A typical season of the
Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) since 2011 is composed of three
conference tournaments. These conferences are played by all active teams of the
league, with the no-import player rule imposed during the first tournament in the
season, the Philippine Cup. This has gone on unchanged until last year, when
the COVID pandemic suspended play on the Philippine Cup mere days after the
opening ceremonies for the 2020 season. When the IATF finally allowed the PBA
to resume on October, they only had enough time left that year for a shortened
Philippine Cup conference. This 2021, the league plans to do more.
The Manila Bulletin has it that the PBA is planning for a, if not
full, then at least a bigger 46th season this 2021 than was had in
COVID-ridden 2020. Their best-case scenario is to hold two out of three
conferences, beginning in April 11, with teams playing in a semi-bubble
environment for 10 months. This was detailed in a virtual press conference this
past Tuesday, March 9, by PBA chairman Ricky Vargas, who envisions the
no-imports Philippine Cup being followed by the import-allowed Governor’s Cup,
which will be longer than its usual playing period.
In a semi-bubble playing
environment, the PBA teams and its players will have restricted movement between
their accommodations, and venues for practice and games, which will be held
within Metro Manila. Of course, all of this must still be given approval by the
Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF). The best-case scenario according to Vargas will
be four of the 10 allotted months being given to the Philippine Cup while six
are for the Governor’s Cup. This conference of course will allow foreign players
as imports, as long as they are no taller than 6-foot-five in height.
PBA’s 45th season in
2020 ultimately consisted only of the Philippine Cup, played at the Clark Freeport
Zone in Pampanga under a strict bubble environment. Ricky Vargas is optimistic
that the 2021 season will at least have more games for league fans to watch
(not live, however). “It is our hope that we would be able to bring 10 months
of basketball in the Philippines starting April 11,” he says.
Image courtesy of Advocates Philippines
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