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French ambassador to return to US after Biden and Macron fence-mending call

PARIS/WASHINGTON — The US and French presidents moved to mend ties on Wednesday, with France agreeing to send its ambassador back to Washington and the White House acknowledging it erred in brokering a deal for Australia to buy US instead of French submarines without consulting Paris.

In a joint statement issued after US President Joseph R. Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron spoke by telephone for 30 minutes, the two leaders agreed to launch in-depth consultations to rebuild trust, and to meet in Europe at the end of October.

They said Washington had committed to step up “support to counter-terrorism operations in the Sahel conducted by European states” which US officials suggested meant a continuation of logistical support rather than deploying US special forces.

Mr. Biden’s call to Mr. Macron was an attempt to mend fences after France accused the United States of stabbing it in the back when Australia ditched a $40-billion contract for conventional French submarines, and opted for nuclear-powered submarines to be built with US and British technology instead.

“The two leaders agreed that the situation would have benefited from open consultations among allies on matters of strategic interest to France and our European partners,” the joint US and French statement said.

“President Biden conveyed his ongoing commitment in that regard.”

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and his French counterpart Jean-Yves Le Drian, interacting for the first time since the submarine crisis erupted, had a ‘good exchange’ on the margins of a wider meeting at the United Nations on Wednesday, a senior State Department official told reporters in a call.

The two top diplomats were likely to have a separate bilateral meeting on Thursday. “We do expect that they’ll have some time together bilaterally tomorrow,” the official said, and added that Washington ‘very very much welcomed’ France and European Union’s deep engagement in the Indo-Pacific.

Earlier on Wednesday, White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki described the call as “friendly” and sounded hopeful about improving ties.

“The president has had a friendly phone call with the president of France where they agreed to meet in October and continue close consultations and work together on a range of issues,” she told reporters.

Asked if Mr. Biden apologized to Mr. Macron, she said: “He acknowledged that there could have been greater consultation.”

The new US, Australian and British security partnership (AUKUS) was widely seen as designed to counter China’s growing assertiveness in the Pacific but critics said it undercut Mr. Biden’s broader effort to rally allies such as France to that cause.

Biden administration officials suggested the US commitment to “reinforcing its support to counter-terrorism operations in the Sahel” region of West Africa meant a continuation of existing efforts.

France has a 5,000 strong counter-terrorism force fighting Islamist militants across the Sahel.

It is reducing its contingent to 2,500-3,000, moving more assets to Niger, and encouraging other European countries to provide special forces to work alongside local forces. The United States provides logistical and intelligence support.

Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said the US military would continue to support French operations, but declined to speculate about potential increases or changes in US assistance.

“When I saw the verb reinforce, what I took away was that we’re going to stay committed to that task,” she told reporters. — Reuters

Echoes, uncertainty as Afghan pilots await US help in Tajikistan

REUTERS

WASHINGTON — A US-trained Afghan pilot was talking to Reuters on a smuggled cellphone from Tajikistan, where he is being held, when something strange happened — his voice started looping, repeating everything he had just said, word for word.

His fiancée, an American nurse in Florida, was on the line too and started to panic. She shouted his name, but his words kept cycling back.

“I was freaked out,” she said, speaking on condition of anonymity to protect him. “The worst things came to my mind.”

Whatever the reason for the telephone glitch, which only happened once, it added to a deep sense of anxiety for the couple. It also came amid growing feelings of impatience and uncertainty among the Afghan pilots and personnel who have been held by the government in Tajikistan since fleeing there on Aug. 15.

There are 143 Afghans detained at a sanatorium in a mountainous, rural area outside of the Tajik capital, Dushanbe, waiting and hoping for more than a month for transfer by the United States.

After flying there with 16 aircraft as their military’s ground forces crumbled before the advancing Taliban, the Afghans say they had their phones taken away. They were initially housed in a university dormitory before being moved on Sept. 1.

Contact with family is extremely limited. Although they appear to be held in humane conditions, they are on edge, uncertain about the future.

“We don’t know about our destination. … We’re all worried about that,” the pilot said.

The pilots want to join the other Afghan military personnel being processed for US visas in places like Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Germany.

“Whenever we ask the government of Tajikistan, they just answer: ‘Please wait,’” said a second pilot, speaking separately on condition of anonymity.

Among the military personnel at the facility are two Afghan women, including a pilot who is eight months pregnant, the second pilot told Reuters.

Such a pregnancy would be an important reason to move them quickly, said David Hicks, a retired US brigadier general who is helping lead a charity called Operation Sacred Promise working to evacuate and resettle Afghans.

There are also 13 Afghan personnel in Dushanbe, enjoying much more relaxed conditions. Several of those pilots told Reuters they flew separately into the country on Aug. 15 and are staying in a government building. Speaking in a video call, they said they have not had contact with the Afghans at the sanatorium.

The pilots could not explain why the two groups were being kept apart.

The US State Department declined comment on the pilots in Tajikistan. Tajikistan’s Foreign Ministry did not respond to a request for comment.

The US-trained Afghan pilots in Tajikistan are the last major group of Afghan air force personnel abroad still in limbo after flying dozens of advanced aircraft across the Afghan border to that country and Uzbekistan in the final moments of the war.

Earlier in September, a US-brokered deal allowed a larger group of Afghan pilots and other military personnel to be flown out of Uzbekistan. Some of the English-speaking pilots there had feared they could be sent back by the Uzbeks to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan and killed for inflicting so many Taliban casualties during the war.

‘NO DOMESTIC URGENCY’
Afghanistan’s new rulers have said they will invite former military personnel to join the country’s revamped security forces and that they will come to no harm.

That offer rings hollow to Afghan pilots who spoke with Reuters. Even before the Taliban takeover, the US-trained, English-speaking pilots had become their prime targets. Taliban fighters tracked them down and assassinated them off-base.

The pilots did not express concern the Tajiks will send this group back to the Taliban. But after more than a month, pilots and their supporters complain about a lack of urgency by authorities to move the group along.

Reuters has learned that US officials have started collecting biometric information to confirm the identities of members of the group, in a sign that help could soon be on the way. A similar effort in Uzbekistan preceded those pilots’ transfer from there.

People close to the pilots said the United States had collected biometric data on about two-thirds of the group so far.

Paul Stronski, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, thinks Tajikistan’s president, Emomali Rahmon, may be proud of his role receiving the pilots as the Taliban swept to power.

Tajikistan, which shares a porous, 835-mile (1,345-km) border with Afghanistan, has broken from its more conciliatory neighbors and been outspoken about its concerns over the new Taliban government in Afghanistan.

“The Tajik government is probably playing this to try to get some benefit,” Mr. Stronski said. “There’s no domestic urgency, and it probably suits Rahmon to sort of say: ‘We’re housing these people.’”

About a quarter of Afghanistan’s population are believed to be ethnic Tajiks, although no recent census data exists. But they and other ethnic minorities are not represented in the Taliban’s interim government, a point Mr. Rahmon has made publicly.

“Foisting any political system on Kabul without regard for the voice of the Afghan people, which consists of diverse ethnicities, may lead to seriously negative consequences,” Mr. Rahmon was quoted by Russia’s TASS news agency as saying last week.

Tajikistan says it has given asylum to more than 3,000 refugee families from Afghanistan, a total of 15,000 people, in the past 15 years.

A Tajik government source familiar with the situation blamed delays by the United States and Canada to issue visas.

When the Tajik government confiscated the Afghans’ phones, it told the pilots it was for their safety, explaining the Taliban could trace their signal when they called home.

“You are not allowed to use your phone for the security of your family,” a Tajik official said, recounted the second pilot.

The Tajik government source also said the Afghans’ phones were taken from them so that their exact location could not be tracked.

But being largely cut off from communications has taken a psychological toll. The pilots are fearful their families in Afghanistan could suffer Taliban reprisals and, with the war lost, they have no income to support them.

The second pilot recounts seeing people pacing around outside the sanatorium in the middle of the night.

“Whenever I ask someone why… they (say): ‘I’m not relaxed, I’m thinking about my family,’” he said.

The American nurse, who is a dual US-Afghan national, and her fiancé have only spoken infrequently. After the technical glitch, where the pilot’s voice started looping, they took a break from calls for a while.

The nurse sounded exhausted and frustrated by the lack of progress after calling offices of US lawmakers and government officials.

“I have reached out to literally anyone and everyone I could,” she said. “No one has been able to help.” — Reuters

Bolts head into playoffs on a high

THE Meralco Bolts sustained the momentum they built in the elimination round heading into the PBA Philippine Cup quarterfinals, winning their fourth straight game at the expense of the Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings on Thursday.  — PBA IMAGES

THE Meralco Bolts are heading into the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Philippine Cup playoffs on a high after racking up their fourth straight win in their final game of the eliminations over the defending champions Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings, 79-66, on Thursday in Pampanga.

Already assured of the number two seed in the quarterfinals of the ongoing Philippine Basketball Association tournament, the Bolts showed no letup, dominating the game early and finishing strong to book the win that pushed them to a 9-2 record at the end of classification play.

“We just wanted to build momentum. We did not want to go into the playoffs coming off a loss,” said Meralco Bolts coach Norman Black after the game.

Meralco opened the proceedings with a 10-0 run, which it used to set the pace en route to building a comfortable 47-32 advantage by the half time break.

In the third quarter, the Kings found their footing, outscoring the Bolts, 19-8, to narrow the gap, 55-51, entering the final quarter.

But Meralco regained its form in the payoff canto, reestablishing a double-digit lead, 68-58, midway and never looking back from there.

Mac Belo and rookie Alvin Pasaol led the Bolts in the win with 15 points apiece.

The loss dealt Barangay Ginebra’s playoff hopes a big blow as it fell to 4-7, sending them to a three-way tie, as of this writing, for number eight, along with the Phoenix Super LPG Fuel Masters and Terrafirma Dyip, and will have to go through a playoff match, if ever, just to make it to the quarterfinals. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo    

Philippine women’s football team shoots for spot in 2022 AFC Asian Women’s Cup

THE Philippine women’s national football team shoots for a spot in the 2022 AFC Asian Women’s Cup when it takes on Hong Kong in an all-important Group F qualifying match on Friday in Uzbekistan. — AFC

THE Philippine women’s national football team shoots for a spot in the 2022 Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Asian Women’s Cup when it takes on Hong Kong in an all-important Group F qualifying match on Friday in Uzbekistan.

Currently leading the group with three points, the Malditas are looking to complete a sweep of their assignments that would earn them direct passage to the Asian Cup happening in India next year.

The Philippine women’s team had to dig deep in its opening qualifying match against Nepal on Sept. 18 at JAR Stadium in Tashkent, banking on late goals by Thanai Annis and Camille Wilson to pull the rug from under the Nepalese.

The nationals played catch-up throughout the contest after going down, 0-1, in the 10th minute after Nepal’s Bimala Chaudary scored on a header.

While the 68th-ranked Malditas were seemingly heading to an upset loss at the hands of 101st-ranked Nepal going into stoppage time, the former extricated for an equalizer.

Ms. Annis found herself free in the box and converted a cross from teammate Chandler McDaniel to level the count in the 90th minute.

Two minutes later, Ms. Wilson would score the go-ahead goal on another assist from Ms. McDaniel to complete the impressive charge-back win.

The Malditas, whose campaign is being supported by the Philippine Sports Commission and the MVP Sports Foundation, will still advance even with a draw with Hong Kong, which was held to a nil-nil stalemate by Nepal in their clash on Sept. 21.

In the qualifying phase, the format has the top teams in each of the eight groupings advancing to the AFC Women’s Asian Cup, where they get to vie for spots in the 2023 International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) Women’s World Cup. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Champ Pacio thrilled to meet Saruta for the third time

ONE CHAMPIONSHIP world strawweight champion Joshua Pacio of the Philippines — ONE CHAMPIONSHIP

FOR the third time, reigning ONE Championship world strawweight champion Joshua “The Passion” Pacio of the Philippines will take on Japanese Yosuke Saruta in a title clash.

And for the Team Lakay stalwart, he is still thrilled to face Mr. Saruta, looking at it as a chance to showcase his improvement as a fighter against an opponent he considers as one of his motivations.

“I want this to be over with, so I can move on,” said Mr. Pacio in a recent media conference with local sports media for “ONE: Revolution” happening on Friday. “He’s the number one contender for the title and he deserves a shot.”

Messrs. Pacio (18-3) and Saruta (21-9-3) will fight in a rubber match in Revolution after splitting their previous two encounters.

The Japanese took the strawweight title from the Filipino in a controversial split decision in January 2019, but Mr. Pacio bounced back three months later by reclaiming the belt with a knockout win over Mr. Saruta in their rematch.

That set the stage for their third fight, part of a stacked ONE Revolution card featuring three world title fights.

“I’m excited and we’re ready for this fight. I want to show how I have improved as a fighter,” Mr. Pacio said.

“Saruta and the other contenders are part of my motivation to continue to grow as an athlete, to be a better martial artist. Through them, I got to see my weaknesses, the things that I need to improve on,” he added.

Twenty-five-year-old Mr. Pacio last fought in January last year, defeating former champion Alex Silva of Brazil by split decision.

Unfortunately, the pandemic forced Mr. Pacio to a long layoff.

Mr. Saruta, 34, for his part, last saw action in ONE in October 2019, winning over compatriot Daichi Kitakata by second-round knockout.

FIGHT TAKE
For local fight analyst Nissi Icasiano, Pacio-Saruta III is going to be interesting, considering how their previous fights panned out and the possible effects of the pandemic-forced inaction on the two fighters.

“For Joshua, we have to remember that training and actual competition are two different things. There are certain aspects that only actual competition can provide. And I believe this was the longest layoff he had ever gone through in his young career. It will be intriguing how Joshua Pacio will dust himself off and shrug off the cobwebs come fight night,” the analyst said.

“Second is the fact that this is a rubber match… Let’s take note that there is an element of familiarity here in this third. It’s a no-brainer that they already know each other’s strengths and weaknesses. There will be adjustments in the fight, but it will be very minimal,” he added.

But the analyst highlighted that Mr. Pacio being the more well-rounded between the two will serve him in good stead.

“As seen in their last two fights, Pacio can trade strikes in the stand-up as well as carry himself efficiently on the ground with Saruta,” he said.

Mr. Pacio has to go out and claim it though, Mr. Icasiano further said.

“Joshua has to mix it up with Saruta. Like in the second meeting, he has to keep Saruta guessing. By doing so, he will be able to dictate the pace from start to finish against an opponent like Saruta who gets really frustrated and flustered when he’s not on the driver’s seat,” said the analyst.

Also featured in ONE: Revolution is the lightweight world championship clash between champion Christian Lee (Singapore/United States) and challenger Ok Rae Yoon (South Korea) as well as the bantamweight kickboxing world championship bout between Thai champion Capitan and Algerian challenger Mehdi Zatout.

ONE: Revolution will take place at the Singapore Indoor Stadium and will be broadcast live over One Sports on Friday, beginning at 6:30 p.m. and over the ONE mobile app. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

PSC to hold forum on indigenous sports

LUMADS use a spear to hit a ball made of coconut in the game called Bubuntug during the Tribal Games in Davao City. — GILBERT PGS L. MULA

IN line with National Indigenous People’s Month in October, the Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) will hold a four-part webinar series focusing on indigenous sports and games.

The “2021 Indigenous Sports and Games Webinar Series: Preserving and Promoting the Rich Cultural Heritage of our Ancestors” will take place on Oct. 7, 21, 28, and Nov. 5 via Zoom and designed to spotlight the rich culture of indigenous peoples (IP).

The sports agency has invited speakers from different government agencies to discuss various IP-related topics.

The webinar begins at 1 p.m. and is to be held in partnership with the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP).

Meanwhile, the sport of pencak silat will take center stage in this week’s Rise Up, Shape Up session of the PSC.

Fifteen young girls and women who won gold Medals in the recent 7th Women’s Martial Arts Festival will be featured in the session on Sept. 25.

Part of the program will have Women in Sports (WIS) Commissioner in-charge Celia H. Kiram, in her regular segment “K-Isport: Kwentong Isport,” briefly tackling the history of pencak silat in the country. — MASM

Chelsea edges past Villa on penalties; Man Utd out of League Cup

LONDON — Timo Werner scored his first goal of the season as a much-changed Chelsea side crept into the fourth round of the League Cup by beating Aston Villa (4-3) on penalties after the Stamford Bridge clash ended 1-1 on Wednesday.

Manchester United crashed out, however, as West Ham United avenged their Premier League loss at the weekend with a 1-0 win at Old Trafford sealed by Manuel Lanzini’s early effort.

West Ham hung on for their first win at Old Trafford since 2007 and face holders Manchester City next.

Harry Kane was on target for Tottenham Hotspur, but they surrendered an early 2-0 lead at Wolverhampton Wanderers before winning 3-2 on penalties as manager Nuno Espirito Santo claimed his second win of the season against his former club.

Chelsea manager Thomas Tuchel made 10 changes to his starting lineup and German striker Werner took his opportunity to give his side the lead in the 54th minute as he headed a Reece James cross past Villa keeper Jed Steer.

Werner should have made it 2-0 almost immediately, but shot wide and Villa responded with youngster Cameron Archer’s superb header from a Matty Cash cross sending the tie to penalties.

Chelsea, who threw on Romelu Lukaku late on, forged ahead in the shootout as Villa’s Marvelous Nakamba and Ashley Young both failed to score, but Ben Chilwell struck the crossbar when he could have sealed it for the hosts.

Reece James made no mistake though as Chelsea set up a fourth-round home clash with Southampton.

West Ham arrived at Old Trafford fresh from a 2-1 defeat on Saturday in which Jesse Lingard, who was on loan at West Ham last season, scored late on and then Mark Noble had a stoppage-time penalty saved by David de Gea.

But they were the better side early on and took the lead when Ryan Fredericks cut the ball back for Lanzini to slot home.

United, who made 11 changes to their starting side, almost leveled when Juan Mata hit the bar while Anthony Martial also wasted a great chance, one of 27 home goal attempts.

West Ham dug deep and should have buried their hosts late on with Andriy Yarmolenko, Noble and Jarrod Bowen all wasting golden opportunities, but in the end it did not matter.

It was a frustrating night for United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjær who saw another route to silverware blocked as he chases his first trophy in the Old Trafford hotseat.

“You want to go through, but it is a long season, we gave it a good go. They got a goal and after that, we played well for long periods, gave it a go and stats don’t mean anything. When you have 27 shots, the boys have given it a go.”

Tottenham earned an away tie at Burnley after coming through an entertaining tie at Wolves.

Goals by Tanguy Ndombele and Kane put Spurs in command, but Wolves hit back through Leander Dendoncker and Daniel Podence.

Rúben Neves almost won it for Wolves late on with a deflected effort against the bar and he then missed his spot kick as Tottenham squeezed through.

Arsenal cruised into the fourth round with a 3-0 home win against third-tier AFC Wimbledon with Alexandre Lacazette scoring on his first start since April. Emile Smith Rowe and Eddie Nketiah struck late on.

Arsenal will host Leeds United in round four while Leicester City set up a home tie with high-flying Brighton and Hove Albion thanks to a 2-0 win at Millwall. — Reuters

Ian Poulter: ‘Everything is stacked against’ Team Europe

IAN Poulter has been on the winning side in four of his previous six Ryder Cup appearances, yet he’s relishing the “underdog” role this week.

Team Europe has won nine of the past 12 Ryder Cups, but the United States is 17-4 on home soil.

Poulter was on the European team that beat the United States by a point at Medinah Country Club in 2012. The US rebounded to win the Cup 17-11 at Hazeltine four years later, and Poulter said everything about trying to win away from home is more difficult — from the partisan crowds to the course setup.

“Everything is stacked against us,” Poulter said on Wednesday. “When you have that, when you can go in as underdogs, when you can turn the tide and actually come out victorious, it means a little bit more.”

Poulter, 45, has long been a thorn in the side of the US. He enters this week with a 14-6-2 overall record, including a 5-0-1 singles record that includes a slew of memorable clutch putts.

“I’m sure I’ve annoyed plenty,” he said when asked about whether his intensity gets under the skin of players he’s beating. “I mean, my percentage has been really nice, for me, and not for the guys I’ve played against. So I’m sure that’s been pretty frustrating to be on the receiving end of that.

“I enjoy holing putts and winning matches. It’s been a great ride. I’m never going to apologize for it. It’s how match play should be played.”

It remains to be seen how many pairings Team Europe captain Padraig Harrington sends Poulter out in on Friday and Saturday. The Englishman is 4-4-1 in fourball and 5-2-0 in foursomes.

The one thing for certain is that Poulter will be on the course at Whistling Straits for Sunday singles. And that is just the theater he has thrived in for a half-dozen previous Ryder Cups.

Poulter said the US fans have been “brilliant so far” during practice rounds as he embraces what could be his final Ryder Cup as a player.

“It’s a great buzz,” he said. “You only have to look around and all the grandstands are red. Everything that you look at, the fans, 98 percent are obviously going to be US fans this week. It’s difficult from start to finish. It’s hard. It’s not easy to play away from home.

“As much as we feel comfortable as a team, to know we’re underdogs, to know that we have to play extra special this week to get the job done. It feels pretty rewarding at the end of the week if we can get it done.” — Reuters

Former world number one Halep splits with coach Cahill

FORMER world number one Simona Halep and coach Darren Cahill have parted ways after working together for six years, the Romanian player said on Wednesday.

The 29-year-old won her first Grand Slam — the 2018 French Open — under the guidance of Cahill before the Australian left her team at the end of that season to spend more time with family. The two reunited ahead of the 2019 Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) Finals.

In the first three years with Cahill, Halep finished two seasons as world number one and also reached the final of the 2018 Australian Open.

“After six wonderful years working together, @darren_cahill and I have decided that it’s time to end our working relationship. Thank you D for everything, for making me a better tennis player and a better person,” the two-times major champion wrote on Twitter.

Halep, who was knocked out in the fourth round of the US Open by Elina Svitolina earlier this month, got married to Macedonian businessman Toni Iuruc last week. — Reuters

Warriors owner Joe Lacob fined for Ben Simmons comments

EVEN though Golden State Warriors owner Joe Lacob seemed to want to distance his team from pesky trade rumors, the National Basketball Association (NBA) viewed his comments about Ben Simmons as tampering all the same.

The league fined Lacob $50,000 on Wednesday for violating its anti-tampering rule in response to comments he made to the San Francisco Chronicle about the Philadelphia 76ers’ disgruntled star.

Multiple reports have said Simmons told Philadelphia he wants to be traded and will not report to training camp, nor play another game for the franchise. A Western Conference executive told the Philadelphia Inquirer last month that Simmons has his sights set on “three California teams” — presumably the Warriors, Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers, all of whom are pushing for an NBA title.

In his interview with the Chronicle, Lacob was asked about the Warriors’ interest in the three-time All-Star guard, who has received criticism for his poor shooting performances in the playoffs.

“I think we are always looking at everything to see if we can improve our team. We would always look,” Lacob said. “In some ways, (a trade for Simmons) doesn’t really fit what we’re doing. He makes a lot of money. And, can he finish games? I don’t know.

“He’s very talented. The problem is: We have Draymond (Green). Draymond and him are very similar in the sense that neither one really shoots and they do a lot of the playmaking. That’s one issue. The salary structure is another.” Reuters

Gersson Rosas out as Timberwolves’ president of basketball ops

THE Minnesota Timberwolves fired president of basketball operations Gersson Rosas on Wednesday.

“Today, the Minnesota Timberwovles parted ways with President of Basketball Operations Gersson Rosas,” Timberwolves and Lynx owner Glen Taylor said in a statement. “As an organization, we remain committed to building a winning team that our fans and city can be proud of.”

Shortly after news broke, All-Star Karl-Anthony Towns took to social media to presumably offer his thoughts on the news.

The Timberwolves, who posted a 23-49 record last season, are in the midst of change at the top. Former baseball star Alex Rodriguez and entrepreneur Marc Lore were named as the new part owners of the Timberwolves and the WNBA’s Lynx in July.

Rosas was hired as Minnesota’s president of basketball operations in May 2019 after a 16-year stint with the Houston Rockets, with whom he served his final five years as vice-president of basketball operations. He also briefly served as the Dallas Mavericks’ general manager in 2013.

Executive vice-president Sachin Gupta is being promoted as the new head of basketball operations, The Athletic reported. Gupta would become the first person of Indian origin to run an NBA team, per the report.

The Timberwolves reportedly are a top suitor for Ben Simmons, a three-time All-Star guard with the Philadelphia 76ers.

ESPN reported on Tuesday that Simmons will not report for the start of training camp next week and intends to never play another game for the 76ers. — Reuters

T-Wolves radio silence

“Today, the Minnesota Timberwolves parted ways with President of Basketball Operations Gersson Rosas. As an organization, we remain committed to building a winning team that our fans and city can be proud of.” Thus went the two-sentence statement that Timberwolves Glen Taylor released yesterday. A short while later, the 80-year-old Minnesota native issued another press dispatch. “Given the leadership changes announced earlier today, Sachin Gupta will assume basketball operations oversight while remaining Timberwolves Executive Vice- President of Basketball Operations. We are committed to staying aligned to achieve our short-term goals and reach our long-term vision.” In between and thereafter, the franchise offered no additional information.

That the Timberwolves would be less than forthcoming about the development is no shock to longtime followers of the pro hoops scene. Radio silence has met many of their moves since Taylor became majority owner in 1994. That the turn of events seemed to have been precipitated by — well — nothing is at best a surprise. There’s a reason Rosas was fired from a job he left the Rockets to occupy in 2019, of course, and that reason may even be justified. Whether it will be revealed by knowledgeable quarters using more than hushed tones in darkly lit rooms, however, is another matter altogether.

At this point, National Basketball Association (NBA) fans are left to speculate on why Rosas was given the boot. True, the Timberwolves have scraped the bottom of the barrel since he arrived on the scene, going 19-45 and 23-49 in the last two seasons. If nothing else, the numbers reflected the poor returns on the significant personnel changes he made during his time. On the other hand, he remained active in the front office up until he was given the pink slip yesterday. The last month saw him spring trades and signings that underscored the authority he continued to wield internally.

Why Taylor would swing the revolving door open once more without warning — and, at first glance, without logic — remains to be seen. He’s not talking, at least not yet, although it’s hard to envision him pulling the trigger on Rosas’ departure without the imprimatur of the new ownership group slated to assume full control in two years. Then again, given the way things have been run in the Timberwolves, nothing can and should be construed as coming from left field anymore insofar as they’re concerned. Frequency of occurrence has made the exception the norm. And so, even as resident superstar Karl-Anthony Towns could not help, but tweet “wtf…” in reaction to the news, just about everybody else sees it as the same old, same old, worthy of a shrug and little else.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and Human Resources management, corporate communications, and business development.