Philippine basketball officials have fired a player for ridiculing Manny Pacquiao’s quest to become a professional basketballer.
Former Kentucky and NBA player Daniel Orton hit the headlines last week after playing against Pacquiao in the local pro-league, a game in which the boxing champion didn’t score a single point.
Afterwards Orton clowned Pacquiao to the media.
“Professional boxer, yeah, okay… professional basketball player, no. It’s a joke,” said Orton, 24, who signed with the Purefoods Hotshots team just this month.
Orton was saying what people around the Philippines can’t — that Pacquiao is a relatively talentless basketballer who gained his coaching-playing role with the Kia Carnival team because of his boxing fame.
The head of Phillipines basketball league didn’t find it humurous.
His team sacked Orton late last week, and he posted a farewell to his fans in the Philippines on Twitter on Monday.
“I thank God for my time in the Philippines and thank Purefoods for everything. I wish the team the best of luck,” Orton said.
Purefoods management refused to comment, but the team’s top administrator, Rene Pardo, was quoted in local media as saying Orton had been let go for insulting Pacquiao.
“Everyone is angry at him… it is like he went to the United States and insulted the name of Martin Luther King,” the ABS-CBN quoted Pardo as saying.
The Philippine Basketball Association also fined Orton 250,000 pesos ($5,653.3 dollars) for his comments.
“This office disapproves of and frowns upon the cavalier manner in which Mr Orton issued his comments and the unwarranted antics and liberties he has taken with the league and a fellow player,” PBA commissioner Chito Salud said in a statement.
“This insulting behaviour will never be condoned by this league.”