Showing posts with label JC Intal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JC Intal. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Barako Bull on the rise

Allein Maliksi gets another shot
at superstardom
The team that gets the most number of players is usually the winner of any or all professional transactions no matter the starpower involved. You could always argue in favor of whichever team gets to bring home the former league MVP or All Star, but at day's end, four solid rotation players is still better than a star who has hit the proverbial "glass ceiling" and an under-rated, under-sized four man.

Gone are Ronald Tubid, Leo Najorda and Lester Alvarez from the Barako Bull Energy's roster and in their place are former PBA Finals MVP Jonas Villanueva, UAAP Finals MVP Jojo Duncil, college star JC Intal and PBA D-League MVP Allein Maliksi. As you can see, the letters "MVP" are spread evenly among those young thoroughbreds and that they are all young, athletic, have legit basketball skills (except maybe for Intal who has yet to find a niche in the league thus the inconsistency). Villanueva can orchestrate and, given the minutes, belongs atop the PBA's best floor generals. Duncil is a clutch jumpshooter who has the size and speed to play the two spot. Intal is crazy athletic and can get streaky from time to time. Then there's the other guy, Maliksi-- who is making a "homecoming" of sorts to the team that drafted him last season, who can pretty much hold his own against the league's premier scorers from Gary David to Mark Caguioa.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

San Mig Coffee bets the house on Mallari

More "you reach, I teach" sessions for Mallari
now that he's with James Yap
What a difference back-to-back ass-whoopings makes in the PBA huh?

In a surprising turn of events, the San Mig Coffee Mixers decided to part ways with underutilized yet very promising former PBA Finals MVP Jonas Villanueva, JC Intal and Aldrech Ramos to bring in Petron's rookie Alex Mallari, Barako Bull veteran and under-sized power forward Leo Najorda and another rookie pint-sized point guard Lester Alvarez.

See, we tried to defend this move by saying that the Mixers did it in order to stretch their rotation and become "deeper." Then we took a look at the names on the roster, the ones that they're sending away and the ones who are coming in and it didn't take too long for us to realize that that rationale wasn't going to stick. There's Villanueva, a guy who was plagued by injuries under head coach Tim Cone but showed that he knew how to run the point position to a "T" when he's healthy. Intal may have not blossomed into the elite perimeter defender/ Scottie Pippen to James Yap's Michael Jordan project that we all hoped for but the guy has tremendous hops and can move on the hard court. Then there's rookie Aldrech Ramos, a 6"7 guy who plays defense and has a nice soft touch from the perimeter.

The Good, The Bad and The Ugly

Hay salamat Panginoon at natupad
ang dasal ko na mabalik sa contender
What a day it has been for local professional basketball-- while it may not look like much, anytime you can get five teams to agree on a deal that would have ten guys changing uniforms no matter their status in the league, this "mega deal" could prove to help balance a top heavy PBA come next conference.

To summarize, here are the guys who were part of the trade and where they have landed:

Ronald Tubid: Petron Blaze Boosters
Mac Baracael: Barangay Ginebra San Miguel
Aldrech Ramos: Alaska Aces
Alex Mallari, Leo Najorda and Lester Alvarez: San Mig Coffee
JC Intal, Jonas Villanueva, Allein Maliksi and Jojo Duncil: Barako Bull Energy

Now to help keep things interesting (and give us entries to have fun with while waiting for the Commissioner's Cup to start), we will split the entries into three parts. Since San Mig Coffee and Barako Bull got the most players out of the deal, it is only just that we give those teams separate entries all to themselves.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Lito Alvarez: Hari ng Padala

With Alvarez back on board, no one's safe.
The guy managed to trade all the household names
in this picture for nothing.
Just for the sake of parity and respect, this writer won't even bother with returning Air21 Express team governor Lito Alvarez' non-basketball (read: political) interests and ventures. Let's just stick to how we fans know him: someone who'd trade his own mother if it meant making more money and getting future picks (which in turn will end up being traded, again, for money) all at the cost of his team being remotely decent.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Ginebra Plays The Blame Game


After another disappointing run,
Siot's walking on thin ice

Could the Barangay Ginebra Kings really have won their epic semifinals duel with the mighty BMeg Llamados had they chosen to keep Chris Alexander instead of the now “butt-of-all-chokes/jokes” Jackson Vroman?

Would they have advanced to the PBA Commissioner’s Cup Finals had Mark Caguioa not suffered the nasty eye socket injury he did (also at the hands of BMeg but in an earlier showdown)?

Friday, April 13, 2012

The All Star Joke


See you in the All Star Game kid
The votes have been tallied and the stars are all set to shine in the beautiful city of Laoag this May. From a basketball fan's standpoint, there's no arguing that the most popular names were sent to represent their teams, from a basketball purist's perspective, the voting system and overall selection couldn't have been any worse.

Not only did the league settle for getting the Top 5 vote-getters, but they did it regardless of the position similar to how the PBA Mythical 5 has been picked the last three-four years. Difference being, the Mythical 5 allows that whenever there's no legit dominant player in a certain position. This is the All Star Game, we want to see the best guys in their positions and not guys trying to play whatever. This could've easily been fixed had the PBA All Star voting system classified the guys per position and asked for the fans to vote and not just throw random names out there and get the most popular.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Trade talks and other things

Intal needs to recapture his UAAP MVP contender form
JC Intal (Ginebra) to BMeg
Noli Eala went on Twitter to say that this was purely BMeg head coach Tim Cone's call, who then explained his choice by saying that Intal would/ could blossom into the "Scottie Pippen" to James Yap's "Michael Jordan" much like the relationship between Powerade's Gary David and Marcio Lassiter. Our only concern is that Intal has yet to really find his niche in the PBA. As athletic as he is on the hardcourt, Intal has never been a lockdown defender AND an option to shoot with any consistency. He'll undoubtedly blossom under Cone's coaching, but not enough to displace PJ Simon as J. Yap's chief buddy come crunch time (shorter, but better scoring option).

Kerby Raymundo (BMeg), Dylan Ababou (Barako Bull) to Ginebra
When you are on the receiving end of the best players in any trade, then you're bound to be on the winning end of things. Raymundo's a proven high post player, arguably the best off the dribble among big men. Then there's Ababou, who will undoubtedly be Ginebra's key small forward for the future. While Intal had a hard time adjusting because he had to play a support role to Ginebra's stars after being "the man" in college with Ateneo, Ababou is the exact opposite. He can score and has the PBA size, but he also knows how to play without the basketball. This trade also sets up a taller Ginebra future scoring duo to probably replace The Fast and The Furious (who are in the 30s) together with UST and Barako Bull teammate Allein Maliksi. People are hyping the two rooks as the "Espana Express" this early, hopefully, Coach Siot lets them play instead of burying them on the bench (as he always does with rookies).

Ronald Tubid, Reil Cervantes (Ginebra) to Barako Bull
The Gin Kings had to let go of Tubid to appease Commissioner Chito Salud and have the trade push through. We say it's time to let Tubid go, not with Caguioa bent on reclaiming his throne as the league's best shooting guard (a title that rightfully belongs to Gary David-- for now), while Maliksi waits in the wings for his turn at glory. They also have the ever-improving John Wilson who not only has the balls to take big shots, but plays lockdown defense as well. With Barako, Tubid forms a great/ awesome First Five with Willie Miller, Danny Seigle, Dorian Pena and Mick Pennisi. As for Cervantes, he shows a lot of spunk and fight when given minutes-- he'll have them at Barako.

Omolon brings credible perimeter defense
to a soft Air21 roster (Ogie Menor is a joke)
Nelbert Omolon, Mark Isip (Meralco) to Air21
Other than Meralco assistant Boyet Fernandez, the last remnants of the old Santa Lucia Realtors' champion team have been shipped out-- for the better. At Air21, both guys are a lock to start. Omolon goes back to his natural small forward spot while Isip provides the inside toughness and maturity that Air21 frontliner Magi Sison still lacks.

Dennis Daa, Mark Canlas (Air21) to Meralco
Daa's a serviceable big, but why take on Canlas?

Hopefully, more trades go down to create an even more interesting Commissioner's Cup. There are talks that a big time, big named trade is in the offing. There's also talk that a PBA team is on the verge of folding and may be replaced by a team from the amateurs.

Oh, and yes, we all would like to see Marcus Douthit strut his stuff in the PBA once again. But why with Air21? We'd rather see him with Powerade, if only to have him play side by side with JVee Casio and Lassiter-- oh, and to help the Bataan Bomber win a title this year.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Big Doug's House

Big Doug's got the Bataan Bomber's back
Doug Kramer, the Powerade Tigers' anchor in the paint, took time to develop in the pros after being drafted 5th overall by the Air21 Express. Little did everyone know back then that the burly forward/ center would mature and become a key contributor to a struggling franchise's title hopes.

It's not that we haven't seen Kramer play this role before (as he did with the JC Intal-led Eagles), it's just that we had doubts if he was too "pogi" for the PBA's rugged style of play that will have him literally trading elbow shots to the face with the Dorian Penas, Ali Peeks, Beau Belgas, JayR Quinahans and the like.

Then he got his tooth knocked out during a rebound skirmish a few months back.

That's where his approach to the league changed from KKS' view. He fought for rebounds before, but never really bothered to dish out cheap shots and use his frame to the hilt. Not anymore. This year, he was released by the same team they just eliminated, the Rain or Shine Elasto Painters, to the Tigers. He no longer had to play   in a rotation heavy system. He was going to get a chance to shine. He also had veteran bangers to learn from- Rommel Adducul and Alex Crisano.

From the start, Kramer's role was clear: rebound, intimidate and set bruising screens for his superstar guards Bataan Bomber Gary David, Marcio Lassiter and JVee Casio. He played freely under coach Bo Perasol, allowed to take (and make) his pet 15-17 ft jumpers which made the Tigers' even more of a threat if they continue to develop their Pick and Roll play (when that happens, they'd be near impossible to guard because the P&R sucks in a lot of defenders and would open up the floor for the other two knockdown shooters on the court).

During the RoS-Powerade series, Kramer averaged 10 points and 11 rebounds in only 30 minutes of burn. Those are numbers that don't really jump at you from the get go (when compared to elite bigs in the PBA- but then again, who else is left? JayR Reyes?), but considering his place in the Tigers' offensive hierarchy- those are damn near solid.

Heading into the PBA Philippine Cup Finals, Kramer will have his work cut-out for him non-stop. The newly-unleashed Ranidel De Ocampo is wreaking havoc as the Talk 'n' Text Tropang Texters' new main man in their re-modeled offense, Kelly Williams is athletic and quick, Japeth Aguilar will have his day jumping all over the place and lastly, Ali Peek is Ali Peek.

But make no mistake about it, while all the attention will rightfully go to the Tigers' high scoring trio of Lassiter, Casio and the Bataan Bomber, Kramer is just as invaluable if they are to win their first championship under the Bo Perasol era.

PS

We're still waiting for that Kenneth Duremdes comeback. One more game. One more game.
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