by rick olivares
The five-peat was achieved against the
four winningest teams in the UAAP – La Salle, UE, FEU, and UST. It was running
through the gauntlet of top dogs in order to be the best.
That reminded me of the Chicago Bulls’
dominance in the 1990s when they went up against the Los Angeles Lakers, the
Portland Trailblazers, the Phoenix Suns, the Seattle Supersonics, and the Utah
Jazz – all of them the top teams in the West. Critics claim that there was no one
team that battled them on a yearly basis ala Boston-LA in the 1980s. These
people aren’t exactly bright.
The league was pretty much a two or
three (Philadelphia) or four (Houston) horse race then. And the Bulls’ rivals?
They were in the East with the Cleveland Cavaliers (Magic Johnson’s proclaimed
team of the future), the New York Knicks, and the Miami Heat.
As for the Blue Eagles, FEU was like
our Utah Jazz. We had to play and beat them twice.
The Bulls won an unlikely six. Is that
possible for the Ateneo Blue Eagles? Well, it is going to be very difficult as
we might get pounded inside. If the bigs and the recruits respond to that
challenge then we might have a fighting chance. Making the Final Four is as
always the target. We will take our chances once we get there.
However, that is looking way too far
ahead. Let’s savor this. And there’s more blue and white hoops.
When the Ateneo Blue Eagles
participate in the University Games in Bacolod, Gabby Severino will coach them
temporarily.
If you want to see guys like Greg
Slaughter, Nico Salva and the others play for Ateneo one last time, that’s
going to be in the Champions League.
As I made my way out of the media room
(Norman Black, Kiefer Ravena, and Nico Salva were still holding court with the
press), I spotted UST head coach Pido Jarencio. He was chatting with two
people. I waited patiently then stuck out my hand to shake his. We didn’t
exchange a word only a smile.
I have always been a fan of Jarencio
from the time I first saw him torch the baskets at the Loyola Center to his
incredible shoot outs with Allan Caidic. When I saw him with Magnolia where
Norman Black was his head coach, I wondered how soon before he breaks out? But
that was a talented and deep team he was in. When Jarencio became a star with
Ginebra San Miguel, I was elated. The team had evolved into a new one although
it was still a line up of discards albeit with a few choice draft picks like
Noli Locsin and Marlou Aquino.
He was ‘The Fireman’ and he fit
Ginebra’s style of play.
When he went back to coach UST, I
thought he was pretty brilliant for an old school coach. After all, he did lead
the Growling Tigers to a title at Ateneo’s expense in 2006. Although there were
calls for his head in the years after, he always made do with what he had. His
teams took on his style of play – hard-nosed, tough, and well, gunning from the
outside.
In 1985, as a Glowing Goldie, he shot
down Ateneo, dashed their hopes, with a late display of marksmanship from the
outside. Even before the game was done, he went out and shook the hand of every
Atenean. I remember that like it was yesterday as I watched that from the
bleachers. In 2006, after that stunning last second layup by Doug Kramer to
take Game One of the Season 69 Finals, he immediately went to the Ateneo bench to
shake every one’s hand. There he was without hesitation to congratulate the
opposing team that had stolen a game from him. And he led the applause from the
UST side.
I always put Jarencio in the same
category I hold Yeng Guiao – animated, old school, quotable, funny, and well,
amiable. FEU’s Bert Flores is in that neighborhood too but Jarencio takes the
cake.
Like every one else, people will
disappoint you from time to time. In 2008, following a long halftime
performance from the Blue Babble Battalion (yes, we were wrong and I have no
idea what the BBB was thinking), Jarencio led the UST cheers that drowned out
the halftime show never mind if Ateneo wasn’t done. I was sitting along the
baseline and watched him raise his arms to egg on the Tigers crowd. I
understood why but I thought that he should have not done it.
Last year, I had many a great
interview with him inside the media room, inside the UST dugout, or sometimes
during the PBA games. He was as always candid and very accommodating.
This season, I was disappointed once
more with his protestations and comments that were out of bounds. It was a
somewhat chastened Jarencio I saw in Game Two even before the match started.
If I may digress, the UAAP will have
their own pool of referees in two years time. I think it’s good and I think
it’s bad. The people who comprise the technical committee are all from the
member schools. I think that employer-employee relationship will hurt more than
it will help. As I wrote in my tirade against the board (that did not earn me
brownie points with them at all), I said that it is
best that an independent panel (maybe the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas)
handle this. It is imperative that the SBP improve the training of referees
among other matters such as grassroots and national team development.
We may all disappoint each other once
in a while but who doesn’t make mistakes? I was wearing my Ateneo jersey when I
shook his hand following the second game. I enjoyed trying to cover him. In fact, I have
a story about him in the works (it began in the late second round).
He had hinted earlier about leaving
UST after seven years although he did back pedal a bit and said he’d make the
decision come January 2013. In the meantime, he managed one last quip to end
Season 75, “Magtitinda muna ako ng gasolina” in reference to his coaching stint
with Petron in the PBA.
He started out his UST career by
beating Norman Black in their first ever UAAP Finals. Black, now out of Loyola
Heights, got his revenge this year making his exit all the more sweet. As for
Jarencio, he admitted to a bittersweet ending to this season. It hurt him.
Losing does. But when you put it in perspective, think about it – seven years
and four semifinals appearances, two finals appearances, one championship, two
MVPs in Jervy Cruz and Dylan Ababou. Not bad at all.
When the Tigers return (although
without Jeric Fortuna and Melo Afuang who wasn’t effective at all this
campaign), they will see Kim Lo at the one, Jeric Teng at the two, Kevin Ferrer
at the three, Aljon Mariano at four, and Karim Abdul at center. That is a
plenty strong starting unit right there. Clark Bautista will be back for one
more run but they will need a little more on the bench if they want to compete.
I thought that the pressure of playing
in a Game Two told heavily on Mariano and Abdul. Watching the Cameroonian from
the patron section, he looked nervous all throughout. It sure didn’t help that
Greg Slaughter blocked his first three attempts.
But all this will serve them in good
stead for next season. They will know what to bring to the table for Season 76.
End of Part 1
Rick, I'm confused. Which game are you talking about when you say Game 3? There were only 2 games in the finals? And if you're talking about the season long meeting between the 2 schools, then is game 3 the first game of the finals?
ReplyDeleteThe match up this season is 3-1 Ateneo, making it seem like their only win back in the 1st round was in Pido's word 'chamba'.
I may be wrong on this one but at the top of my head, during the the 5-peat run, Feu won 3x, UE and DLSU each won 2x, and UST 1x against Ateneo. Adu 1x. Where did the 10th loss come from? I know Ateneo lost just a total of 10 games in 5 years.
Also, did Pido shake NB's hands after game 1 of the finals? I didn't think so. He was too busy complaining. And the UST crowd was too busy booing that they didn't hear Ateneo start and sing its Alma Mater song. But in the second game, they were respectful (not after realizing their faux pas and being called 'wa-class' lol).
ReplyDeletenagbenta daw si Abdul
ReplyDeletePati naman si Mike Cortez ng La Salle dati di ba nagbenta din sabe ng sarili nilang community lol? Pati ba import ng UST, nabibili na rin? Baka naman chokers lang sa finals pero di nila matanggap.
DeleteCortez really sold that according to my sources, and I wouldnt be making this up. Chinese gamblers threatened his family, but still, that clinching game 3 of season 65 was a classic, regardless. IT was a competitive game and Ateneo should always be given credit. And im a lasallian.
Deletesir who do you foresee as Ateneo's ultimate rival for next year DLSU or UST? or some other team
ReplyDelete