Where to, Red Warriors?
by rick olivares
When you look at the team bus of
the University of the East Red Warriors, on both sides are some of the finest
players to don not only the red and the white but also go to the professional
ranks.
From left to right, there’s Elmer
Espiritu, Roi Sumang, Mark Borboran, Hans Thiele, James Yap, Paul Lee, Raffy
Reyes, Rudy Lingganay, Rob Labagala, and Val Acuña. Talented, solid, and
game-changers – that’s what these players are. However, the one thing they do
have in common is they were unable to lead UE, proud UE, back to the Promised
Land of an UAAP title.
Unfortunately it looks like they
will once again come away trophy-less… for the 32nd consecutive
year. The last title they won was in 1985 with Allan Caidic, Jerry Codinera,
and Boycie Zamar at the helm. The latter two tried to lead them back to glory
but both left, disenchanted. They wanted to serve their alma mater but instead,
they got burned by ungrateful players or politics.
And now this season… shake your head
here and hold that thought.
Las Sunday, September 17, with
5:47 left to play, and UP leading 74-53, the University of the East Red
Warriors seemingly threw the white flag. Their best player, Alvin Pasaol, was
subbed out for Nick Abanto.
Pasaol never got back in the
groove after he was pulled out in the first half on account of two fouls.
Previously, they rode his luck and foul trouble and came out lacking in
firepower when they needed him the most. Perhaps wanting to manage his fouls,
he was kept on ice. And by the time he re-entered in the third period, UP has
seized control and Pasaol simply never had any more influence in the game.
When he got yanked for good, he
pulled out his shirt didn’t look like one happy camper. Not because he was
pulled in my opinion, but even this early the Red Warriors seemingly are going
nowhere fast. At 0-3 and the new UAAP season only eight days old, that sinking
feeling is fast creeping in. And they have yet to face Adamson, Ateneo, and La
Salle. They cannot even take UST that despite being 0-2 doesn’t look like a bad
team. The potential is there.
Do the Red Warriors lack talent?
Not really. They have it. It is
just a young team that has to get old real fast. What that means is no way
should this team be in the dumps if they still had the team they had. Meaning a
lot of players transferred. Where is Edgar Charcos – at Perpetual Help serving
his residency? Bon Bon Batillier, who was the first recruit by Derrick Pumaren
when he joined UE, is with Letran. Jordan Sta. Ana is making a case for the
next King Growling Tiger. Joshua Gonzales is with La Salle. Fran Yu is studying
in Thailand. Ralph Penuela is now with San Beda. Gino Jumao-as is somewhere.
You can even go as far back in the previous years when Roi Sumang opted out of
his last playing year and African players Charles Mammie and Moustapha Arafat
were booted out even before they finished out their stint. Yes, there are
reasons but when you keep losing people left and right especially when you
consider that even assistant coaches Dindo Pumaren and Nonoy Falcasantos are
but what does that say? During the Filoil Flying V Cup last summer, Dindo stood
at the far end of the bench instead of the customary seat next to head coach
and older brother Derrick Pumaren. Word is they clashed and the split was
coming.
I thought that Renz Palma could
be UE’s version of Ed Daquiaog, a wrecking ball on offense and defense. I
thought that Paul Varilla would be really good. But no. Not even in their final
years did they improve.
This UE team was so promising two
years ago. They found their voice and style after they rebuilt from the ashes
of Boycie Zamar’s talented but underachieving team (at least for the UAAP
because they won some outside tourneys). Their hellacious defense was fun to
watch. Yet theirs was a haphazard way of playing that was half-entertaining and
half-maddening.
I thought that the job Manong did
was incredible and make no mistake, I am a fan of his. He’s done a great job
with La Salle, Jose Rizal University, and initially, UE. The trick about
coaching is not to leave the ship in worse shape when you came in.
The four corners of hell defense
looks like hell – a wasteland of turnovers and poor shots.
There’s talent. Mark Maloles is
going to be good – unless he too bails out. Chris Conner will only get better.
I think Jason Varilla will amount to something. Clark Derige could be
something. Yet like Mark Olayon, it’s confidence and consistency.
This coming Sunday, they’ll face
top-ranked Ateneo. It is both good and bad. Good because in the past two
pre-seasons, they defeated the Blue Eagles. The problem is, it was the
pre-season because come the UAAP, it was UE that got clobbered.
Not a bad sign? Maybe, but at
this point, they have nothing to lose but to go out and flat our play.
And maybe next time, the player
they add to the side of their team bus, will have led them back to the Promised
Land.
Their most current near title was a decade ago when they swept the elims. Quite uncannily, it was under Dindo who lost out to the older bro in La Salle. Then they changed the format of the stepladder because of that, then they brought it back again. One word: import. You can't be competitive going all-filipino in a reinforced conference. Look at LaSalle. Not just any import mind you. An import worthy of international caliber mvp (look at Ben). Mamie was a nut case.
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