This appears in INSIGHT section of abs-cbnnews.com.
What ails
the La Salle Green Archers?
by rick olivares
If you ask me what is plaguing the La
Salle Green Archers nowadays I will point to two things: one, inexperience (and
offensive woes), and two, the lack of continuity.
When you go back and take a look at
the history of champion teams, it’s almost always a veteran squad that was
brought up together through the years. Every year they mature with experience
and they improve their skill set. Likewise, the coaching staff adds new pieces
to their championship puzzle.
This season, La Salle easily landed
the bluest of the blue chip rookies in Jeron Teng out of Xavier. He is said to
be the missing piece to their title aspirations. While Teng is putting up great
numbers as he looks to be the runaway rookie of the year, the team has stumbled
out of the gates and is currently 2-3 with rejuvenated NU and tough Adamson
remaining in their schedules.
But easily, two of the three loses
could have gone either way (a pair of two-point loses to FEU and UST). And if
that were so, we wouldn’t really be analyzing La Salle’s woes.
So why did I point out to lack of Inexperience
and continuity? Glad you asked.
Inexperience
and offensive woes
The current squad features only two
super seniors in Joshua Webb and Jovet Mendoza and they do not even get a lot
of minutes.
They are led by a “junior” and a
sophomore” in LA Revilla and Norbert Torres who technically aren’t what their
school status says because both have been around but have missed playing years
either because of injury or eligibility.
It’s a young team that had loads of
potential.
Here is how they are broken down by
class:
Super seniors: Jovet Mendoza and
Joshua Webb
Senior: Yutien Andrada
Juniors: LA Revilla, Jarelan Tampus,
Luigi dela Paz, Almond Vosotros, Jed Manguera, and Papot Paredes
Sophomores: Norbert Torres, Arnold Van
Opstal and Alfonzo Gotladera
Rookies: Mark Tallo, Thomas Torres,
Jeron Teng, and Gab Reyes.
In five matches, here are the minutes
played by the different players:
Of those logging loads of playing
time, the only players who contributed significantly to La Salle’s previous
campaign were Norbert Torres, Revilla, Andrada, dela Paz, and Van Opstal. That
means many of the younger players are being asked to shoulder the offense.
After Rico Maierhofer and Jayvee Casio
moved on following Season 71, La Salle struggled to for someone to lead the
team in scoring.
Take a look at the difference.
Let’s break that down further.
This year, La Salle finally has a
couple of players who they can count on for points – LA Revilla and Jeron Teng.
Whether they can continue that remains to be seen.
Here’s a contrast of two of La Salle’s
best offensive players:
Teng
Wins: 11.0 ppg; 57% FG; 2.0 rpg
Losses: 7.7ppg; 40% FG; 4.0 rpg
Revilla
Wins: 8.5 ppg; FG 55% 3.0; rpg 1.5 apg
Losses: 11.5 ppg 47%FG 3.5 rpg 1.3 apg
Incredibly, La Salle’s stats are
nearly the same whether they win or lose.
So what causes the losses? It isn’t
their defense. It’s their offense or lack of it. It’s also their inexperience.
In their three loses, La Salle only
took three of the 12 quarters (not counting the extension periods). In the
final quarter of play, they have had more turnovers.
In the final extension period against
the Growling Tigers, the Green Archers had three TOs to UST’s one. Against
Ateneo, La Salle incurred seven TOs to the Blue Eagles’ three. In the first
loss of the season, DLSU had five turnovers to the two of FEU.
That is a sure sign of inexperience.
Once this crew jells they’ll be a tough unit to beat.
Continuity.
In 2009, it was hoped that by taking
in several players from the RP Youth Team, La Salle would have brought in
terrific new weapons to the squad that lost to Ateneo in the 2008 Finals. They
brought in Joel Tolentino (UPIS), Tata Marata (UPIS), Jed Manguera (DLSZ), Gab
Banal (Xavier), and Papot Paredes (Sacred Heart CD) from the national team. But
La Salle was not able to get best of that team – RR Garcia went to FEU, Kevin
Alas went up to the senior team in Letran, ditto with Frank Golla in Ateneo
while Joseph Terso to NU. Jaypee Mendoza (Tarlac State University) went to San
Beda. Jai Flores and Jon Sumido (both from Iloilo Central HS) joined the UE Red
Warriors.
Nevertheless, the Green Archers also
got Arvie Bringas and Yutien Andrada from many-time NCAA juniors champion San
Sebastian Staglets.
That sounded like not just a great
recruiting class but a future dream and champion team right there. Except that the
dream never turned into a reality.
Three years later, Tolentino is now
with the College of Saint Benilde, Banal is in Mapua, Bringas is in FEU, and Marata
back in UP.
In 2010, they brought in Nico Elorde
from DLSZ but two years later, he transferred to Ateneo. In 2011, they
recruited Roldan Sara from the San Beda Red Cubs. One year later, he returned
to Mendiola.
In the meantime, the changes in the
coaching staff have seen Papot Paredes, Joshua Webb, and Jovet Mendoza
relegated to the bench.
For Webb, it has been particularly
more difficult because he came out of DLSZ as a highly touted rookie who got
serious minutes under Franz Pumaren. Now, he isn’t even the star of his squad and
it is his final year. He has gone through three head coaches in his five years
in Taft.
If Bringas were still around, he’d be
in his third year in green and white. And he would have formed a terrific
frontline with Andrada, Mendoza, Paredes, Arnold Van Opstal, and Norbert
Torres. Much was expected from Marata and Banal. Marata was given the minutes
while Banal hardly got off the bench.
La Salle used to be the paragon of
stability not just in their coaching staff but also in their program.
Will the Green Archers ever been
champions again? Sure they will. They could even win it all this year – don’t
laugh – in spite of their 2-3 record. Two of those losses were by two points
that could have gone anywhere. Besides, there’s still the second round and
really, anything can happen.
To say that the suspension hurt them is
a fallacy because they won it when they returned in 2007 and that remains an
incredible feat. But as it is with change there is a learning curve. After
competing for the finals in almost every year of its existence in the UAAP it
sure is painful for the green and white faithful to see their team struggling.
But as the saying goes, the only place
to go when you’re down is up.
For awhile the Pumaren system was unbreakable.
ReplyDeleteThen their own community started being hard on them when Franz lost in 2008, and the year later was a disaster. I dunno if his decision to run for higher position in politics was premeditated before or an afterthought of his debacle in 2009. Dindo, another Pumaren, was supposed to give that continuity in the program, but we know the rest of the story; their strong alumni group even short of kicking them out 2 years after.
I hope we won't be as hard to the new coach (next season). That's why the committee must be meticulous in its choice, and not just randomly from the PBA who's available.
I like how you stayed away from the usual "Free throw shooting" surface analysis that I hear from most people. Some of their fans and armchair coaches tend to over-simplify DLSU's issues as 'had we just shot X more free throws' then we would have won the game. Your analysis proves there is much more than that (although the FT shooting is part of their struggles). I agree that DLSU will eventually overcome their hurdles, but it is not as simple as 'we fix FT shooting, we are golden' as others articulate it. Cheers and OBF!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Lester. While the free throws are a culprit for sure. The problems are a little deeper. I keep tabs on every team. Even the NCAA until this season. Have reams of notes and ideas that I have. Of course, I always test them and run them by some people who are in a position to know or debunk them. Unlike say, UE, their problems are so obvious. I'll have something on the UP Maroons soon. That's altogether something else.
Delete