GILAS 3X3 TEAMS CARRY FIGHT FOR PH
SANYA, China — Both the Gilas Pilipinas 3×3 men and women teams reached the quarterfinals of the cage tourneys that somehow soothed the pain of the Alas Pilipinas beach volleyball squads’ exit as the Philippines stayed in third place overall Monday in the 6th Asian Beach Games.
At press time Monday, the official medal tally showed the Philippines in the third spot with three gold, two silver, and two bronze in the 45-nation continental showcase.
Host China still tops the standings with 14 gold, 11 silver, and four bronze medals followed by Thailand (4-5-3).
Team Philippines’ campaign in this resort city is supported by the Philippine Olympic Committee under its President Abraham “Bambol” Tolentino and the Philippine Sports Commission led by chairman Patrick “Pato” Gregorio.
The three mints were courtesy of jiu-jitsu’s Annie Ramirez and Alexandria Luz Enriquez and high jump standout Leonard Grospe as the Games returned after a 10-year hiatus.
The Philippines will host the 2028 edition of the ABG in Cebu.
The two silver came from jiu-jitsu bet Emily Thomas and the women’s relay team of Jessica Rose Laurance, Kristina Marie Knott, Lianne Diana Pama, and Shane Poince with the two bronze won by Laurance in the 60 meter dash and Kaila Napolis in jiu-jitsu, respectively.
The men’s quartet lost to Iran, 14-21, to end its Pool A bid but still advanced to the quarterfinals at the Sanya Sports Centre Gymnasium here.
Despite the coach Patrick Fran-mentored side’s first loss of the joust, Gilas 3×3 men finished with a 2-1 record in a three-team tie with Iran and China and emerged as No. 1 in their group via the total accumulated points.
“We accomplished our goal top our pool. Just to be honest, the boys deserved to be here. They worked hard and this is a blessing for us because of the hard work we put in the first day,” Gilas 3×3 men coach Patrick Fran said.
“I think this is a big preparation for us going into the quarterfinal tomorrow,” he added.
Jeff Manday fired eight points for the Pinoy 3×3 cagers while Nic Cabañero added six.
Gilas 3×3 men’s opponent in the quarterfinals will be known Tuesday.
The women 3×3 side shrugged off a slow start to complete a sweep of Group C, defeating Kyrgyzstan, 21-15, and secure a quarterfinals spot.
The Gilas women battled back from an early deficit when their lax defense helped Kyrgystan gain the lead early.
Fortunately, 3×3 veterans Mikka Cacho and Tantoy Ferrer combined to slowly chip at the lead, with Gabi Bade and Kaye Pingol also making key baskets down the stretch against the winless Kyrgyzstan squad.
“Defense. Defense is going to be the key to helping us win all of these games. We just had to stay focused on defense because our shots will come, will go through if we focus on defense,” Bade said.
“You know, we can’t underestimate any team. You know, every team is good. So we just got to come out and battle and fight each game.”
Bade finished with five markers as Ferrer led the cavalry with eight points.
Cacho had seven points while Pingol was limited to just one point.
Gilas women await their quarterfinal opponent between the winner of the play-in match of Kazakhstan and Macao.
Over at the Tianya Haijiao Venue Cluster, Sunny Villapando and Grydelle Matibag fell to the Japanese duo of sisters Ren and Non Matsumoto, 10-21, 13-21 in the quarterfinals.
The Pinay pair of Khylem Progella and Sofiah Pagara also dropped a 17-21, 15-21 setback to Thailand’s Worapeerachayakorn Kongphopsarutawadee and Taravadee Naraphonapat also in the Last Eight.
In teqball, the Philippine men’s doubles tandem of Prince Agustin and Anel Pacis Jr. bowed out of contention after back-to-back defeats at the Sanya Bay Yuhai Club.
The duo first dropped its opener to powerhouse Lebanon, 6-12, 7-12, before absorbing another straight-sets loss to Laos, 9-12, 9-12.
Despite taking early leads in both sets, the Filipinos failed to sustain their momentum as the Laos side mounted late surges to seal the win and deny them a quarterfinal berth.
In mixed doubles action, Precious Tabucol and Klyde Polca also groped for form, absorbing a 1-12, 2-12 loss to host China in the preliminary round.
The Philippine pair’s campaign came to an end after another defeat to Cambodia, 04-12, 3-12, officially closing Team Philippines’ teqball run in the tournament.