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Unofficial UAAP seniors first half overall championship tally

With basketball the only sport left playing in the first half of the UAAP, the De La Salle Green Archers are snug at second place in the overall tally with 134 points.

The green and white emerged champions in women’s badminton and men’s swimming, placed second in men’s taekwondo and men’s badminton, and finished third in women’s taekwondo, women’s beach volleyball, women’s basketball, women’s swimming, and women’s table tennis.

Note that the four schools figuring in their respective men’s basketball and women’s basketball finals have two figures. Those are their projected point totals depending on their finish.

University of Santo Tomas – 151
De La Salle University-Manila – 134
Far Eastern University –  114 or 111
University of the Philippines – 112
Ateneo de Manila University – 110 or 107
University of the East – 76 or 73
Adamson University – 61 or 58
National University – 22

DLSU judo teams third and fourth in UAAP

The girls trump the boys in UAAP judo as the Lady Judokas finish third, while the men’s team came out at fourth to conclude De La Salle’s UAAP first half campaign at the Blue Eagle Gym in Ateneo on October 4.

The women’s judo team hauled two gold and three bronze medals led by first place finishes by Florence Payno (under-78kg) and Dian So (over-78kg). The lone gold medal of the Green Judokas came courtesy of Gerard Teruel (under-66kg).

The other green and white medalists are as follows: Chris San Pedro (silver, men’s under-81kg), Butch Albarracin (silver, men’s under-100kg), Nicole More (bronze, women’s under-57kg), Kristin Espinas (bronze, women’s under-70kg), Keith Ver (bronze, men’s under-60kg), Dominic Tuazon (bronze, men’s under-66kg), Jan Tejada (bronze, men’s over-100kg), and Alvin Francisco (bronze, juniors under-60kg category).

Lady Paddlers place third, Green Paddlers fifth in UAAP table tennis

De La Salle University-Manila continues its campaign as the women’s table tennis team finished in third place, while the Green Paddlers fell short in reaching the playoff round of the UAAP table tennis competition concluded on October 1 at the Blue Eagle Gym in Ateneo de Manila.

The Lady Paddlers amassed 16 match points that were good for third spot. They automatically garnered second runner up at the end of the eliminations as defending champion Far Eastern University swept the competition.

In the last day of competition, the women’s team won a crucial match against National University, 3-1, despite getting swept by the eventual champions in the morning. Mikaela Yagin, Vanesa Ng, and Kim Medina all won their respective singles bouts against the Lady Bulldogs to wrap up their season.

Meanwhile, the men’s side lost a close one to University of the Philippines, 2-3, foiling its chance to play in the final four.

They were tied with University of the East at fourth with 17 match points, however UE won the tiebreaker after emerging 3-0 in their second round pairing. The Taft-based Paddlers won their first round encounter, 3-2.

Other results the Green Paddlers had on that day were a 3-0 assault against NU and a 0-3 shellacking from defending champion University of Santo Tomas.

Finally, De La Salle Zobel lost all its matches to end up seventh in the juniors division.

Archers reach new low, fall below .500 again

The De La Salle Green Archers suffered a rare debacle, succumbing to Ateneo de Manila University, 65-81, on August 16 for the Archers’ third straight loss in UAAP men’s basketball at the Araneta Coliseum.

Besides going 0-3 dating back to last Sunday, this is also the first three-game losing streak of the green and white squad in the Franz Pumaren era. Add to that the fact that the Green Archers are 0-6 against its nemesis the past two UAAP seasons.

Unlike the first encounter, the Eagles started strong, erecting a double-digit lead going into the half. By the time 20 game minutes elapsed, they were ahead, 44-27.

Rabeh Al-Hussaini asserted his might, scoring 14 of his game-high 26 points during that time. The lead became 21, 59-38, from an Al-Hussaini fastbreak finish started by an Eric Salamat steal, 5:16 in the third quarter.

The farthest it got was 23, 73-50, from a Al-Hussaini bucket. The reigning MVP shot 12/20 from the field and also had three rebounds, two assists, and three blocks.

He was helped out by partner Eric Salamat, who had 11 markers on 4/8 field goal shooting and eight assists. Nico Salva had ten.

Three DLSU cagers scored in double figures, led by Peejay Barua’s 16 points. He was followed by Joshua Webb with 13 markers, while Maui Villanueva came up with ten.

De La Salle suffers second two-game skid

The De La Salle Green Archers had one of those “WTF happened” games and succumbed to Adamson University, 55-61, on August 13 to start the second round of UAAP men’s basketball action at the Araneta Coliseum.

The Archers never recovered after AdU uncorked a 15-0 run in the first quarter, which set the tone for the rest of the slow-paced contest. Alex Nuyles gave the Soaring Falcons the largest margin, 46-30, with a reverse layup, 2:54 in the third quarter.

The nails in the coffin were two straight three-pointers by Lester Alvarez against two taller defenders and Leo Canuday as he fell down in front of the Adamson bench for a 58-42 tally, 4:26 remaining in the game.

The Green Archers tried their best to start a comeback rally but the shots were rattling out for a season low 22% two-point field goal percentage. To the credit of the Falcons, they also played a punishing physical defense.

This is the second straight two-game losing streak by the young green and white this season for an even 4-4 win-loss record. This is also the first victory of the San Marcelino-based squad against DLSU since in nearly five years to improve its standing to 2-6.

Leading in the early part of the first period, De La Salle suddenly went blank to finish the first quarter trailing, 9-20. The Taft-based squad shot only 25% in the first half.

Jan Colina led all scorers with 14 points, going 6/6 from the freethrow stripe, and five rebounds. Nuyles also had ten.

James Mangahas was the lone double figure scorer for the Archers with 12 along with seven boards. Peejay Barua went 3/4 from beyond the arc for nine markers.

Joel Tolentino had seven points, while Bader Malabes finished with seven on 1/10 field goal shooting. Malabes also collared four caroms.

Boxscores:

Adamson 61 – Colina 14, Nuyles 10, Canuday 9, Alvarez 8, Camson 6, Margallo 5, Lozada 5, Galinato 2, Cañada 2, Penalosa 0, Cabrera 0, Basilio 0.

De La Salle 55 – Mangahas 12, Barua 9, Tolentino 7, Malabes 7, Atkins 5, Co 4, Webb 3, Marata 3, Mendoza 2, Bringas 2, Andrada 1, Villanueva 0, Ferdinand 0, Bagatsing 0.

Quarters: 20-9, 30-23, 48-34, 61-55.

Win streak ends at four

The De La Salle Green Archers went toe to toe for 40 minutes against the defending champions until fatigue set in overtime as Ateneo de Manila won, 76-72, on August 9 to end the first round of UAAP men’s basketball eliminations at the Araneta Coliseum.

After Arvie Bringas and Hyram Bagatsing scored consecutive three-pointers in the final 20 seconds of regulation to send the game into extra time, the Archers tried to salvage the game in which they led by as many as ten early in the third period. Alas, their attempts from beyond the arc went wild and wooly as Nico Salva sealed the outcome with a bucket, :14.7 to go, for the final tally.

Nevertheless, the saving grace of this game is that the rookie laden squad held their ground against the more mature Blue Eagles.

Joshua Webb went crazy to end up with 17 points in the first half, finishing with 26. This is the highest output of any Archer so far this season.

Bringas also had ten.

Rabeh Al-Hussaini limped out with 13 points with Eric Salamat producing the same along with five assists and three steals.

Jovet Mendoza made himself known, scoring six straight points to end the first quarter. In the second, it was the heady plays of Yutien Andrada at the defensive end that went noticed, blocking Al-Hussaini twice and Salamat once.

But all that time, it was Webb who was carrying the scoring load for the green and white, relentlessly attacking the Ateneo interior defense, scoring nine of the 14 Archer points in the second canto.

Bringas started the second half with a turn around basket for the game’s first double figure lead, 42-32. The last time it reached ten was from two Webb charities, 46-36, 7:02 remaining.

As the green and white went ‘three-ger’ happy, the Blue Eagles gradually crept themselves back into the game, capped by a Ryan Buenafe buzzer beater to end the third, with the Archers cautiously ahead, 50-46.

A 14-3 run by ADMU shifted the momentum to the blue side as it tasted the lead for the first time since the first quarter, 60-57, courtesy of a two-man play between Salva and Salamat leading to a Salamat trey, 3:36 in the clock.

A Salva followup and a Salamat split from the freethrow line for a four-point Ateneo lead, 65-61, with :23.5 to go set the tone for the comeback. Coming from a timeout, Bringas hoisted a cold-hearted three from Bagatsing’s inbounds pass from a straddle, exactly three ticks elapsing.

After Buenafe made his freebies from a Mendoza duty foul, Bagatsing faked Austria off his socks for a leaning three-pointer from near the top of the key, :0.8. Bringas almost won it but his attempt hit rim and bounced out as time expired.

The second round begins on Thursday for the Archers as they battle Adamson University at 2pm. As a sidenote, the whole team had yellow shoe laces to pay tribute to the late President Corazon Aquino.

Archers claw UST in double OT, win fourth straight

From boys to men.

The De La Salle Green Archers grew right in front of our eyes, scratching out a double overtime victory against University of Santo Tomas, 101-92, on August 2 at the Araneta Coliseum for their fourth consecutive victory in UAAP men’s basketball.

Peejay Barua scored his only points in the two overtime periods, his first three sending the game into another extension and his other three starting it. However, rookie Arvie Bringas showed the stuff he was made of, scoring 13 of his game-high 21 points from the fourth quarter and beyond.

”They forgot a player named Peejay Barua,” Archers head coach Franz Pumaren said. “This is the breakout game of Arvie Bringas.”

Bringas shot 7/10 from the field including a three-pointer to end the third period along with eight rebounds. James Mangahas missed a double-double with 18 points and nine boards.

Other double digit scorers include Kish Co with 13 points and seven caroms, Joshua Webb with ten on 4/4 two-point field goal shooting, and Bader Malabes with ten, five rebounds and seven assists.

Also registering seven feeds is Hyram Bagatsing while inputting nine points, three rebounds, and two steals.

“There was no need to panic. We were able to hang tough,” Pumaren said on the Archers’ surge after a slow start in the season. “We did not run away from what we were doing.”

The 0-2 start seems to be a distant memory with the way the Taft-based squad is racking up wins the past two weeks, now at solo third behind league leaders Ateneo de Manila University and Far Eastern University.

Dylan Ababou led six other Tigers in double figures with 19 points and 11 rebounds.

UST dropped to 3-2 along with University of the East in fourth.

“Before the game, we were talking with Br. Bernie Oca that we are going to dedicate this game (to former President Corazon Aquino),” Pumaren stated. “She has a very special place in our hearts.”

Playing in front of a sizeable crowd gave it a playoff-like flavour as the two sides went tit-for-tat until a 14-6 first half finish gave the Tigers an eight-point lead, 45-37.

One thing noticeable that Santo Tomas employed to counter the Archers’ press defense were outlet passes that most of the time were foiled and interecepted. The counterpoints was that the green and white crew were badly outrebounded in the first 20 minutes of play, 11-23.

“We were down because of our own wrongdoings,” Pumaren told his players during the halftime break. “They shot well because we allowed them.”

The España-based team found a way to beat the press and at the same time found its guns blazing as Jeric Fortuna’s triple to beat the shot clock buzzer 6:48 in the third quarter provided his squad a 16-point gap, 56-40. The highest it got was 17 from two Allein Maliksi freethrows off a Maui Villanueva personal foul, 60-43, 5:45 to go.

Maliksi’s midrange fadeaway pull up with 3:49 left assured that this is the highest output so far by any opponent this season with the score pegged at 66-50.

After Bringas ended the quarter with a rare three-pointer, he followed this up by scoring the first seven points of the Archers in the fourth to jumpstart the comeback. Bagatsing followed suit orchestrating his own 7-0 run to tie the count at 74-all, 5:52 in the clock.

With USTe holding a four-point margin going into the final minute and a half, Bringas converted a reverse layup, 1:05 to go. Co then scored on a putback off a Mangahas miss to tie the game, 82-all, :27.7 remaining.

With Ababou’s attempt falling short and Santo Tomas getting called for a 24-second shot clock violation, the Archers had exactly three seconds to devise a win in regulation but Mangahas’ jumper from the top of the key hit the front end of the rim.

De La Salle could have had more breathing space in the first extra time if not for clunked freebies. Leading by three, going into the two-minute warning, the Tigers breezed with a 6-0 run to go ahead, 90-87, :26.1, capped by Fortuna’s freethrows.

With still a chance to tie the game, Barua was sent in with a purpose. Bagatsing found him at the other end of the wing, lobbed a crosscourt pass, and the veteran sank a three-point bucket with :05.5 remaining. Barua then had another booming three off an inbounds play, nine seconds elapsed in the final extension.

UST started shooting blanks, scoring only a field goal in the last five minutes as Simon Atkins closed the door with two charities off Teng’s fifth foul, 99-92, 2:37 to go.

DLSU shot 47% from the field but was horrendous at the stripe, 25/45. Hustle board stats include 22 assists, 15 second chance points, and 26 turnover points, all in favour of De La Salle.

Boxscores

De La Salle 101 – Bringas 21, Mangahas 18, Co 13, Webb 10, Malabes 10, Villanueva 9, Bagatsing 9, Barua 6, Atkins 2, Andrada 2, Mendoza 1, Tolentino 0, Marata 0, Ferdinand 0.

Santo Tomas 92 – Ababou 19, Teng 18, Mirza 12, Camus 11, Maliksi 10, Fortuna 10, Bautista 6, Afuang 6, Mariano 0, Green 0, Aytona 0.

Quarters: 19-17, 37-45, 60-72, 82-82, 90-90, 101-92.

Blazing Report: Morial powers CSB to 3OT win over Arellano

85th NCAA Standings W L
San Sebastian 6 0
JRU 6 0
San Beda 6 1
Letran 4 3
St. Benilde 4 4
Arellano 2 4
EAC 2 5
Mapua 1 5
Perpetual 1 5
AUF 1 6

Jeff Morial made his 23rd birthday a memorable one leading College of Saint Benilde to a grueling 117-107 triple overtime victory over guest team Arellano University in the 85th NCAA basketball tournament at The Arena in San Juan City last July 31.

As a follow-up to his 32-point performance in the loss to Emilio Aguinaldo College last Monday, Morial drained 31 points while grabbing 10 rebounds to help the undermanned Blazers improve to an even 4-4 record for fifth place in the standings.

Read more…

De La Salle turns tables, notches first win


Finally.

This could be the first word uttered by every Lasallian as they sighed in relief after the Green Archers won their first game of the 2009 UAAP men’s basketball season against University of the Philippines, 73-63, on July 23 at the PhilSports Arena.

De La Salle did to the Fighting Maroons what its two previous opponents did. Joshua Webb and  Hyram Bagatsing capped a 12-2 run in the third period to give the Archers a 12-point lead, 43-31, 6:40 in the clock. This went up to 15, 62-47, midway in the fourth after they uncorked a 12-0 rally highlighted by two Bader Malabes three-point shots.

“Execution is our particular concern,” said DLSU men’s basketball head coach Franz Pumaren. “I hope this game will be our turning point.”

James Mangahas topscored for the third straight game with 15 points on 7/13 field goal shooting. This ups his average to 10.6 ppg.

“James is a classic example of a Jvee Casio (or) Mon Jose-type of leader,” explained Pumaren. “He is not vocal but his teammates respect him.”

“Last two games parang bad game sa amin,” Mangahas shared. “Minotivate kami lahat ni coach Franz, huwag magkanya-kanya. Execute lang.”

Malabes had 14 markers, shooting 50% from the field. Webb finished with 13 and five rebounds.

“We are working on our offense,” commented Webb. “It is getting better.”

Rookie Arvie Bringas provided eight boards.

“The rookies and the veterans will (have to) gel as one. We do not have that individual talent that we had (previously),” Pumaren stated. “In order for us to win, we need to work together.”

Carlo Gomez led UP with a double-double 14 points and 14 rebounds. Former Junior Archer Martin Reyes finished with 11 markers, all coming from the first half.

Alvin Padilla put up ten points, eight rebounds, and six assists.

Game Photos

Scores:
DLSU 73 – Mangahas 15, Malabes 14, Webb 13, Villanueva 8, Ferdinand 6, Bagatsing 6, Barua 4, Bringas 3, Tolentino 2, Atkins 2, Mendoza 0, Marata 0, Manguera 0, Co 0.

UP 63 – Gomez 14, Reyes 11, Padilla 10, Lopez 6, De Asis 6, Sison 4, Co 4, Reyes 4, Gamboa 2, Braganza 2, Astorga 2, Maniego 0, Hipolito 0, Juruena 0.

Quarters: 17-21, 29-25, 50-45, 73-63.

DLSU fails big again

De La Salle got routed once again, getting victimized by Far Eastern University, 51-65, on July 18 in UAAP men’s basketball at the Araneta Coliseum.

The Green Archers had spurts of brilliance but they were mere trickles as they encountered major scoring droughts throughout the match. This also marks the worst start of the team in the Franz Pumaren era.

For the second straight game, the Archers only made a quarter of their shots, making 23% from the field. This became more imminent when they found it hard to make short range attempts, botching several fastbreak tries for only three transition points.

On the upside, the De La Salle crew fought in the rebound department, grabbing 42 rebounds, winning in the offensive glass, 15 to FEU’s 13. They were also better from the stripe, going 19/25. Another consolation is that the Archers played with more desire and hustle especially in the first half.

James Mangahas led the pack with eight points, shooting 3/9 at the field, while hauling six rebounds. Another significant contributor was Bader Malabes with seven and seven.

The two spent the most time on the court, logging in 25 and 24 minutes respectively. The only other Archer who played more than 20 minutes is Hyram Bagatsing.

Although there were dry spells in the first half, the green and white squad went colder than Antarctica in the second, as they converted only five field goals in the last 17 minutes of the match.

The last two baskets in the third quarter were more than four minutes apart and there was a time when they went blank for more than three minutes as the Tamaraws went on an 8-0 rampage for a 17-point bubble, 47-30. This later bubbled to 20, 61-41, from two Ryan Roose Garcia freethrows, 3:26 in the fourth.

The common theme observed by the winning coaches on the Archers is that the team is still trying to learn the system and no one should count them out. There is no where else to go but up as they face winless University of the Philippines on July 23 at the PhilSports Arena.

A sign that it would be a long day for the Lasallian faithful was when the N. Reyes-based squad scored ten straight to start the contest with a 10-2 tally. The Archers quickly recovered to momentarily take the lead via a Sam Marata three-pointer, 16-14, 9:33 of the second.

Credit goes to their stinging pressure defense as the Far Eastern backcourt reserves got rattled from the fullcourt press.

FEU then went into a 22-8 rampage highlighted by a 12-0 run and a 10-0 rally as it enjoyed its highest lead in the first 20 minutes, 36-22.

Mark Barroca topscored with 15 points despite playing only 19 minutes due to foul trouble. Garcia had 12 markers and five boards.

Reil Cervantes came up with a double-double with 11 and 13 rebounds as JR Cawaling finished with ten points.

The Tamaraws swatted away six DLSU shots with Aldrech Ramos accounting for three. They also only had 13 turnovers, while scoring 12 fastbreak points.

Game Photos

Boxscores:

Far Eastern 65 – Barroca 15, Garcia 12, Cervantes 11, Cawaling 10, Ramos 8, Noundou 4, Tanuan 2, Caluag 2, Manalo 1, Vinluan 0, Sanga 0, Knuttel 0, Excimiano 0.

De La Salle 51 – Mangahas 8, Malabes 7, Marata 6, Barua 6, Bringas 5, Tolentino 4, Bagatsing 4, Atkins 4, Ferdinand 3, Webb 2, Villanueva 2, Mendoza 0, Co 0, Banal 0.

Quarters: 14-12, 36-24, 51-37, 65-51.