This appears on philstar.com
NCAA Season 91 Preview Part 1
by rick olivares
If the NCAA was watching the finals of the Filoil Flying V Hanes
Premier Cup, a shudder must have gone up the spine of every team thinking they
have a chance to knock San Beda College a peg or two from its decade of
dominance. They crushed La Salle with so much ease, unerring focus, and
incredible firepower – despite missing point guard Baser Amer – to pick up
their first ever pre-season trophy.
Is this the start of what could be a historic season?
San Beda Red Lions
The road to the NCAA championship will have to go through Mendiola.
They are the prohibitive favorite to annex their six straight NCAA title.
They still have plenty of holdovers from their previous title
squads to see them through. They might not be as deep as they used to be but
they arguably have three of the best starters in the league in Amer in the
one-spot, Arthur dela Cruz in the power forward position, and Ola Adeogun at
center. The rest are role players who know what to do and how to do it.
Frightening combination if you ask me. You can’t even leave Jaypee Mendoza or
Michole Sorela alone because they will burn you.
It looks like it’s a lean year for recruits this year as only Ice
Reyes, the former Ateneo Blue Eaglet, is new to the squad. In my opinion, their
singular biggest addition is head coach Jamike Jarin.
No disrespect to any of the previous coaches but this man is a
teacher, motivator, and defensive guru all rolled into one. He will make the
Red Lions individually better and bring them as whole. The summer gave the Red
Lions a first look at their coach who introduced a whole new set of mind games
designed to make them better. They ended the summer firm believers.
Now teams might be able to defeat the Red Lions in a game or two in
the elimination round. However, as I have stipulated in previous years –
beating them in two straight for the championship is altogether another matter.
Nevertheless, who are the contenders for the NCAA crown?
Jose Rizal University Heavy
Bombers
They won the Fr. Martin Cup as they took down the University of
Santo Tomas and lost in the semis of the Filoil Cup to San Beda. The victory by
the Golden State Warriors gives this team hope.
After all, they are the proponents of small ball and bombarding
from the outside. In the aforementioned Filoil tourney, JRU hoisted the third
most number of triples by a NCAA squad. Tops was Letran with 185 followed by
EAC with 178 then JRU with 171.
They play with an undersized line-up sometimes utilizing three
combo guards of which they have a plethora – the returning Paolo Pontejos,
Teytey Teodoro, Dave Sanchez, and Gio Lasquety. This gives head coach Vergel
Meneses flexibility to push the ball and press. They can bombard from the
outside because they now have a workhorse underneath in Abdel Poutouchi and the
much improved Abdulrazak Abdulwahab who seems to have finally understood what
he can do for the team by playing rim protector and rebounding.
They have a pair of fine forwards in Jordan dela Paz and Marco
Balagtas. The problem however is everyone tends to stand around while waiting
for the guards to figure out what they want to do. The lack of movement hurts
and causes them to be stagnant. What they prefer is a quicker type of offense.
But as Coach Vergel Meneses said, if they want to win they have to
do it by playing defense (they were the best defensive team of the Filoil
tournament).
Perpetual Help Altas
They are contenders because of one man – Nigerian center Bright
Akhuetie. Along with Mapua’s Allwell Oraeme, Akhuetie elevates what is
otherwise a team that is so-so despite the presence of last year’s Most
Valuable Player in Earl Scottie Thompson (they did lose Jong Baloria, Justine
Alano, and Harold Arboleda). Akhuetie’s work ethic is impressive and it would
do well for others – especially the locals – to emulate. He works hard, never
gives up, and is smart. His backup, compatriot Prince Eze is solid on defense
but less polished on offense. He isn’t bad though.
The tandem of Akhuetie and Thompson will keep teams honest and that
will give others like Crispin Elopre, Ric Gallardo, Gab Daganon, Gerald Dizon,
Flash Sadiwa, Kevin Oliviera, and John Ylagan their looks.
If they are angling for a crack at the title then they have to make
their move this year as it is Thompson’s last. It isn’t everyday you land a
talent like him.
Arellano University Chiefs
How do they follow up a breakout and surprise season where they
made the finals (although they were seriously outmatched in the finals)?
By hiding its team and not participating in pre-season tourneys. A
mistake if you ask me. It would be nice to be wrong though.
Having written that, I don’t think they will be springing any
surprises this year but they will definitely compete with their newfound
confidence. They will count on Dioncee Holts, the much improved Jiovani Jalalon
who has gained a lot of experience and valuable training with the national team
to the SEA Games, Nichole Bangga, and the improving Mark Tano.
If their bench can help the starters then they will be back in the
Final Four.
College of Saint Benilde
Blazers
No Mark Romero. No Paolo Taha. No chance?
Not at all.
The Blazers will be out there battling all the way utilizing that
small ball that they play so well. Even without their graduated stars, CSB
still packs lots of firepower in Jonathan Grey, Raphael Nayve, Alfonso
Saavedra, Ralph Deles, and the up and coming Carlo Young.
They like to push that ball every chance they get while playing
harassing defense. JR Ongteco has improved his skills around the basket and
that will give them some offense inside. They’ll match up with a lot of teams
when it comes to starting fives but the bench is rather suspect.
However, their coaching staff – despite their manpower losses – are
high on this team because of great attitude (which is essential) and high
confidence.
If they want to realize their Final Four aspirations then they have
to notch some early wins because the second round will be a free-for-all.
For Benilde, they really have to dedicate themselves to playing
defense. And they can play defense. In the Filoil Cup, the were in the Top Five
in holding teams down in scoring. Their problem? It’s playing the full 40
minutes and not the first 35.
If they can play consistently and four full periods, they have a
chance of cracking that Final Four. Anything beyond that is pure gravy.
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