In FIBA World Cup host Philippines, basketball is life

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Children play basketball on the rooftop of tenement housing in Tondo, Manila, on May 17, 2023. Basketball is played everywhere and by almost everyone in the Philippines, which counts the sport as a national obsession along with boxing and beauty pageants. (Reuters)
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Laurah Agmata, 15, poses for a portrait by the train tracks near where she lives, in Pandacan, Manila, on Aug. 8, 2023. Agmata plays for her school's varsity and the local community league in the Pandacan neighborhood. (Reuters)
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Teenagers play basketball at a court in front of a mural of Kobe Bryant in Manila on July 17, 2023. (Reuters)
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Updated 24 August 2023
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In FIBA World Cup host Philippines, basketball is life

  • Basketball is played everywhere and by almost everyone in the Philippines, which counts the sport as a national obsession along with boxing and beauty pageants
  • Organizers hope to smash the record attendance of 32,616 fans that watched the 1994 FIBA World Cup finals in Canada

MANILA: It may be dwarfed by other nation’s sporting prowess, but the Philippines’ fervor for basketball is gigantic, and enthusiasm for the sport is only intensifying ahead of the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup, which opens in Manila on Friday.

Basketball is played everywhere and by almost everyone in the Philippines, which counts the sport as a national obsession along with boxing and beauty pageants.

There is a basketball court of sorts set up near most churches, and whether it is in a cemetery or near a sewer, these places of worship are ubiquitous in this majority Catholic nation of 112 million people which is co-hosting the FIBA world championships from Aug. 25-Sept. 10 with Indonesia and Japan.

“We are excited since the tournament will happen here. There are many players from the NBA that we are excited to see,” college student James Froilan Almeda told Reuters near championship venue Mall of Asia Arena. The NBA is the US National Basketball Association.

The Philippines might not clinch the 32-nation championship but it can win some games, added Almeda. FIBA ranks the Philippines men’s team 40th globally and the women’s 42nd. Spain and the US are in the top two spots.

Basketball first came to the Philippines in the 1910s, when it was a US colony. American teachers introduced the game to the public school system, initially just for girls.

The appeal of basketball endured through the decades because of its simplicity, veteran sports anchorman Sev Sarmenta said.

“The love affair with basketball continues,” he told Reuters. “I will give you a backboard right here, I will find a piece of wire, it becomes our ring, I’ll attach it to the wall here and we can play. And it’s a scene repeated many times in many streets throughout the country.”

Basketball also cuts across all social classes in this developing nation, where nearly half the population consider themselves to be living in poverty, a recent survey by private pollster Social Weather Services showed.

Jessie Conde, a regular at a court built by waste pickers in the slums of Tondo, said he always turns to basketball when things get tough at home or at school.

His teammates, bare-chested and barefoot, typically bet 50 pesos ($1) each per game, with the winner often using the prize money to buy everyone refreshments.

“Once I’m on the court, I forget all my problems,” the 18-year-old said.

Even though the cheapest ticket for the World Cup costs almost half the minimum daily wage, organizers hope to smash the record attendance of 32,616 fans that watched the 1994 FIBA World Cup finals in Canada.

Opening games that include the Philippine team facing the Dominican Republic will be staged at a 52,000-seat arena. Ticket prices for these early games range from 249 to 19,199 pesos (about $4 to $342).

Laurah Agmata, who plays for her school’s varsity and the local community league by the train tracks in Manila’s Pandacan neighborhood, said she was looking forward to seeing Jordan Clarkson represent the Philippines in the championship. One day, she hopes she can also play for her country like the Filipino-American NBA player who is currently with Utah Jazz.

“Sometimes I get discouraged because it’s often only boys who get opportunities in basketball,” the 15-year-old said. “But basketball is love.”


Leaders Bayern look to power past Wolfsburg in busy start to new year

Updated 21 sec ago
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Leaders Bayern look to power past Wolfsburg in busy start to new year

  • The Bavarians went into the three-week pause in complete control on 41 points
  • Leading Bundesliga scorer Harry Kane has been in scintillating form with 19 league goals

BERLIN: Leaders Bayern Munich look set to stretch their unbeaten Bundesliga run into the new year when they host struggling VfL Wolfsburg on Sunday, with Vincent Kompany’s team sitting nine points clear at the top as the league resumes from the winter break.
The Bavarians went into the three-week pause in complete control on 41 points, with 13 wins and two draws from 15 league matches and a record-breaking goal difference of +44 goals.
Leading Bundesliga scorer Harry Kane has been in scintillating form with 19 league goals as he eyes the all-time league record of 41 goals in a season and what could be a record-extending third ⁠consecutive top scorer trophy in his third season in Germany.
With Luis Diaz adding another eight goals, few will be betting against Bayern earning all three points, with the Wolves having won just two of their last seven matches to sit in 14th place, three points above the relegation playoff spot.
Bayern have never lost in Munich against Wolfsburg in 28 league ⁠matches, having won 26 of them and drawn two.
“After the first few training sessions you could sense that the team is really hungry,” Kompany, who will be on the bench for his 50th Bundesliga game, said after Bayern’s 5-0 friendly win at RB Salzburg on Tuesday.
“We have a lot of motivation for what we want to achieve in 2026. We start off with three matches in a row in six days.” After Sunday’s match, Bayern travel to Cologne on Wednesday for midweek league action before visiting RB Leipzig at the weekend. “That ⁠is tough, especially coming straight out of the holidays,” Kompany said. “But the break was not too long and the lads are fit. If the squad gets out of this (three-match) phase well then we will be very strong for that phase of the season where everything is decided.”
Bayern are on course to qualify for the knockout stage of the Champions League and are also through to the German Cup quarter-finals where they will face Leipzig on February 11.
Second-placed Borussia Dortmund, on 32 points, travel to Eintracht Frankfurt on Friday while Bayer Leverkusen, in third place on 29, host VfB Stuttgart. RB Leipzig, in fourth also on 29, take on St. Pauli.