Tim Cone on Gilas' mission Down Under: Steal one game on the road
At A Glance
- National team head coach Tim Cone underlined the importance of the two road games against New Zealand and Australia especially that the record will be carried over to the next round where the team is set to face Middle Eastern teams.
Gilas Pilipinas may have been through to the next round of the 2027 FIBA World Cup Asian qualifiers but the two remaining games in the third window are crucial to the Nationals’ bid of making it back to the global showpiece.
National team head coach Tim Cone underlined the importance of the two road games against New Zealand and Australia especially that the record will be carried over to the next round where the team is set to face Middle Eastern teams.
“If we can steal one game, that would be huge going into the next round. That's really the plan,” said Cone.
As it stands, Gilas is at third in Group A with a 2-2 record for six points. In the next round, the Nationals will possibly play Jordan, Iran and Syria.
Only the eight teams, including host Qatar, will advance to the next round, which means Gilas needs to finish in the Top 4 of its group at the end of the crossover round.
“Right now, if we don't win one of these next two games, we're going to have a very small margin of error as we move forward into the next round. Almost like we're going to have to sweep the next round,” noted Cone.
“That's really difficult with high quality teams like Iran and Jordan. It would really help us out if we could win one of these two games. That would give us more margin of error as we move forward into the next round,” he added.
Cone understands full well that the team is in a tough position, having to play both New Zealand and Australia — the two best teams in the region — right on their home turf.
And that’s exactly the reason why he’s urging his wards to take the games as if they were championship games.
“Every game we play at Gila is a Game 7 championship.It's just like what we played with TNT. It's that same feeling, that same magnitude that goes on,” said Cone whose team is currently in Brisbane for a four-day training camp before flying to New Zealand for a pair of friendlies just before the start of the window.
“We've just got to treat every game like it's a championship game. That means we've got to prepare the best we can prepare,” he added.