July 11, 2013

Yao Ming’s ‘Team America’ vs Team China: Random notes from a (very) random night of basketball in Beijing


I wrote this feature for SLAM Online, and it was originally published on their website on July 2, 2013.

The starting five checked out of the game at halftime, were each member was patted on the back by Coach Yao Ming and Assistant Coach Tracy McGrady as they headed to the bench. Joakim Noah, Metta World Peace, Luis Scola, George Hill and Kyle Lowry—the not-entirely-American starting five of the team erroneously named “Team America All Stars”—were then replaced for the third quarter by a bunch of elementary school kids. On the other side, the Chinese National team were replaced by their mini-mes, too. On the “American” bench, John Wall and Ricky Rubio watched while McGrady enthusiastically coached the 10-year-olds. Metta joined in to give a pep-talk, too. All this was happening while Chinese cheerleaders dressed like one of the Mario Brothers danced in the middle of the floor and the crowd of several thousand chanted McGrady’s name like he had just been named Finals MVP.

Wait, wait, I’m getting ahead of myself here. Sorry. That’s what happens when you’ve just witnessed the zaniest exhibition game on this side of the globe (or any side of the globe, for that matter) to kick off the NBA offseason. On July 1, the Yao Ming Foundation organized its third charity game between the Chinese National Basketball Team and a group of Yao’s super-friends (from his time at Houston, mostly) playing under the Team America moniker against Team China, featuring the host country’s finest players. With little expectations, I set out to witness this event at the MasterCard stadium in Beijing, the same stadium that hosted the 2008 Olympics gold medal game.

First, let’s do a roll call shall we? The following were present at the game, either participating in the game or watching from the sidelines: Yao Ming, Tracy Mcgrady, Joakim Noah, Metta World Peace, Luis Scola, George Hill, Kyle Lowry, Ricky Rubio, Chris Singleton, John Wall, Damian Lillard, Jrue Holiday, Chinese players Yi Jianlian, Wang Zhelin, Sun Yue, Liu Wei, Wang Zhi Zhi and super-famous Brazil and Real Madrid soccer/futbol player Kaka. Yes, that Kaka.

(Bonus: Here’s a hilarious picture of Kaka with Yao and Wang Zhi Zhi from the day of the event.)

Yao has held this event twice in the past six years, with Steve Nash and Baron Davis amongst those to have starred in it in the past. But as far as I know, this year was the “biggest” show. It had everything. Drama (Joakim Noah’s clutch defense), excitement (Noah on the offensive end, Tracy McGrady coaching) and World Peace (Metta). And all this for a good cause, to support the primary school in China that’s funded by Yao’s foundation and his other charitable efforts for children in poverty-stricken areas in China.

Here are some of my notes from the game:

- Metta was working on his jump-shot a lot pre-game, and it was looking like the opposite of pretty.

- Chinese fans really, really love Tracy McGrady. This goes back to T-Mac’s time with Yao in Houston, and of course, McGrady’s stint playing in China last season. I was thoroughly impressed by the variety of McGrady jerseys in attendance, with fans donning his jerseys from Toronto, Orlando, Houston, New York and Detroit. No one seemed to commemorate his time with the Spurs, though. Fans chanted his name throughout and cheered for him louder than anyone else. When Team America took the floor, Metta was announced first and McGrady last.

- Those were the same fans wh would soon be very disappointed to discover that McGrady wouldn’t be suiting up and instead would be Yao’s assistant coach.

- Kaka—who played no part in Brazil’s Confederation Cup victory the same morning—gets asked to speak to fans before the game.

- Yao is the biggest human being I’ve ever seen.

- (Speaking of Yao, this all took place the same day he skyped with Dwight Howard and pitched him to join the Houston Rockets)

- While Yao had gotten Metta, Noah, George Hill etc. to volunteer to play in the game, the surprise attendees were four point guards: John Wall, Ricky Rubio, Damian Lillard and Jrue Holiday, who just so happened to be in Beijing at the same time for an adidas promotional event. Wall, Lillard and Holiday watched from the Team America sidelines in street clothes, but Rubio couldn’t resist and changed into gear to check into the game minutes in the first quarter.

- The Yao-and-McGrady coached Team America fielded Noah, World Peace, Scola, Hill and Lowry as its starting five.

- Team America’s first shot was a Metta three and a Metta miss.

- Despite spending a season in China, McGrady feigned ignorance to the existence of Wang Zhelin, one of the brightest young Chinese prospects and possible draft pick next year. Wang had a pretty dominant start to the game for Team China. Wang, 19 (supposedly), is a talented, mobile 7-footer, and was definitely the center-piece for China’s team. We hope T-Mac knows him now.

- Joakim Noah doesn’t have an off switch, and he decides to play playoff defense from the get-go. He is aggressive and emotional on the other end, too, dunking emphatically, taking ill-advised long twos, and on one occasion, playing the role of a point guard while trying to beat his man off the dribble. Good times.

- Watching Yi play in this game (and for his CBA team Guangdong in the past), it’s clear that being in China raises his confidence to another level; he plays with the swagger of a superstar. He takes a far more aggressive role in the offense. It didn’t amount to much in this game, but at least he was trying.

- In two consecutive possessions in the second quarter, Metta attempts to inbound the ball from his own end with a heave pass to the running Chris Singleton all the way on the other end of the floor. Two turnovers.

- Luis Scola’s under-the-radar career went a little further under when he joined the Suns, but the big Argentinian definitely still has some of the prettiest back-to-the-basket post moves.

- Rubio checks in to the surprise and delight of the fans. He looked a little rusty throughout the game, but was aiming to please.

- Rubio and Metta on the same team is my dream come true.

- The crowd breaks into “Mai Di” chants (that’s McGrady’s Chinese name) on numerous occasions, urging him to play. But it’s to no avail.

- The game itself is a pretty even, low-scoring affair, with the American side not taking things too seriously yet (except for Noah) and the Chinese side looking quite rusty.

- After halftime, quite inexplicably, the two participating teams get replaced by two teams of Chinese primary school-kids (presumably from Yao’s foundation school) wearing the same jerseys as the actual teams that now sat on the bench. For the next 10 minutes, the kids play a full-court game on a lowered rim and with a smaller ball. This surprisingly turns out to be a more entertaining affair than the “big-boys” game, as the kids ran helter-skelter end to end and each basket was greeted by rousing applause. McGrady was promoted to Head Coach for the kids, and took this brief job as primary tactician very seriously, mock-arguing with the refs on the sidelines, stepping out on the court animatedly and shouting tactics to his young players during the timeouts. As a matter of fact, this was the most animated I had ever seen McGrady.

- I initially assume that the game is just an extended half-time show, but my Chinese friend clarifies that the kids have just played the third quarter of the game, and the accumulated scores will count when the real teams return for the fourth quarter.

- By the time the fourth quarter does begin, Team America and Team China hit the floor again with China leading 42-40. Team America stops messing around and perks up on the defensive end. Noah is a monster, commanding the post to shut down all comers. The result is two-fold: the “Americans” begin to get a lot of fast-break opportunities that lead to breathtaking dunks and the Chinese players then retaliate by shifting into higher gear, too. Suddenly, we have a game!

- America’s crunch-time lineup is the starting five again: Noah, Scola, World Peace, Lowry and Hill.

- Noah continues his dominance on both ends of the floor, blocking several shots and scoring on numerous occasions. He ultimately ends up being the difference as Team America pulls through for a 61-58 victory.

- Hugs, cheers and applause for Yao.

And, that wraps it up. Watching basketball in China is always an awesome, if surreal, experience, which includes ingenious chants from the fans, a conglomerate of different and sometimes random NBA jerseys (I saw a guy in a Celtics Larry Bird uni a few rows in front of me), inappropriate arena music, a lot of laughs from the crowd, awful, sweet popcorn (this one is a personal pet-peeve) and awkwardly gyrating cheerleaders.

Mix those ingredients with an invasion of random NBA players, and the end result was a pretty memorable night of basketball. Thanks for the fun times, Yao.

July 10, 2013

NBA Champion Chris Bosh is in India from July 16-19


Nearly a month ago, we revealed on this blog that none other than Sir Christopher Bosh, now back-to-back NBA Champion with the Miami Heat, will be visiting India over the off-season. Ripples of excitement obviously caught on with a lot of Indian NBA fans, who haven't welcomed an active star of Bosh's stature since Dwight Howard and Pau Gasol dropped by three years ago. And now, finally, we have more exacting details about Bosh's trip.

Bosh will be in India - visiting only the city of Mumbai - from July 16-19. The NBA revealed more information about his trip in their recent press release:

Bosh will be the 22nd NBA or WNBA player or legend to travel to India since 2006.

“I am excited for the chance to visit India and help build interest in the game I love,” said Bosh. “The NBA is a global game and I hear that basketball is becoming pretty popular over there so I am looking forward to teaching kids that may end up in our league one day.”

"Chris is a dynamic player and personality, and will be a huge hit with our fans,” said Heidi Ueberroth, NBA President, International. “The popularity of basketball is growing in India and we're thrilled that Chris will take part in youth development and community activities as part of his visit to Mumbai.”

Schedule of Bosh’s activities in India:

July 16

Mumbai Tour: Bosh will tour famous sites in Mumbai. His tour will be captured by Sony and NBA Entertainment and featured in NBA programming on Sony SIX.

Launch NBA India Instagram: Bosh’s visit will launch the official NBA India Instagram channel, giving fans an inside look at his trip.

Larry O'Brien Trophy Tour: Bosh will bring the NBA championship trophy to India and give fans a chance to take pictures with it.

July 17

Press Conference: Bosh will help the NBA and Sony announce the launch of a unique NBA basketball and entertainment event in India.

July 18

Elite Development Basketball Clinic: Bosh will conduct a clinic for some of the top basketball players in India. He will also conduct clinics for youth of all levels at a local school.

Magic Bus NBA Cares Event: Bosh will participate in an NBA Cares event and basketball clinic as part of our overarching NBA Cares partnership with Magic Bus, a local NGO, and Sony SIX. The partnership, announced during NBA Commissioner David Stern’s trip to Mumbai in April, uses sport to impact underserved youth across India.

The NBA and Sony are also running the "Namaste Bosh" Fan Contest, where, through digital and social media promotion, they are asking fans fans to submit entries on how they would welcome Bosh to India. SONY will develop a localized promo and song to encourage fan participation. The league and Sony will use the hashtag #NamasteBosh across all media assets to promote. Fans with the most passionate and creative submissions will get a chance to meet Bosh. In case your lifetime dream is to listen to a weird Hinglish rap about Chris Bosh, consider yourself blessed and check out this SONY Six ad right now.

Bosh's visit to India is great news: the presence of a current All Star player was long overdue for India, and Bosh being recently crowned champion, and playing with two of the league's most popular players LeBron James and Dwyane Wade, will add to the excitement of the local fans. It seems like his schedule seems quite well stacked and he will be able to crunch in a lot of experiences in his short time here. Kudos to the NBA for promoting this event the right way too: this is the most publicity that any upcoming player visit has gotten for India so far.

So what are you waiting for Mumbai/nearby-area fans? Stick out your 'Boshasaurus' necks and go out and say Namaste to Mr. Bosh next week...

July 8, 2013

USA win U19 FIBA World Basketball Championship for fifth time


The American basketball future - much like the American basketball present - is shining bright.

USA's under-19 Men's Basketball team defeated Serbia on Sunday night in Prague (Czech Republic) to lift the 2013 FIBA U19 World Championship for a record fifth time. No other team has won the tournament more than once. The USA used an impressive 13-1 run in the fourth quarter to sneak away to a 82-68 victory, thus ending the tournament undefeated.

It was Serbia's second consecutive silver medal at the tournament, after finishing as runners-up to Lithuania in 2011.

The Americans, who were dominated through the course of the tournament, were given some healthy competition for three quarters by a feisty Serbian side in the Final. Jovan Novak of Serbia was the game's leading scorer with 21 points, but the USA used a balanced attack, led by forward Montrezl Harrel (17) to slip away to victory.

USA's Aaron Gordon, who only had six points and six rebounds in the Final, was named the tournament's MVP for his efforts leading up to the Final game of the tournament. He was the finest amongst near-equals in a balanced USA team. Gordon, who is committed to the attend Arizona next season, is one of the brightest young American players and was named the MVP of the 2013 McDonald's High School All American game.

Defending champions Lithuania had to settle for the bronze medal after defeating Australia 106-100 in overtime earlier in the day. Lithuana were led by Tomas Dimsa (19) while Dante Exum (28) and Dane Pineau (20) led the way in a losing effort for the Aussies.

Earlier on the semi-finals, USA had destroyed Lithuania 100-60 in a balanced effort led by Marcus Smart. Nikola Jancovic scored 21 points to lead Serbia past Australia 63-58 in the other semi-final. Dante Exum had 20 for Australia.

Final Standings

1. USA
2. Serbia
3. Lithuania
4. Australia
5. Spain

All Tournament Team

  • Jahlil Okafor (USA)
  • Aaron Gordon (USA)
  • Dario Saric (Croatia)
  • Dante Exum (Australia)
  • Vasilijie Micic (Serbia)

July 7, 2013

India wins SABA Qualifiers to seal spot at 3rd U16 FIBA Asia Championship


India’s U16 Boys’ Basketball team won all their games at the SABA Qualifiers in Dhaka and thus sealed their spot in the 3rd FIBA Asia 16 Championship. India came on top of the four-team qualification event that was held from July 3-5, defeating Maldives, Nepal, and hosts Bangladesh on Friday to finish with a 3-0 record.

Led by coach Raghavendra Singh Gour, India’s 12-man roster featuring some of the country’s brightest young talents had no troubles against their South Asian rivals, winning each game by an average of 53 points. Here are the final results:

- July 3: India beat Maldives 95-50.
- July 4: India beat Nepal 92-22.
- July 5: India beat Bangladesh 103-59

Bangladesh finished at second place and Nepal came in third after defeating Maldives in the bronze medal game on Friday.

The third edition of the FIBA Asia U16 Championship is set to be held in Tehran (Iran) from September 25-October 4. It is a qualifying tournament for the FIBA U17 World Championship. India will have good memories of the previous U16 FIBA ABC. Two years at Nha Trang (Vietnam), India’s squad led by behemoth talent Satnam Singh Bhamara broke out into the scene and gave some of Asia's finest squads a scare. India couldn't improve on their 10th place finish, but showed much-improved performances on court. There’s no clear-cut talent like Bhamara around anymore, but hopefully, the current team can play well together as a unit to surprise Asia's finest once again.

July 6, 2013

Spaniard Francisco Garcia is the new coach of India’s Women’s Basketball Team


The Basketball Federation of India (BFI) has announced that experienced Spanish coach Francisco Garcia will be named as the head coach of India’s Senior Women’s Basketball squad. Garcia (41), has 20 years of coaching experience in the past in Spain, Denmark, and Finland, will become the fourth international head coach for the Indian Women and take over from Pete Gaudet.

The Times of India reported that Garcia spent the last season with Spanish Women’s national team players as a private development coach, including stars like Amaya Valdermoro, who has won three WNBA championships.

Via Times of India:

Having started his coaching career way back in 1994 in Asturias, Francisco was involved in various women's professional programs in Spain, Denmark and Finland, where he won a gold and silver medal.
Since returning to Spain in 2005, he has been coaching in various Spanish Federation Youth National Development Camps.

The development has left Indian hoopsters feeling excited. Top star Geethu Anna Jose said, "The BFI has done its part. We had a small chat with Francisco and he seems very interested in Indian basketball… He feels India has very good talent and is really happy to work with us. I'm waiting for the camp."

Garcia will have to be up to his task from the get go: he only has a few months of preparation before India's Women get a chance to play for the Asia's biggest basketball event - the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship for Women - from October 27 - November 3 in Bangkok (Thailand). After finishing sixth in the 2011 Championship, the Indian team finds itself in Level I of the tournament, along with Asian superpowers China, Korea, Japan, Chinese Taipei, and Lebanon.

Pete Gaudet, who was formerly coach at Duke University, left India after 15 months with the team.

July 4, 2013

And the NBA’s 2013 Social Media Champions Are…


Let’s say it bluntly shall we: the Los Angeles Lakers had a horrible 2012-13 season. Their ‘big five’ starting lineup of Steve Nash, Kobe Bryant, Metta World Peace, Pau Gasol, and Dwight Howard never figured out a way to gel together, they fired a bad coach and hired another bad one, they were unforgivably cursed by injuries all year, finished a disappointing eighth in the West, and were swept in four games in the First Round of the playoffs.

And yet, despite the tragic times, the popularity of one of the NBA’s most successful and famous franchises of All Time never wavered. A simple eye-test of the number of Laker jerseys or die-hard Kobe fans or the team’s outreach into popular culture confirms that, but now we also have some real statistical confirmation of their social media influence. While the team itself wasn’t good enough to finish better than eighth in the West, they continued to dominate social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter, and were (once again) the NBA Champions.

A few weeks ago, Unmetric, a company that tells global brands how they stack up against competition on social media, released its second annual NBA Social Media Playoffs Report which details the social media efforts of all 30 NBA teams participating in the 2013 season to observe the impact of social media presence and to compare results from the 2012 season. For the season, Unmetric gave each NBA franchise a score based on a blend of quantitative and qualitative metrics, weighted and averaged by sector to produce a single number ranging from 0 to 100 for each social network – one score for Facebook and one for Twitter. These scores, the Unmetric Scores, were based on metrics such as content strategy, engagement, growth, timing and frequency of tweets and posts on Twitter and Facebook.

The Lakers had the highest score (out of 200) in the NBA of 120. The Miami Heat – 2012-13’s actual NBA champions – finished second in the Unmetric ladder with 110. The Chicago Bulls came in third, followed by the Boston Celtics and the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Here are some more interesting facts about the NBA teams’ Facebook/Twitter activity from the Unmetric report:

- The Lakers have the most Twitter followers in the NBA (3,067,125).

- The Lakers also have the most Facebook fans (16,271,154)

- The Nets were the fastest-growing team on Facebook, and the Raptors on Twitter.

- The Bucks had the most tweets during the course of the season (8,518).

- The Grizzlies had the highest number of admin posts on their official Facebook page (2,113), and also had the fastest average reply time on Facebook.

- The Pistons had the fastest average reply time on Twitter.

- Miami Heat were given the ‘engagement’ crown, as the team most engaged in giving their fans updates on latest schedules, scores, articles, and videos on Facebook. Meanwhile, Miami superstar LeBron James’ old haunt – the Cleveland Cavaliers – finished dead last when it came to engaging with their Facebook fans.

Unmetric did some other interesting research, going beyond just the quantity of content provided by the teams to discover what type of content got fans most involved. The most popular categories for the top 10 teams included content about the players, game schedule, game results, questions to their fans, and score updates.

Lakers have the most Twitter followers in the NBA. The Heat, the Magic (surprising!), Celtics, and Bulls round up the top five. Lakers also have the most Facebook fans, followed by Bulls, Heat, Celtics, and Knicks.

Nice to know that the Lakers are still ‘winning’ something, although another poor season could definitely see the Heat closing the gap on them next year. Miami are NBA champions in the basketball sense of the definition, and the definition that ultimately matters, and their recent success has also made them one the most popular and engaging teams in the league in recent years.

Overall, the NBA is one of the most engaged and active brands when it comes to social media. They rank top amongst all sports brands in Twitter followers and third (behind Manchester United and Barcelona) in Facebook ‘likes’.

All stats and graphic provided via Unmetric – thanks particularly to Vikas Bysani for his help.

July 3, 2013

India U16 Boys to compete in SABA Qualifiers in Dhaka for 3rd U16 FIBA Asia Championship


India's under-16 boys' basketball team is in Dhaka (Bangladesh) to take part in the South Asian Basketball Association (SABA) Qualifiers for the 3rd FIBA Asia U16 Championship for Men. The Qualifiers are being held from July 3-5 and four teams - India, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Maldives - will take part to determine who will be representing South Asia in the U16 FIBA Asia Championship, scheduled to be held in Tehran (Iran) from September 25-October 4, 2013.

The Basketball Federation of India (BFI) has finalized a 12-men roster for this championship who are already in Dhaka along with their coaching staff, led by Head Coach Raghvendra Singh Gour. Several young up-and-coming Indian talents, including the likes of Yogesh Kaneriya and Mahipal Singh, are part of India's team.

Here is India's U16 Boys Basketball roster for the SABA Qualifiers:
  • Mahipal Singh (Rajasthan)
  • Akhilesh Kumar Tudu (Rajasthan)
  • Yogesh Kaneriya (Rajasthan)
  • Prabhnoor Singh (Punjab)
  • Rahul Mehla (Punjab)
  • Jaipal Singh (Punjab)
  • Bitto (Delhi)
  • Sunil (Delhi)
  • Mithun Das (Chhattisgarh)
  • Dhimant Sahi (Tamil Nadu)
  • Erash Hooda
  • Arjun Pandit (Delhi)
  • Coach: Raghavendra Singh Gour
  • Assistant Coach: Tirthesth Guha
  • Physiotherapist: Raj Kumar Dubey
  • FIBA Referee: Atanu Banerjee
Here is the schedule of games at the tournament:
  • July 3: India vs Maldives (6 PM) / Nepal vs Bangladesh (7:30 PM)
  • July 4: Nepal vs India (4 PM) / Bangladesh vs Maldives (5:30 PM)
  • July 5: Nepal vs Maldives (4 PM) / India vs Bangladesh (5:30 PM)
As it usually is in South Asian basketball competitions, India will start as clear favourites to go qualify for the 3rd U16 FIBA Championship for the third consecutive year.

India will have good memories of the U16 FIBA ABC. Two years ago in the previous championship at Nha Trang, a team led by behemoth talent Satnam Singh Bhamara broke out into the scene and gave some of Asia's finest squads a scare. India couldn't improve on their 10th place finish, but showed much-improved performances on court. It was Bhamara's breakout moment, as he ended up as the leading scorer of the championship and was perhaps the best defensive player in the tournament too. There seems to be no such talent on the Indian roster this time around, but hopefully the team can play well together as a unit to surprise Asia's finest once again.

But, first things first. India has to deal with Nepal, Maldives, and Bangladesh. It will be an important tune-up to get the team ready for bigger things ahead.