EASL looking to address PBA ‘challenges’
- Jody
- 0
LAPU-LAPU CITY—Brian Goorjian has always considered his time almost coaching the Bay Area Dragons to a Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) championship as a memorable experience.
And the decorated coach of the Australia national team is a firm believer that any of the premier PBA teams can compete against the top teams in the East Asia Super League (EASL).
“There’s no doubt in my mind,” Goorjian said Saturday in this city, taking part in one of the EASL’s outreach activities with a basketball clinic for kids inside Hoops Dome. “The Philippine teams can come here and win.”
READ: PBA teams continue EASL slump with TNT loss to Abando, Anyang
The PBA was the only one among the EASL’s four member leagues that didn’t have a team in the Final Four which culminates on Sunday with the Chiba Jets of Japan’s B.League taking on the Seoul SK Knights of the Korean Basketball League for the EASL title and $1 million top purse.
Anyang Jung Kwan Jang, another Korean club powered by Filipino import Rhenz Abando and the New Taipei Kings of Taiwan’s P+League will meet in the other game for third place.
READ: Rhenz Abando, Anyang fall to Seoul SK in EASL Final Four
PBA teams struggled in the EASL’s first attempt at a home-and-away format, with TNT and Meralco posting one victory each during group play.
EASL boss Henry Kerins acknowledged the challenges the PBA faces and looks to address those.
“The PBA does have different conferences and essentially plays 11 months in the year,” Kerins told during a roundtable interview with reporters on the eve of the finale. “… I think a lot of the issues were with us instead of the PBA.”
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