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NO TIME TO RELAx
Sports BusinessMirror
Thompson wants to play in Olympics
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| Thursday, June 9, 2016 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph sports@businessmirror.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao Asst. Editor: Joel Orellana
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The champions know exactly how fast a series can change, having just pulled off a mathematically improbable comeback from 3-1 down against Oklahoma City in the Western Conference finals. And even with the odds now stacked high against Cleveland in these National Basketball Association Finals, the Warriors say they cannot fall into the trap of thinking this series, which resumes with Game Three on Wednesday night, is already over.
LEVELAND—Not even Zika worries will deter Klay Thompson from playing in the Olympics if asked. The Golden State guard, while he and other potential Olympians in these National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals acknowledged having some concerns about the Zika virus, made clear on Tuesday he would accept any invitation that comes his way to represent USA Basketball at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. “It would be an honor to play for Team USA,” Thompson said. “I’d love to go to Brazil.” His insistence that he wants to play came one day after his Warriors teammate Stephen Curry announced he won’t, citing needs to rest and heal as his primary reasons. The Cleveland-Golden State finals matchup is loaded with Olympic prospects. Curry won’t be going, but as many as seven other players in the series may still represent the US this summer—and there’s likely international Olympians like Australian teammates Andrew Bogut and Matthew Dellavedova, plus Nigeria’s Festus Ezeli. Warriors forward Draymond Green was downright emphatic about his hope to be there. “Hell, yeah,” Green said, when asked if he wants to play, dragging his words out for theatrics. Golden State’s Harrison Barnes also said he wants to go, and 2012 gold medalist Andre Iguodala also hopes to play—but indicated he isn’t sure to make the cut. “I’m on the list,” Iguodala said, “but I think I’m the No. 14 pick.” There are 12 slots on the US roster. Cleveland star and three-time Olympian LeBron James hasn’t decided about playing in Rio yet, part of the reason USA Basketball is working on two different roster scenarios in advance of the anticipated team announcement later this month. Kevin Love remains a possibility, and Kyrie Irving said he will decide after the finals. Irving said the Cavs are in a tough series with the Warriors, “so I haven’t really thought about it.” What many are thinking about, however, is Zika and its risks. Zika is a mosquito-borne virus and although there have been outbreaks across other countries, Brazil has been hit hard. Zika is known to cause severe birth defects, part of the reason NBC Today show anchor Savannah Guthrie—who is pregnant—said on Tuesday she will not accompany the network’s team to Brazil for the Olympics. US cyclist Tejay van Garderen has already cited Zika concerns as his reasons for dropping out from Olympic consideration, and the World Health Organization is putting together an emergency committee to study the virus and examine risks of the games behind held in Brazil. Bogut can’t stand getting shots, so him already getting several as precautions for visiting Brazil shows how much he wants to represent Australia. “Just being bitten by a mosquito and then come down with something is a pretty scary prospect,” Bogut said. “I’ve had my yellow fever shot already, which is a battle in itself. And then you’ve got malaria and you’ve got Zika. So being able to get that from an insect is pretty scary stuff.” He then half-seriously detailed a precaution option. “Might have to buy a hazmat outfit to arrive,” he said. Curry said Zika fears didn’t factor into his decision. He wants to use the time off this summer to prepare for next season, the rigors of two years capped by NBA Finals appearances taking a toll. “As his coach, I’m pleased,” Warriors Coach Steve Kerr said. “He needs rest.... He weighed all the dynamics and realized that a summer of rest would be the best thing for him long term. And I think that’s the wise choice.” But Thompson said he thinks a couple weeks off between the finals and Olympic preparations will be enough for him. “The best thing about Team USA, no one’s logging heavy minutes,” Thompson said. Thompson acknowledged Zika worries him somewhat—”mosquitoes love me,” he quipped—but not enough to deter him from wanting to play. “It’s no joking matter,” Thompson said. “It’s a little concerning. But at the same time, you’ve just got to take the precautionary steps to avoid it.” AP
STEPHEN CURRY and the Warriors shoot for a 3-0 series lead. AP
NO TIME
FADING INTEREST? N
EW YORK—The second straight National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals matchup between Golden State and Cleveland got off to a promising start for ABC, but the network has to be hoping the series becomes more competitive in a hurry. The first two games averaged 18.3 million viewers, the Nielsen company said on Tuesday. Except for last year’s two-game average of 18.5 million, it’s the best start for the NBA Finals for viewers since the 2001 series between Philadelphia and Los Angeles. But the trend line isn’t good: while the first game had 19.2 million viewers, Sunday night’s blowout win for the Warriors dropped to 17.5 million, Nielsen said. It was the opposite last year, where an overtime second game outdrew the series opener. Unless Cleveland can get back into it when the series heads east on Wednesday, viewership interest will likely continue to fade. The Simon Cowell effect was worth half-a-million viewers to NBC’s America’s Got Talent. The series’ summer
premiere, with Cowell as a new judge, drew nearly 11.7 million viewers last week. The season-opener with Howard Stern last year had 11.1 million viewers, Nielsen said. NBC’s summer variety series with Maya Rudolph and Martin Short had a moderately promising debut, reaching 6.3 million viewers on its first night. ABC won the week with an average of 6.9 million viewers in prime time. CBS had 4.9 million, NBC had 4.6 million, Fox had 2.8 million, Univision had 2.2 million, Telemundo had 1.41 million, ION Television had 1.37 million and the CW had 980,000. TNT was the week’s most popular cable network, averaging 2.37 million viewers in prime time. Fox News Channel had 1.71 million, the Disney Channel had 1.57 million, HGTV had 1.56 million and USA had 1.55 million. ABC’s World News Tonight nipped its rivals at NBC in the nightly news evening race for its third win in a row. ABC averaged 7.8 million viewers, NBC’s Nightly News had 7.7 million and the CBS Evening News had 6.5 million. AP
TO RELAX
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By Tim Reynolds The Associated Press
LEVELAND—Golden State has won the first two games of the National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals, both of those wins coming by double figures and with a few dominant stretches of basketball in there. Strange as this sounds, that has the Warriors feeling a bit uneasy. The champions know exactly how fast a series can change, having just pulled off a mathematically improbable comeback from 3-1 down against Oklahoma City (OKC) in the Western Conference finals. And even with the odds now stacked high against Cleveland in these NBA Finals, the Warriors say they cannot fall into the trap of thinking this series, which resumes with Game Three on Wednesday night, is already over. “That’s a great analogy, one that we’ve already used,” Warriors Coach Steve Kerr said on Tuesday. “It doesn’t matter what the scores are, doesn’t matter if you win by 25 or lose by 25, it’s one game in the series. And we got blown out twice in a row in OKC, down 3-1, and we were able to come back. We know we’re playing against a great team. They’re coming home. They can change the momentum around with just one win.” Cleveland hopes he’s right. The Cavs might be without concussed Kevin Love for Game Three, but they are 7-0 at home in these playoffs—
winning by an average of 20.9 points. “It’s a do-or-die game for us,” Cavaliers forward LeBron James said. “We can’t afford to go down 3-0 to any team, especially a team that’s 73-9 in the regular season and playing the type of basketball they’re playing.” When the Warriors were on the brink of elimination against the Thunder, history suggested that they had a 3.9-percent chance to win the series—232 previous NBA teams were down 3-1 in a best-of-seven, and only nine won. Compared to that, Cleveland’s chances look fabulous. “We’re not in that bad of shape as they were—3-1 is worse than 2-0,” Cavaliers Coach Tyronn Lue said. “And they came back and took it one game at a time, like we have to do.” Teams that have fallen behind 2-0 in the NBA Finals have rallied to win 9.7 percent of the time, with three of them getting it done in 31 past opportunities. The 1969 Boston Celtics, 1977 Portland Trail Blazers and 2006 Miami Heat all lost the first two games of the finals on the road before winning the title—the Celtics doing so in seven games, the Blazers and Heat getting it done in six. “History,” Lue said, “is something that’s made to be broken.” Despite their predicament, the Cavaliers certainly seemed confident and loose on Tuesday. During the open portion of practice, James was laughing with teammates and tossed up the occasional underhanded 60-footer—reacting with mock disbelief when the lowpercentage shot didn’t fall. Point guard Kyrie Irving played a long
game of one-on-one with Cavs Assistant Coach James Posey, who was on that Heat team that rallied from 2-0 down in the finals against Dallas and hit a huge shot in the clinching game. Their thinking is simple: Take care of home court on Wednesday and Friday, knot the series and see what happens in a best-of-three. “When they go on their runs, we have to be able to withstand those punches,” Irving said. “And Game One and Game Two, we’ve done it at times. We’ve shown that we’re capable of doing it, but we’re just constantly on our heels.” That’s what the Warriors do against everyone, not just the Cavs. Cleveland’s biggest lead in the series so far is six points. Golden State’s is 33. In four games this season, including the two regular-season matchups, the Warriors have held the lead for a staggering 87 percent of the time. And in last year’s finals, Golden State won twice in Cleveland—more than proving that it can handle the Cavs’ raucous home crowd. “We know they’re going to make adjustments,” Warriors star and two-time NBA MVP Stephen Curry said. “We know they’re going to come out with a sense of urgency in the moment. But we need to have that same mentality, because for what’s at stake, if we’re able to go up 3-0, that is a great position to be in. That is the opportunity in front of us.” And no one has ever come back in an NBA series from 3-0 down, either. “We can’t relax,” Warriors guard Klay Thompson said. “No time to relax.”
SPORTS
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Why oil prices and power rates keep on rising Database
Cecilio T. Arillo Part Five
Rendering the public vulnerable to high electricity cost
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Thursday, June 9, 2016 Vol. 11 No. 243
P25.00 nationwide | 4 sections 28 pages | 7 days a week
SC sides with Pilipinas Shell vs BOC on ₧21.4-B tax case PHL GROWTH TO EXCEED T 6%, WB SAYS
INSIDE
KLAY THOMPSON: It would be an honor to play for Team USA. AP
A broader look at today’s business
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HE Supreme Court (SC) has ruled that giant oil company Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corp. (PSPC) cannot be cited for direct contempt in connection with its bid to stop the Bureau of Customs (BOC) from collecting P21.4 billion representing unpaid taxes.
By Cai U. Ordinario
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In a 12-page decision penned by Associate Justice Mariano C. del Castillo, the Court’s Second Division junked the petition filed by the BOC seeking the reversal of the decision issued by the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA), dated June 11, 2012, which junked its motion to cite for direct contempt PSPC Vice President for Finance and Treasurer Willie J. Sarmiento and company lawyer Cipriano U. Asilo for resorting to forum shopping just to prevent the agency from collecting the amount. The BOC sought to cite the PSPC for direct contempt after it filed with the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Fourth Judicial Region, Batangas City, Branch 3, a complaint for injunction with prayer for the ex-parte issuance of a 72-hour temporary restraining order (TRO), to enjoin the implementation of its memorandum dated February 9, 2010. Continued on A2
‘Rice self-sufficiency is still the way to go’ By Mary Grace Padin
OWERsector reform programs rendered the public vulnerable to high electricity cost, profits motive of private power firm and loss of control over environment regulation. The end-result pointed toward significant impairment of consumer protection and transfer of corporate debts into public hands.
he incoming chief of the Department of Agriculture (DA) will not abandon the Aquino administration’s bid to become self- The volume of additional sufficient in rice and is even considering the expansion of rice that the Philippines palay-production areas to wipe needs to produce to out imports. meet local demand Incoming Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol announced on Wednesday that he is targeting to expand rice-production areas in the country by 1 million hectares to achieve rice self-sufficiency. “[During my Byaheng Bukid initiative] I saw a lot of places with unused lands that could have been utilized for palay production. There are also a lot of wide [rice-production] areas producing only once a year and the main problem is irrigation,” Piñol said. He added that he has already asked regional directors of the DA to provide a list of irrigated and rain-fed areas, as well as the potential production areas in each region. According to the incoming DA chief, the additional 1 million hectares of rice-producing areas will be able to plug the chronic shortfall in the country’s palay output.
Continued on A10
See “Rice,” A2
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DISTINCTIVE STYLE The Scuderia Ferrari Orologi Spring/Summer 2016 watch collection was launched on Wednesday at the Ferrari Showroom in Bonifacio Global City by Brand President Tad Uchtman. ALYSA SALEN
China plans oceanic ‘space station’ in South China Sea
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hina is speeding up efforts to design and build a manned deep-sea platform to help it hunt for minerals in the South China Sea, one that may also serve a military purpose in the disputed waters. Such an oceanic “space station” would be located as much as 3,000 meters (9,800 feet) below the surface, according to a recent Science Ministry presentation viewed by Bloomberg. The project was mentioned in China’s current five-year economic plan released in March and ranked No. 2 on a list of the top 100 science
and technology priorities. Authorities recently examined the implementation of the project and decided to accelerate the process, according to the presentation. “Having this kind of long-term inhabited station has not been attempted this deep, but it is certainly possible,” said Bryan Clark, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. “Manned submersibles have gone to those depths for almost 50 years. The challenge is operating it for months at a time.” Continued on A4
mid lower global growth expectations, the World Bank (WB) said it remains confident that the Philippines will grow by more than 6 percent over the next three years. In the latest update of its Global Economic Prospects (GEP) report, the World Bank maintained its growth expectations for the Philippines in the 2016 to 2018 period, despite lowering forecasts for many East Asia and the Pacific economies. The Philippine economy is still expected to expand by 6.4 percent this year and 6.2 percent in 2017 and 2018, unchanged from the Washington-based lender’s January projections. “Growth in the rest of the region is expected to be supported by rising investment in several large economies [Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand], and strong consumption supported by low commodity prices [Thailand, the Philippines and Vietnam),” the report read. Growth in the East Asia and Pacific region, which includes the Philippines, is projected to slow to an unrevised 6.3-percent rate in 2016, with China’s expansion expected to ease to 6.7 percent, as projected in January. The Washington-based lender said the region, excluding China, is projected to post a growth of 4.8 percent in 2016, unchanged from 2015. “This outlook assumes an orderly growth slowdown in China accompanied by steady progress on structural reforms and appropriate policy stimulus, as needed,” the World Bank said. The World Bank said countries in the East Asia and the Pacific region, like the Philippines, still face “considerable” risk. These include short-term risks, such as a sharper-than-expected slowdown in China and the risks posed by a significant increase in private-sector credit. The increase in private-sector debt, particularly in emerging market and developing economies in Continued on A4
n japan 0.4303 n UK 67.1836 n HK 5.9480 n CHINA 7.0289 n singapore 34.1898 n australia 34.4416 n EU 52.4684 n SAUDI arabia 12.3155
Source: BSP (8 June 2016 )