BUMPY ROAD TO PARIS

Chot Reyes is pressured to lead Gilas Pilipinas back to the Summer Olympics for the first time since 1972. | Photograph Courtesy of FIBA
Gilas Pilipinas is treading a bumpy and dangerous road to realize its dream of securing a berth in the 2024 Paris Olympics.
The Filipinos have two ways to reach next year's Summer Games — one is ending up as the best-placed Asian team in the ongoing FIBA World Cup or going through a harder route of winning a ticket through Olympic qualifying tournaments.
The first option would be quicker but not necessarily an easy one.
Despite dropping all of their three games in the first round, Gilas remain in the thick of the battle to end a decades-long Olympic absence since participating in Munich back in 1972.
All the Filipinos need to do is win all of their remaining two assignments in the classification round against the cagers from South Sudan, whom they are playing at press time, and China on Saturday then pray that all other Asian teams drop all of their games.
"First in context is the win-loss record. So, if the Philippines ends up with two wins, Japan one win, China one win, Iran no wins, the Filipinos (would) come through. That's the first measure, the win-loss record," FIBA World Cup event director David Crocker explained.
No one among the participating Asian teams — including Japan, Iran, Jordan and Lebanon — has advanced to the second round.
FIBA co-host Japan, however, was the first Asian squad to score a victory after beating Finland, 98-88, last Sunday before China ambushed Angola, 83-74, and Lebanon beat Ivory Coast, 94-84, to inch closer to the elusive Olympic slot.
In case of a deadlock in win-loss records, the Asian team that will head to Paris outright will be determined through a point ratio tiebreak.
"Now if we have teams with the same win-loss records say Filipinos won, China won, Japan won, then we go on a point ratio for-against and then it will balance out there. So that's the measure. Win-loss record No. 1 and then if we have an equal win-loss record (it will be decided by) point ratio," Crocker said.
"Nothing is easy to get to Paris 2024 but the most direct is to win more games than anybody else here in Asia in this tournament."
