
“The passionate support from the South Korean cheerleading squad is my source of great strength,” he said while posing for pictures.
Was this really the same man who four years earlier had thanked leader Kim for teaching him how to “crack a rock with an egg”?
O Kang Chol cried buckets for his dead mother after his maiden gold medal in the men’s 69kg.
It was a touching moment as he mourned his mum who passed away earlier this year and whose ambition had been to see him win a first title.
“I will visit mother’s grave and give her this gold medal,” he told reporters, still weeping and unabashed at baring his grief — a huge contrast to the robotic strongmen and women paraded at previous championships.
It is an eye-opening change, which appears to have gone hand-in-hand with the thawing of global diplomatic relations culminating in the historic summit between Kim and US President Donald Trump in Singapore in June.
South Korean observers have been taken aback. “We have never see the North Koreans like this,” Yonhap news agency reporter Joo Kyung-don told AFP.
The new open attitude appears to have been encouraged right from the top.
North Korean Sports Minister Kim Il Guk, one of Kim Jong Un’s right-hand men, was in attendance Sunday and giving his blessing to team officials spilling the beans on previously taboo topics.
‘THEY ARE NOT SCARY’
“The weightlifting champions who raise the country’s honour will be rewarded with a new house and a new car,” head coach Kim Kwang Dok told AFP, for the first time confirming something that had long been suspected in the secretive nation — that sporting glory is a way out of grinding poverty.
“Our athletes will get national hero status once they return and will get big attention from our people. Everyone will be proud.”
It is not just at the weightlifting arena that heads have been turning and relationships opening up.
The two Koreas marched together at the opening ceremony, fielded a joint team in women’s basketball and so far have won a historic gold and two bronzes in dragon boating.
“They are not scary or anything like portrayed on the internet,” South Korea basketball player Kim Han-byul said. “It’s been the normal girl talk with them.”
Weightlifting sisters Rim Un Sim and Rim Jong Sim tenderly cried tears of joy at each other’s success as they pulled off a golden double and said they couldn’t wait to get home to show off their medals to their family.
Rim Jong Sim was one who did remember, albeit briefly, to thank Kim Jong Un. “This gold medal isn’t for me, but it’s for my country and our supreme leader,” she said.
But such expressions were few and far between and her sister had soon changed the subject.
“I can’t describe how happy I am,” Rim Un Sim said. “We competed together and won medals at the university championship last year, but this is the Asian Games.” — AFP
A United Nations report says Myanmar’s top generals should be investigated and prosecuted for committing genocide and war crimes against the Muslim Rohingya minority, raising pressure on the international community to act against the country’s military and civilian government.
The UN Human Rights Council-mandated fact-finding mission’s report, released Monday, found Myanmar’s security forces systematically murdered, tortured, gang-raped and enslaved civilians, while also setting fire to entire communities in violation of international law. On the same day, Facebook Inc. said it was also removing accounts and pages linked to Myanmar’s top military officials, including commander-in-chief Min Aung Hlaing, whose Facebook posts were cited by the UN as proof of pre-planning attacks.
“Military necessity would never justify killing indiscriminately, gang raping women, assaulting children, and burning entire villages,” the report says.
UN investigators said “gross human rights violations” committed by Myanmar’s military — and aided by the civilian government’s lack of action — were “shocking for their horrifying nature and ubiquity.” They recommended the UN Security Council implement travel bans and asset freezes against those who have violated international law. The UN should refer the matter to the International Criminal Court, or a specially-created international criminal tribunal, they recommended.
The UN report says the army’s crimes against the Muslim Rohingya, nearly 1 million of whom have fled into neighboring Bangladesh, is “similar in nature, gravity and scope to those that have allowed genocidal intent to be established in other contexts.”
Facebook Action
Acting on concerns about the misuse of its platforms in Myanmar, Facebook removed 18 accounts, one Instagram account and 52 Facebook pages that were followed by nearly 12 million people, the company said in a blog post. It’s also banning 20 individuals and organizations, including the army chief and the military’s Myawaddy television network.
“We want to prevent them from using our service to further inflame ethnic and religious tensions,” Facebook said.
A Myanmar government spokesman did not answer a call for comment on the UN report. Previously, Myanmar government officials have blamed Rohingya for launching attacks on state security forces and for setting fire to their own homes.
Facebook has been criticized in a number of Asian countries as its platforms, including Instagram and the widely-used WhatsApp messaging service, are used to spread hate, misinformation and fake news or rumors that can help fuel mob violence.
“While we were too slow to act, we’re now making progress – with better technology to identify hate speech, improved reporting tools, and more people to review content,” Facebook said. “Today, we are taking more action in Myanmar.”
In India, fake rumors spread through WhatsApp led to mob attacks and numerous deaths, while President Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippines has been accused of using Facebook to target critics. These developments, in part, led WhatsApp to begin labeling forwarded messages, in an attempt to crack down on fake news and rumors.
In its post, Facebook noted that the “nascent” state of the news media and the rapid adoption of smartphones made Myanmar particularly vulnerable.
“We have a responsibility to fight abuse on Facebook,” wrote Facebook product manager Sara Su in a blog post earlier this month. “This is especially true in countries like Myanmar where many people are using the internet for the first time and social media can be used to spread hate and fuel tension on the ground.” — Bloomberg
JAKARTA — Poy Erram got his baptism of fire playing in his first Asian Games, going up against a pair of seven footers in China’s Zhou Qi and Wang Zhelin, then a few days after, taking on the tough South Korean juggernaut.
In both games, the Rain or Shine-Pilipinas lost their tough matches and to make it worse, Erram suffered a chipped tooth while diving to save the ball. He had to be taken out as blood flew from his gums.
For the 6-foot-8 big man, he doesn’t mind loosing or suffering a chipped tooth. What’s more painful was the loss the Philippines suffered against South Korea which booted out our basketball team from the medal race.
“The loss to South Korea was a painful one. I’m willing to sacrifice my body, even my tooth,” said Erram as he flashed a big smile showing his front tooth loosing a chunk.
But for Erram, his first international experience gave him a lot of lessons, something which he could bring when he return and help his mother club, Blackwater, in the PBA.
“With the national team, you got the chance of playing some of your rivals from the PBA and they’ve been nothing but supportive, knowing I’m one of the youngest in the team,” added Erram. “Playing against some of the best players in Asia would also help me to get better. The international brand of game is different from the PBA as each game is like a do-or-die situation.
Erram is expected to be one of those players going to be retained by head coach Yeng Guiao to represent Gilas Pilipinas in next window of FIBA Asia World Cup qualifier three weeks from now in Iran.
Guiao is batting for continuity, the best way in forming up a team, and Erram could be a good addition.
“Without him in the Asian Games, we’re going to have a shallow frontline,” added Guiao, who will take over on a temporary basis the post vacated by suspended coach Chot Reyes. “Erram is really a big help for us. He’s been holding his own against the other big guys we’ve faced and his ability to play as a stretched big man in offense and his length on defense, provides us additional inside presence.” — Rey Joble