Aussie, Filipino officials apologize for vicious ‘basketbrawl’

Aussie, Filipino officials apologize for vicious ‘basketbrawl’
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Philippine and Australian players engage in a brawl during their FIBA World Cup Asian qualifier game at the Philippine arena in Bocaue town, Bulacan province, north of Manila on July 2, 2018. (AFP / TED ALJIBE)
Aussie, Filipino officials apologize for vicious ‘basketbrawl’
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Philippine (blue) and Australian (yellow) players engage in a brawl during their FIBA World Cup Asian qualifier game at the Philippine arena in Bocaue town, Bulacan province, north of Manila on July 2, 2018. (AFP / TED ALJIBE)
Aussie, Filipino officials apologize for vicious ‘basketbrawl’
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Mathew Wright (L) of the Philipines engage Daniel Kickert of Australia in a brawl during their FIBA World Cup Asian qualifier game at the Philippine arena in Bocaue town, Bulacan province, north of Manila on July 2, 2018. (AFP / TED ALJIBE)
Updated 05 July 2018
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Aussie, Filipino officials apologize for vicious ‘basketbrawl’

Aussie, Filipino officials apologize for vicious ‘basketbrawl’
  • World body FIBA is expected to announce soon possible sanctions for the brawl that saw nine Philippine and four Australia players ejected.

MELBOURNE, Australia: Basketball officials from Australia and the Philippines have issued a joint apology for the vicious brawl during a World Cup qualifier on Monday that resulted in the ejection of 13 players.
Philippines basketball federation president Alfredo Panlilio and Ned Coten, president of Basketball Australia, said in the statement Thursday that the “actions displayed have no place on any basketball court.”
“We wish to apologize to the entire basketball community worldwide, and in particular to our fantastic fans in the Philippines and Australia, for the behavior displayed by both teams and for bringing the game of basketball into disrepute.”
World body FIBA has yet to announce any sanctions for the brawl that saw nine Philippines players ejected and four from Australia.
Australia assistant coach and former NBA player Luc Longley said on his return to Australia that the brawl at Philippine Arena in Ciudad de Victoria was the worst thing he had seen on a basketball court.