Basketball World Cup Sets Attendance Record with 38,115 Showing Up for Game in Manila

 A giant basketball is displayed near MOA Arena, one of the venues for the FIBA World Cup, which begins on Friday in Pasay, Metro Manila, Philippines, August 23, 2023. (Reuters)
A giant basketball is displayed near MOA Arena, one of the venues for the FIBA World Cup, which begins on Friday in Pasay, Metro Manila, Philippines, August 23, 2023. (Reuters)
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Basketball World Cup Sets Attendance Record with 38,115 Showing Up for Game in Manila

 A giant basketball is displayed near MOA Arena, one of the venues for the FIBA World Cup, which begins on Friday in Pasay, Metro Manila, Philippines, August 23, 2023. (Reuters)
A giant basketball is displayed near MOA Arena, one of the venues for the FIBA World Cup, which begins on Friday in Pasay, Metro Manila, Philippines, August 23, 2023. (Reuters)

On Day 1 of the Basketball World Cup, the Philippines made history.

A record crowd of 38,115 filled Philippine Arena for Friday’s game between the host team and the Dominican Republic – easily the biggest crowd to see a game in World Cup history. Setting that mark was one of the Philippines’ stated goals for some time, and the country famous for its love of basketball made it happen.

Among those in the crowd: Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Basketball Hall of Famer Dirk Nowitzki, who is one of FIBA’s ambassadors for the World Cup. Marcos arrived and took his courtside seat just as his national team got the first basket of the game, and then posed with the squad at midcourt for a photo at halftime.

But the Dominican Republic spoiled the party for the home fans: Karl-Anthony Towns scored 26 points, leading his team to a 87-81 win in a Group A matchup. Jordan Clarkson scored 28 for the Philippines before fouling out in the final moments.

"This is something I’m never going to forget, right here," Philippines forward A.J. Edu said. "I mean, this was such a blessing to experience. I couldn't hear anything every time we scored."

The previous attendance record was 32,616, set on Aug. 14, 1994. That's when the US rolled past Russia 137-91 in the gold-medal game of that tournament — then called the FIBA world championship — at SkyDome in Toronto.

"We all knew the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2023 was going to be special and within the first day we already have evidence of this, having witnessed this historic moment," tournament chairman Richard Carrion said.

Fans arrived early Friday, some several hours before the game. There was an opening game at the arena; Italy topped Angola in front of 21,214 fans in a matchup that started four hours before the Philippines-Dominican Republic contest.

When that game ended, the seats kept filling up. There was a pre-game concert and an on-court dance performance to add to the spectacle. By the time the home team took the floor to warm up, the building's occupants were roaring.

Philippine Arena was originally slated to host the final phase of the World Cup, including the medal games. But FIBA changed that plan earlier this year, citing traffic and transport concerns. The arena, which can hold as many as 55,000 fans for some events, is at least an hour by car — maybe much more depending on traffic — from most of the other Manila venues being used during the tournament.

The record is certain to not fall again in this World Cup. Friday's games were the only ones being played at Philippine Arena in this tournament; all the other venues being used in Manila, Japan and Indonesia for games are much smaller.



Algeria's Nemour Outshines Biles, Qui On Uneven Bars at Olympics

FILE - Algeria’s Kaylia Nemour competes on the uneven bars to win the silver medal during the apparatus finals at the Artistic Gymnastics World Championships in Antwerp, Belgium, Saturday, Oct. 7, 2023. The 17-year-old athlete, one of the best in the world on uneven bars, was born in France. She grew up here, and still trains here. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo, File)
FILE - Algeria’s Kaylia Nemour competes on the uneven bars to win the silver medal during the apparatus finals at the Artistic Gymnastics World Championships in Antwerp, Belgium, Saturday, Oct. 7, 2023. The 17-year-old athlete, one of the best in the world on uneven bars, was born in France. She grew up here, and still trains here. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo, File)
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Algeria's Nemour Outshines Biles, Qui On Uneven Bars at Olympics

FILE - Algeria’s Kaylia Nemour competes on the uneven bars to win the silver medal during the apparatus finals at the Artistic Gymnastics World Championships in Antwerp, Belgium, Saturday, Oct. 7, 2023. The 17-year-old athlete, one of the best in the world on uneven bars, was born in France. She grew up here, and still trains here. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo, File)
FILE - Algeria’s Kaylia Nemour competes on the uneven bars to win the silver medal during the apparatus finals at the Artistic Gymnastics World Championships in Antwerp, Belgium, Saturday, Oct. 7, 2023. The 17-year-old athlete, one of the best in the world on uneven bars, was born in France. She grew up here, and still trains here. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo, File)

Algerian teenager Kaylia Nemour outshone Simone Biles on the uneven bars Sunday to qualify for the apparatus and the women's all-around finals at the Paris Olympics.

The 17-year-old French-born athlete earned an impressive 15.600 points for her bars routine -- an acrobatic, gravity-defying performance full of technical skill and difficulty at Bercy Arena, AFP reported.

China's Qiu Qiyuan, 17, who beat Nemour to gold at last year's world championships in Antwerp, was second with a score of 15.066 points.

Defending Olympic champion Nina Derwael of Belgium, a former two-time world champion, qualified fourth with 14.733.

Biles, 27, achieved 14.433 on the apparatus which is her weakest, and the four-time Olympic champion finished ninth to just miss out on the eight-woman final in a week's time.

"It's good, but could be better," said Nemour.

"It was a lot of pressure because it's the first apparatus, first Olympics, and I'm starting with the bars, my goal.

"But I'm happy, it went really well. There is still a week before the final and I still have room to improve."

Nemour also pulled off the Yurchenko double twist vault, scoring 14.000, on her final apparatus. She had a few errors on floor (13.160) and beam (13.200) but her overall total of 55.966 earned a place in Thursday's all-around final.

Nemour has competed for Algeria since last year after a dispute with the French gymnastics federation, and was delighted with the warm welcome in Paris.

"I didn't expect that," she said.

"Obviously, it's stressful but overall I'm happy with that performance."

Working on the psychological side for the past year has been "paying off", she said.

"I can still improve things. I have three days left to work, so I'm just going to make the most of it."

She will be bidding to earn a first gymnastics medal for Algeria.