Looking at Ateneo’s win over UP
by rick olivares
Two games. Two blowout wins. And
if you watched the Ateneo Blue Eagles take down their Katipunan neighbors, the
University of the Philippines Fighting Maroons, 92-71, you got the feeling that
they still haven’t played that perfect game.
Here are our thoughts about that
game.
What a debut for Tyler Tio.
That was an explosive debut for
Tyler Tio who scored 14 points. His explosion to start the fourth period hiked
an 11-point lead to 19 as he scored on eight straight points to take the wind
out of the sails of UP.
Tyler missed the first game with
an ankle injury. Was iffy for the game against UP because of some pain and yet
he played superb. Didn’t miss a shot. 6-6 from the field including two treys
plus two assists (zero turnovers) in 11 minutes.
When was the last time we saw a
great debut for a Blue Eagle?
Ryan Buenafe finished with 8
points.
Kiefer Ravena shockingly didn’t
score a point.
Greg Slaughter, technically not a
rookie, but in his Ateneo debut finished with 23 points – a win over a very
good Adamson team.
Of course, we have to check the
numbers of Jun Reyes, Danny Francisco, Richie Ticzon, Vince Hizon, Rich
Alvarez, Magnum Membrere, and LA Tenorio to name a few.
But I guess, in recent memory,
Tio has had one of those great debuts.
As we have seen for a while now
(yes, I was watching him in high school play alongside Isaac Go, Kyles Lao, and
Jarrell Lim in Xavier at the MMBL tourneys), he’s displayed a steadiness, a
shiftiness, and great vision. Excellent handles too.
Thirdy Ravena is finding consistency. Ditto with Chib Ikeh.
Incredibly, not one Blue Eagle
finished in double digits scoring last season. Ravena did lead the team with
9.6 points and 7.4 rebounds.
In two matches this S80, he’s doubled
the output to 18.0 in scoring and is pulling down 8.0 rebounds a game.
He isn’t the only one to raise
his numbers. Chibueze Ikeh finished with identical 5.2 averages in scoring and re
bound last season. This year it is up to 13.5 points and 12.0 rebounds.
The Big Fella had another solid
outing. He didn’t play much as the Blue Eagles were superb all around. I have
no problem with his three-point attempt as he does that from time to time.
Besides, he took it in one motion and with a low of confidence. I immediately
glanced at Tab Baldwin and he didn’t show any sign of disgust or what.
Aaron Black played one of his
best games in a while.
Nine points, 10 rebounds, plus 3
assists? Not bad. He was very active all over the court. Hopefully, this sees
him break out of his shell.
Solid offensive rebounding.
The activity, the willingness to
battle inside the paint, the conditioning. Good to see the Blue Eagles playing
tough inside. The 18 offensive rebounds saw them post a whopping 31 second
chance points against UP.
Against Adamson, they scored 29
second chance points to the Falcons’ six. UP finished with seven.
The superb bench mob.
Not since the five-peat teams has
Ateneo have a deep bench. Coach Tab Baldwin fielded all 16 players. Only Jawaun
White did not register a single point, rebound, assist, steal, and block (he
did have one turnover). But everyone else added something. That gives confidence
to everyone that almost everyone is seeing playing time. Just wait until White
gets going.
The defensive work on Paul Desiderio.
UP’s main man finished with 9
points. He scored 2 points in the first, 3 in the second, and 4 in the third
but was held scoreless in the fourth. He shot a poor 22% from the field.
What does Ateneo need to work on?
Limit turnovers. They still
commit turnovers – two in a span of two minutes.
Not losing concentration in
certain moments of the game.
What does UP need to work on?
Playing a better team game. Too
much pro-style one-on-one basketball.
Hey Sir Rick, can't help but think that UP is playing too much one on one since Bo Perasol is their coach. During his time with Ateneo, he pretty much did the same thing, and he was lucky that he had an incredible offensive talent in Kiefer Ravena to rely on. Is that a fair assessment?
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