Chinese center Yao Ming said Tuesday that his national
colleagues should not let slip from their mind the lessons they
drew at the World Men's Basketball Championship in Japan.
Yao, set to leave for the Houston Rockets for the upcoming NBA
season, helped China advance to the knockout stage of the
recently-concluded basketball championship.
"Our CBA (China Basketball Association) players should remember
about the tournament and draw lessons from it," Yao told the
state-owned CCTV (China Central Television) sports channel
Tuesday.
"It is hard to do pioneering work but it is even harder to keep
the accomplishments. We have a good start, and I hope they never
dump what they have learned from the championship in the less
competitive CBA league."
The Chinese men's team reached the last 16 at the championship
but only found them thrashed by European champions Greece 95-64 in
the first knockout round on Aug. 27.
Domestic media said after the game that the Chinese players are
unable to match foreign players in physical quality, tactics and
will to succeed.
Yao, who had said during the Japan campaign that Chinese
basketball was like making a cart behind closed door, suggested
more players go abroad to collect more experience.
"As the 2008 Olympics are drawing near, we should send abroad
the likes of Yi Jianlian and Wang Shipeng as soon as possible in a
bid to raise our level in short term.
"Even our basketballers fail to play as regulars, we still could
benefit at least from their training sessions. I myself played as
substitute ten minutes per game initially, too. It depends on your
will and work."
But it is impossible for the domestic clubs to send their key
players to foreign leagues due to the demand to national success,
admitted Yao.
It will serve as expedient for the Chinese side to see over 30
international games of high level while training in Europe next
spring, deputy-director of the Chinese Basketball Administrative
Center Hu Jiashi told the China Sports Daily on Sept. 1.
Yao, the leading player who scored an average of 25.3 points in
his six games at the championship, was the only current NBA player
from China.
His national teammate Wang Zhizhi, the first Chinese player to
play in the NBA, returned home recently after four years of exile
in the United States. He will rejoin the Chinese military club, the
Bayi Rockets in the upcoming CBA season.
Chinese players will go in for club competitions which kick off
in October before they are called up once again at the end of
November for the Asian Games basketball events, which Yao will
skip.
(Xinhua News Agency September 6, 2006)