Monday, October 02, 2006

UST Tigers Wins UAAP Basketball Title

Amazing Tigers keep date with destiny
By Joey Villar
The Philippine Star 10/03/2006

The University of Santo Tomas Tigers lived and died and finally lived for all the glory in the end in a nerve-wracking overtime victory over the Ateneo Eagles, 76-74, completing an amazing journey from near-obscurity to UAAP supremacy.

The Tigers came back from a last-second heartbreaker from Game One with a ferocious stand in Game Two and clinched a record-tying 19th UAAP men’s basketball title as the Blue Eagles misfired two winning plays before a roaring crowd of nearly 20,000 at the Araneta Coliseum.

It was a win that was one for the ages as UST capped its improbable surge from the back of the pack to the top of the heap behind a gritty bunch of Tigers, who survived an atrocious stint at the foul line and hung tough in a pulsating endgame minus their two prolific mainstays.

But Jojo Duncil and Dylan Ababou displayed the heart and spunk of the Tigers when everything was on the line, firing a series of crucial shots in the face of the soaring Eagles’ charge to the finish and keeping UST’s date with destiny alive.

"This should be destiny because no one expected us to be where we are right now," said an ecstatic UST coach Pido Jarencio, who thus became the first coach since Joel Banal steered Ateneo to the 2002 crown to win a UAAP championship in his rookie season. Fritz Gaston was the first rookie mentor to win a UAAP crown in 1988, also with Ateneo.

Duncil fired 18 points, including eight in overtime as the Tigers completed a 2-1 series victory to join the Far Eastern U Tams in the history books with the most number of titles and co-titles totaling 19 each.

It was the España-based squad’s first UAAP crown since going all the way exactly a decade ago that capped a brilliant four-peat.

It also marked the third time that the Tigers won a title in four times it figured in a deciding Game 3 after dropping the series opener. They won in 1994 and 1995 over La Salle while losing the decider in 1999, also to the Green Archers.

Twice the Eagles had the chance to wrap up the championship in the seesawing, pressure-packed showdown. And twice they blew it.

JC Intal, the go-to guy for Ateneo in the entire season, drove for what could’ve been the game-winner in the final seconds of regulation and in the last 11.4 seconds of the extra period. But both times, his shots rimmed out and out went the championship for the Eagles. It also negated Macky Escalona’s courageous stand, firing 28 points against the Tigers’ unforgiving defense.

The victory relived the victory run by UST in the 90s, the last in 1996, which the Tigers and the school used as a rallying cry to remember the spirit of ’96 in Season 69.

It was indeed a Cinderella-like finish for the Tigers, who shared the cellar in one stretch of the double-round elims, rallied to crash into the Final Four, then upended the UE Warriors to gain a crack at the crown.

Needing a hero when Allan Evangelista and main man Jervy Cruz fouled out one after the other in the closing minutes of regulation, Duncil took charge for the Tigers, hitting one big shot after another in the extra period, including a heart-stopping jumper that gave the Tigers a 74-72 lead with 42 seconds to go.

That was enough for Duncil to win the Finals MVP.

"He’s just like me, he plays like me when I was still young," said Jarencio, who never won a title when he was still a Golden Goldie in the early ’80s.

Until now.

Ababou, who starred in Game 2 with a big 22-point output, hit a free throw with 12.5 seconds remaining in the game then after an Ateneo miss, Jun Cortez drained the front end of his charities off a foul from rookie Eric Salamat but muffed the other with 3.7 seconds left.

But Ababou tapped the ball out in a rebound scuffle with bigger rivals and forced a scramble for the loose ball as the buzzer sounded.

Pandemonium broke loose as the Tigers and their supporters ran into the center court to celebrate one of the most dramatic title runs in the history of the most prestigious league in the land.

Intal, who barely lost the MVP plum to Adamson’s Ken Bono, scored clutch baskets late in regulation and in OT only to miss one of the two key shots — a short jumper from the right flank — that would have given them the lead, or probably the win.

The diminutive but big-hearted John Paul Cuan battled Intal to force a jump ball, thus giving UST possession via the possession arrow rule.

Ababou and Duncil sparked a 17-2 run to turn a 31-37 deficit at the break to a 48-39 lead midway in the third quarter.

But Doug Kramer, who scored the game-winner in a miraculous 73-72 win in Game 1 for Ateneo, spearheaded an 11-3 exchange to close in at 50-51 going into the final period.

The two teams fought each other to four deadlocks in the first quarter, the last at 15-all before Zion Lattere shattered it to end the period with the Eagles barely ahead, 17-15.

But the Eagles padded it more to make it a 29-21 advantage thanks mainly to the backcourt duo of Macky Escalona and Tiu.

Ateneo held on to a 37-31 upper hand at the break that was highlighted by a triple by Ken Barracoso late in the second canto.


UAAP Notes: Personalities from both Ateneo and UST watched Game 3, including new Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas president and chair Manny V. Pangilinan. Also on hand for the historic game was US Ambassador Kristie Kenney. She came here for the second straight game upon the invitation of this year’s host University of the East. She awarded the trophies and medals to the champion, runner-up and third place teams, Olympic style. There were also the players of both schools — both the old and new ones — among them Dennis Espino, Rey Evangelista, Estong Ballesteros, Bobby Jose and Sta. Lucia coach Al Chua of UST and LA Tenorio, Olsen Racela, Rico Villanueva, Larry Fonacier, Wesley Gonzales and Rich Alvarez of Ateneo.

Comments on "UST Tigers Wins UAAP Basketball Title"

 

Blogger GCU said ... (6:12 AM) : 

When I was in the Philippines last June, I met Fr. Franklin Beltran, OP on a plane from Tuguegarao City to Manila. Fr. Franklin was the most basketball active Dominican when I was a seminarian at the UST Central Seminary. He is the former sports coordinator of Letran during the time of Samboy Lim and he was the PE Director of UST during the high school days of Marlou Aquino and EJ Feihl. When I played as a Varsity of the Central Seminary (known as ECCLE in the intramurals), he was the manager of the College of Education Varsity. When, I asked him how the UST Tigers will fare on this year’s UAAP Basketball, he said “they will surprise everybody”.

And so, the Tigers have, indeed, surprised everybody. From the cellar of the first round eliminations (they were at the bottom because one after the other, the great players were either sick or injured) they rose to 3rd for the final four. They have already made Thomasians like me proud by securing the no. 3 spot. At the Final Four play-offs, all the more they surprised everybody by beating the favored UE Warriors which enjoyed a twice to beat privilege. Reaching the Finals was already quite an achievement for a team that was never expected by experts to be part of the final four casts.

Game 1 showed the inexperience of the young squad as they bungled a won game with that last one second defensive lapse as they lost 73-72. But in game two, they have proven that they are in the Finals not by sheer luck by clobbering the Blue Eagles 87-71. The game 3 overtime win has proven all pundits wrong. They bagged the Crown with a 76-74 win over the Blue Eagles. This UAAP Championship will be one for the books. It has all the elements of a classic that basketball fans will savor years and decades from now. It was a real Cinderella finish for a young team with a Rookie coach- Pido Jarencio who during his time as a Goldie (the tigers were Goldies at that time) was not able to bring the gold as a lonesome hero of the then UST Goldies in 1984 in a classic match with UE’s Allan Caidic for the 1984 UAAP Finals.

The win brought the old glory we savored during the four-peat years from1993-1996. I was lucky to be at the UST Central Seminary in those years. I remember going from one Dominican priest to another to ask for most sought after UAAP Championship tickets in all of those years. There was even a time when I had to buy a ringside ticket from the driver of Dennis Espino. But it was Fr. Virgilio Ojoy, OP, the UST Secretary-General at that time, who pampered us with ringside tickets.

I can imagine the Thomasians having a grand victory party at the UST Grounds at this very moment. During the four-peat years, there were roasted calves and packed dinner in each victory celebration. As they celebrate, I am sure they are shouting these cheers over and over again till their voices become hoarse:

GO USTE
Go USTe! Go USTe! Go USTe!Go! Go! Go! Go! (4x)(2x clap) U(2x clap) S(2x clap) T(2x clap) UST Tigers! 1, 2, 3, 4(5x clap) U(5x clap) S(5x clap) T(5x clap) UST TIGERS!

BLACK GOLD BLACK WHITE
L - Black Gold, Black WhiteA - Black Gold, Black WhiteL - Black Gold, Black WhiteA - Black Gold, Black WhiteBlack Gold (clap 2x)Black White (clap 2x)Black Gold (clap), Black White (clap)Go Fight, Fight, FightGo Fight (clap 2x) and win (clap 2x) for U (clap) S(clap) T(clap 3x) FIGHT!

SANTO TOMAS SPELLING
L - Santo Tomas SpellingA - Santo Tomas SpellingL - Santo Tomas Spelling - Santo Tomas Spelling Ready 1, 2, 3 (clap)S-A-N-T-O T-O-M-A-S Santo Tomas Fight!

VIVA SANTO TOMAS
VIVA SANTO TOMAS!!
We are the Tigers the mighty, mighty TigersWe came to cheerAnd to win it with no fear (3x)We are the Tigers the mighty, mighty TigersWe came to cheer 1, 2, 3And to win it with no fear

P-P-O P-O-W-E-R the POWER the TIGER POWER Whooh!

And lastly they will be singing this Hymn with great pride:

UST HYMN
God of all nations
Merciful Lord of our restless being
Sweep with your golden lilies
This fountain of purest light
Trace with the sails of the galleons
The dream beyond our seeing
Touch with the flame of your kindness
The gloom of our darkest night
Keep us in beauty and truth and virtues impassioned embrace
Ever your valiant legions
Imbued with unending grace

Congratulations to coach Pido and the Tigers and also to the
Tigresses for winning the women's championship too.

 

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