UAAP Season 80 Preview: Far Eastern
University Tamaraws
by rick olivares
For decades, the Far Eastern
University Tamaraws paraded teams stocked with talented no-names from all over
the archipelago who’d come to the big leagues and make names for themselves.
Now they’ve reached out across the world and now look like a more 21st
century team what with the mix of accents, tattoos, and talent.
The word there is talent. In new
head coach Olsen Racela’s debut season with FEU, his team has re-loaded with
four players who will clearly make a difference for the Tamaraws.
That’s Arvin Tolentino and Hubert
Cani who transferred from Ateneo, Jasper Parker who first strutted his wares
with Southwestern University in CESAFI, and newcomer, Fil-Canadian RJ Ramirez.
All are big game players. Watching FEU in the pre-season, the newcomers have
stamped their class and impact on the team.
In Tolentino, FEU has a long
range bomber who can take the last shot. In Cani, they have a quality point
guard --- yes, he flashed the form he last displayed in high school and not
with Ateneo who can backstop Wendell Comboy. He adds depth to a court general
corps that also includes Axel IƱigo, Jojo Trinidad, and Parker.
Speaking of Parker, he isn’t that
deadly player he was with SWU as he had Mark Tallo running the point too while
he slid to shooting guard. In this pass first dribble drive system of FEU, he
cannot simply look. But the system is good.
RJ Ramirez is going to be a top
player for this team. He doesn’t need plays called for him which is a huge plus
for a team with players who need the ball to be very effective. Ramirez will
provide hustle points, defense, and a lot of energy.
Of the holdovers from their title
team of two seasons ago, Ron Dennison has become a better player with a
dependable jump shot. Plus, he has gotten more adept at pilfering unsuspecting
foes of the ball.
Richard Escoto is undersized in
terms of height but not in heart. If he can get into the flow of the game that
helps the frontline.
Center Prince Orizu remains an
enigma. How can he put up some solid stats one game then be as quiet as a mouse
in the next? If he can bring it every game, then he will open up the floor for
this team’s gunners and slashers.
That brings up Brandley Bienes
who can hit triples. Ditto with Joe Nunag.
The x-factor here is Ken Tuffin,
the second year Fil-Kiwi. He has that PBA height. He can shoot (just not
consistently). He can play defense. He will eventually captain this Tamaraws
team. You can see it. You can see his contributions on defense but when he is
unable to score, his frustration is evident on his face. The dribble drive
positions him in the corners or across the arc for triples. I’d rather he
attack than jack up those shots of which Escoto, Cani, and Ramirez were tops in
accuracy. If he can be consistent enough on offense and help with his trademark
D he will propel this team, ease the pressure on a thin frontline (Barkley
Ebona and Escoto round out the rotation).
The Tamaraws are fun to watch as
it looks like they found the flow and rhythm of their championship squad of two
years ago. And they can do it on both ends of the court. They trap and hound
foes.
The concern for this team is
confidence. They know they have talent. But it’s confidence. During the summer,
UP waylaid them and they crumbled. They played La Salle once; the first they
were blown out. In the second they won in that now infamous fight (but that was
without Ben Mbala). The question is, how did they come out of that fight – with
a united team and with a keen understanding of what it takes to win or will
they back down when the going gets tough?
How they answer that will
determine their season.
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