The hard way: UP stuns
FEU with a late comeback to barge into the UAAP football finals for the third
straight year
by rick olivares
Before the start of this semifinals series, I told
the people at the UAAP Commissioner’s table that FEU would win the first game
but UP would sneak back into the finals.
When I see the FEU Tamaraws and this particular team
of their minus multi-talented Dexter Chio and striker Jon Melliza, I think back
to when they were trying to break through in the juniors ranks. In their first
year, Ateneo oft blew them out and La Salle as they tried to learn how to play
alongside each other much less get used to Manila football. In their second
year in high school, they made the finals but lost to Ateneo that had Mikko
Mabanag and many others in the current squad. By the time they were seniors
they defeated Ateneo for the juniors crown.
Watching this a part of that batch move up to the
seniors last season, they immediately made FEU competitive. Then the next batch
moved up and that catapulted them to contender status. Somehow all season long,
as frightening as they could be on offense, there were still some lapses. Of
course, college football isn’t the same as junior ball. The Tamaraws had to
play bigger and more talented squads than what they faced in the high school
division.
It’s small consolation for the FEU Tamaraws to say
their future is bright but there really is no other way to say it than, they’ll
have to learn from this stunning extra period 2-1 loss to UP in a game they
dominated.
It is also safe to say that UP learned a thing or two
and beat the Tamaraws with a FEU-esque type of move.
From Daniel Gadia to Jinggoy Valmayor to a cutting
Gabe Mendoza. In the Fighting Maroons’ one and only good run inside the FEU
box, the two-time defending champions scored off three passes late in the
second period of extra time and held on for a 2-1 win.
FEU dominated possession for the first 90 minutes and
the first 15 minutes of the extra period. This despite losing defender Eric
Chavez to two yellow cards in the first extension period. If anything that is
testament to FEU’s talent while UP didn’t play too well. Sure UP got their runs
but they made the most of their few opportunities while FEU had lots of chances
but only scored once.
Just to give you an idea, in the first few minutes of
the match, the entire field team of UP including striker Jinggoy Valmayor who more
often than not plants himself up front and waits for the long balls to come his
way, stayed behind their defensive half.
When FEU couldn’t make any headway because of the
strong defending position, only then did Valmayor move up. As they did in their
last game, a 5-1 win, FEU kept four players surrounding Valmayor. While it hurt
FEU’s attack as they didn’t have enough players to support their forward
position, they soon adjusted – a mere tinkering in the ball movement and
working those triangles.
And then they began to threaten. That culminated in a
goal in the 22nd minute by Melliza off a sublime throughball by
midfielder Paolo Bugas that left the FEU striker in a one-on-one position with
UP keeper Ace Villanueva.
UP noticed a hole on the right flank. In the 60th
minute, Albert Yatco dropped a long ball behind FEU’s defensive line that went
over the heads of the Tamaraws smaller defenders. Tams keeper Michael Menzi
however was up to the task as he denied two Maroons from collaring the ball.
But UP liked what they saw. Four minutes later, they
attempted another run up that side with Yatco making that pass and run up the
right. They probed deep and picked up a free kick that Valmayor fired low from
some 30 yards out. Buyboy Fernandez, unmarked and unchallenged, headed in the
ball for the equalizer and UP received a massive dose of life.
FEU however still looked good as they moved up and
down the field with relative ease as Arnel Amita and Bugas ruled the midfield.
That is until the 19th minute of the extra period when Valmayor
found Mendoza for the game winner.
At the half of regulation, UP head coach Anto
Gonzales bawled out Valmayor for his seemingly disinterested play. Two games
ago, he got on rookie Carlos Monfort’s case. “Maglaro ka ng maayos,” he
screamed at the frosh. One year ago (Season 74) also against FEU, Valmayor (and
then teammate Ayi Aryee) got on Mendoza rather harshly during the game
prompting Gonzales to rush to his player’s defense. Mendoza then led UP during
the UniGames last year while Valmayor and Fernandez were training with the
Azkals. Come the UAAP, the lack of chemistry hurt UP, hence, Mendoza looking
lost on the field with his teammates from the national team and Aryee who was
then playing with Global in the UFL.
In the game-winning goal, it was Monfort who made the
pass up the right side to Gadia that allowed the run. Now it’s almost complete
as Mendoza seems to have found his groove with the Maroons.
As it is, the two teams with the most titles in the
last 10 years will be playing one another for the Season 75 championship –
Ateneo and UP. Ateneo, three-peat winners from 2004-06 are up against UP,
titlists in 2009, 2011-12. It’s the best college football team (UP) against the
unlikely finalists (Ateneo who the previous season finished second to the
last).
It’s going to be an explosive match up.
As for FEU, they’ll learn from this. Watching from
the sidelines will add to their motivation for next season.
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