Manny Pacquiao played six minutes and 46 seconds in his PBA debut as the
playing head coach of the KIA Sorento. He failed to score a point as he
did not take a single shot attempt. He turned the ball over twice,
committed a foul, and was overall a detriment to his team while he was
on the floor as a minus-9.
Yet, the mark Pacquiao left in the KIA
Sorento is indelible. He didn’t help on the floor. He didn’t help a lot
in the sidelines as assistant coach Glen Capacio drew up the plays and
called the shots.
The role of playing-coach is reserved for very
special kinds of athletes. In the NBA, it was for the legendary Bill
Russell. In the PBA, it was for Robert Jaworski.
With his entry in the PBA as a playing-coach and a rookie at 36 years of age, Pacquiao altered the norm.
The
PBA is, in the very end, a business as it is a basketball league. While
Russell and Jaworksi were great basketball minds who turned out to be
great brands later on, Pacquiao is a greater brand now, which made the
basketball part unnecessary.
“Pressure is natural,” Pacquiao said
in Filipino during the press conference. “I told them ‘If you’re awed
by the number of people here, just imagine they’re all here to support
us.’ Just focus on the game and execute the plays we’re practiced.”
Not expected to win, KIA rallied in the third quarter after getting bludgeoned in the first half.
“We
played better defense in the third quarter and then our offense came
along after,” Pacquiao said. “We won with the help of all the members of
our coaching staff and it’s good that the players listened to us.”
LA Revilla, a point guard who already fell out of the league, got a
second chance under Pacquiao. He made it count by playing the best game
of his life as he scored 23 points and grabbed six rebounds.
“I’m
proud of him,” said Pacquiao as he patted Revilla on the back. Pacquiao
will never be as good as Revilla in basketball but the young player
will never be close to gaining Pacquiao’s popularity.
It was a
symbiosis between the two, brought along by the fact that they both
needed each other. Without Pacquiao, KIA may not have pushed on with
their plan to be in the PBA. Without KIA, Revilla would still be playing
in the PBA D-League.
In exchange, Pacquiao gets to sit in front
of members of the media and talk about the game he loves so much. He is
addressed as "Coach" and he gets to talk about his game. All it cost him
was time. All he lent was his popularity.
“It doesn’t matter if I
play or not as long as my team wins,” Pacquiao said. “Our next game is
on Saturday against Ginebra but I won’t play anymore because my fight is
fast approaching but my support will be there for the team.”
On
October 19, at the Philippine Arena, the PBA and KIA needed Manny
Pacquiao the coach and player. But on November 23, the Philippines needs
Manny Pacquiao the boxing champion.
With the loss of Nonito Donaire earlier in the day, Pacquiao is once again the lone Filipino near the top of the boxing mountain. He knows nothing less than a clear win would do.
So there he was, inside the press room. Smiling. Talking about basketball. Taking in the sight of the mammoth crowd.
Tomorrow he returns to being Manny Pacquiao the boxer, and basketball will have to take the backseat again.
“I’m
really happy with the result. We’re a new team but there were a lot of
people who supported us,” Pacquiao said. “I hope they don’t grow tired
of supporting us. We’ll do our best to give you good games and make you
happy,” he finished, the statement eerily similar to the ones he often
says in the ring after vanquishing an opponent.
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