Can the
Bolts use all this hard-won experience for a title run?
by rick olivares
When I look at the Meralco Bolts the past three seasons, they have had
their chances to bag some PBA silverware but have unfortunately, come up short.
They have picked up some stellar imports such as Arinze Onuaku and Allen Durham
but they do not have the local crew to compete. This isn’t to say that they
don’t. They do. Just not deep enough.
And speaking of that depth, minus four of their best players, they went
into the Fiba Asia Champions Cup in Thailand, and by some good fortune, made it
to the semi-finals where they lost to Petrochimi of Iran that was stocked with
national players. Then in the battle for the bronze, the Ghosts of Korea once
more came to haunt a Philippine team. The Bolts finished in fourth spot.
Not bad. But still disappointing.
The short-handed Meralco Bolts opened the 2018 Fiba Asia Champions Cup with a 100-92 loss to Mono Vampire of
Thailand. They lost to Alvark Tokyo, 84-73, after which
they shocked Al Riyadi with a 96-63 pounding in their
last assignment of the group stage.
Because of the quotient system, Meralco was given a chance to compete in the semi-finals against Petrochimi
of Iran.
Petrochimi is stacked with Iranian national players in Sajjad Mashayeki, Benham Yakchali, Ashgar
Kardoust, Mohammad Jamshidi who himself once played
briefly for Meralco two years ago, Arslan Kazemi, and
Rouzbeh Arghavan. Surprisingly, Jamshidi was not fielded by their coach, Mehran Hatami.
The Bolts struggled to get consistent local support for imports Allen Durham and Diamond Stone. Garvo Lanete
and Mike Tolomia provided it, but it wasn’t enough as KG
Canaleta and Baser Amer struggled.
Consistency was the key word in local support (not only in Fiba Asia
action, but in the PBA as well). Reynel Hugnatan and Amer helped out the imports against Mono
Vampire, however, there was no local scored in double digits against Alvark
Tokyo.
Against Al Riyadi of Lebanon, the local support finally showed up with
Garvo Lanete,
Canaleta, and Anjo Caram all scoring in double figures. Amer himself was two points away from double figures.
With a chance to salvage a bronze medal, Amer and Canaleta were able to help out Durham and Stone. But
again, it wasn’t enough.
Talking to Meralco head coach Norman Black, this is what he had to say
about the Bolts’ Fiba Asia Champions Cup campaign, “I think our participation
was a good experience for the players as well the coaching staff. For the
players, it was a chance to play against some of the best players in Asia.
For the coaches, we were able to scout and learn the systems of our opponents.
When we left for the games our goal was to win as many games as possible and
have a good finish. We did not get a medal so we are all disappointed by the
results. But we are hoping the experience will help our players and our team in
the long run.”
Unfortunately once more, Meralco lost by a whisker to BlackWater in its
return to PBA Governors’ Cup action, 94-91, following a Paul Zamar triple (and
the Bolts totally bungled their last offensive).
Durham had a chance to give Meralco a win, but he split his free
throws, 91-all, setting up Zamar’s heroics.
Injuries have robbed the Bolts of weapons to contribute. And just my
thought, after this campaign, maybe it is time to seriously re-tool the team;
add a few more weapons. But as Coach Norman told me, because of the luck of the
draft and not having enough blue chip players to trade, the Bolts make do with
this hardworking team.
In previous seasons, they were leading the field but ran out of gas in
the finals. With them struggling now at 1-4, they still have a chance. Let’s
see if they fare better catching up and put to good use all that experience
they have gained in these past three seasons.
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