Adamson Falcons head coach Kenneth Duremdes hugs Don Trollano in a moving locker room scene post-win vs. UP. |
This appears on philstar.com
Good vibrations: The
Adamson Falcons salvage a measure of pride and respect
by rick olivares
This was probably the happiest bunch of 1-13 guys in
UAAP Men’s Basketball annals.
Despite losing a bunch of players to graduation and
three-fourths of their starting unit, not much was expected from a team of
bench players and rookies. Their opponent for the day, the UP Fighting Maroons,
as early as the summer, penciled in two wins over the Adamson Falcons (three in
fact as they figured they’d pull the rug from underneath another team).
“Hindi kami papayag ma-bokya,” promised Jansen Rios
before the match. “Gagawin natin lahat. Maging pisikal man o magpalitan ng
mukha. Basta hindi pwede matalo.”
Two riveting hours after Rios made that promise, the
Falcons eked out their first win of UAAP Season 77, a 67-63 nail biter to avoid
finishing winless and earn back a measure of respect.
As huge as the win was for Adamson, it isn’t the only
reason why the team is a happy bunch.
Even when the team was strong and a championship
contender, they weren’t a solid bunch. Graduating point guard Ryan Monteclaro
hinted that one teammate had a world of his own and his aloofness affected team
unity. “Hindi tayo nanalo masyado this year pero pamilya tayo,” summed up
Monteclaro during a post-season speech.
Family.
Before the series of post-season speeches began,
courtside reporter Gianna Llanes who incidentally goes to school in Ateneo was
in tears. This season, she lived and breathed the life of a Adamsonian. Their
losses were her losses. When they were crushed so was she. The team showed its
appreciation for her by giving her a bouquet of flowers. “Thank you for making
me a part of your family. I will always remember this,” said Llanes while
fighting back the tears.
On cue, first year forward-center Ivan Villanueva
then led the team with a chorus of, “Sapatos! Sapatos!” By virtue of their
morale-boosting victory, the players hoped that management would buy them new
shoes.
So make that family and kicks.
“Boracay! Boracay!” the Falcons segued.
After they compete in the University Games, they’ll
hie off to nearby Boracay for a couple of days as a perfect way to relax and
unwind before heading back to school for the final semester.
This isn’t by any chance celebrating mediocrity. Led
by first year head coach Kenneth Duremdes, it’s all about creating good vibes.
“There has been a lot of negativity in the past few months to last a lifetime,”
noted Duremdes. “We all understood and accepted our limitations from the
beginning. So why point fingers? Move forward na lang kami.”
And “moving forward” has been the cry for the season.
After the successful stint of former head coach Leo Austria who led the Falcons
to heights not soared since the days of its head coach, they fell flat last
campaign. And it continued all the way to this year.
The season hit its nadir when they were blown out by
National University 62-25. “Even I needed some encouragement after that,”
admitted Duremdes who has come back to help his alma mater with former Adamson teammate
Marlou Aquino along with then rival Vince Hizon who starred for Ateneo.
At 0-13, they were staring at a winless season and
being the butt of endless jokes and bashers not to mention another UP bonfire
at their expense.
The Falcons shot a league-worst 55.9 points per game.
They also had the worst field goal percentage with a paltry 32% accuracy rate.
However, Adamson was up against a UP team that had
its own dubious records – worst defensive team as they conceded a high of 75.5
points per outing while rebounding a poor 34.5 boards a game; dead last in the
eight-team field.
Maybe both teams were even after that. True enough, both
squads battled through four deadlocks and six lead changes. The two teams each
posted their of 12-point lead. But it was Adamson that led UP by a dozen at
59-47 after Don Trollano scored off a spin move inside the lane at the 6:57
mark of the fourth period.
Looking to win going away, the Falcons – much to the
chagrin of Duremdes – committed seven turnovers that allowed the Fighting
Maroons to tie the match for the last time at 63-all after Diego Dario hit two
free throws.
Adamson quickly responded with a basket in transition
off a brilliant drop pass by Jansen Rios to a trailing Dawn Ochea for a 65-63
lead.
Both teams traded scoreless possessions before Axel
IƱigo clinched the game with two free throws after a Mikee Reyes miss to notch
the final count at 67-63. The Falcons finally avenged their first round 77-64
loss.
Inside the jubilant Adamson locker room, a smiling Vince
Hizon reflected. "Oh, yeah. Definitely. But I
miss this more," he said referring to the locker room camaraderie and
banter. "The college game is more family and school spirit than the pro
game."
Hizon can relate. His Ateneo teams, despite having him
and high scoring gunner Richie Ticzon, didn’t win much.
On the other hand, at that time, Adamson with
Duremdes, Marlou Aquino, and EJ Feihl were contenders to then powers FEU, UST,
and La Salle.
“Mahirap yung transition from playing to coaching,”
admitted Aquino whose son, Matthew, is a rookie with Adamson. “Siguro yung
communication, pagtuturo at pasensya ang pinakamahirap na adjustments.
Kailangan paulit ulit at dapat patient ka kasi mga bata ‘to. Kailangan
matandaan mo rin yung dinaanan mo nung player ka nung college.”
While the Falcons of Duremdes and Aquino didn’t win a
UAAP championship (they did cop a national title though), it was all about
representing the school.
“The important thing,” reminded Duremdes, “is you
represent your school in the best way you can. And I think today you did just
that. Finishing 1-13 is a lot different from a 0-14 record. No one can take
that away from you because it is in the record books. And you did the school
proud.”
As the graduating players – Monteclaro, Rios, and Don
Trollano – were paraded up front to give their farewell speeches, the seated
Falcons couldn’t wait for the latter, the team captain, to speak.
“Quiet,” shushed shooting guard John Ryan Gumtang,
“mag-speech si Asiong… in English!”
The room burst into laughter.
“Asiong” is Don Trollano. The nickname was hung on
him by former Falcon Rodney Brondial after the Joseph Estrada film on the late
gangster Asiong Salonga. Trollano was best pals with Brondial, the “Erap” of
the Adamson team.
Trollano offered a toothy grin then spoke in the
vernacular. After a two minute oration where he thanked a lot of people,
Barrera protested…. “English!”
“Work hard… mga pare!” he closed to another barrage
of laughs.
This past season, it was all about “moving forward.”
These young, inexperienced, and battered Falcons saw the fruits of their labor.
Next year, it will be time to roll up their sleeves and put their work boots
on. It will be time to “work hard.”
And just maybe the good vibes and times will continue
to roll.
Ryan Monteclaro holds up a little allowance for the team given by their supporters. How did the team celebrate the win and the season's end -- buffet dinner at Hotel Sofitel. |
With Don "Asiong" Trollano, Ryan Monteclaro, and Jansen Rios. |
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