Surprise, Surprise!
In what probably counts as one of the biggest shockers so far in S73, our Green Archers upended the fancied Ateneo Blue Eagles, 66-63 yesterday at the Araneta Coliseum. After trailing by 9 with slightly less than 4 minutes left in the game, many of our supporters had given them up for lost. But in a characteristic (at least for this Archers team) show of their never-day-die attitude, the team smothered the blue-and-white offensive, holding them to a single point while pouring in 13 in an explosive burst that “shocked and awed” the Eagles into submission. At the end, Ateneo still had a faint chance to send the game into overtime, but still reeling from that 3minute burst of intense pressure, they could not execute the play drawn up by Coach Black and had to pin their hopes on their center Chua for tying 3pointers which he missed badly.
Joshua Webb finally broke out of his slump, tallying 12 points despite being tightly marked all game long, and he led a balanced scoring parade with 11 out of the 12 Archers breaking into the scoring column. Last game’s best player Maui Villanueva played a very quiet game, concentrated on the defensive end, and teamed with Andrada to tend the boards where he pulled down 5 rebounds and made the painted area an unfriendly zone for any Blue Eagle who dared venture near the ring.
Can we mention streak in the same breath as Green Archers? With the win, we broke a 2-year, 6-game losing streak, and improbably started a very modest 2-game winning skein.
What went wrong?
Not much, since we won. However, there were obvious lapses in concentration, and still some miscommunication resulting in turnovers, showing that this team still has some work to do to refine its teamwork. There were also miscues on defense, allowing Chua to get free to score on a couple of baseline plays.
What went right
The players never lost their focus or concentration. That’s impressive. There was a game plan drawn up by the coaches, as well as options (plan b, c, d, etc). The players stuck to it, never played out of control, always looked for each other, and except for a couple of botched defensive assignments, were almost always in position where they were supposed to be. Read more…