NBA Stars Opt to Play in the Philippines

The Philippines is one of the most basketball-crazed countries in the world.  From Baguio to Caguyan de Oro, basketball has virtually become the nation’s national pastime. Professional basketball players such as Doug Kramer are household names throughout the archipelago nation and are subjects for reality TV.  The once-popular Team Kramer highlighted the family life of Kramer and celebrity wife Cheska Garcia in weekly episodes, however, little is known of the PBA (Philippine Basketball Association) player internationally.  Outside the Philippines, arguably the most famous player in the Philippine league, ironically, is not a basketball player, but a boxer:  5’5” (1.66 m) Manny Pacquiao.

The NBA takes notice of basketball’s undeniable popularity in the Philippines by bringing exhibition games to the Philippines and having All-Star teams complete against the PBA’s best. Despite the NBA’s goodwill visits to the Philippines, which continues to feed the nation’s insatiable appetite for the sport, few players, if given the opportunity, would opt to play in the PBA perhaps until now.

The International Business Times reports the exciting possibility of two NBA stars considering stints in the PBA. In a Saturday, July 29 post, John Tan reports former Los Angeles Lakers Lamar Odom and Jordan Clarkson’s interest in playing for a PBA franchise team.

Clarkson, a nationalized Philippine citizen, thus far, has represented the Philippines in last year’s Asian Games but has yet to play extensively in the Philippine league.  Five years removed from the NBA limelight, Lamar Odam looks to revive his career after being ousted from a 3-on-3 league due to poor health.

Can Odam and Clarkson make a splash in the PBA and make the league a viable option for international players?  Only time will tell.

Published by

Darrell Kramer

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Originally from Buffalo, New York, an area situated in America's former rust belt, like most Western New York natives, I am partly of Polish decent. I grew up immersed in the American football and hockey frenzy that often consumed the community. It was a great diversion from the socioeconomic problems that began to plague Buffalo in the end of its industrial heyday. It gave the people of Buffalo, often called "the city with no illusion," an escape from the mundane as they vicariously lived through sports figures, celebrities and dramas seen on television and the covers of magazines displayed on the checkout counters at supermarkets. From a very young age, settling in a particular school or area was difficult. The instant I made friends and acquaintances, abruptly, it was time for me to move on and start over again. With minimal time to make lasting impressions, my encounters with people were like brief stops on a tour. Their memories of me as I had of them were not mutual, remembering them for the roles they played as film characters, viewing them from afar as merely an observer. Unlike many of the people encountered, whose path in life seemed definite and set out before them, I had had the privilege, sometimes at other’s expense, of living my life almost day to day, void of any commitment or obligations. Subsequently, my lifestyle has caught up with me. Trying to play different roles to different people and not being able to follow up with an end result has left things open ended. However, all my travels on my seemingly limitless, open-ended journeys were not in vain. In retrospect it has given me a better understanding of the human condition everyone must inevitably face. Regularly transplanted from one setting to another, filled with different people and different places have given me a broader perspective in life, which has made me grateful for the friends, family and resources at my disposal. After nearly a decade of living and working abroad throughout Asia, I presently reside in my hometown in suburban Buffalo. Though it has been wonderful to catch up with friends and family and have a taste of the local cuisine eaten since childhood, there is a void that can only be filled by memories abroad in countries such as Japan, South Korea and the Philippines. Memories of long-standing wooden shrines underscored by ever-changing electronic billboards, April cherry blossoms, and riding around in jeepneys will endure. Returning to the USA was as though a claw from above forcibly lifted me by my shirt collar through the atmosphere across the Pacific, dropping me onto a bed of cold ice-packed snow beside an airport parking lot, making my long-awaited homecoming after visiting in the tropical Philippine Island of Boracay seem like a slap in the face. Unsure of how to exit the premises, agoraphobia set in. Overwhelmed by the vast and expansive landscape common in the US, momentarily, the airport car park seemed like an Arctic tundra during a calm after a storm nearing spring. It was a quite a contrast from Korea where within the same time taken to exit the airport, I would have been sitting comfortably on a train, enroute to my studio apartment. It has been over a year since my last visit to Asia. Since my return, I have been diligently searching for a means to have one foot firmly planted in Asia and another firmly planted stateside. With the help of a dedicated staff and willing participants in the Philippines, Pinay Sisters celebrates the beauty of sisterhood. With a photo-journalistic approach, from the province villages to the urban neighborhoods of Manila, Pinay Sisters takes you throughout one of the world’s largest archipelagos with unique photos, stories and profiles featuring sisters from many walks of life updated monthly. Please enjoy. Positive criticism and feedback are greatly welcomed.