Talks are that the NBA owners and the players are making progress in their efforts to end the lockout. While that is in the works, it's good fun to think about the possibilities of NBA players playing in the Philippines again. With the PBA Commissioner's Cup allowing unlimited height for imports, which NBA players would make great imports in the PBA?
Monday, October 31, 2011
Fantasy Hoops
Labels: kevin durant, NBA, PBA
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 12:09 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
PBA 37th Season: First Ten
Whether it's the rich draft class, player and coach movement, the NBA Lockout or the new TV partner, there seems to be more excitement around the PBA in this 37th season. Here is From the Fifty Peso Seats' "First Ten" Roster.
2. Rain or Shine is off to a fast start and it could be good Feng Shui. The Elasto Painters currently have the most Chinese-Filipino players in the PBA. They have Jeff Chan, Jonathan Uyloan, TY Tang and rookie Paul Lee. Why not try to beat Shopinas at #1, hire Wilmer Ong and have a starting five?
Labels: 37th Season, Ginebra, PBA, PBA Draft
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 1:34 AM 2 comments
Friday, October 21, 2011
The Hunger Games
(This article was originally published by A Sports Syndicate)
The thing with wars is both sides think they're doing the right thing; that's why they're willing to sacrifice resources, and even lives to win. In this information age, both sides even take to media to manifest their principles and try to convince people to join their side.
The other thing about wars though, is that no matter which side wins, everyone else on the sidelines suffer. In any war, there is always collateral damage and in the NBA Lockout, the damage is tremendous.
With every NBA franchise comes an arena and the businesses surrounding it. In the arenas, you have ticket takers, concessionaire stand staff, ushers, security staff and cleaning/maintenance staff. Around arenas, you have restaurants and bars that staff hundreds of cooks and waiters and other stores that sell team merchandise among others. With every passing day of posturing and preening from both the owners and the players, business and income go down and bills pile up for arena and restaurant staff. As the players "fight for what is right" and the owners "make business decisions that can curb losses" the restaurant and arena staff take on the real fight, the fight to earn for their kids, to pay for the mortgages and to earn enough not to go hungry.
In truth, the NBA Lockout is a complicated problem. The profit sharing, the salary cap structure; they are all very deeply complicated. Players do have a point and so do the owners and yes they are well in their rights to fight for their principles. As another week passes however, and another round of rhetoric is given on why the NBA team owners and the players cannot come to an agreement, both sides should probably remember something more important than their principles. Yes, going down from 57 % profit to 50% profit for the NBA players or the owners giving up on their hard cap policy is an attack on their principles, but either way both sides still get paid. The key phrases in their argument are "profit sharing" and "salary," and that means that whatever happens in their war, both sides will have profits and salaries. For the arena and restaurant staff, though, they will have less and less of both, as long the NBA Lockout war keeps going.
Principles determine and define people and so they need to be defended and protected, but nothing trumps beating hunger. That is more than a principle; it's a basic human right.
Labels: David Stern, Lockout, NBA
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 9:02 AM 0 comments
Saturday, October 8, 2011
How to Build a UAAP Championship Team
As Ateneo celebrates its fourth straight championship with dreams of more entirely possible, big words like "destiny" and "dynasty" are going to be thrown around. Before everyone begins to believe that there's nothing stopping Ateneo in the future, other schools should take note that stopping the Blue Eagles takes only 2 steps.
Step # 1 Yo Teach!!!
Labels: Ateneo, Kirk Long, Nico Salva, Rabeth Al-Hussaini, UAAP
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 12:43 PM 0 comments