BLEACHERS BREW EST. MAY 2006

Someone asked me how my blog and newspaper column came to be titled "Bleachers Brew". It's like this, it's an amalgam of sorts of two things: The bleachers area in the stadium/arena where I used to sit when I would watch baseball, football, and basketball games and Miles Davis' great jazz album Bitches Brew. That's how it got culled together. I originally planned on calling it "The View from the Big Chair" that is a nod to Tears For Fear's second album, Songs from the Big Chair. So there.

Saturday, May 14, 2022

History repeating... Learning from the finals loss and Ateneo bouncing back


History repeating.

By Rick Olivares

 

Let’s get this out of the way… much deserved championship and congratulations to the UP Fighting Maroons. They did it and how.

 

And as painful as it is to say, let’s give it that try again in Season 85, Ateneo Blue Eagles. I still remain proud but am hurting just like you.

 

History repeated itself.

 

No, not the 13-0 team losing in the final game of the elimination round then in the first game of the finals. That is established.

 

Two months before Season 84 began, a player within the Blue Eagles asked with ominous foreboding… 

 

“What can we do to help Jolo, Gian, and BJ graduate with a championship,” I was asked.

 

The player referred to Season 77 of the juniors tournament in 2016. 

 

It isn’t like they haven’t won, but a title is always a nice graduation gift to one’s self and the Ateneo community.

 

Heading into Season 77, Ateneo lost three of their starting five in Matt and Mike Nieto, and Marc Salandanan. Enzo Joson could still play but was knocked out by academics.  

 

Left to hold the fort were Jolo Mendoza, BJ Andrade, Gian Mamuyac, and Sean Ildefonso. The young players in the squad included SJ Belangel, Jason Credo, RV Berjay, and Dave Ildefonso. 

 

The Ateneo Blue Eaglets, defending champions, were bounced by De La Salle Zobel, 75-68, in the step-ladder format. 

 

My answer to that inquiry was to make sure that everyone was on the same page and that everyone believed that they can win it all, that when players are not getting playing time, they should talk to their teammates and make everyone realize that whatever one does – big or small will help to the overall effort.

 

The cracks were there all right. 

 

As much as I believe in team play, you still need your stars to stand up and be counted when it is gut check time. 

 

Ateneo bushwhacked UP in the first game of the season. Since then, the Fighting Maroons had found their verve.

 

I didn’t expect an undefeated season but was pleasantly surprised when they were on the verge of doing so. 

 

I thought that NU and UE showed teams how to beat Ateneo… a fast moving team that beat them to the boards and in hustle plays, the physicality of their play. Furthermore, was the inconsistency of the players. 

 

In the first game of the season – the win over UP – six players did very well – Dave Ildefonso, Angelo Kouame, Raffy Verano, Belangel, Mamuyac, and Mendoza.

 

Against FEU, it was Dave and Tyler Tio.

 

Against Adamson, it was Angelo and Tyler. 

 

Against La Salle, it was Angelo, Dave, and Gian.

 

Against NU, it was Dave, Angelo, SJ, and Tyler.

 

Against UE, it was Dave, Angelo, SJ, and Gian. 

 

Against UST, Tyler and BJ carried the cudgels. 

In the second round against the Green Archers, it was SJ and Gian.

 

Against the Red Warriors, it was BJ, Angelo, and SJ.

 

Against the Growling Tigers in a monstrous blowout win, six players scored in double digits. 

 

Facing the Bulldogs, Dave and Angelo played well.

 

Against the Soaring Falcons, it was Angelo and Matthew Daves.

 

Against the Tamaraws, it was Verano and Tio. 

 

Against the Fighting Maroons to end the elimination round, it was Angelo, SJ, and Dave.

 

When Season 82 ended, I wrote back then, how Ateneo replaces Thirdy Ravena in the three-spot will spell the success of a four-peat.

 

Enter Dwight Ramos. Pandemic happens. Exit Dwight Ramos.

 

Dave Ildefonso returned to Ateneo after spending his first two years of college in NU and showed that he could be that man to spot Ravena. But he was largely inconsistent. And on the big stage, he wilted.

 

If you look at La Salle after Season 79, they lost Jeron Teng. And that vacancy in the three-spot was too glaring to fill even if they had MVP Ben Mbala. La Salle was also depowered by the loss of Jason Perkins and Julian Sargent. 

 

Ateneo, after Season 82 lost four-fifths of their starting five, their sixth man, and that guy supposed to replace Ravena. 

 

When you think about it, the only players left with significant exposure from previous seasons were Kouame, Belangel, and Verano. Everyone else is either new or didn’t get much playing time. So that meant they were on the level with UP.

 

But UP had more in terms of size and personnel. 

 

UP’s size, physicality, and defense gave Ateneo fits. But they had the studs who carried their previous teams like Ricci Rivero (La Salle), CJ Cansino (UST), Malik Diouf who was the anti-Kouame (CEU), Carl Tamayo (NU), and Joel Cagulangan (LSGH). 

 

They had built themselves with big recruit signings but also talented stud transferees like Cansino, Cagulangan, Rivero, and Diouf. Not to mention CJ Catapusan who played well for Adamson. 

 

Ateneo had come unglued after the Game 1 loss. The team that was so steady in the endgame found themselves in that unfamiliar situation.

 

One can even postulate that losing to UP at the end of the second round was a fluke. But when they took Game 1, no it wasn’t. They had gained the full measure of Ateneo and found that confidence. 

 

As for the Blue Eagles, the team that played unselfish ball was unable to mostly find someone who wanted that ball, who needed that ball, and more importantly, shoot that ball. That traditional UP killer in Tyler Tio was silent. 

 

UP had been knocking on the door to greatness over the last few years. Many would mock Bo Perasol when he moved back to his alma mater to coach and build UP’s program. While Goldwin Monteverde deserves a lot of credit for his outstanding coaching which has been on display since his days at Chiang Kai Shek, Adamson, NU, and now, UP, Perasol had his fingerprints on all the players who are in their current roster. And this victory also belongs to him. 

 

The Fighting Maroons ended Ateneo’s long win streak and their finals win streak. They are truly deserving champions.

 

Ateneo just ran into a hungrier and better team. 

 

And so history was made and history repeated itself sadly for Mendoza, Mamuyac, and Andrade along with graduating players Tio and Verano. 

 

Ateneo can look to learn the lessons of college basketball history.

 

Dave Ildefonso had a rough and tumble finals. Disappearing badly in both losses. 

 

Maybe, he can talk to Enrico Villanueva and how he bounced back from the 2001 finals when he wilted in Game 3 and La Salle had its four-peat. Villanueva came back the next year with a monstrous season and Ateneo ended the Green Archers’ march to a fifth straight title.

 

SJ Belangel had a trying first season as the lead point guard. 

 

In Season 78, sans Mamu, Jolo, and BJ, he played alongside Kai Sotto, Credo, Berjay, Joaqui Manuel, and Dave. They lost in the Final Four to FEU who had RJ Abarrientos, LJ Gonzales, Xyrus Torres, Daniel Celzo, and Royce Alforque.

 

If SJ wants to graduate with a championship (and he did in high school in Season 79), he must elevate his game and play with a manic consistency. 

 

Ateneo will be left with players who got good playing time in Chris Koon, Dave, Joshua Lazaro, and Daves (not to mention Angelo). How they elevate themselves is anyone’s guess. 

 

And here’s a shopping list…

 

They really need to work on those free throws and rebounding. They need to work on the quality of those passes. The search for a proper four spot player and a back-up to Angelo is sorely needed. They need to get taller, faster. I really wish they played faster. So much for playing small ball when you can’t really run. In the end, it was Ateneo chasing the well-spaced shooters of UP.

 

Ateneo must look to the lessons of 1988 when they were unable to defend their back-to-back titles, 2003 when they lost to FEU in the Finals, in 2013 the season after the five-peat. 

  

The common denominator is after being unable to defend a title, Ateneo is not able to return to the Big Dance. It took a few years until they had sufficient veterans to lay siege to the title. 

 

Maybe it is time to break that streak and make history once again.

 

But by God, what a run. At the end, all you can do is tip your hat to UP and Ateneo for a finals well and agonizingly played. It could have gone either way and that is all you ever ask.

 

Thanks, Ateneo. 

 

Thanks Coach Tab and the coaching staff. To all the players and those who are graduating in Tyler, Raffy, Gian, BJ, and Jolo. 

 

OBF!

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, May 8, 2022

UP sticks it to the champs as Ateneo self-destructs


 What should have been a win turned out to be a painful 81-74 loss for Ateneo. 

 

Give credit to UP for not giving up.

 

As for Ateneo.

 

There is a litany of bad play that can be summed up in three words – outplayed, outhustled, and outcoached. Out-everything'd if there is such a word. 

 

The Blue Eagles played like rookies while the Fighting Maroons played like veterans. UP guarded the pick and roll well and rotated out quickly. They made Ateneo pay for packing in the lane – and I don’t know why they do this (is it to protect Angelo Kouame from foul trouble). 

 

The bad signs were there early on when BJ Andrade gave up two quick boners that allowed UP into the game.

 

Even worse, SJ Belangel was mostly invisible. Yes, he scored 17 points but he was invisible when the game counted.

 

Whatever Ateneo was doing to opposing point guards early in the tournament they were given a dose of in this game. SJ Belangel couldn’t get the ball. Tyler Tio was unable to get any daylight to shoot and he reverted to his old self of dribbling away the clock with nothing happening. 

 

Then Gio Chiu came in an UP got back into the game. Gio plays well against smaller players but against taller players. I do not know why they use him as a press breaker when he has bad hands and turns the ball over at the first sign of trouble. 

 

Dave Ildefonso clearly was a rookie in his first finals. He had no confidence going inside the basket and was oft indecisive and turn over prone. Having him and Chiu on the floor was hurting the team big time. And Chiu, not being able to spell Angelo is hurting the team. He cannot grab a rebound even if his life depended on it. 

 

And Angelo Kouame. I have no idea why he needs to put the ball on the floor. I have no idea why he cannot dunk the ball in traffic. This is what happens when they are asked to rebound and kick the ball out. Take the goddam ball to the rack. Have we been watching too many Golden State Warriors highlights?

 

In spite of their bad play, the Blue Eagles had a chance to win it when they posted a 12-point lead. But a bad one-footed shot by SJ, Chiu bottling it and some ticky tacky fouls saw UP gain life.

 

And this is the worst free throw shooting Ateneo team I have ever seen. The worst. At times, Ateneo is its own worst enemy. How about those last two plays in regulation? 

 

I question the defense out in the perimeter. Why are you staying on the side so that you can wait for the help defense then trap? Maybe closer to the basket, yes, but not too far out. SJ got killed by this. 

 

UP has figured out Ateneo. Someone like Ricci Rivero drives to the basket, bowls over players like ten pins then kicks the ball out to an open shooter. You can complain about lapses in officiating but sorry… that will not change the game. As the game wore on, the Blue Eagles shrunk from the challenge. No one wanted the ball. WTF, right?

 

The last team to make Ateneo shrink this way was FEU. 

 

You know how bad this was when you cannot get the once vaunted bench out because they do not have the height to deal with UP’s frontline. Yes, we’re good enough to play the FEUs and Adamsons of this world but struggle with tall athletic frontlines. Imagine if La Salle’s Bright Nwanko and Ben Phillips played well. 

 

UP has shown the rest of the league how to beat Ateneo. Field tall and athletic players who will swarm Angelo. 

 

Now, UP is poised to end their title-less streak and end Ateneo’s championship run. And how many came away thinking this one will be all over come Wednesday?