If you're from Ateneo, here are six
reasons to feel good about the win over UST.
by rick olivares
This
one was a total team effort.
This 61-57 win is only the second in
26 games played this UAAP season where a team had all the players it fielded
contribute to the effort.
All 10 players fielded by Bo Perasol
scored. All 10 not only scored but they also had at least one rebound as well.
And six Blue Eagles also got an assist, steal, or a block. Seven of them went
to the free throw line as well. What this all adds up to is a total team
effort.
The only other team to have all its
fielded players score is FEU during their 87-83 win over NU.
Even Gwyne Capacio hit some big shots!
If there is one Blue Eagle that I have been waited to show his wares it is
Capacio. He’s had steady performances now. Here’s to building on that.
This
is the first game where the team practically led from start to finish.
Okay, it was the Growling Tigers who
drew first blood courtesy of Kevin Ferrer. But Frank Golla scored inside and
over Karim Abdul off a nifty bounce pass by Ryan Buenafe to equalize 23 seconds
later. Thirty-two seconds after that, Juami Tiongson scored on a lay-up after
they harassed Brian So into a turnover.
The Blue Eagles answered every run,
every big shot by the Growling Tigers with one of their own.
After taking a 19-6 first quarter
lead, UST went on a mini 9-4 run to make it 23-15 after an Aljon Mariano short
stab. Chris Newsome deposited two free throws to restore a double-digit lead.
Then Juami Tiongson added two of his own after another Mariano bucket.
During the third quarter, after Kevin
Ferrer put back a brick to cut the lead down to 34-28, Juami Tiongson raced to
the left corner where Kiefer Ravena gave him the rock for an uncontested
three-ball, 37-28. Then Ryan added to free throws off a Kim Lo foul.
In the pay-off period, Ed Daquioag,
playing a resplendent second half, drove in for a basket to make it 56-53,
Ateneo.
Ravena answered with a drive of his
own, 58-53, with time down to 1:54 seconds left.
Then the Phenom blocked a Daquioag
trey attempt.
In the endgame, it got interesting
when Ateneo began to miss free throws giving UST a shot a sending the match
into overtime.
Fortunately for the blue and white,
Kevin Ferrer missed a couple of open looks.
Ateneo
won the battle of the third period and for the second consecutive game, won all
four periods.
Let’s tackle first that third period.
UST had whittled Ateneo’s lead down to six, 27-21, in a low scoring affair.
But the Blue Eagles took the third
period 20-18 (points scored), won the battle of the boards 13-10, and had more
assists 6-3. This was the period where Capacio scored five points while Von
Pessumal made his only bucket – a three – of the game.
Why is that third period important?
It’s because, they are able to answer the opposing team’s halftime adjustments.
And it serves as a springboard for a good fourth period.
In the first three games of Season 76
– all loses – Ateneo conceded that third period. They won their next ones –
Adamson, UE, UP, and UST.
But we lost to UE you say.
True. After Ateneo’s third quarter
rampage, the score was knotted at 54-all. It was those end game miscues that
cost us the W.
And that leads me to the fourth
periods.
What this all means is the team is
finally putting it together. Derailed by unexpected and untimely injuries, they
are starting to put it all together.
Here is the season flow thus far:
Get blown out in the opener – lose by
a hairline in the next – rack up a lead and get some gruesome fouls called
against the bigs and the team prompting a loss – win the next with that big
third quarter – lose another close one – then lastly win the final two matches
by taking all four periods.
Furthermore, after averaging 16.2
turnovers in their first five matches, Ateneo turned the ball over only 9.5
times in their past two games. Both for wins.
Yes, the team is getting better
physically and mentally (as is Kiefer Ravena who admitted to being 70% back).
Ateneo’s
bigs stayed in the game.
For the second consecutive game, Frank
Golla and JP Erram played 25 and 15 minutes respectively. They combined for 10
points, 5 rebounds, and 3 shot blocks. Versus one turnover. Although they had
three fouls with attempts (meaning the opposing player trooped to the free
throw line). Vince Tolentino also played 10 minutes where he chipped in 2
points and 2 rebounds.
There’s
a little bit of déjà vu.
Third period. The score is 30-21 with
Ateneo on offense. The play nearly goes awry but Chris Newsome saves the ball
from going out of bounds by tossing it near the elbow of the free throw line.
Ryan Buenafe hauls down the loose ball before Clark Bautista could get to it.
As he lands, he draws Aljon Mariano and Kim Lo. Newsome runs back into play and
Buenafe finds him with a snap pass. Newsome skies and slams it home with Karim
Abdul trying to swat the shot. Forget that dunk, Kobe Paras. That was during a
lay-up line. This is/was the real deal!
When I saw that, I said to myself,
jeez, we just go the dunk of the season. No way are we going to lose this game.
I said the same thing when Juami
Tiongson poked the ball away from Jeric Fortuna in last year’s second round
match up. Kiefer Ravena streaked forward with Abdul hot in pursuit. The Phenom
took off with Karim trying to return to sender. Jam! That made it 33-28 with
about 40 seconds left in the second period.
Nearly identical scores and both
flushes in a win against UST. Déjà vu.
That
was a great coaching job by Bo Perasol.
You have to give credit to the coach.
He was in control of this match.
First and foremost, Ateneo came out
with a lot of energy. They had UST on their heels for most of the game.
Karim Abdul was defended well. The
double teams worked as the Cameroonian averages 15.0 points per game. He ended
up with 6. Abdul was guarded by either Frank Golla or JP Erram with held coming
from Ryan Buenafe or others players within the vicinity.
Chris Newsome on the other hand took
on Kevin Ferrer. The third year forward for the Tigers averaged 13.8 points per
contest heading into their final match up of the first round. He finished with
9 points.
Aljon Mariano had a monster first half
but in eight minutes in the fourth period, he had zero points. Ditto for
Ferrer.
They played great defense as they
scored 14 points off turnovers (to the 5 of UST). The blue and whites also had
4 steals to the 2 of UST. Both teams were even at 4 blocks each.
Coach Bo’s use of his time outs was
judicious if not timely. He shuffled his players making sure each one got
adequate rest. And every bunot worked from Vince Tolentino to Gwyne Capacio.
Plus, I love how they attacked the
interiors. Ateneo scored 28 points in the paint (to the 22 of UST). That shows
a willingness to mix it up inside.
So the team is at 3-4 to close out the
first round. Save for the NU match, every one of the other losses were
winnable.
In those loses, they stayed close only
to crumble in the endgame. Now, they are learning to close them out again. Plus, Coach Bo is getting a better grasp of the team not to mention amateur ball all over again.
It’s a good win. Along with the break
that they will use to get healthier (and for Ryan Buenafe to shed a few more
pounds), they’re poised for a run in the second round.
The drive is still alive.
Great article Sir Rick. I do agree with you a lot especially the defensive stops of Golla (Props to him) and Erram on Abdul. That's what they should be continuing to do in every game in the second round. Hats off to Coach Bo as well for a splendid plan that was well executed.
ReplyDeleteThis is a very very very BIG WIN for the Blue Eagles and is now reverberating all over.
ReplyDeleteNice article, Rick. But you didn't mention that Ateneo was facing a UST team without its main scorer Jeric Teng. Without him, Ateneo should have blown UST off the court. Yet, the Tigers were able to stay in the game and hang around until the end.
ReplyDeleteDondi Nolasco
Yea, Ateneo should blow away UST anytime (like it used to) IF the latter doesn't have an import. Jeric has been there even before Abdul came around. And he knows how it had been to be a whipping boy against Ateneo. Abdul is the big difference for UST. Point is, if you miss Abdul in a game (like Ateneo lost Slaughter this season), then a close game with UST (much worse a loss) will indeed be a game that leaves much to be desired. But until then, a win against an import-reinforced team is still a big accomplishment. And this is one of it. That Adu game proved just one thing --- make Uaap an all-Filipino (or fil-foreigner) league and Ateneo will blow away the competition. So there.
DeleteAteneo lost to UST in Filoil when Abdul was battling an injury. Admu had ravena there
DeleteAteneo will soon have imports. Let us not crucify. OBF
DeleteExcellent game. Not to be nitpicky, though, but did we win all four periods? We were up 13, 19-6, at the end of the first, but ended the game with just a 4-point margin, so I'm sure we lost at least one quarter (probably the second).
ReplyDeleteOh nvm, now that I think about it, I think you meant we were up at the end of each quarter.
Still, another great article sir Rick. Looking forward to the next one (and the next win). OBF!
Nice last point regarding Coach Bo. He had a rough start as a coach for the Blue and White but injuries got in the way of the team. Bo REALLY Knows.
ReplyDeleteSo if everyone on a team gets one point and one rebound each, that means it's a total team effort? I have two problems with that statement:
ReplyDelete(1) This takes away the credit from people who don't manage to score in games but still contribute something on the defensive end. It doesn't matter if you tallied one point, one rebound, and one assist if you don't defend. Stats don't translate to anything unless analyzed deeply. What if Asistio never tallies a stat but say, held down Sumang for a good five minutes? He didn't log a point and a rebound, ergo not a team effort? Hmmmmmm.
(2) Say Ateneo lost. Everyone contributed stats and the scrubs were sent in to play in garbage time. Still a total team effort?
Let's not brush aside Kobe Paras' athleticism. Sure, they're both dunkers, but Newsome is FilAm and is way older. Paras, a homegrown talent, is dunking on people at a raw age of 15. If you haven't seen that dunk against JRU, Google is your best friend.
Lastly, save for NU, all of the games were winnable? Ateneo won against an Adamson with an injured Ingrid Sewa and a Tomasino squad without Jeric Teng. A win is a win, but sometimes, wins have to be judged by their quality.
Regarding your last statement about wins have to be judged by their quality, then for our part, the wins of La Salle and FEU against us are not quality wins because we were without Ravena. So we are given the right to judge those loses
DeleteJudge both wins and losses. Would really rather have all the teams healthy. Those losses without Ravena are to be taken with huge chunks of salt. Same with the wins against Adamson and UST.
DeleteThe Newsome play was weird since he came from out of bounds after saving the ball, tbh
DeleteDami mong sinasabi. Just enjoy the win bro.
Delete@op, No (center) import in a (enter) import-reinforced league? Isn't that quality enough a win for you? lol
DeleteLol he didn't say you couldn't
DeleteHaha lol this article is titled six reasons to enjoy the win. That's two wrong reasons ff the bat =)))))
DeleteAno ba tayong mga Atenista. Nanalo na nga eh napa-critical pa rin...kahit sa isa't-isa. As a fellow Atenena, all your political correctness and know-it-all remarks take away the joy of watching your sports team win.
Delete1. If you have something to say about the article, make your own sports blog then.
2. Why don't we all just shut up with all the criticism and let the Blue Eagles play with our full support behind them.
Hahaha I agree^ make your own blog. But he has a point; an unexamined life is not worth living
DeleteRick, I have to agree with the commenter...stats don't always tell the story - Manuel
DeleteYes we should not judge our fellow Atenenas! One big fig!
DeleteWhoever said stats tell the whole story? What I was trying to point out was everyone chipped in on the stat sheet. Only the Tams were able to do that all season long. Don't read too much into that. It is what it is.
DeleteIntelligently and composed, that is how we played!
ReplyDeleteDEFENSE MADE IT FOR US; they made less than 15 pts a quarter.
ReplyDeleteThe defense was good. Not great. They missed a lot of open shots.
DeleteMy advice to the coaching staff, put yourself in the mind of the other coaching staffs and try to put a fix on what their strength is over us! I am almost sure that except for UP and FEU they will conclude that their edge over us is their frontline, their Big men; I think DLSU is beginning to believe it.
ReplyDeleteHaving established that, attack whatever you think they will draw up against us! I am almost sure we will be able to develop something.