Sunday, October 5, 2014

OUT NOW: Manila Bulletin Sports Digest October 2014 issue


KIA Sorento playing coach and eight division boxing world champion Manny Pacquiao makes an appearance in this month's cover.

But a true head coach is featured inside the magazine! Coach Tim Cone gets his own close up after winning his second Grand Slam last season!

Also inside this issue: Gilas Pilipinas by the numbers, Dindin and Jaja Santiago, Brandon Vera and ONE FC, and many more!

Grab your copies now!

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Why the Gilas' Asiad exit hurts

Marcus Douthit's status with Gilas still 'up in the air' after benching, says coach Chot Reyes
Photo by Reuben Terrado/ SPIN.ph
Where do we start?

San nga ba tayo magsisimula?


Malamang sa Incheon. Kasi Asian Games.


Should we start sa Iran? Sa Korea? Sa Kazakhstan? Dun tayo natapos eh.


O sa India? Nanalo tayo dun eh. Talo tayo sa Kazakhstan. Period.


Alam ko na. It all started sa... puso.



"Ang puso ialay sa laban, kapalit ay tagumpay."

Naalala mo yung sa Sevilla? Yung World Cup, kung saan we're playing for the first time in 36 years? Kung saan nanggulat tayo. Where we reached all-time highs in the spotlight of international basketball. Kung saan minahal ng mundo ang mga nagliliitang Pilipino, nakikipagbangaan, tinatakbuhan, at tinitirahan ang mas malalaking kalaban.

Talo man, panalo pa rin. Di man naka-abante, champion pa rin. Kung saan naniwala ang lahat, kung saan minahal ng lahat, at kung saan pinalakpakan ng lahat ang Gilas.

Tapos, anong nangyari?


Honestly, di ko alam. Katulad yun ng patutunguhan ng opinyon ko, opinyon natin. Kung saan sandamakmak ang may salita, sandamakmak ang may alam ng problema, at sandamakmak ang may solusyon. Kung saan ang lahat ay may kanya-kanyang tama, pero di naman lahat makakapag-desisyon. Call ni Boss MVP yun.


Sabi ng iba, "Yan ang napapala ng puro puso. Umaasa parati, pagdating sa dulo, nabibigo. Di kasi pwedeng puro puso, dapat may utak din." Ang lalim ng hugot, akala mo, di na Gilas ang pinaguusapan.


Pero ganun naman talaga di ba? Pag mahal mo ang isang bagay, ibubuhos mo lahat, kahit na walang kasiguraduhan. Open ka masaktan, pero syempre, di mo iniisip yun. Ang nasa utak mo, yung happy ending sa dulo.

At para sa Pilipino, ilang beses nang naisulat, nai-TV, at nairadyo kung gano kamahal ng Pilipino ang basketball.


Bumabagyo na, basketball pa rin.


Credits to the owner.
Dinelubyo na, basketball pa rin.

Credits to the owner.
Kaya masakit.

After nung World Cup stint, ganto yung nangayari sa Gilas sa Asian Games. Laglag.

Tapos, nagkasisihan na. At malamang, di pa matatapos sa Korea yun.

Pero para saan pa? May magagawa pa bang mabuti? Makaka-medal pa ba tayo pag nagkasisihan? So kasalanan nya, ano gagawin mo?

Para ka namang di nanonood ng basketball. Team game nga, nagkasisihan pa. Bakit nagkaganun?

And worse, sa huling laro, we tried to force overtime by scoring in Kazakhstan's basket just to get the needed 11-point spread, something which we're not even sure of. Of course, Marcus Douthit's "own goal" was nullified due to the FIBA International Basketball Rules. This came after we erected an 18-point lead, na nawala na lang parang bula.

For some, it was a desperate attempt to advance to the semifinals. Gagawin ang lahat para manalo, which is tama naman.

But for others, it was a slap in the face of the sport we all love, a mockery of the sport of basketball.

In short, nakakahiya.

It was a sour end to Jimmy Alapag's international career, and a sorry dent on the Philippines' proud basketball heritage.

But maybe, its a chance for Gilas to reassess its state, to refocus on what should be done and should be improved.

Yes, this might be a start of a better tomorrow for the Philippines. We proved we can match up with the world's bests. Now its time to rethink our assets and come back stronger, silence our Asian rivals and rack up medals once more.

The Kazakhstan game, as much as we try to forget the weird ending it brought, will stay with us for the long time, just as Lee Sang-min's trey in the 2002 Asiad. 

But remember, sometimes we win, sometimes we learn.

Gilas' season ends with this "win" over the Kazakhs, but it doesn't end here. Lets come back stronger, make use of all the assets that we have, and prove that the Philippines is really a force to be reckoned with. Its time to put all those lessons and moral victories to the test and make it a reality. Napatunayan nating kaya natin. Oras na para ipakita ring kaya nating manalo.

Also, for the men and women who made the Gilas' dream run possible, maraming salamat.

Kapitan Jimmy's international career ends here.

Eerily, it feels like a graduation, too.

"For together we stand, divided we fall. Together we climb to the top of the world."

#LabanPilipinas #PUSO

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

In Defense of the NCAA


Photo by Angelo Falcon/ Rivals PH
By now, I guess you already read and watched the bench clearing brawl that has happened in the NCAA last Monday.

NCAA commissioner Bai Cristobal has already laid down the law, suspending 17 players and indefinitely relieving the three referees officiating the game.

I think we can all agree that the free-for-all was such an unfortunate incident, more that it has happened to a league like the NCAA.

But what prompted me to write about this are the uncalled for comments hurled in social media.
One comment which irked me reads: "Buhay pa pala yung NCAA. SMH."

Go ahead, shake you head. Ginusto mo yan eh.

Yes, the NCAA has really suffered a dip when it comes to media mileage. Even before when they were still with Studio 23, NCAA games were shown on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays to give way to the playdates of the UAAP. That didn't help the connotation that the NCAA is a second-tier league compared to the UAAP.

There's a reason why MVP supports Ateneo more vocally than he does San Beda. There's a reason why La Salle is in the UAAP and St. Benilde is in the NCAA. And there's a reason why scalpers enjoy an Ateneo-La Salle rivalry game than a San Beda-Letran rivalry game.

We can never shape the public's minds enough when it comes to which league is better. It has already been judged.

But remember, the NCAA is where we got Calvin Abueva, Ian Sangalang, RJ Jazul, Raymond Almazan, and, in a stretch, Jayson Castro. It is where rookies Kevin Alas, Ronald Pascual, Harold Arboleda, and Juneric Baloria came from. And in the near future, this is where Baser Amer and Earl Scottie Thompson will look back at.

Yes, people might say that the NCAA is an inferior league compared to the UAAP, but there is no doubt that the current crop of guys can match pound-for-pound with their UAAP counterparts. It just so happens that you watch more UAAP games on TV.

We, the sports media, also agree that the level of physicality in the NCAA has better equipped the players when they take their talents to the D-League (That's right, the league your Daniel Padilla was supposed to join), and even in the PBA, while the UAAP has been more of a glamour league as of late.

I'm not a kissing a**es when I said that. This is coming from a writer who has covered both leagues this season. I cannot compare how it was in the past years, but I can talk about what I see when I cover the games.

All I know is that when an NCAA game is already on a halftime break, the UAAP game is just wrapping up its first quarter. You wonder why? Whistles.

The NCAA games have also been more competitive this year, and when you have Mapua, a cellar-dwelling team this season, beating Perpetual, a Final Four contender, you really know that every team, how weak they might seem to be, are really fighting for every game.

Did that make it to the nightly newscast? I doubt.

We can make an argument that the eliminated teams in the UAAP also fought tooth-and-nail in their games, and we're not discounting that. It is just that in the NCAA, "weaker" teams grab those wins and have obviously created crazy situations in the standings.

Did the Adamson win over UP, the Falcons' first victory of the season, make it to the news? I don't think so.

But UP's first round win did. But the Ateneo-La Salle encounters did.

See how the mainstream media primes the viewers' minds?

Which brings us to our next point. Another comment said, "Minsan na lang mababalita, ganto pa yung nangyayari. Way to build up your name, NCAA."

When was the last time the nightly news talked about FEU winning over UE? Or when Arellano won over JRU?

But when Renaldo Balkman choked Arwind Santos, that made the headlines, right?

As much as we try to groom sports as good news, they just won't pick it up. Of course, we can't force the networks to show clips about games, games which not much people care about.

More if that is the NCAA, a league which has been perceived as a lower class compared to that of the UAAP.

There's a reason why the former is holding the games at the San Juan Arena and the latter is juggling venues from Araneta to MOA. Because not much people pay attention to the NCAA, save if you're a student from one school or you're just a diehard basketball aficionado.

Going back, we're not saying that we tolerate John Tayongtong and the proponents of the EAC-Mapua scuffle. But you have to consider what these players had to endure.

The Generals are currently dealing with an internal issue which has gravely affected their season, which saw Igee King and their Cameroonian reinforcement Cedric Happi Noube leave the squad. The players have also been the collateral damage in this struggle, as reports say that the management has not provided them with enough help throughout the course of their campaign.

You don't see that problems arising with the heavily sponsored schools. But its a sad reality for these guys, and probably for other colleges, too, which doesn't have much support for their basketball programs.

The Cardinals, also, are not that fortunate, as even before the season started, their leader Josan Nimes went down with an injury. Thus, the continuous defeats. But they have gotten to a roll as of late, which allowed coach Atoy Co to eclipse their three-win total from last year.

We're not defending the Generals and the Cardinals for their actions, we're just putting perspective to what both of these teams had to endure before this fateful encounter.

Shifting back to the game, I was there to witness it first hand.

Considering it was a non-bearing game, things seemed to be heated in the last minute, where the Generals are comfortably ahead. And when Tayongtong bumped CJ Isit, and Leo Gabo saw his teammate fell to the floor, it was a recipe for disaster. Gabo shoved Tayongtong and then, as they say, the gloves are off.

The turn of events happened so fast that you cannot blame the referees for not controlling the situation. Even the bouncers were caught off-guard in what should have been the last 28.5 seconds of an already won game for EAC.

I agree that the referees should have called a foul in that Tayongtong shove which floored Isit. Even with the game out of reach and the players just running down the clock, frustration will always be there, and with one trigger, the riot ensued.

It is no different to those of barangay leagues, where tempers are sure to flare whenever an arrogant dayo (outsider) taunts the crowd and ensues a melee. We can't blame those on the bench for both squads if they want to stand up, defend, and retaliate on their teammate's behalf.

But we're not saying that is tolerable, nonetheless, acceptable. And the commissioner has dropped the axe.

It is what it is, and any league will not tolerate such hooliganism.

It was an unfortunate turn of events for the oldest collegiate league in the country, and as much bad rep it will bring to the league, NCAA will always have physical players banging bodies and laying it all for the win.

We just hope that next time, emotional players should be kept in check and the referees should handle the situation more carefully. Lessons learned.

As for those guys wondering if the NCAA still exists, don't you worry.

#HindiPaTaposAngNCAA

Thursday, September 18, 2014

STILL OUT: Manila Bulletin Sports Digest September 2014 issue


UAAP MVP Kiefer Ravena and brother Thirdy of the Ateneo Blue Eagles graces our cover this month, as the siblings shared their own tales on and off the court!

Also this month, NBA 3X Philippines 2014, bag raid with V-League stars, the 10th Lago de Oro Perpetual Cup, and many more!

Grab your copies now!

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Dilis Pilipinas

All photos are courtesy of FIBA.com
Twenty-four hours later, the loss still hurts.

It took me almost a day to finally accept what has happened.

But I asked myself, should it hurt the way it did?

We had a 1,000-to-1 chance of winning it all in the betting lines. We're ranked 34th in the world, and critics pegged us to finish 20th in the tournament. We're supposed to be routed by stronger, taller, and more experienced opponents. We are minnows, guppies, dilis stuck in an ocean lorded by whales and sharks.


But we proved them wrong.

We made Croatia, fourth-placer of last year's Eurobasket and ranked 16th in the world, sweat their pants and grind out a tough overtime victory. Their performance was so bad that standouts Bojan Bogdanovic and Damjan Rudez had to say they were "too nervous" with the game against Gilas.

What team is on its first world championship appearance since 1978 again? Last time I checked, Croatia almost got to the quarterfinals of the 2010 world championships if not for Serbia.


We made Greece, fifth-best in the world and one of the tallest squads in the tourney at 6-8 (compared to the Philippines' 6-3 average thanks to Blatche's 6-11 ceiling), lose its cool early behind our physicality. Nick Calathes was frustrated all game long that he had to pad the Greeks' lead in the end game.

So bad was their performance that 7-1 center Ioannis Bourousis shoved 5-7 LA Tenorio when the game ended. So much for sportsmanship from the squad which the Olympics originated.


And yesterday, we made Argentina, the 2004 Olympic gold medalists and third-best squad in the world, fight for their lives and play the toughest game they had to go through.

Yes, they didn't have Manu Ginobili and Carlos Delfino, but they are still the bronze medalists of last year's FIBA Americas. They are still Argentina – the home of Walter Hermann, Andres Nocioni, Pablo Prigioni, and (the late) Luis Scola.



But coach Julio Lamas stood there at the sidelines for two hours, nervous if he'll still have a job after the final buzzer with the way they were outplayed by the smaller Gilas squad. At the end of the night, it was status quo, as Argentina escaped with the W.

You know you made it when your opponents make excuses on how they played on a game they won.

You know you made it when one of the world's best squads make one of their NBA players shoot a three in the end game to make a nine-point lead a double-digit one, further improving their chances if everything ends up decided in quotients.

You know you made it when the winners feel like they just lost as much as the losers in the end game, prompting their coach to note that you are "the weirdest, craziest teams" he has coached against.


The minnows, guppies, and dilis of the blue ocean are really piranhas. Overlooked, underestimated, but unbowed.

At 0-3 and two games left, the Philippines' chances of advancing from the group stage is as slim as ever. But we'll take it.

Dray might be too hurt, Jimmy might be too old, LA might be too small, Jeff might miss too much threes, Jayson might be too tentative, Gary might be too cold, Ranidel might be too slow, Gabe might be too overexcited, June Mar might be too undersized, Japeth might shoot too much jumpers, and coach Chot might be too proud, but we'll still cheer on.


Coach Yeng Guiao said, "No top team in the world is going to take us for granted from now on." Its not tsamba that we stayed in step with the world's bests in our first three games. It's heart – puso.

So to answer my question, yes, it should hurt. Losses should always hurt, no matter how outmatched you are. Throw away all the rankings and past achievements. We are back in the world stage. We deserve it because we are one of the best teams in the world. Its time to prove all the doubters wrong.

There's a part of the song "Coming Home" which goes like this: "Let the rain wash away all the pain of yesterday."

Coincidentally, rain poured down moments after Gilas fell to Argentina on the sleepy Tuesday dusk. But the rain has stopped now, and there's nothing else to do but to bounce back.

Moral victories are over. Time to rack up those real wins, Gilas.


#LabanPilipinas #PUSO!




Thursday, August 28, 2014

STILL OUT: Manila Bulletin Sports Digest August 2014 issue


#LabanPilipinas #PUSO! Gilas Pilipinas is now in Spain and is also on the cover of this month's issue! Get a glimpse of Jayson Castro, Marc Pingris, and Japeth Aguilar as they try to encapsulate the mystique that surrounds the whole Gilas squad.

Also this month, UAAP volleyballes EJ Laure, Jia Morado, and Bernadeth Pons, SoleSlam Manila, Azkals' Simone Rota, Ninja Academy, and many more!

Grab your copies now!

#TBT: 'When you play Gilas, you play against a country'

Just before Gilas Pilipinas takes on the world at the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup this Saturday, here's a throwback piece I wrote when I was working as a liaison officer at the 2013 FIBA Asia Championships.

*****


FOR many years now, it has been said that Philippines is a basketball-crazy country. It’s hard to see what that means until you see it with your eyes.

The decision to hold the 27th FIBA Asia Championship here on our home turf was such a monumental step for the basketball followers of this nation. All 90-plus million buzzed and dreamed big for our national team, the Gilas Pilipinas.

It’s not just going to be a home court advantage for our boys, the games will be played in the Filipino home court, an environment like no other.

We shout whenever our team is up and are making baskets. We boo almost everything in the court even though the opposing teams haven’t done anything yet. We react to bad calls, missed calls, and calls that make us scratch our heads. It is that kind of an unforgiving atmosphere that can really send chills down the spine for the guys on the other side of the floor.

Achieving the dream of winning a ticket to the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup to be played in Spain from Aug 30 to Sept 14 next year was just the icing on the cake for all the thousands who made it to the Mall of Asia Arena, and many more thousands who missed it.

Whether it may be filing in long queues just to buy the hottest ticket in town – an incomparable chance to see our national team tussle it out with the giants in Asia here on our land, or may it be doing the Mexican wave electrifying the crowd and being the most imposing sixth man on the floor, the Filipinos have done it, willing the team to remember their battle cry going into this tourney which is “para sa bayan (for the country)”.

We smiled whenever coach Chot Reyes strut down the court with his colorful polos. We shouted every single time LA Tenorio and Jayson Castro William outsmarted bigger guys and made baskets on their fearless drives. We gasped when Marcus Douthit limped down the floor. We went loud in every Japeth Aguilar dunk. We soaked Gary David with cheers of his name, willing him to deliver – and he did. We were left in awe when Gabe Norwood shut down the team’s best offensive threat. We watched all those long bombs from Jeff Chan, Larry Fonacier, and Jimmy Alapag from their hands through the air and through the net, then we went bananas.

Most importantly, we cried when they won.

That’s why almost 20,000 strong Filipinos rocked the Mall of Asia Arena every time the Philippines took the court. It was such a rare moment that Filipinos of all shapes and sizes – a hodgepodge of diverse cultures based on different influences all in the past, have come together and united as one.

We always were a basketball-crazy country. We cheered “Gi-ne-bra!” for one of the most popular ballclub in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

But this? Singing your hearts out for your country right in front of our very eyes with the chance to be tagged as an Asian royalty after long years of wait?

This is just priceless. It’s incomparable!

As they say, to see is to believe, and you haven’t seen how big basketball is to the Filipinos until you become a part of it.

Coach Chot Reyes said it best. “When you play Gilas Pilipinas, you don’t just play against a team. You play against a country.”

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Scouting Report - #UAAP77 Week 1

(c) Sherwin Vardeleon

UAAP Season 77 is finally upon us! The opening weekend saw three blowouts and an intense clash between contenders FEU and La Salle. At this stage, all of those preseason predictions and rankings [I am guilty of doing one. Or two. Come on! Its part of my job!] are proven futile and should be thrown out of the window.

And with two playdates already done, lets take a quick look on the early achievers of this young collegiate basketball season and give credit to the boys who deserve it. Here we go!


WHAT YOU MISSED

UE def. UP, 87-59.
FEU def. La Salle, 82-77.

Ateneo def. Adamson, 79-57.
NU def. UST, 59-40.


POWER RANKINGS

1. FEU (1-0)

Terrence who? RR who? The Tamaraws showed no signs of missing last year's star guards as Mike Tolomia, Mac Belo, and the returning Russel Escoto towed FEU to a hard-fought opening day upset win against the favored La Salle team.


2. NU (1-0)

It wasn't pretty, but the Bulldogs ushered in its post-Bobby Ray Parks era with a statement win versus their tormentors last season UST, blasting their rivals with ease in a total team effort.


3. UE (1-0)

"Thunder" Dan Alberto zapped UP with five treys to set the wheels in motion for the Red Warriors' trek to the Final Four. The bench production for UE allowed coach Derrick Pumaren to go easy on Roi Sumang's exposure in opening day.

4. ADMU (1-0)

Sign of things to come? Kiefer Ravena might just have opened Chapter 1 of his "Eff-You" season this year, torching the lowly Falcons and posterizing defenders not once, but twice. "Eff-You" indeed.


5. DLSU (0-1)

The Green Archers might be stunned with an opening day loss against FEU, but it just wasn't their game to win. Expect the defending champs to bounce back in their next game – against rivals Ateneo.


6. UST (0-1)

Its just not the same without coach Pido. That's not a dig towards new coach Bong dela Cruz, but in the Tigers' first outing, the runner-ups seemed to be discombobulated [Did I spell it right?] against a more ready NU squad. The good thing is its just their first game; the bad thing is that they have to get it fast.

7. ADU (0-1)

With 11 rookies, even coach Kenneth Duremdes didn't expect the mugging they would get from Ateneo in their opener. He hoped that they would at least compete, but the team's immaturity surfaced, forcing "Captain Marbel" to reassess his plans, even if it needs him to exit the dugout in the fourth quarter of the succeeding game.


8. UP (0-1)

I'll just let this meme do the talking.

(c) UAAP-NCAA Memes


MVP WATCH

(c) Sherwin Vardeleon

(weekly production/ averages in parentheses)

1. Mike Tolomia (23 points, 4/6 3PT FGs, 3 rebounds, 5 assists in W vs DLSU): The fourth-year guard made the most of his extended responsibility, bucking a slow first half and torching La Salle with 20 second half points, as the defending champs struggled to find an answer against the Tams in the endgame.

2. Kiefer Ravena (22 points, 4 rebounds, 4 assists, 3 steals in W vs ADU): It was a statement game for the elder Ravena sibling as Kiefer really showed the way for Ateneo. It also won't hurt that he had two slam dunks which sent Mika Reyes wildly cheering from her seat.

(c) Sherwin Vardeleon

3. Mac Belo (20 points, 4 rebounds in W vs DLSU): Belo has shown tremendous improvements from his days in the Sinag Pilipinas squad, and the forward has been a workhorse in the paint against taller counterparts.

(c) Sherwin Vardeleon

4. Dan Alberto (15 points, 5/6 3PT FGs, 2 assists in W vs UP): Whoever said that Dan Alberto will be an early season MVP candidate, please raise your hands. Nobody? Exactly.

(c) Sherwin Vardeleon
5. Gelo Alolino (13 points, 6/10 FGs, 3 rebounds, 3 steals in W vs UST): It all starts with Alolino, as the NU playmaker anchored the all-around assault for the Bulldogs in exorcising the demons of their bitter UST losses last season.



BEST FIVE

G - Mike Tolomia (FEU)
G - Kiefer Ravena (ADMU)
F - Mac Belo (FEU)
F - Russel Escoto (FEU)
C - Troy Rosario (NU)


ROOKIE WATCH


(c) spin.ph/ UAAP-NCAA memes

(weekly production/ averages in parentheses)

1. Ivan Villanueva (15 points, 6/9 FGs, 9 rebounds in L vs ADMU): Extra Rice Jr.? The former Letran Squire showed his soft shooting touch even as the Falcons struggled in its first game of the season.

2. Arvin Tolentino (12 points, 2/6 3PT FGs, 5/12 FGs in W vs ADU): The ex-San Beda Red Cub lived up to his hype as he joined forces with Kiefer Ravena in the early Ateneo pullaway, draining threes amd setting the tone for the W.

3. Rev Diputado (8 points, 2/2 3PT FGs in W vs UST): Diputado, a former Bullpup, showed that his spot in coach Eric Altamirano's rotation is safe as he was solid in his time on the floor while Alolino is resting on the bench, drilling occasional threes while setting his teammates up in offense.


WHAT THEY SAID



"We're playing undersized. Si Carl Bryan Cruz nasa kili-kili na ni AVO. Sacrifice." - Nash Racela on FEU's bigs matching up with La Salle's big men.





"Maganda ba or di maganda? Kung maganda, itutuloy namin. Kung ayaw nyo eh di palitan namin. Baka mas maging topic nyo pa yung outfit namin than the result." - Juno Sauler on the coaching staff's coat-and-tie uniforms





"I didn't do anything. I'm a good boy." - Kiefer Ravena on the unsportsmanlike foul whistled on him in their Adamson game.






WEEKLY NOTABLE


The La Salle coaching staff donned these uniforms which set the Twitter world ablaze last Saturday. What do you think?


UNI-WATCH

Just a quick word on the opening day uniforms.

The Nike jerseys (Ateneo, La Salle, FEU) are still the usual, but I observed one thing which bugs me until now. The school's names, regularly emblazoned on the shirt's chest, is now placed on a lower position, particularly the "tummy area." We believe that this space is alloted for the advertising patches, but isn't it too spacious for a certain patch to be placed in the center of the uniform?

Unless... they are pushing for a sponsor's logo to be placed above the school's name in the jerseys (which just further hammers a discreet belief on the league's commercialization, if its not yet that commercialized).

NU and UST, for me, had the best opening day uniforms.

Without any biases, I liked the loudness of the UST golden yellow uniform bearing a tiger print lining in both sides.

I also liked the simplicity of NU's white uniforms, going away from the usual "big U" NU logo and the one bearing a bulldog, and rather opting with the simple "National University" text upfront. Plus points for the style of the numbers at the back, which is the same font face of those of San Mig Coffee's. [Quick tangent: NU assistant coach Mon Jose also served as a video coordinator and later, an assistant coach for the Coffee Mixers during the 2014 PBA Governors' Cup.]

Still not digging UP's threads. Its nice that you have the word "Pilipinas" written on your jersey's front (with a little "Unibersidad ng" text written above it), but the white "bibs" that hug the maroon jersey just doesn't make the cut. And I'm using that term lightly. It really resembles an infant's bib, right?


The author covers the UAAP for Balls Channel, Solar Sports Desk, and occasionally, for Inquirer Libre.

The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the author's employers.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

My post-mortem for the PBA's 39th season


The 39th season of the PBA has now come to an end, and in my first season of covering the Asia's oldest professional basketball league, I have been honored to write about the games, the players, and the PBA.

I have to admit that writing basketball for eight months straight is a daunting task for anyone, more that you have to deal with keeping the inspiration afloat despite the rigors of having the usual routine, not to mention other external factors. But at the end of the day, its a fulfilling job to do.

Through the Yeng Guiao rants (which sometimes result to fines), Ryan Gregorio's vocabulary, Mark Caguioa tweets, June Mar Fajardo's honest (and more often than not, funny) one-liners, Tim Cone-isms, and Marc Pingris promises, this has really been a season to remember.

And in that light, I picked some stories I think I have written well throughout the course of the season which all appeared in the PBA website, and I hope I can do a better job for the following seasons to come. Enjoy!


BARAKO VETS OUT TO PULL SURPRISES, SILENCE DOUBTERS

Nov. 21, 2013: Barako Bull's early season win against GlobalPort

PETRON GIANT ‘RAISES THE ROOF’ AND HIS GAME

Nov. 21, 2013: June Mar Fajardo's inspired play tows Petron over GlobalPort


DESPITE LATE-GAME HEROICS, JAPETH STILL A WORK IN PROGRESS

Dec. 9, 2013: Japeth Aguilar on his "coming of age" after Ginebra's win against Talk 'N Text

CABAGNOT BAILS PETRON BLAZE OUT OF TROUBLE

Dec. 11, 2013: Alex Cabagnot nails a game-winner in his first game back for Petron vs Air21



EXPERIENCE OVER YOUTH

Dec. 29, 2013: Barako Bull's veterans once again propel them over GlobalPort

THE DEMOLITION RESUMES FOR DANNY I

Jan. 6, 2014: Danny Ildefonso's first game for Meralco


“FIRST TIME KO YUN!”

Jan. 15, 2014: JR Quinahan hits a game-winner to zap Meralco

WITH FAJARDO BACK TO FORM, PETRON ENDS ELIMS IN A BLAZE

Jan. 18, 2014: Petron Blaze vs Meralco. Fajardo vs Ildefonso.

A TALE OF TWO BASKETS

Feb. 9, 2014: James Yap's Game 5 game-winner in semifinals against Ginebra



HAPPY BIRTHDAY PAUL

Feb. 14, 2014: Paul Lee gives Rain or Shine first blood in Game 1 of Philippine Cup Finals series vs San Mig Coffee

GIVING HIS ALL

Feb. 27, 2014: Mark Barroca on his Philippine Cup Finals MVP award


SLAUGHTER, LASSITER BEG OFF FROM GILAS PILIPINAS POOL

March 8, 2014: Greg Slaughter and Marcio Lassiter shock everyone with their announcement

MORE OF A BOON(E) THAN A BANE

March 10, 2014: Josh Boone plays a superb game despite looming import change


DOWN BY 20, MERALCO GRINDS WAY BACK TO BEAT AIR21

March 23, 2014: Brian Butch helps Meralco crawl back and win the game vs Air21

RAIN OR SHINE GETS BACK ON TRACK

March 26, 2014: Alex McLean plays his final game and helps Rain or Shine stop their skid


GREEN LIGHT FOR 3 NEW TEAMS

April 10, 2014: PBA Board approves the entry of the expansion teams

HAPPY ENDING FOR BATANG PIER

April 13, 2014: GlobalPort wins first game under coach Pido Jarencio


THE ROCK IS STILL ROLLING

April 27, 2014: Asi Taulava helps Air21 book its first franchise semifinals appearance

PERFECT FIT

April 30, 2014: Sean Anthony rises to the occasion for the Express

SAN MIG MAKES IT 3 STRAIGHT

May 15, 2014: San Mig Coffee wins Commissioner's Cup title


THE ACCIDENTAL COACH

May 27, 2014: Alex Compton takes the head coaching reins for Alaska

BLATCHE TO PLAY WITH PUSO & PINOY PRIDE

June 10, 2014: Andray Blatche presser



TAULAVA BUCKS BLOODY CUT AS AIR21 BOOTS OUT GLOBALPORT

June 11, 2014: Asi Taulava comes back and helps Air21 in win over GlobalPort

REID STARS AS RAIN OR SHINE FINISHES NO. 2

June 16, 2014: Arizona Reid shoots the lights out for ROS to grab number two-seed

SAN MIG SUPER COFFEE NAILS GOVS’ CUP, COVETED GRAND SLAM 

July 9, 2014: San Mig Coffee achieves four-peat, Grand Slam. Tim Cone wins his second Triple Crown