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Lakers eliminate Rockets

LEBRON JAMES had 29 points, 11 rebounds and seven assists, and the Los Angeles Lakers eliminated the Houston Rockets from the NBA playoffs with a 119-96 victory in Game 5 on Saturday at the NBA bubble near Orlando.

Kyle Kuzma scored 17 points, Markieff Morris added 16 and Danny Green chipped in 14 for the Lakers. Anthony Davis contributed 13 points and 11 boards but committed six turnovers.

James Harden had 30 points, six rebounds and five assists, and Jeff Green finished with 13 points off the bench for the Rockets. Russell Westbrook had 10 points on four-of-13 shooting.

It’s the Lakers’ first trip to the Western Conference finals in 10 years. They will meet the winner of the series between the Los Angeles Clippers and Denver Nuggets.

Like they did against the Portland Trail Blazers in the first round, the Lakers dropped Game 1 of the series and then won four in a row.

The Lakers, who led by as much as 30, seized control of the game in the third quarter. A bucket by Harden allowed Houston to creep within 65-59, but Los Angeles answered with a 18-2 surge after a putback dunk by Davis made it 83-61 with 5:01 left in the third.

The Lakers carried a 95-69 lead into the fourth quarter. They outscored the Rockets 33-18 in the third.

The Lakers bolted out of the gate. They led by as many as 22 points in the first quarter before taking a 35-20 lead heading into the second quarter.

But the Rockets rallied, cutting the deficit to seven after a jumper by Westbrook capped an 8-0 run to open the second quarter.

However, the Lakers increased the lead again to double digits and took a 62-51 advantage at the break. James and Harden each scored 19 points in the first half.

The Lakers outshot the Rockets 52.7% to 37.1%. Los Angeles converted 19 of 37 3-pointers to 13 of 49 for Houston. — Reuters

New recruit Koon excited to play for UAAP champions Blue Eagles

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

DEEMED a talent who got away, Filipino-American player Chris Koon has had a change of heart and is now excited to play for the reigning three-time University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) men’s basketball champions Ateneo Blue Eagles.

A product of Rolling Hills Preparatory in California where he averaged 16 points, 6.6 rebounds, and 4.0 assists, and helped the school to three straight California Interscholastic Federation Southern Section titles and a CIF state championship, Koon is now focused on having the same success and impact in parlaying his wares in the local collegiate scene.

Koon, who traces his Filipino roots to Novaliches, Quezon City, through mother Iderlina Acosta, was being eyed by Ateneo in the last few years but in 2019, was recruited by California State Polytechnic University in Pomona, where he committed but redshirted in his rookie year.

Having had the chance to see the culture in Ateneo firsthand and the basketball program it had under coach Tab Baldwin in a visit to the country last year, Koon said he just felt he needed to come over and play for the Blue Eagles and get his education in Ateneo.

“When I visited a year ago, I saw the school’s culture. Coach Tab is one of the best coaches out there and I felt the family vibe when I was there,” said Koon in an online interview session with local media on Friday.

“I’m excited to play for Ateneo and contribute the best way I can,” added the 6’5” player, who will be sitting out Season 83 of the UAAP to complete his one-year residency.

Koon is described as an all-around player who can create plays both for himself and his teammates.

“He’s a very smart and tough player and I think his transition into our program will be fairly seamless and won’t require a lot of adjustment and adaptability,” said Mr. Baldwin, who joined Koon and Ateneo team manager Chris Quimpo, in the interview.

“He has a high basketball I.Q., he is a leader, and I expect him to be one when he joins us,” added the coach of Koon, a school mate at Cal Poly Pomona of fellow Ateneo recruit Dwight Ramos.

But while Koon is expected to shore up the Blue Eagles’ basketball program for years to come, both Messrs. Baldwin and Quimpo said the move to Ateneo by the Filipino-American player could also be a boon to the latter, not only as a player but as an individual.

“He (Koon) wants to be with a winning program and I think Ateneo gives him that. We have a system here that identifies weaknesses in one’s game, addresses those weaknesses and turns them to strengths,” said Mr. Baldwin.

“And it’s not just as a player that we want to develop Chris but also academically. We want him to finish his studies,” Mr. Quimpo, for his part, said, taking note of Koon’s 4.5 grade point average (GPA) in high school.

Koon, the second prized recruit of the team recently after Filipino-Italian Gab Gomez, is now enrolled in Ateneo, taking up a Management Economics course.

He said eventually he wants to play in the Philippine Basketball Association or internationally, depending on how his game develops.

US Open champion Naomi Osaka

FACTBOX ON JAPAN’S NAOMI OSAKA, WHO BEAT VICTORIA AZARENKA OF BELARUS 1-6 6-3 6-3 TO WIN THE US OPEN TITLE ON SATURDAY.

Born: Oct. 16, 1997 in Osaka, Japan

Grand Slam titles: 3 (US Open 2018, 2020; Australian Open 2019)

EARLY LIFE
• Born to a Japanese mother and a Haitian father, Osaka grew up idolizing 23-times Grand Slam champion Serena Williams.

• Moved to New York when she was three-years-old and turned professional in 2013 aged 15.

• Played in the main draw of a WTA event for the first time at Stanford in 2014. Beat Sam Stosur in the first round before losing to Andrea Petkovic.

CAREER TO DATE
• Made her Grand Slam debut as a qualifier at the Australian Open in 2016, beating Elina Svitolina in the second round before losing to former champion Azarenka.

• Cracked the top 100 in the world for the first time in April 2016 and the top 50 later in the year.

• Named 2016 WTA “Newcomer of the Year” after making third-round appearances at three Grand Slams and reaching her first WTA final.

• Won her first WTA title in March 2018 in Indian Wells, beating Maria Sharapova, Karolina Pliskova and Simona Halep along the way.

• Beat Serena Williams in the 2018 US Open final to claim her maiden Grand Slam title and finished the year ranked fifth in the world.

• Beat Petra Kvitova in the 2019 Australian Open final to become the first player since Jennifer Capriati in 2001 to win the next Grand Slam after her maiden major.

• Beat Azarenka to win her second US Open title. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, there were no fans in attendance at the hardcourt major in 2020. She turned up for each of her seven matches at Flushing Meadows wearing a face mask carrying the name of a Black American to highlight racial injustice in the United States. — Reuters

Kaya focuses on winning first PFL title after AFC Cup cancellation

HAD its 2020 AFC Cup campaign abruptly cut by the coronavirus pandemic, local football club Kaya FC-Iloilo now channels its focus in its bid in the Philippines Football League (PFL) where it hopes to win its first-ever league title.

Following the decision of the AFC Executive Committee late last week to cancel altogether the remainder of the AFC Cup because of logistical issues and concerns, Philippine clubs seeing action in the tournament had no choice but to accept what was seemingly an eventual decision amid the prevailing conditions in different parts of the world brought about by the health crisis.

For Kaya, while it laments the cancellation of the tournament, it is choosing to view the turn of events as an opportunity to give more focus on its campaign in the long-delayed 2020 edition of the PFL.

“The cancelation of this year’s AFC Cup only means we’re more focused than ever to get ourselves right for the start of #PFL2020!” said the team in a short post on its Facebook page.

“We’re going all out for our first ever Philippines Football League title!” it added.

In the fourth season of the PFL, originally scheduled to start in March but is now being angled to push through sometime in October, Kaya will be part of the six-team field, along with United City Football Club (formerly Ceres-Negros FC), Stallion Laguna FC, Mendiola FC 1991, Azkals Development Team, and new entrant Maharlika Football Club.

It is currently training in the Philippine Football Federation Training Center in Carmona, Cavite, the designated area for such as included in the protocols agreed upon by the league and the government as part of mitigating measures against the spread of the coronavirus.

Kaya has been part of the PFL since the start but has yet to win the league title. It, however, won the Copa Paulino Alcantara title back in 2018.

The club competed in the last two editions of the AFC Cup.

In this year’s edition of the regional tournament, Kaya was running second in Group H with 1-2-0 record and five points, two behind group leader Tampines Rovers FC (2-1-0) of Singapore.

It last played against PSM Makassar of Indonesia in Jakarta on March 10 where it settled for a 1-1 draw.

Kaya was scheduled to play PSM Makassar and Shan United FC of Myanmar on Sept. 23 and 26, respectively, until organizers decided to cancel.

“In view of the logistics in coordinating the five zones of the AFC Cup and completing the Inter Zone matches, the AFC Executive Committee also agreed that the pandemic created complexities which constituted a Force Majeure event and, with sadness, led to the cancellation of the 2020 competition,” the AFC said in its decision.

Apart from Kaya, also in the tournament was Ceres, the place of which was to be taken over by UCFC.

Before the cancellation, Ceres was on top of Group G with seven points built on a 2-1-0 record. Michael Angelo S. Murillo

ZC Valientes looking to do well in newly recognized pro league NBL

THE ZAMBOANGA CITY MLV Valientes are excited to play for the National Basketball League, which recently got the approval of the Games and Amusements Board to operate as a professional league. (NBL Facebook page)

THE Zamboanga City MLV Valientes will finally experience playing for a professional homegrown league in the Philippines.

Owned by Rolando “Junnie” Navarro Jr., the Zamboanga City MLV Valientes are excited to play for the National Basketball League (NBL), which recently got the approval of the Games and Amusements Board to operate as a professional league.

“Valientes will always be there for Zamboangueños, win or lose. We want Zamboangueños to play, we know Zamboangueños are good players, we already proved that in National PRISAA when Zamboanga won two championships, and was a champion in NBA 3×3 in the country,” said Navarro.

Besides Navarro, supporting the team is accounting firm MLV in Australia, owned by Michael Venezuala.

“It has been a dream of every Zamboangueño basketball player to play professionally,” added Navarro.

“Valientes are the original team of Zamboanga, the only team from Mindanao and the first pro team in Zamboanga. The fans are very excited to see our team finally play in the pro league.”

The team will be coached by Joseph Romarate while the roster includes former University of the East player Gino Jumaoas from Boalan, Das “Tausug Hero” Esa from Barangay San Jose, AA Fabian and Jon Rebollos from Sta. Maria.

The NBL is the second active professional league in the country after the PBA.

Naomi’s mask

It was clear from the outset that Naomi Osaka planned to stay in the bubble environment at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center for the entire fortnight. As she prepped for the 2020 United States (US) Open, she strove to embrace its uniqueness; she pledged to wear a mask,  bearing the name of a victim of police brutality to every match. Certainly, it showed her willingness to flex her muscles off the court, first made evident when she sat out the semifinal of the Western & Southern Open the week before to protest the shooting of Jacob Blake. More importantly, it underscored her self-assurance in likewise making a difference with a racket in hand; the fact that she brought seven masks with her meant she believed she would be able to stick around all the way to the final.

Not that Osaka’s spot in the last contest of the women’s draw was secure. Far from it, in fact; she needed three sets to dispatch opponents in three of her six matches en route. Among those was a tough Round of Four encounter with 28th seed Jennifer Brady, during which she had to go through a tiebreak to claim the first set. On the other hand, there can be no questioning her sense of purpose and resiliency. She can be hard on herself, with her confidence occasionally wavering under pressure. Not in the US Open, though; when the going got tough, she displayed her toughness and got going.

Granted, Osaka received no small measure of good fortune with her assignments. Anett Kontaveit at Number 14 was the highest seed she faced at Flushing Meadows, in contrast to the four Top 20 rivals — living legend Serena Williams included — fellow finalist Victoria Azarenka had to upend before their encounter. That said, she could only go so far as take the measure of those before her. And she did, with aplomb; she may have been far from flawless, but she managed to raise her game under pressure and show her best when it mattered.

There will be more trials for Osaka, even as she has shown an increased capacity to handle the demands of success on her time. Up next in her agenda: the French Open, where she figures to encounter difficulty, and not just because clay is her least-favorite surface. If there’s anything going for her, it’s that she has stopped becoming her own worst enemy. As she proved against Azarenka yesterday, she has learned not to beat herself. All she can do at any given time is try her best, and if she does, she’ll gladly live with the results.

 

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.

Plant thieves scour forests to satisfy foliage-starved Filipinos

The pandemic has set off a wave of theft in the Philippines. The target? Plants.

The government has stepped up monitoring of social media and patrolling of protected natural areas amid reports of traders scouring mountains and forests for plants, including endangered species, to meet a sudden spike in demand from locked-down Filipinos who are craving some greenery in their homes.

“Illegal gatherers and collectors are having a fiesta because the market is bigger and prices are more attractive,” said Rogelio Demallete, an ecosystem specialist at the nation’s Biodiversity Management Bureau. “People are buying and raising plants because of boredom from the quarantine.”

Carnivorous pitcher plants and bantigue trees, popular in crafting bonsai, are among those sought after, Demallete said. The bureau’s agents, hampered by quarantine restrictions, are working with the National Bureau of Investigation to catch illegal gatherers and traders of the “vulnerable” and “endangered” species such as Alocasia zebrina and Alocasia sanderiana.

WHITE LEAVES

Common plants such as caladiums, rubber trees, and ferns are selling in legal nurseries for 35% to 40% more than before COVID, according to Win Marcella, a hobbyist who is spending more time tending his garden. A mature Monstera deliciosa, or swiss cheese plant, now fetches at least P3,000 ($62), compared with as little as P800 before. Other enthusiasts on social media say demand for the rare white-leafed subspecies Deliciosa albo is so high that they are valued at P7,000 per leaf.

Even as the government begins easing a lockdown that was reimposed in the capital last month after a spike in new COVID cases, green fever has prompted some entrepreneurs to switch to or add horticulture after their existing businesses fell victim to the effects of the virus.

Marvin Braceros, the chef behind Philippine restaurant Yum in Milan, had to close his fine-dining outlet in a Manila shopping mall earlier this year as his customers vanished. In a small space offered him by the mall landlord to help recover some of his losses he began selling house plants. Now he has stalls in two malls and plans to open seven more by October.

“I was surprised with the response,” said Mr. Braceros. “I think it’s driven by the need for positive vibes and a stress reliever. I don’t think this is just a fad. People are more conscious of healthy living.”

The desire to have something living to care for in an apartment has boosted sales of house plants in other cities facing lockdowns. Even before the pandemic there had been a growing trend among millennials to raise “plant babies” in cities such as New York and London. But the demand in Manila for greenery is especially striking. One of the most densely populated cities in the world, with more than 27,000 people per square mile, it’s also one of the largest, with an estimated 23 million people sandwiched between the mountains and Manila Bay.

The need for nature is helping established plant wholesalers like Bulacan Garden Corp. survive a drop in business from their traditional customers that landscape new developments or supply hotels and offices. While sales to bulk buyers have more than halved, a daily stream of individuals who buy three to five pieces each has kept Bulacan Garden’s two Manila shops busy, said store manager Ricky Santiago.

“Many people have nowhere to go and nothing to do during the lockdown so they raise plants to fill the time,” Mr. Santiago said. “Retail buyers are not replacing the volume lost from bulk orders, but they are helping us and many others stay in survival mode.”

Demand from the capital has spread to small operators in the suburbs around Manila’s vast urban sprawl. Jeffrey Cabida, who helps run a backyard nursery 85 kilometers south of the capital, says most of its sales now come from Manila with orders up eight-fold from a year ago. “So many are buying that some plants run out of stock,” he said.

“We’re surprised at the increase,” Mr. Santiago said. “We can’t help but wonder because these aren’t consumables. This isn’t food that you can eat.” — Bloomberg

Philippines reports surge in fatalities after re-classification

The Philippines recorded a surge in deaths caused by COVID-19, after having to take into account 126 fatalities that had been incorrectly classified, according to data released on Saturday by the Department of Health.

The country recorded 186 virus-related deaths, according to the department. On final validation, 128 cases previously reported as recovered were found to be 126 deaths and two active cases, the department said. The adjustments cover data going back to April.

The country added 4,935 new COVID cases as of 4 p.m. Saturday, bringing the total to 257,863 cases, the department said. The Manila metropolitan area accounts for about half of the country’s cases. Total recoveries increased by 659 to 187,116 patients, it said.

The Philippines is battling Southeast Asia’s worst COVID-19 outbreak, with cases doubling over five weeks. Infections soared even after the government returned the Manila capital region and nearby provinces to a stricter lockdown for two weeks in August. — Bloomberg

Philippines deports US Marine who killed transgender woman

MANILA – The Philippines on Sunday deported a United States Marine convicted of killing a transgender woman in the Southeast Asian country in 2014, after he was granted an absolute pardon by President Rodrigo Duterte.

Lance Corporal Joseph Scott Pemberton left Manila’s international airport at 9:14 a.m. local time (0114 GMT) aboard an American military aircraft bound for the United States, according to Bureau of Immigration (BI) spokeswoman Dana Sandoval.

Pemberton was accompanied by representatives from the U.S. embassy on his way to the airport, she told state television PTV-4.

“As a consequence of the deportation order against him, Pemberton has been placed on the Bureau’s blacklist, perpetually banning him from coming back,” BI Commissioner Jaime Morente said in a statement.

Details of Pemberton’s flight arrangements were not disclosed to the media until after he left amid tight security measures.

A court had found Pemberton guilty of killing Jennifer Laude in a hotel in Olongapo, outside a former U.S. navy base northwest of the capital Manila, six years ago, in a case that sparked debate over the U.S. military presence in its former colony.

Duterte’s move to pardon Pemberton has sparked condemnation from activists who described the move as a “mockery of justice”.

Presidential spokesman Harry Roque, who served as a lawyer in the prosecution of Pemberton, had said Duterte’s decision may have stemmed from his desire to get access to coronavirus vaccines being developed by U.S. firms.

However, the Philippine health ministry quickly said that none of the U.S. vaccine makers the government is in talks with had set any conditions. – Reuters

DoH says no conditions set to access US vaccines

PHL COVID-19 cases hit 250,000

The Philippines will have access to potential COVID-19 vaccines being developed by US firms without any strings attached, the Department of Health (DoH) said on Friday, after the presidential spokesman had linked the pardoning of a US Marine to ensuring access.

This as the DoH reported that the country now has over 250,000 coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases.

Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire said none of the US vaccine makers that the government is in talks with had set conditions, adding that all potential vaccines will undergo a regulatory process to ensure safety and efficacy.

“No conditions were provided or given to us,” Ms. Vergeire told a news conference.

The Philippines has met with US vaccine manufacturers Moderna Inc. and Pfizer Inc. to secure a supply of COVID-19 vaccine. It has also held discussions with China and Russia, which are among countries leading the global race to develop coronavirus inoculations.

The government plans to buy 40 million doses worth $400 million for 20 million people, about a fifth of the country’s population of 107 million.

Presidential Spokesman Harry Roque said on Thursday that President Rodrigo Duterte’s decision to pardon a US marine convicted of killing a transgender woman nearly six years ago may have stemmed from his desire to ensure access to coronavirus vaccines. But Mr. Roque reiterated on Friday that he was merely stating a personal opinion.

Joseph Scott Pemberton was serving a six- to 10-year sentence for killing Jennifer Laude near a former US navy base in 2014. He will likely be released from a military jail and deported this weekend, the Bureau of Immigration said.

Philippine Ambassador to Washington Jose Manuel Romualdez said US officials were “surprised” by the pardon. While they inquired about Pemberton, they did not push for his release, he told ANC News channel.

250,000 cases, 4,000 dead

In its daily case bulletin on Friday, the DoH reported an additional 4,040 cases, bringing the country’s total COVID-19 tally to 252,964.

The DoH also reported that the number of recoveries has reached 186,606, including 566 newly reported recoveries. An additional 42 deaths were also reported, bringing the total number of fatalities to 4,108.

Meanwhile, the government’s task force against COVID-19 — the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) — on Friday said it had approved the recommendations made by the Department of Communication and Information Technology (DICT) regarding its contact tracing system StaySafe.PH. It will be used as part of the government’s official COVID-19 response along with the DoH’s COVID-19 Data Repository System (CDRS).

“…The training, integration, and the use of StaySafe.PH and the COVID-19 Data Repository System (CDRS) shall be incorporated in the country’s COVID-19 response, particularly, in the response of local government units,” the resolution said.

The task force also approved the DICT’s recommendation for an “enhanced’ RapidPass System. A technical working group in charge of making policies regarding the system will be established.

The RapidPass system was created to make passing through checkpoints easier for frontliners and other authorized persons in areas under lockdown. — Gillian M. Cortez with a report from Reuters

IATF eases distancing rules for commuters

Distancing rules in public transport have been eased, allowing jeeps, buses, trains, and planes to carry more passengers amid the region’s worst coronavirus outbreak, the Department of Transportation (DoTr) said.

The one-meter physical distancing rule has been reduced to 0.75 meters, and will be gradually eased to a third of a meter in a month. Commuters will still have to wear face masks and face shields, the agency said, and passengers are still discouraged from speaking while inside public vehicles. Standing commuters will be allowed in buses.

The distancing rule change will be implemented starting Sept. 14.

The agency and economic managers’ proposal to increase public transport ridership and accommodate more people going back to work was approved by the government’s coronavirus task force, the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases, Transport Secretary Arthur Tugade said in a statement Friday.

“There is a need to safely optimize the carrying capacity of the various public transport modes as Metro Manila and its adjacent areas to continue with the transition towards the ‘new normal’ where more workers are expected to return to their re-opened workplaces and more businesses are expected to resume operations that were stopped during the enforcement of strict quarantine measures,” said Mr. Tugade.

The easing is in line with economic officials’ push to reopen the economy more, even with the highest coronavirus cases in Southeast Asia, with over 250,000 infections as of Friday.

The physical distancing requirements in the various train lines — LRT-1, LRT-2, MRT-3, and PNAR — will also be reduced, increasing capacity. Passenger load capacity of roll on-roll off vessels will also be increased.

“As for airlines and passenger ferries, optimizing the physical distance between passengers will mean more passengers being allowed to enter airports and seaports,” the statement said. — Gillian M. Cortez with a Bloomberg report

OVP initiates job platform for Filipinos affected by pandemic

The Office of the Vice-President (OVP) has again initiated a program to assist Filipinos left unemployed by the coronavirus pandemic — this time a platform for job listings free for both job seekers and employers.

Vice-President Leni Robredo on Thursday announced the OVP has partnered with tech company Elevatech Solutions to build the website Sikap.PH, calling the initiative “BAYANIHANAPBUHAY.”

“The goal of this initiative is to offer a platform that will make it easier for our countrymen who have lost their jobs due to the pandemic to look for other job opportunities,” Ms. Robredo said in Filipino on her Facebook post. 

Ms. Robredo, who is known for collaborating with civil society organizations and local enterprises through her AngatBuhay program, said the program was the result of her talks with various employers including EMS Services Philippines, Inc., D.M, Consunji Inc., Lots’a Pizza, Get Philippines, Empire East Land Holdings, and Solarwinds Software Asia PTE LTD- Philippine branch, among others partner organizations and companies. 

According to the VP, applicants looking for job openings should proceed to the website and click “Sign up as a worker,” while employers who want to post their job vacancies should send their contact details to the e-mail address bayanihanapbuhay@ovp.gov.ph

As of press time, the Sikap.Ph website posted openings in the finance, food, real estate, business outsourcing, and services industries. 

Since the pandemic began, Ms. Robredo’s office has launched several programs to help various sectors cope with the loss of their livelihoods. In June, Ms. Robredo announced that her office tapped families of drug war victims to help in the production of local personal protective equipment. —  Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza