Green Archers Fall to FEU in Quarterfinals

Two days after downing Ateneo to take the last playoff slot, the Green Archers bowed out of the Fil-oil tournament, losing to FEU in the quarterfinals, 68-73 in a hard-fought encounter. The Archers showed flashes of their ability to compete with the best teams, battling FEU on even terms in stretches, but were unable to maintain that level of play throughout the game.

The Archers blew hot and cold, sandwiching the cold-shooting middle quarters with a hot start in the first quarter and a blazing rally in the last 4 minutes, but ultimately fell short. The absence of forward Norbert Torres was acutely felt in the rebounding department, as the taller and heftier Tamaraws hammered the Archers, 50-38 on the boards. The Archers defense held FEU to only 36% shooting from the field, missing 42 of their 66 attempts, but the Tamaraws were able to pull down 21 of those misses which they turned into 10 second chance points. The rebounding disparity also gave FEU additional possessions which allowed them 11 more attempts.

Last year’s MVP RR Garcia waxed hot the entire game, hitting 3pointers from all angles to finish with 30 points. Aldrech Ramos showed the fruits of his stint with the Smart Gilas national team, scoring 12 points even as he and Noundou combined to pull down 24 rebounds.

The Archers had a good start in the first quarter behind the active work in the paint of Arnold Van Opstal and Jovet Mendoza who together scored 9 out of the Archers’ first 14 points. Aggressive defending and sharp passing allowed the Archers to take a 20-13 lead at the end of the first quarter.

However, FEU increased the pace of the game in the second quarter and turned up their physical defense, causing some confusion in the Archer ranks and resulting in poor movement, faulty shot making, and turnovers. The Archers managed only 5 points even as FEU scored 18, fuelled by 7 fastbreak points, to take the lead at the half, 25-31.

The 3rd quarter saw more of the same, with FEU’s guards lighting it up from afar to help FEU score 22 points in the quarter. Even though the Tams were able to widen the gap to 13, 40-53 at the end of the 3rd, the Archers never gave up. They continued to attack, and were able to get to the foul line, but flubbed most of their attempts in the quarter.

The Archers finally regained their bearings in the 4th to score 28 in the quarter. Jovet, undersized compared to the FEU bigs, manfully battled in the paint to score in the paint, and got to the foul line 13 times, missing only once.

Trailing 47-60, Papot Paredes scored on a give-and-go with Sam, then Yutien scored 4 consecutive points in an unusual sequence: he made the first of two foul shots, missed the second, but rebounded his miss and scored on the put-back, was fouled, and sank the and-1 to make it 53-60.

That triggered the furious finish. After an exchange of free throws, Simon nailed a trey, which was answered by 4 FEU fts. Yutien scored under, 59-64 with 1:50 to go, but Garcia was fouled by Jovet, and Garcia sank the fts, 59-66 time down to 1:40. Jovet was fouled, made both, 61-66, then the Archers clamped down on defense to force a 24-second violation. Sam missed on a drive, but LA Revilla scored on a step-back triple, 63-66, 27 seconds to go, Romeo scored on a couple of foul shots, Yutien scored under, Garcia was fouled again and made both gift shots, 65-70, then Sam connected on his only field goal – a triple to come tantalizingly close at 68-70, time down to 10 seconds. A desperation foul sent Romeo to the line, he made the first, missed the second which was rebounded by Noundou who was fouled and made both fts for the final score, 68-73.

The Archers played well in stretches but seemed flustered at first when the game turned physical. The bigger Tams bodied up on our players inside, muscled their way into good rebounding positions, and were able to get more than their share of rebounds. The Archers adjusted late in the game, perhaps too late, but their rally just ran out of time.

With the margin only 5 points, one can’t help but rue the missed free throws (again!!!). The Archers aggressively got to the foul line and were rewarded with 32 attempts, but they missed 11 for 66%. Again, if they had made half of those misses, the game might have gone into overtime, or we could have won outright.

And so the Archers can now settle down to prepare in earnest for the UAAP. They have one month to work out the remaining kinks in their game, develop that much-needed consistency and internal fortitude, and learn how to buck a physical opponent.

The Archers have shown significant improvement in the quality of their play, in their offense, and the pressure defense still can make an impact. However, all these gains could easily be negated by their poor performance from the foul line. In the one month left before the start of the UAAP, this is the one area that can stand much improvement.

Box scores:

FEU 73 – Garcia 30, Ramos 12, Noundou 8, Romeo 8, Cawaling 6, Cruz 5, Bringas 2, Exciminiano 1, Knuttel 1, Tolomia 0, Escoto 0

DLSU 68 – Mendoza 22, Revilla 7, Van Opstal 7, Paredes 7, Atkins 6, Andrada 6, Marata 4, Vosotros 4, de la Paz 2, Sara 2, Villanueva 1, Tampus 0, Gotladera 0

Quarter scoring: 13-20, 31-25, 53-40, 73-68

 

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FREE THROWS! Around how many free throws should each player practice per day?? I'd say at least 500, realistically.

We should not discount the possibility that our FT woes might be caused by something psychological, a sort of mental block. The coaching staff should address both, the technical as well as the psychological issues on why we are missing too many FTs!

i remember in one of my posts last year regarding our teams' horrendous free throw shooting that the team should consider hiring lim eng beng as free throw consultant. those of us who know lim eng beng or are familiar with him, let's start this clamor to have the coaching staff bring him into the team.

FREE THROWS! FREE THROWS! FREE THROWS!

I like how this article ended - "The Archers have shown significant improvement in the quality of play, in their offense and pressure defense... However, all these gains could easily be negated by their poor performance from the foul line" Our goal is always to go for the win. But if we lose, the next best thing is to use this to learn what it is we lack and get better. Obviously, we are horrible in our freethrows so we clearly need to do something about it. It will be difficult to beat ADMU Adm and FEU if we dont hit at least a 60% of our foul shots. We also lack offensive consistency. In the last two games we averaged just 66+ points and we just won the game against Ateneo because we were able to shackle them on defense. In the game against FEU we should expect that our nightmare press can force a couple of turnovers (about 3 - 4 in the 1st half) but ultimately with the athletic pair of Romeo and RR they can negate it a little bit so we'll have to live with that. But we had a spell of inneffective shooting in the 2nd and third quarter so I guess we missed both Spyder's scoring and Norbert's with also his ability to defend the middle. RR got hot and he was making forced three point baskets (in one occasion the three he took was just to bait Luigi for a foul but it went in anyway) but hey, a loss is a loss. But Im very positive with this team. This is way better than last year with the promising frontline of Norbert and AVO and a more confident Marata, Vosotros and a more mature LA Revilla. Animo.

Remember King Archer Lim Eng Beng? He made a living off making those foul shots. And he was so good at foul baiting. I was still at La Salle when he played for the varsity team. Aside from the fact that he was gifted with talent, he worked hard in practice on his foul shooting as well as on his outside shots. I always saw him practicing on his individual skills by himself outside of team practice. He would shoot 100 shots on his free throws each time, first from rest and then after jogging, would shoot another 100 shots. He would not stop practicing until he was satisfied with his foul throw shooting and his confidence back. I wish our coaches would ask our players to spend more time on their foul shots during and outside team practice. I wish too that players on their own would take the cue from what Lim Eng Beng did. Developing one's confidence and skill will only come through hard work and practice. Perhaps, the school should get Lim Eng Beng as shooting coach with marching orders to develop each player's foul shooting skills. And perhaps, the school should get one of its faculty from the psychology department to handle motivational and confidence building programs.

I totally agree with Jimmy as Lim Eng Beng truly was a master in foul shooting. I was there when he played and he would stay in court until he gets it right. That is why during the game, it is a given he will make the foul shots. Beng is a true La Sallian Hall of Famer and I believe if he is asked to help the team, he will do it. Coaches should know by now, the urgency that is needed to make this team win and compete. WE REALLY SHOULD GET BENG AS SHOOTING COACH.

can i also suggest renren ritualo? not only can he teach them basic shooting mechanics but also on how to be a great winner having been the star of the FOUR-PEAT championship teams