Ginebra needs to solve Zhu Songwei puzzle, says Justin Brownlee
Too agile for a big man and too big for a wingman.

Zhu Songwei posed huge problems so far for Ginebra and the Kings must find a way to solve the puzzle come pivotal Game 3.
The 6-foot-9 forward played big in Game 2, dropping 25 points, six assists and five rebounds on top of a 3-of-6 clip from beyond the arc. Zhu also anchored the Dragons on the defensive ends, bothering the shots of the Kings inside the paint while also shadowing Ginebra import Justin Brownlee.
Brownlee, who finished with 35 points but was forced to become a "volume shooter" according to Kings head coach Tim Cone, recognized the contributions of Zhu to the performance of Bay Area.
“He gives anybody problems. He got size and good lift. He's just all-around very versatile and I'm not 6-foot-9 so he definitely can bother me,” said the 6-foot-6 winger.
After being limited in Game 1 due to foul trouble, Zhu spearheaded the bounce back game for the Dragons, conniving with import Andrew Nicholson to impose their size and speed advantage against the Kings.
“We just gonna give them a lot of credit. We got them the first game. They responded well and import played great. Zhu had a great game,” said Brownlee.
“They give us a lot of problems shooting the ball, driving the ball you got to give them a lot of credit with the adjustments. They did overall a good job especially at the defensive end for us,” he added.
Brownlee hopes to make adjustments in the next game.
"I can keep attacking him and just stay aggressive and get what I can get, get to see an opportunity to attack and I just go from there, " said Brownlee.
Despite the Game 2 loss and the momentum shifting to Bay Area’s side, Ginebra is not too worried at all with Brownlee noting that they just need to keep the things that worked well for them during that second half comeback attempt.
“We just got a good rhythm offensively. This is a really good defensive team so it's gonna be a lot of effort trying to break them down offensively. They played hard. We got toa little bit of rhythm but they broke that rhythm they got to pull away from us,” said Brownlee.
“We got to expect from them a lot and we knew that we could get them but that's night to night of course, just like in Game 1, if we can keep going with what we do well as far as executing and moving the ball and playing off each other and defensively.”