HALF of the Filoil Flying V Centre was alternating between intermittent cheers and gnashing of teeth. One side in green (for La Salle) and the other side in red (for San Beda). In recent years, this battle has been eagerly anticipated, as it has turned somewhat chippy beginning with a national title followed by last summer’s preseason championship match between the two.
As the arena rocked and rolled, a petite blonde, standing 5-foot-5, smiled broadly, squatted nearly the first-aid station, and took the whole ambiance in. “I’m in a country to feed my passion,” declares 28-year-old Agnieszka “Aga” Drabik from Bielsko-Biala, a city near Krakow, Poland, known for being a industrial and tourist hub.
What’s a lass from Poland doing over 6,000 miles away from her homeland?
“I work for Philip Morris International in the human resources division. I’m here on a temporary assignment for six months,” she confesses. “I will be here until August of this year. But you’ll never know.”
Even before coming over to the Philippines, she heard of the passion, the mania and the zest for basketball here. “What football is to Poland, basketball is to the Philippines,” she compared of the world’s two most popular sports. “You have the strongest league in Asia, the Olympic Qualifiers will be held here, so in Asia, the Philippines is basketball heaven for me. I know that basketball is crazy here, so I wanted to be a part of it. I asked the federation here [the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas] if I can do some refereeing here. They gave me a test, I was accepted, and I passed it.”
Aga’s first match in the Filoil Flying V Premier Cup was a high-school match between Emilio Aguinaldo College (EAC) and La Salle Greenhills on May 19. “Not such a big crowd,” she notes of the match (she also officiates in the Dickies Cup, a women’s basketball tournament).
She is surprised, though, when told that it’s just the preseason but when the college game is in full swing come June and September, it gets really crazy. “I hope I am still around to witness that,” she wishes.
Outside work, she goes out of town with her husband. “We’ve been around. But I like Bohol and Palawan. Bohol, especially. I hope to see more of this country.”
“I try to find a balance between work, travel and basketball,” she says. “I think I have done it.”
Basketball, or at least the women’s game thrives in Poland. “In Poland, compared to Europe, women’s basketball is stronger and more popular. However, I prefer the men’s game, because of the intensity of the play,” she admits. “Men like football. My husband [Tomasz] loves football but he, too, enjoys basketball. We have a local league, the Euro league, and keep track of what goes on in the NBA [National Basketball Association]. Because of the time difference, we usually find out the result when we wake up. But we follow the NBA.”
Aga’s path to officiating basketball began nine years ago in Poland. “My father was an influence on me. He is and still is a referee in Poland. Over there in Europe, it isn’t so unusual to have ladies as referees. Here it is as widespread. In Poland, though, it is not easy for women referees, because with guys, they give the trust immediately. With a woman, the trust is zero, and you have to earn it.”
Joey Guillermo, tournament director for the Filoil Flying V Premier Cup is happy with Aga’s performance. “She impressed everyone,” he says. “She called it very smart and was very decisive. No one protested any call. I think that’s good, right? But after the match, players and officials all had their picture taken with her.”
The pictures are something that still perplexes Aga. “Even when I am walking on the street, people stop to ask if they can have their picture taken with me,” she wonders. “I am not sure if it is because I am a woman with blue eyes.”
She dismisses the assertion of the fan selfies because of her looks. “I think Philippine women are beautiful, too.”
Aga called her second match of the tournament, once more a high-school match between EAC and National University, where she once more impressed. As a reward for her impressive performances, she will be calling the match between La Salle and Letran next Sunday, the 29th of May. “People think that because I am here, I am a national or Fiba [International Basketball Federation] referee. No, I am not yet at that level,” she admits.
When asked if she was nervous because it’s a big game, she professes, “I’m excited, because I get to be a part of some of the best basketball played in the world.”