| The 22-year losing streak to China could not have ended at a better
time for the Philippines, at a better place and at a better tournament.
And in Tokushima, Japan last night, the Filipino cagers may also have shaved a
few hundred kilometers out of their long and treacherous trail to the 2008 Olympics
in Beijing. With their back against the "Great Wall", the Nationals scaled
new heights, coming back from several double-digit deficits to pull off an inspiring
79-74 win over a Chinese squad badly missing its biggest stars. The victory
was the country's first against the Asian powerhouse since the 1985 Asian Basketball
Confederation Championships in Malaysia and it kept the Philippines' hopes of
making the quarterfinals alive in the Fiba-Asia Championships, an Olympic qualifying
tournament. Playmaker Jimmy Alapag stood way taller than his 5-foot-9 frame and
Mark Caguioa shrugged off a sputtering start to combine forces with Kelly Williams
in an end-game blitz that left the Chinese gasping for air and, perhaps, led them
to an improbable early exit in this 16-nation tournament. The Filipinos
are not out of the woods yet, though. They need to whip a Jordanian squad,
reinforced by two naturalized Americans, in its final elimination-round match
in the so-called "Group of Death" at 7 tonight. Iran, which dealt the
Philippines a 75-69 defeat Saturday night, was playing Jordan, a 78-65 winner
over China, as of press deadline last night. Limping as he left the court
against Iran, Alapag won a late fitness battle and tallied a game-high 25 points
on four triples, the last one at the 2:15 mark in the fourth quarter kept the
Filipinos' heads above water, 71-67. With China leading 43-55 midway in
the third, Alapag fished fouls, hit two charities and a trey, conspiring with
Kerby Raymundo, Dondon Hontiveros and Williams to put the Philippines within one
56-57 entering the fourth. Williams' thunderous two-handed jam had the Filipinos
pumped up two plays earlier. By then, China's offense was in disarray by the Filipinos
little-room-to-breathe defense. The Chinese woes were compounded when chief playmaker
Ying Ming was forced to his fifth foul by Hontiveros. A perimeter jumper
from JJ Helterbrand on the opening play of the final period capped a 14-0 bomb
that gave the Philippines the lead, 58-57, before Chen Chen's triple swung the
advantage back to China, 60-58. That would prove to be China's last taste
of the lead as Helterbrand scored on a follow-up, Raymundo finished a slick spin
move and Asi Taulava made another putback that was part of a 10-4 burst that made
it 68-62, 5:23 remaining. And when Qiang Bian stroked home a triple to trim the
gap to one, 67-68, Alapag immediately put a dagger into the Chinese' hearts with
that booming triple that may have reverberated throughout basketball-crazy Philippines.
The last time China threatened was at 75-74 on Chen Chen's trey with 18.4
seconds left but Caguioa, who bungled a fast-break lay-up two possessions earlier,
made up for his mistake with another twinner to ice the game, 7 seconds left.
Williams registered the Philippines tenth and last steal to thwart a potential
game-tying shot and the Fil-American pegged the final count by converting two
foul shots. A day after shooting an atrocious 22 percent from the field
against Iran, the Filipinos improved considerably at 36 percent. Even
so, it wasn't the only glaring statistic. They committed lesser mistakes,
12 turnovers as against 16 on China, and grabbed more rebounds. With the
hardworking Williams at his best, the Nationals hauled 39 rebounds, 19 on the
offensive end, while China, which did not have the luxury of fielding the likes
of Yao Ming, Li Janlian and Wang Zhizhi, collared 31.*CPT back
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