LPU Pirates: A renewed focus this NCAA
S94
by rick olivares
Right back at you.
That’s what the Lyceum Pirates
must have said after their 82-65 win over the Arellano University Chiefs.
In the first period, the Chiefs
pounded LPU real bad that you would have thought that the way the three-point
shots were raining inside the Filoil Flying V Centre that Typhoon Josie was
still in town. The Arellano University Chiefs could do no wrong. They drilled
five triples and after Archie Concepcion drove for a bucket to make it 34-17,
coach Jerry Codinera’s troops were up by 17.
By game’s end, it was LPU that
had won by a 17-point margin.
For a while there, it looked that
Lyceum would succumb to its first loss of the young NCAA season. Arellano’s
Adrian Alban, Brylle Meca, and Michael Cañete repeatedly took it to the basket
unmindful of Pirates center Mike Nzeusseu’s presence.
After LPU sliced a 13-point
deficit to nine, 26-16 following a Jayvee Marcelino trey, Arellano responded
with a bombardment of their own for an even bigger 17-point margin.
While the Chiefs played great
defense, the Pirates were also a bit unlucky. CJ Perez missed two lay-ups while
Nzeusseu bungled two dunk attempts much to the delight of the predominantly
Arellano crowd.
With their offense in a funk, Lyceum
turned to its star and to playing defense to turn matters around. Perez stole
the ball thrice in succession and scored five points off them. The defensive
display rattled the Chiefs who would not be the same the rest of the game. By
second period’s end, their once imposing lead was down to four, 41-37.
Ten minutes later, LPU led,
58-54, and never looked back.
At the 7:51 mark of the fourth
quarter and the Pirates leading 62-56, Perez reprised his second period heroics
when he scored seven straight points all off lay-ups including an and-one for a
69-56 lead. Then at the 3:40 mark, he delivered the coup de grace when he
drilled a triple from the left corner pocket, 72-56, LPU.
“At some point in the first
period, I pulled CJ out,” remarked Pirates head coach Topex Robinson. “He was
surprised I subbed him out. I needed him to gather his wits. And it helped.”
Perez, in one of his most
brilliant performances in his collegiate career, top scored with 31 points
while adding six boards, six assists, and five steals.
“When you have a special player
like CJ, sometimes you just ride that same wave as he does,” quipped Robinson.
Unlike Game One of last year’s
NCAA Finals against San Beda where the Pirates had panic written all over their
faces as the Red Lions seized the momentum and ended their dreams of a sweep –
after going 18-0 in the elimination round – with a 94-87 win, this season, LPU
despite twice challenged twice by Emilio Aguinaldo College and now, Arellano,
have looked composed.
Robinson agreed. “I think it’s
the experience of having been there and losing in the finals. We now know what
it is all about. That doesn’t mean it is going to be easy this season. We
aren’t catching anyone by surprise. Expectations are up and San Beda, is still
San Beda.”
Other than a more composed
nature, one other difference is that the team trusts each other more. Last
season saw some new faces added to the mix – Perez, the Marcelino twins. Now
that everyone has been to war together, including the winning D-League campaign,
they trust each other more.
“That is why our motto is
‘together is better,’” pointed out assistant coach Jeff Perlas who knows a
thing or two about winning having been a part of National University’s historic
UAAP Season 77 champion squad along with current Pirates forward-center Ralph
Tansingco. Robinson also knows a thing or two about winning having been a part
of San Sebastian’s 1997 NCAA champion team with current his LPU assistant,
Rommel Adducul.
Robinson was also a part of some
of champion teams in the PBA from Red Bull to Alaska as a player and as a
coach.
“What we are trying to do is
create a winning culture for Lyceum,” pointed out Robinson. “We have winners
and doers here in the coaching staff; good people. We hope that will translate
into our teachings to the players.”
Of course, the season is young
and any talk about a championship is premature at this point. The memory of
last season’s 18-0 and subsequent 0-2 finish is still fresh more so with a
meeting with San Beda looming on the horizon.
“Right now, we’re 4-0, and at
this point that doesn’t really mean anything,” summed up Robinson. “It’s a long
season. But games like these are good because this is where you learn and not
from blowouts. We have our work cut out for us.”
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