By Mike T. Limpag
Fair Play
Sunday, January 15, 2012
WHEN I met Dan Palami two weeks ago, I asked him if the Philippine Football Federation still gets money from the Philippine Sports Commission.
He shrugged, and said, “I don’t think they still need it.”
It was also at that time when he and PFF president Nonong Araneta were deep in negotiation for an exclusive TV contract and over lunch, he told me that ABS-CBN’s global reach is an advantage to the Azkals because of how the team has connected with overseas workers in its training camp abroad.
And, just recently, the national papers announced the PFF’s P300-million deal with the network giant, another exclusive deal I reckon. I guess, if you have 300 big ones, a paltry P4 million from the PSC doesn’t really, count, does it?
Though I am not familiar with how the deal works—will the P300M come in tranches—I want to know one thing. Where will it go? In the previous PFF admin, I’d be worried but in the present set-up, I know the money won’t go to anyone’s pockets. I just want to know where it goes.
We deserve to know, besides this is money that the PFF got from its fans. Without the
newfound support from fans, the PFF won’t be able to get P300 from the network. (I wonder if P300 million is enough for a stadium.)
The deal may be for the Azkals matches but I hope the money will trickle down to ALL national teams, not just our poster boys. I hope, too, the network giant will air the games of the Malditas, Musangs, Little Azkals and Junior Azkals.
I hope, too, when it comes to pre-match analysis, commentators will mention the clubs and the UFL even if the league is aired over a rival network. Guys, it’s not the Dark Lord, let’s mention the names shall we? The clubs who shell out P190,000 a month for an Azkal deserve it.
Enough of this competing-network-crap—the reason that was cited why UFL clubs aren’t mentioned during ABS-CBN airtime—because even ANC News carries crawlers/updates of PBA games.
This is not showbiz, this is football. Let’s keep it that way.
By the way, aside from the TV deal, Dan is also set to negotiate for the new outfitter of the Azkals since Mizuno’s contract has lapsed.
I don’t think Mizuno, which has been touting how they have supported the Azkals during lean times, will get the contract. Heck, I don’t think they deserve it, despite how many slanted PRs they will release to the public of how they were the knight-in-shining-armor during the dark days of Philippine football.
They only have themselves to blame.
Whichever outfit Dan gets, I only hope for one thing—the new outfitter won’t do a Mizuno when it comes to fans’ desire to get jerseys. When Mizuno was the outfitter, it felt like indeed the dark days of Philippine football because you can’t get any!
Once, I dropped by the Mizuno stall in Ayala Cebu every week for five straight weeks and all I got was, “The jersey will be available next week!”
If Mizuno comes calling Sir Dan, please tell them you’ll talk to them next week!
UFL. So Kaya beat Air Force—an upset as one outfit called it—and Loyola survived the
Green Archers, who bungled two penalities, during the opening day of the UFL.
I don’t think Kaya’s win was an upset and as for the Air Force, I think their offense would do well if, ironically, Ian Araneta stops scoring.
Ever since the Azkals breakout campaign in 2010, it seems Ian has been pressuring himself to show to the new fans that he can score because he was the top scorer of the team pre-Suzuki Cup.
And I think the pressure is affecting his performance and one play during the Air
Force vs. Kaya match showed that. As the Riders were on a counterattack, Ian had two men to his left and another to his right but instead of passing, he forced his way to the Kaya box and lost the ball. Sadly, it is becoming a familiar scene.
I know Ian can score and as one of my favorite players, I want him to score every time he puts on the national team jersey but he’s got to learn to acknowledge when somebody is in a better scoring position.
Just like that time in Vietnam, when he provided the pass to Phil Younghusband. Now that was my favorite Ian Araneta move.
(www.cebufootball.blogspot.com)
Published in the Sun.Star Cebu newspaper on January 16, 2012.
I thought it was up to the PFF if they want to sign a new contract with Mizuno, and not Palami? Just because he is the manager, doesnt mean he has the rights to everything. In other countries its the FA/Federations who negiotiates contracts, not the managers, and the new sponsorships includes the whole FA/Federations national teams. Not only the Mens National Team.
ReplyDeleteDoes Palami have too much power?
I've thought the same for quite some time now as well! I've also made comments about conflict of interest and I think that is the case. He's the team manager of the senior & U-23 men's national teams... it also gone to the point where it like he manages the senior team like he owns it like a club team. He's also the president of the Leyte FA, owner and active player of his own team (Global FC) in the ufl, he's also been appointed as some marketing person within the PFF, now he's directly involved in negotiating for things like TV & outfitter deals.... what else is there?? WTF?!?! Like I said, CONFLICT OF INTEREST!!! And its not good!
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