Years headline-makers in hoops: Varsity wars draw huge crowds
December 27, 2005 | 12:00am
Letran came from behind to dethrone Philippine Christian University in the other best-of-3 Finals for the NCAA senior mens title. Coach Louie Alas leaned on MVP Boyet Bautista, the leagues Most Improved Player Aaron Aban, three-point specialist Jonathan Aldave, Mark Andaya, Erick Rodriguez and J. P. Alcaraz to get the job done.
The Ateneo Lady Eagles were another team that claimed its first-ever UAAP crown this year. Coach John Flores wrapped up the plum in style. The Lady Eagles finished the regular season with a win over FEU then tangled with UP in a Final Four match-up where the Maroons enjoyed a twice-to-beat advantage. Ateneo did what it had to do and repulsed UP twice in a row to arrange a title showdown with Adamson. In the best-of-3 Finals, Ateneo beat Adamson by 10 in Game 1 and by 12 in Game 2.
Through the years, the Shell coaches were Freddie Webb, Ed Ocampo, Joe Lipa, Dante Silverio, Bobby Parks, Arlene Rodriguez, Rino Salazar, Chito Narvasa, Perry Ronquillo, John Moran and finally, Leo Austria.
In its farewell appearance, Shell took third place in the 2005 Fiesta Conference.
After the tournament, Qatar was suspected of playing ringers by Jordan coach Maz Trakh.
"I dont know about the citizenship laws in Qatar but from what Im told, the Al Rayyan team had just a few players with Qatari roots," said Trakh. "If thats true, its outright cheating." Qatars imports were Americans Todd Day of Arkansas and Pervis Pasco of Kansas State. But Qatar forward Erfran Ali Saeed admitted to media he is from Senegal and has lived in Doha only the last two years. Another player Saad Abdul Rahman Ali was said to be from Canada.
There were 13 former MVPs among the stars and eight were at least 50 years old. Two are still active pros Johnny Abarrientos and Kenneth Duremdes. Jaworski was the Hataws playing coach while Baby (The Maestro) Dalupan called the shots for the Legends who won, 96-92.
Caidic walked away with MVP honors after compiling 30 points, eight rebounds, three assists and three steals in 32 minutes.
Before the game, the PBA inducted its initial batch of Hall of Famers. Enshrined were Jaworski, Fernandez, Francis Arnaiz, Philip Cezar, Bogs Adornado, Atoy Co, Dalupan, Danny Floro, Leo Prieto, Rudy Salud, Emerson Coseteng and Joe Cantada.
In the early months of the 2005-06 season, attendance averaged over 9,000 paying customers a game and more than 10,000 if you count the "scholars" who get their tickets for free. Those numbers are record highs. Additionally, TV ratings and sales are soaring with a distinct increase in viewership in the 16 to 24-year-old bracket.
The PBA staged its annual All-Star extravaganza in Laoag, Ilocos Norte, and the event was highly successful. In the peripheral side attractions, Air21s Nino (KG) Canaleta amazed a sellout crowd at the Centennial Arena with several NBA-type jams to capture the Slam Dunk title, Red Bulls Topex Robinson won the obstacle challenge, San Miguel Beers Paolo Hubalde sank a basket off a cabezada to edge Talk n Texts Mark Cardona for the Trick Shot crown and Phone Pals long-range bomber Jimmy Alapag regained the three-Point Shootout diadem. The main games saw the sophomores beating the rookies and coach Ryan Gregorios North All-Stars trimming coach Joel Banals South All-Stars, 131-128.
A bonus was the legends trio of Frankie Lim, Ronnie Magsanoc and Alvin Patrimonio upsetting Alapag, Air21s Ren-Ren Ritualo and San Miguel Beers Dondon Hontiveros in a team three-Point Shootout.
PBA commissioner Noli Eala attributed the leagues resurgence in popularity to several factors, including a concerted marketing effort, the consolidation of talent resulting in competitive parity and a rationalized season featuring only two conferences. (To be concluded)
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January 10, 2025 - 12:00am