When Lebron James made his epic laugher slash middle finger, "The Decision," the sporting world seemingly split between haters and defenders. Fans were quick to point out that James was well within his rights to leave Cleveland as a free agent, and the so called, "haters," who were calling for loyalty, respect and good taste, were deemed too "emotional." It just seemed like the two sides were constantly fighting with neither side getting the real point. I weighed in on it, with one of my favorite articles , but I think mine didn't get the real point across either.
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
No Hater Zone
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 4:15 PM 0 comments
Friday, April 13, 2012
Judging the "Chotness" of It All
The Veteran All Star line up have been finalized:
Starters: Mark Caguioa, JC Intal, Mark Pingris, James Yap and Arwind Santos
Bench: Jimmy Alapag, Kelly Williams, L.A Tenorio, Sonny Thoss, Gabe Norwood, Gary David, and Alex Cabagnot
The RSJ Team, meanwhile, will have:
Bench: Japeth Aguilar, Mark Barroca, Mac Baracael, Rico Maierhoffer, Rabeh Al-Hussaini and Chris Ross
Apart from the weird starting line ups which features no centers, no point guards on one side and two on the other, what is most interesting is that, it is like Smart Gilas 1 versus Smart Gilas 2. The veterans features 10 of the 16 players Chot named to the new national team pool. Only controversial choices Rico Villanueva, Jason Castro, Larry Fonacier (plus Ranidel de Ocampo) are missing. Meanwhile, the RSJ team features seven (eight if Al-Hussaini is included) of the Rajko-trained Gilas ballers in their team. Missing only are non pros Chris Tiu, Greg Slaughter and Aldrech Ramos. Of course, since the line ups are not complete, it hardly gives us an accurate picture, but it does pose some interesting questions.
Labels: PBA, PBA All Star, Smart Gilas
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 8:42 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
The "Most" List
When I started this blog, I never meant for it to last this long, but a couple of Philippine Blog Awards nominations pretty much nudged me to continue writing. This, believe it or not, is the 200th post of From the Fifty Peso Seats. Not bad, eh? So here's the "Most" list, my quick compilation of the posts with the "mosts." Sorry. I just had to type it.
Most Read: Top 10 "Top 10s" Most Beautiful Women in Sports
Link: http://fiftypesoseats.blogspot.com/2010/05/top-10-top-10s-most-beautiful-women-in.html
Highlight: The Melina ring entrance video justifying her number 1 position
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Ana Ivanovic:placed 2nd in my list |
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 1:24 PM 0 comments
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Oh Please
Every sports fan has probably heard about it by now. Two members of the Azkals, the Philippine Men's National Football Team, were accused of sexual harassment by AFC Commisioner and former presidential daughter Cristy Ramos Jalasco. Now, people have apparently decided to take sides on this issue in a classic he said/she said situation, but there really is no side to take. There is only the truth. If Angel Guirado and Lex Moy did what Ramos Jalasco alleged, then they must pay. If they didn't sexually harass her, then she must explain her actions and resign from her position.
His masterpiece of a speech included, "Hindi naman kayo Pilipino. Nagpapanggap lang kayong kayumanggi." ("You are not Filipino. You are pretending to have caramel complexion.") Not to be a smart aleck, but Moy looks pretty kayumanggi to me. Seriously, though, this is where everything becomes a farce. This is such an old issue and the fact that it's resurfacing just shows how much racism is prevalent in our nation, most likely brought about by the numerous foreign countries which occupied us.
Oh please. Since when did being Filipino become a matter of blood or color? If Clavio and all these writers are so adamant about being true Filipinos then they need to excuse themselves as well, unless they are of pure blood from the Filipino indigenous tribes. After all, they're looking for "real" FIlipinos here. How can Jose Rizal be a true national hero then, when he is of mixed origin?
Being Filipino has never been about skin color, race or place of birth. That is why you can be born anywhere and still be Pinoy. Being Filipino has always been about heart. It is about love of country and family, respect for elders, ingenious adaptability and warm hospitality. It is about deciding to sacrifice your body, blood, sweat, tears to play for the country. It is about declaring to the world that you are proud of your roots.
If there really are Filipinos of mixed heritage that err, then I'd be the first to stand in line in condemning them. If all we have are allegations, then it is intensely stupid to condemn all of our national athletes of mixed heritage. Heck, even if Guirado and Moy are found guilty, it is still stupid to condemn all the other athletes. These are men and women who chose to play here and represent us. They have the ability to compete and they chose to declare their FIlipino citizenship and help make us proud and lift our country's morale. To call them anything less than true Filipinos is a hate crime. Plain and simple.
photos courtesy of ellentordesillas.com, azkalsfootballteam.com
Labels: Azkals, football, philippines
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 11:30 PM 0 comments
Friday, February 10, 2012
The Long (and Hard) Road
Recently, former Ateneo guard/forward Kirk Long expressed his desire to play in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA). Knowing full well that his American heritage prevents him from applying, he is apparently taking steps to get the PBA to make an exception to his case.
This Long case is bringing back the arguments brought on when Alex Compton, another player of pure American heritage born in the Philippines, applied for the PBA as well and here are just some of my short (pun intended) random thoughts about this whole situation.
Labels: Alex Compton, Ateneo, Kirk Long, Pacific Rims, Rafe Bartholomew, UAAP
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 8:46 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Fifty Peso Previews NBA 2011-12: Southwest Division
Dallas Mavericks
Major Additions: Lamar Odom, Vince Carter
Major Subtractions: Tyson Chandler, Caron Butler
Fearless Forecast: At least 2nd round of the playoffs
Labels: Dallas Mavericks, Houston Rockets, Memphis Grizzlies, NBA, New Orleans Hornets, San Antonio Spurs
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 5:36 PM 0 comments
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Fifty Peso Previews NBA 2011-12: Pacific Division
Golden State Warriors
Major Additions: Nate Robinson, Kwame Brown, Brandon Rush
Major Subtractions: None
Fearless Forecast: Eliminated in the regular season
Labels: Golden State Warriors, Los Angeles Clippers, Los Angeles Lakers, NBA, Phoenix Suns, Sacramento Kings
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 12:23 PM 0 comments
Sunday, January 15, 2012
Fifty Peso Previews NBA 2011-12: Northwest Division
Denver Nuggets
Major Additions: None
Major Subtractions: None
The Nuggets are looking for a drama-free year after the whole Carmelo Anthony trade situation last year. They have the right line up for it, as there are no clear stars on the team. The Nuggets have great pieces in Ty Lawson, Andre Miller, Nene and Danilo Gallinari, and they are looking to continue their run and gun ways. That will mean exciting basketball and a slot in the playoffs. The Nuggets will make the playoffs again, but they do need someone, perhaps Nene (he of the new massive contract) to rise and take the cudgels as the go-to-guy if they want to go deep in the playoffs.
Fearless Forecast: Eliminated in the playoffs (1st round)
Labels: Denver Nuggets, Minnesota Timberwolves, NBA, Oklahoma City Thunder, Portland Trail Blazers, Utah Jazz
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 10:59 PM 0 comments
Friday, January 6, 2012
Fifty Peso Previews NBA 2011-12: Southeast Division
Atlanta Hawks
Major Subtractions: Jamal Crawford
The Hawks decided to keep the nucleus of their team, gaining McGrady while losing 6th man Crawford, in the hopes that yet another year of playing together will finally be "it" for this team that has played together for years. The Hawks, however, are still a team that struggles mightily against good defensive teams. Unless Josh Smith decides to completely reach his potential and Joe Johnson defies father time, the Hawks may be doomed to yet another loss in the playoffs.
Fearless Forecast: Eliminated in the playoffs (2nd round)
Labels: Atlanta Hawks, Charlotte Bobcats, Miami Heat, NBA, Orlando Magic, Washington Wizards
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 1:02 AM 0 comments
Sunday, January 1, 2012
Fifty Peso Previews NBA 2011-12: Central Division
Chicago Bulls
Labels: Chicago Bulls, Cleveland Cavaliers, Detroit Pistons, Indiana Pacers, Milwaukee Bucks, NBA
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 12:28 AM 0 comments
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Fifty Peso Previews NBA 2011-12: Atlantic Division
It's that time of the year again! All NBA teams are undefeated and looking forward to the season. Not all of them will do well, however, and only one will emerge as champion. Who will do well and who will fail? I present this season's fifty peso previews.
Labels: Boston Celtics, NBA, New Jersey Nets, New York Knicks, Philadelphia 76ers, Toronto Raptors
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 8:05 PM 0 comments
Friday, December 16, 2011
My PBA All Star Ballot (Veterans)
The Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) opened the All Star Game voting early and they have also brought back the Veterans versus Rookies, Sophomores and Juniors (RSJ) format. While I disagree with both decisions, I have cast my ballot for the annual event. Since the PBA has become a guards' league some two or three years ago, I'm not voting strictly by position. The 14 slots i will divide by 2 big men, 4 forwards, 4 guards and 4 of any position
2 Bigs - Sonny Thoss and Kelly Williams
Labels: James Yap, Mark Caguioa, PBA, PBA All Star
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 8:43 AM 0 comments
Monday, December 12, 2011
My PBA All Star Ballot (RSJ)
The Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) opened the All Star Game voting early and they have also brought back the Veterans versus Rookies, Sophomores and Juniors (RSJ) format. While I disagree with both decisions, I have cast my ballot for the annual event. Since the PBA has become a guards' league some two or three years ago, I'm not voting strictly by position. The 14 slots i will divide by 2 big men, 4 forwards, 4 guards and 4 of any position.
2 Bigs - Japeth Aguilar and Rabeh Al-Husaini
Labels: Japeth Aguilar, Jvee Casio, Paul Lee, PBA, PBA All Star, Rabeth Al-Hussaini
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 12:03 AM 3 comments
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
The Unseen
With the Sinag Pilipinas Basketball Team running roughshod over their opposition on their way to winning the basketball gold medal in the 26th South East Asian (SEA) Games, it's easy to overlook certain things, good or bad. Here are just some that may have been unseen.
Cliff Jumping a.k.a. the other Chris
Ditching Iverson
Coming into the SEA Games, one of the worries was that both point guards of Sinag, Emman Monfort and RR Garcia, were shoot first guards, or what I call graduates of, "The Allen Iverson School for Non-Passing Point Guards." Their play in the SEA Games disproved that and made me a believer. Monfort and Garcia got their shots and points, but made it their first priority to get teammates involved. Their passing both in fastbreak and drive and dish situations were impeccable and went a long way in helping the Philippines dominate. This actually makes them better players and makes me wonder why they don't play like this in the UAAP. Perhaps they should.
Undertaker and Vitor say, "Not Yet."
Coming in with a wave of success, skills and hype, it's easy to be swept up in calling Kiefer Ravena, "The Phenom." International ball, however, has a funny way of revealing what aspects players need to work on and Ravena's list is larger than people would like to admit. At this point Ravena is already a tremendous talent. He can shoot the mid range, step back and pull up jumper accurately which is more than his dad could ever do, he is ultra quick and athletic (a fast break savant) and he is whip smart (his basketball IQ is tremendous). Yet, his defensive play left Sinag in the cold several times. He can steal the ball but he goes for it too often and his one on one defense suffers because of it. Many an opponent has blown past him, leaving Greg Slaughter or Cliff Hodge to cover for him. He also needs to shoot better from the 3-point line and he needs to learn the point guard spot faster if he wants to maintain his "status" in international ball and in the PBA. With all that being said, he is a tremendous talent and asset to any team even at 18 years old. Perhaps instead of "Phenom," he should be dubbed, "The Prodigy," because that what he really is.
The Old Hand
As everyone celebrated the basketball gold, the names of Slaughter, Ravena and Bobby Ray Parks were dropped as the heroes, as well they should. One name, though, has not been mentioned and it is easy to see why. Captain Chris Tiu's contributions are easy to overlook as he posted ordinary numbers but his effect on the game was no way near that. Tiu, who faced infinitely better competition in his last 3 years with Smart Gilas, looked bored at times in the elimination round. In Sinag's last 2 games, however, when they seemed to face just a tinge of competitiveness from Malaysia and Thailand, the "old guy" perked up. Whether it was assists, steals, lay ups or just plain old words of wisdom, Tiu's mark was indelible. In both games, Tiu played an average of 8 to 10 minutes per half, and he entered when Sinag needed separation. In both games, Tiu led Sinag's 2nd five increased the lead and put the game out of reach, leaving the 1st five to clean it all up with the fast break highlights. In the Malaysia game, Tiu entered the 3rd quarter with Sinag leading by 3. A few steals, assists and points later, he left the game for good with Sinag leading by 25. In the finals against a more competitive Thailand, Tiu came in with Sinag protecting a 4 point lead. 10 minutes, a few lay ups, spin moves and passes later, he left with Sinag leading by 20. Some wondered, but that is why Coach Norman Black never started the Gilas captain. You send in the guy when the young ones need to reminded on how to play.
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 3:03 PM 0 comments
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
5 Things the NBA Lockout is Making Me Miss
The Southeast Asian Games are coming up and Manny Pacquiao has a fight in less than a week's time, but a lot of sporting hearts in the Philippines are still unfulfilled. The culprit is the NBA Lockout, which for reasons valid or not, has gone on for far too long. It's deprived sports fans like me from finding out some of the most interesting things, and here are my top five.
5. Peace Brothers!!!
4. New Blood
This year's crop of rookies is considered a lean one, but there are interesting stories there. Did the Cavs pick the right number 1 pick in Kyrie Irving? What about the long-awaited Ricky Rubio? Will his game translate well in the NBA?
3. Coaching Carousel
As usual, the roster of NBA coaches has changed and these new coaches, whether 1st time coaches like Mark Jackson of the Golden State Warriors or those brought back for another run like the Houston Rockets' Kevin McHale, bring intriguing prospects. Whose coaching philosophies will bring positive changes to their teams? Can Mike Brown handle the circus that is the Los Angeles Lakers? Who will be the 1st coaching casualty of the season and is there ANY possibility that Jerry Sloan will come back to coach?!?
2. Emergence
Last year saw the slight decline in Kobe Bryant's game and the shrinking of Lebron James'. In the same year, though, emerged Derrick Rose and Kevin Durant. The MVP and Scoring Champ, respectively, emerged as the league's newest bonafide superstars, leading their young teams into the conference finals. Will the two remain as the league's greatest individual talents or will new names emerge yet again? Will the old, supposedly forgotten names come back with a flurry?
1. Deadlines
For some teams, the pressure is not as large to win immediately. The Mavericks just won an NBA title, so no one will really burn them in effigy if they fail to repeat. The Bulls and Thunder are young and another year deep in the playoffs with no title won't be too bad. For some teams, though, the pressure is huge. The Boston Celtics and the San Antonio Spurs are aging and probably have only this year to win again or face the team blowing up. The Orlando Magic have only this year to win as well or Dwight Howard will probably leave to free agency. The Miami Heat have spent over a hundred million (and more in PR money) to bring in their "Big Three" of Dwayne Wade, Lebron James and Chris Bosh. Another year without a title could break Heat President Pat Riley's patience. Can these teams beat their deadline? At best, only one of them will.
Labels: chris bosh, Derrick Rose, dwayne wade, kevin durant, Lebron James, NBA, NBA Lockout
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 2:08 PM 0 comments
Monday, October 31, 2011
Fantasy Hoops
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?
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
Monday, September 26, 2011
Crack in the Dam
Everyone knows it by now. Smart Gilas Pilipinas placed fourth after losing two heartbreakers in the semi-final and battle for third games in the recently-concluded FIBA Asia Championships. As expectations are not met and emotions run high, lost in all the hatred, armchair coaching, finger pointing and disappointment are the important things.
History Made
Labels: Chris Tiu, FIBA Asia, Rajko Toroman, Smart Gilas
Posted by sharwin l. tee at 11:49 PM 1 comments