This appears in inthezone.com.ph
Canaleta
steps up for Ginebra in win over Alaska
by rick olivares photo by brosi gonzales
November 23, 2011
Smart Araneta Coliseum
As Barangay Ginebra continues to
search for its identity and the consistent winning formula that seems to have
escaped them, they went – at least for one game – back to some familiar
ingredients.
The journeyman who hopes to have found
a home. And the three-point shot.
NiƱo Canaleta has been in the pro
league for six years and he has played for three clubs – four if you consider
two stints with Air21 the club that drafted him out of the University of the
East in 2006.
In his best game with Ginebra since
being traded midway through last year’s season ending Governors’ Cup, Canaleta
scored a game high 21 points, pulled down eight rebounds, and added an assist
and a block. And he hit four huge triples including two in the third quarter
when the Gin Kings finally seized the lead from hard luck Alaska.
While none of the triples were of the
game-ending or rally-inducing sort that has become so associated with the PBA’s
most popular franchise since the days when the game barker would call out the
names of Sonny Jaworksi, Chito and Joey Loyzaga, Rudy Distrito, and Pido
Jarencio to name a few, they achieved the same effect. Ginebra scattered 11
triples that held the Aces – a long time tormentor – at bay and for the win.
And there was another familiar tag of
the great Ginebra teams of yore. As current head coach Siot Tanquincen put it:
“It’s a crucial game. Parang do or die. Man down pa kami (the Kings were minus
the injured Allein Maliksi and Rico Maierhofer).”
For one game, the supposed talk of
going with its youthful players took a backseat when battle-scarred veterans
Mark Caguioa and Jayjay Helterbrand showed that great players die hard. While
the latter added 10 points, Caguioa chipped in seven but looked painfully mortal
as he saw one of his jumpshots emphatically rejected (by Bonbon Custodio) and a
pair of drop passes go awry.
Ronald Tubid, the other third of the
Kings’ fearsome trio of pistoleros likewise had another frustrating evening as
he scored only two points in 21 minutes.
Early in the match with Alaska going
for its third straight win, the Aces drew scoring sock from LA Tenorio and
Custodio who drove hard to the basket. Inside the paint, Alaska’s frontline of
Sonny Thoss, Jay-R Reyes, and Paolo Bugia poured in the points.
But the Kings came back with tougher
defense and three huge triples in the third period to seize the lead and the
momentum.
And Tanquincen paid tribute to
Canaleta for his strong play: “He played big for us. His ability to spread the
floor and the same time play as an added rebounder is a luxury to have someone
shoot that well and help in the rebounds.”
The Ginebra coach also lauded his
team’s defense in turning back Alaska. “That was our target – to play better
defense.” Although Tanquincen’s troops were outrebounded and gave up more
turnover and second chance points, Ginebra played better as a team as they
collectively passed off for a game high 26 assists that helped all 10 of the
players put some points next to their name.
Ginebra’s win put them in seventh
place with an even 5-5 record (tied with skidding Barako Bull Energy) and two
wins ahead of eighth placer Powerade with a 3-7 record.
Barangay
85 - Canaleta 21, Cortez 13, Intal 12, Helterbrand 10, Mamaril 9, Villanueva 7,
Caguioa 7, Wilson J. 2, Wilson W. 2, Tubid 2.
Alaska
77 - Thoss 13, Custodio 12, Reyes 11, Baguio 11, Dela Cruz 11, Tenorio 10,
Baracael 5, Eman 2, Bugia 2, Salamat 0.
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