AsiaBasket (FilBasket)
Most recent season or competition:
2023 AsiaBasket Dasmariñas Championship
SportBasketball
Founded2021 (2021)
FounderJai Reyes
Inaugural season2021 Subic Championship
No. of teams10
CountryPhilippines
Indonesia
Malaysia
Brunei
Thailand
United States
(all-time)
ContinentFIBA Asia
Most recent
champion(s)
CSB Blazers
(Dasmariñas 2023)
Most titlessix teams
(1 title each)
TV partner(s)AsiaBasket (Facebook, YouTube)
Solar Sports
Official websiteasiabasket.org

AsiaBasket is an Asian men's professional basketball league founded in 2021.

It was originally founded as the Filipino Basketball League, more commonly referred to as FilBasket, a domestic basketball tournament in the Philippines. Its first tournament was the 2021 Subic Championship followed by the 2022 Summer Championship.

In October 2022, FilBasket expanded into the Southeast Asian market with 2022 International Championship taking place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. To further reflect this expansion, the league was renamed as AsiaBasket beginning with the 2023 International Championship also held in Malaysia.

Six teams have won the championship once, with the most recent champions being the CSB Blazers, who won the 2023 Dasmariñas Championship.

History

FilBasket era (2021–2022)

The Filipino Basketball League (FilBasket) was established by former UAAP player Jai Reyes and Buddy Encarnado of the Pasig Sta. Lucia Realtors in 2021.[1][2] It was founded as a means to provide a platform for basketball players whose careers were disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic community quarantine measures. This includes players of the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL) which saw its 2019–20 season delayed due to COVID-19 measures. Hence many teams from the MPBL have joined the FilBasket, while not leaving the former, in a bid to play more competitive games.[2]

The Games and Amusements Board (GAB) of the Philippine government contends that FilBasket is a professional league and not an amateur league as the league organizers believe, hence the league falls under its jurisdiction.[3] The FilBasket organizers admitted that the long-term plan is for the league to become a professional league although it maintains that it will be an amateur league initially.[4] The dispute was reportedly resolved in October 2021, with FilBasket pushing through with its first tournament, the 2021 FilBasket Subic Championship.[3] Filbasket secured approval from Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority and the IATF-EID for a bubble tournament at the Subic Bay Gymnasium, in accordance to regulations for amateur leagues.[5]

The Subic Championship's format is akin to other major sports leagues in the Philippines, a round-robin stage followed by a single-elimination playoffs. The tournament concluded with AICC Manila being the winners. However the GAB issued a cease and desist order insisting that FilBasket is a professional league and declared the Subic Championship as unlawful although it did not impose any further sanctions.[6][7]

FilBasket started the process of turning into a professional league recognized by the GAB on February 22, 2022.[8] By March 1, 2022, the league was granted professional status by the GAB.[9] The league would hold its first professional tournament, the 2022 FilBasket Summer Championship, in early 2022.[10]

FilBasket would also hold its first international tournament, the 2022 International Championship in the latter part of 2022 in Malaysia.[11] It is also the first tournament under the current format, where instead of a round-robin, teams compete in a group stage to get in the knockout round.

AsiaBasket era (2023–present)

On March 3, 2023, FilBasket announced their renaming to AsiaBasket to accommodate with the expansion into the Asian basketball market. The first tournament under the AsiaBasket name was the 2023 International Championship, which also took place in Malaysia in April 2023. Although the league stated that the FilBasket name would be retained for local competitions in the Philippines, the AsiaBasket name was still used for the 2023 Las Piñas Championship in July 2023, which featured an all-Filipino roster of teams competing in Las Piñas.[12]

The 2023 Dasmariñas Championship will take place in Dasmariñas, Cavite, Philippines in November 2023, and will feature United States-based Statham Academy led by Filipino-American Taylor Statham, marking the first time the league will feature a team based outside of Asia.

Teams

Current teams

Teams competing at the 2023 AsiaBasket Dasmariñas Championship:

Name Locality Country First tournament
CSB Blazers Malate, Manila  Philippines International 2023
Corsa Tires Las Piñas 2023
Dasmariñas Monarchs Dasmariñas, Cavite Dasmariñas 2023
Makati Circus Music Festival Makati Dasmariñas 2023
MisOr Mustangs Misamis Oriental Dasmariñas 2023
PCU Dolphins – Dasmariñas Dasmariñas, Cavite Dasmariñas 2023
Pilipinas Aguilas International 2022
Shawarma Shack Pilipinas International 2022
Phuket Waves Phuket  Thailand Dasmariñas 2023
Statham Academy California  United States Dasmariñas 2023

Previous teams

Name Locality Country First tournament Last tournament
Pegasus Brunei Bandar Seri Begawan  Brunei International 2022
Bumi Borneo Pontianak, West Kalimantan  Indonesia International 2022
Elang Pacific Caesar Surabaya International 2022
KL Aseel Kuala Lumpur  Malaysia International 2022 International 2023
Harimau Malaysia Kuala Lumpur International 2022 International 2023
MBC Kirin Malacca City International 2022 International 2023
Ateneo Blue Eagles Loyola Heights, Quezon City  Philippines Las Piñas 2023
BGC Builders Taguig International 2022 International 2023
FEU Tamaraws Sampaloc, Manila Las Piñas 2023
Letran Knights Intramuros, Manila Las Piñas 2023
MFT Fruit Masters International 2023
Perpetual Altas Las Piñas Las Piñas 2023
San Beda Red Lions Mendiola, Manila International 2023 Las Piñas 2023
Sanzar Pharmaceuticals International 2023 Las Piñas 2023
The Th3rd Floor – KalosPH International 2023
Uratex Muntinlupa Las Piñas 2023
Singapore Adroit Woodlands  Singapore International 2022

FilBasket teams

Name Locality Main sponsor First tournament Last tournament
7A Primus 7A Sports Management Subic 2021
AFP-FSD Makati Cavaliers /
FSD Makati ARMY
Makati FSD Auto Insurance Subic 2021 Summer 2022
All-Star Bacolod Ballers Bacolod Bingo Plus Summer 2022
AICC Manila Manila Almeria International Construction Corporation Subic 2021
AMA Online Education Titans Quezon City AMA University Summer 2022
Burlington EOG Sports /
Muntinlupa Angelis Resort – EOG Sports
Manila Burlington Industries Philippines Subic 2021 Summer 2022
Muntinlupa Angelis Resort
Danao City MJAS Zenith /
Medical Depot
Danao, Cebu MJAS Zenith Trading Subic 2021 Summer 2022
Davao Occidental Tigers Davao Occidental United Coconut Planters Life Assurance Corporation Subic 2021
Immaculada Concepcion College Blue Hawks Caloocan Summer 2022
Muntinlupa Defenders Muntinlupa Subic 2021
Nueva Ecija Bespren Nueva Ecija Subic 2021
Nueva Ecija Capitals Nueva Ecija Summer 2022
Pasig Sta. Lucia Realtors Pasig Sta. Lucia Land Inc. Subic 2021 Summer 2022
San Juan Knights - Go For Gold San Juan Powerball Marketing & Logistics Corporation (Go For Gold) Subic 2021 Summer 2022
MTrans Buracai de Laiya /
Tanduay Rum Masters
Batangas City MTrans / Buracai De Laiya Hotel & Resort Subic 2021 Summer 2022
Tanduay Distillers
Zamboanga Family's Atami Brand Sardines Zamboanga City Universal Canning Inc. Summer 2022

Arenas

Tournament Arena(s) Location
FilBasket
Subic 2021 Subic Bay Gymnasium Olongapo, Zambales
Summer 2022 San Jose Del Monte City Sports Complex
Muntinlupa Sports Center
SGS Stadium
San Jose del Monte, Bulacan
Muntinlupa
Quezon City
International 2022 MABA Stadium Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
AsiaBasket
International 2023 MABA Stadium Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Las Piñas 2023 Villar Coliseum Las Piñas
Dasmariñas 2023 Dasmariñas Arena Dasmariñas, Cavite

Champions

Numbers in parentheses indicate the number of times that team has appeared in each tournament's championship game, as well as each respective teams' record in those games.

TournamentWinning teamScoreLosing teamRef.
FilBasket
Subic 2021 AICC Manila
(1, 1–0)
2–1
(series)
San Juan Knights
(1, 0–1)
Summer 2022 Nueva Ecija Capitals
(1, 1–0)
2–1
(series)
San Juan Knights
(2, 0–2)
International 2022 Harimau Malaysia
(1, 1–0)
87–68KL Aseel
(1, 0–1)
AsiaBasket
International 2023 KL Aseel
(2, 1–1)
83–72San Beda Red Lions
(1, 0–1)
Las Piñas 2023 Ateneo Blue Eagles
(1, 1–0)
60–57CSB Blazers
(1, 0–1)
Dasmariñas 2023 CSB Blazers
(2, 1–1)
105–86Statham Academy
(1, 0–1)

See also

References

  1. Joble, Rey (October 29, 2021). "Why FilBasket insists it is an amateur league". Manila Times. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  2. 1 2 Joble, Rey (August 11, 2021). "Sta. Lucia joins FilBasket League". The Manila Times. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  3. 1 2 Mendoza, Martin (October 25, 2021). "Filbasket clears up GAB issue, to push through with inaugural tournament". Rappler. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  4. Rosale, Dale (October 27, 2021). "FilBasket kicks off Thursday". Cebu Daily News. Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  5. Reyes, Kate (July 22, 2021). "Jai Reyes to formally open FilBasket this August". Sports Interactive Network Philippines. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  6. Navarro, June (November 23, 2021). "GAB issues cease and desist order vs Filbasket". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  7. Ramos, Gerry (January 14, 2022). "GAB fires warning after Filbasket's maiden tournament ruled 'unlawful'". Sports Interactive Network Philippines. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  8. Li, Matthew (February 22, 2022). "Filbasket, Super League begin process of turning pro". Tiebreaker Times. Retrieved February 22, 2022.
  9. "Pro status, new teams boost Filbasket ahead of second season". ABS-CBN News. March 1, 2022. Retrieved March 1, 2022.
  10. Li, Matthew (May 8, 2022). "Filbasket: Palma lifts Nueva Ecija to Summer Championship". Tiebreaker Times. Retrieved October 23, 2022.
  11. Terrado, Reuben (October 23, 2022). "Three Pinoy teams to play in FilBasket Int'l Championship in KL". Sports Interactive Network Philippines. Retrieved October 23, 2022.
  12. Morales, Luisa (March 10, 2023). "Filbasket expands, rebrands into AsiaBasket". The Philippine Star. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
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