This appears on philstar.com
Looking at Ateneo’s massive win over
Adamson
by rick olivares
The Ateneo Blue Eagles exacted revenge
on the Adamson Falcons with a 73-67 win to close out the elimination round and
bag the second seed and the twice-to-beat advantage in the final four.
This match was won on pure grit.
They fell behind, weathered runs by Adamson, bucked injuries to two players
(three if you count team captain GBoy Babilonia who has missed the last three
matches) in Vince Tolentino and Adrian Wong who both went out of the match in
the second half. Speaking of the Blue Eagles’ team captain,
hey, you miss him now, don’t you?
Babilonia is more than just
another center who you perceive to be bumbling and fumbling. He is a smart
player who can body up an opposing center, pass that ball and find open
teammates, and can read that floor well. Plus, he leads the team. That is very
important. A lot of what he does cannot be charted in the traditional stats.
Ateneo could have folded right
there more so after center Chibueze Ikeh fouled out. Only they didn’t. They
found their strength in the games of Thirdy Ravena, Isaac Go, and Mike Nieto.
Once Ateneo led in the fourth
period, they didn’t let go.
Anyways, despite struggling with
their shooting, what was impressive was for the most part was their maintaining
discipline. They didn’t turn over the ball much finishing with only 10
turnovers that Adamson parlayed into 14 points. The Blue Eagles answered by
scoring 15 points off Adamson errors. Plus, they finished with 12 assists to
the Falcons’ 7; crucial in this share the ball offense of Ateneo.
The return of the halftime adjustment and the finishing kick
I’ll bet you missed that. We got
spoiled by that during the Norman Black years. Now it’s back. And how!
In 14 elimination round matches,
the Blue Eagles went into the half,
Tied – 4x
Leading by 10 points or more – 3x
Leading by less than 10 points –
5x
Behind – 2x
Interestingly, in those four
halftime level scores, Ateneo went on to lose three of them – NU and Adamson in
the first round, and UP in the second round. The only win was against UST in
the very first match of the season.
When behind at the half, Ateneo
is at 2-1, with a win versus UE in the first round and against Adamson in the
second round. The solitary loss came in the first round at the hands of La
Salle.
When leading at the half, Ateneo
is 7-0.
Outscored the opponent in the second
half four times in the first round with three of them resulting in wins.
Come the second round, Ateneo
outscored the opposition four times more in the second half. All of them for
wins.
Ravena rising.
During the first round, Thirdy Ravena
averaged 11.3 points, 6.7 rebounds, and 1.7 assists. By the end of the
elimination rounds, hos scoring is down at 9.9 points but his rebounds and assists
have picked up with 7.8 and 2.3 respectively.
Let’s break that down further in
order to underscore his importance – how he performs in the fourth and final
quarter.
Thirdy averaged 2.2 points, 1.2
rebounds, and 0.14 assists in the fourth period during the first round. After
two rounds of play, he normed 3.4 points, 4.7 rebounds, and 1.1 assists.
Like his pop and older brother,
Kiefer, he is finding ways to and lead his team to victory.
While the Blue Eagles do not run
away from their offense that sees them pass the ball around and work for a
really good shot, I noticed how the ball has found its way to Ravena to create or
attack in the clutch.
That has me thinking. When Tab
Baldwin first began working with Philippine teams, he came over as a disciple
of the Triangle Offense. He adopted the Dribble Drive Offense while working
with the national team.
The situation reminds of the time
when Phil Jackson was running the Triangle Offense with the Chicago Bulls and
later, the Los Angeles Lakers – they’d run the system but when it breaks down,
the ball would go to Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant respectively for points or
to create.
Thirdy and Isaac Go, who was magnificent once more, are a far cry
from Kobe and Shaq but who knows? They are getting better as a duo.
The gang mentality
While the ball finds its way to
Ravena, Aaron Black, and Adrian Wong when they need to score, the “team”
concept is ever so real.
The Blue Eagles are the only team
in the league with NO player averaging double digit scoring! Yep! NO ONE is
averaging in double digits in scoring and rebounding. They are the only team
with no one player in the column for stat leaders.
And in what I mentioned during
the win over FEU in the second round, the Blue Eagles are the only team with
four players grabbing at least five rebounds a game -- Ravena (7.8), Mike Nieto
(5.5), Chibueze Ikeh (5.4), and Vince Tolentino (5.0). Isaac Go and GBoy
Babilonia are a shade under that mark.
To further underscore the gang
mentality is Ateneo is the league leader in bench scoring with 38.6 points per
game (the starters pour in only 33.6 points which is dead last in the UAAP).
Ratcheting up the defense
For much of the first eight
matches, the Blue Eagles hovered around the middle of the defensive standings.
After two rounds, they are ranked second behind FEU. Ironically, La Salle at
13-1 is fourth.
Nevertheless, the team has become
better defensively despite its woes at center. Ateneo tops some defensive
categories such as the best in shot blocks (4.6), total field goals allowed
(34.7%), 2-point field goals allowed (38.8%), 3-point field goals allowed
(23.4%), assists allowed (11.1), and bench points allowed (22.9).
During Adamson’s four-match win streak,
they were averaging over 60 field goal attempts; several attempts better than
the first round where they were taking about 54 shots from the field. In this
game, Ateneo allowed them only 58 shots.
And that helped get the team back to the Final Four.
I’ll say that Ateneo has gone
from the Walking Dead to the Walking Wounded yet they are, to borrow the title
of that famous story of Sheriff Buford Pusser, Walking Tall. After all, in this
second round, they have taken down three of the other semi-finals teams in La
Salle, FEU, and Adamson in that order.
Before the start of this season,
I tabbed (pun intended) the Blue Eagles to make the finals against La Salle.
Yes, that was my prognosis despite losing a bunch of players, despite not
having fully grasped the new coach’s system, and despite being a young team.
I felt they’d be good in spite of
everything because they still had a lot of talent, are potentially deep, and
the way they responded in taking down some very good teams that had foreign
players in the pre-season; the FilOil Flying V Premier Cup. During the summer
tourney, they downed Adamson with Papi Sarr, Perpetual Help with Bright
Akhuetie, and National University with Alfred Aroga.
That summer, they won in spite of
Thirdy Ravena really struggling to find his game after a year’s lay-off. In
spite of that, he averaged double figures and played well in the clutch. They
won without Raffy Verano who had yet to arrive from the United States.
Speaking of Verano, he has
settled in nicely with the team; adjusted in his role and with local
basketball. Watch out for this kid next year!
The team is composed of winners
and top players. There are Most Valuable Player awardees, Mythical Five
selections, winners who have tasted championships in the juniors level and in
Team B. And aside from having smart players who know how to win, this team is
close to one another. Many of them have been teammates not only in the juniors
division but also in other tournaments. That familiarity and bond cannot be
discounted. It’s huge in my opinion.
For all the team’s questions
about coaching the past couple of years, losing players to grades and whatnot,
they should have gone to the finals last year. Falling short and everything
else that happened afterwards has only made them hungrier. And a lot of credit
should be given to the coaching staff for bringing the team to where they are
at.
Have they overachieved in spite
of where I thought they’d end up? Of course.
Hi, nitpicky correction (you don't have to approve this comment), but Vince Tolentino actually returned towards the end of the game. :) OBF!
ReplyDeleteNo, worries. I didn't notice. But thanks.
DeleteRick,
ReplyDeleteAfter the Adamson game, the boys were in a huddle and another foreign player joined them to celebrate. Can you share some intel on this person?
Thanks.
BT
Baka yon perpetual import? Akhuetie to ADMU. Done deal (na daw)
Deleteoh I was referring to Ateneo sorry.
Delete