Yao Ming has called on Chinese sports authorities to let his
national team-mates play overseas to get the experience they need
to make China a force in international basketball.
"We cannot make enough progress by the national league alone:
it's like trying to build a cart without knowing how," said Yao
after their second round 95-64 rout by Greece.
"Chinese players have to go overseas to play. I mean, they
should go there alone and fight for their positions on the teams.
This is the only way to lift the overall level of Chinese
basketball."
The last-16 finish met the Chinese Basketball Association's
(CBA) target, but it was short of what Yao was personally aiming
for: a quarter-final place.
"I am sorry for the disappointing result," the Houston Rockets
centre said. "Now everybody knows we need to make more changes.
We've got a lot of work to do to prepare for the Beijing
Olympics."
After a 0-3 start featuring losses to Italy, the United States
and Puerto Rico, the team enjoyed two victories over Senegal and,
dramatically, Slovenia to enter the knockout stage. However, their
lacklustre defence and lack of experience was brutally exposed by
European champions Greece. China, the youngest team in the
tournament, committed a massive 23 turnovers, a sharp contrast to
Greece's two.
"We should have had better a chance in the game, but we were so
tense, and the Greeks bossed the game." Yao said. "It's not about
ability and power. It's all about bravery and confidence."
The 2.23m star centre had a tournament-high 25.3 points per
game, and ranked fourth on rebounds (9) and second on blocks
(2.3).
The statistics only tell half the story: it was as much Yao's
on- court leadership as his numbers that made him one of the stars
of the tournament so far.
Despite falling short of the team's showing at Athens 2004 when
China reached the quarter-finals, Yao was able to take some
positives out the Japan trip.
Team-mates and coach echoed his point of view.
"We learned a lot," he said. "We exposed some problems and now
it's up to us to solve them."
"The team needs experience, we need more games like the game
against Greece," said head coach Jonas Kazlauskas. "It would be
good for the team to go to Europe and play against a European-style
defence."
"For sure we will become more mature, especially if we play
against pressure defences like Greece," said Zhu Fangyu, who
finished with 12 points against Greece.
"In the future if we can play more games like this, it will help
us gain more experience."
Following the 8th place finish in Athens two years ago, the top
target for the team is a medal on home turf at the 2008 Beijing
Olympics.
"It's not like we have nothing, we have a lot of young, talented
players," he said. "This (result) is really important for the
Olympic Games."
The players returned to Beijing yesterday evening and will go
back to their local teams for the CBA Super League that tips off on
October 8.
CBA vice-director Hu Jiashi also confirmed Kaslauskas will stay
as head coach through 2008.
(China Daily August 29, 2006)