By Les Tan/Red Sports

Basketball fans across ASEAN will get a league of their own when the ASEAN Basketball League (ABL) tips off in October 2009. It is the first pan-ASEAN professional sports league.

If you’re a football fan and you’re wondering why there isn’t an equivalent football league in ASEAN, you ask the right question.

Politics and factionalism have proven a stumbling block, something that ABL chairman Tony Fernandes hinted at.

“In this world today, politics does involve a lot of sports and so the best doesn’t always come out,” said Fernandes. “It’s great today that we see a lot of camaraderie to make the [Asean Basketball] league a success.”

There was enough camaraderie in the ASEAN Football Federation to get the ASEAN Football Championship off the ground in 1996.

Christened the Tiger Cup after their main sponsor Tiger Beer, the event proved that there was appetite for regional football.

However, the competition – known as the Suzuki Cup in its last incarnation last December 2008 – never improved and innovated. It remained as a biennial competition lasting no more than three weeks at a time.

The lack of a regular football league means no meaningful sports industry can develop. A regular league creates new jobs, not just for the players, but also for coaches, referees and front-office staff. Each country also benefits from tourism spin-offs as fans travel in this era of budget airlines.

The ABL will now probably create these opportunities for the basketball industry.

Without a regular regional football competition, the Singapore national football team is suffering also as a result, playing too few meaningful games with too large a break in between.

With only the S.League to play in, the national players struggle to step up to international football when they get together. The lack of training time together resulted in the humiliating 5-0 loss to Liverpool last month, when a second half collapse saw them concede four goals.

The national basketball team also does not play many meaningful games in a year, but now the national players have a realistic chance to build a career with the Singapore Slingers. All the seven locals on the Slingers roster are expected to be current national players.

“This [league] will wake up a lot of people,” said Fernandes. “Why did someone from outside of basketball and outside of Philippines come up with this idea? I think there will be many, many more ideas now. They’ll say, ‘If that guy can do it, let’s try and do it for football.'”

“Football is crying out for it. The only exciting football in ASEAN is the Tiger Cup,” continued Fernandes. “There is nothing else that gets anyone off their butt to go to a stadium.”

“I’m optimistic that there will be many, many more ASEAN championships of a professional nature – well-run, well-funded, and well-marketed.”

The ASEAN Football Federation failed to take advantage of their initial success with their championship and improve it for fans and sponsors. Offered the first opportunity to go with a regional league by serious sponsors, they just couldn’t get their act together.

Their foot-dragging now means the honour of having the first pan-ASEAN professional sports league goes to the sport of basketball.

Too bad for football.

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