Showing posts with label Powerade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Powerade. Show all posts

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Talk 'n' Text closes out Game 5, Pinoy Cup champs anew

In a game that featured Powerade Tigers' Gary David, KKS' Bataan Bomber, scoring 37 points and fighting tooth and nail to salvage another win, the Cinderella run has finally come to an end via a 101-110 loss to the newly-minted Philippine Cup champions (for the third straight year) the Talk 'n' Text Tropang Texters.

5x coach of the year Chot Reyes leads Texters to another title
David's "supernova" effort was matched by the now 100% healthy, Ryan Reyes who broke PBA records with 10 steals in this crucial match while also adding 20 points and 8 rebounds. The Energizer was all over the court in this one, bringing back scary images of TNT's 2011 title(s) romp when he served as the team's defensive anchor on the perimeter to complement Jimmy Alapag and Jayson Castro (who also looked to be healthy in this series after starting the conference limping).

In a game that was pretty much a "win or go home" for the Tigers, David failed to receive the usual support he draws from super rookies JVee Casio and Marcio Lassiter who looked a bit tentative and tight before waxing hot in the 4th. Lassiter, for his part, couldn't get into a steady rhythm on the floor because of foul trouble.

Then came Mr. Doug-ble-double, Doug Kramer's vanishing act. 3 points and 3 rebounds after a string of monstrous efforts in the post? Unacceptable. TNT's bigs were challenged to do better after their paltry Game 4 showing, but that doesn't excuse Kramer from doing his part for the Tigers-- being the only serviceable big. Rommel Adducul tried, but he's on his last wheels and can't be expected to outhustle TNT's Kelly Williams, Harvey Carey, Ali Peek and Ranidel de Ocampo.

People are already speculating that Kramer's abysmal performance was "fixed," but let's give the guy the benefit of a doubt. He's been the Tigers' key post player up to this point, and it's just really unfortunate that he suffered his worst outing in such a crucial game.

TNT won the game early, bent on not giving the Tigers a chance but as they've always said, the three point shot is the "great equalizer" and come 4th quarter, David and Casio were knocking them down like men on a mission.

Good thing though, that TNT kept its overall composure and didn't engage the Tigers' in an endgame shootout (as they've done the previous games) and opted to rotate the ball. Ryan Reyes' timely defensive stops, crisp passes, rebounds and nakaw fastbreak play finally broke the Tigers' will which led to Lassiter fouling out of the game.

All in all, Game 5 showed the difference between a team that has the firepower to withstand all odds going up against a team that relied heavily on 3s-- which ultimately, became it's undoing.

Nothing to be ashamed of on the Tigers' front, they over-achieved and were even able to win a game versus a powerhouse team that rallied in time-- hurdling injuries, a gun shooting incident and even an almost insurmountable 1-3 deficit against the heavy favorites going into the semis.

Larry Fonacier being named Finals MVP was well-deserved. Once coach Chot Reyes called his number in an effort to slow down Gary David (easier said than done), Fonacier rose to the occasion and was even able to hold his own and make David work-- averaging 16 points in five games.

Jimmy Alapag, Ranidel de Ocampo and Jayson Castro had their moments, but none as consistently as Fonacier who proved yet again that you just can't teach championship poise and clutch.

Congratulations to the Powerade Tigers and the Bataan Bomber for putting a great show, and to the Tropang Texters for what seems like an even bigger, better grand slam bid now that the guys are healthy.

PS

As of January 29, 2011: TNT Gilbert Lao: 5 6 PBA titles. Powerade Gary David: 0.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

No sweep, Tigers alive anew

Tigers' rallying behind Sean Anthony's hustle
The Best Player of the Conference awardee, specially when playing in the PBA Finals, is usually jinxed by the very same award that praises his efforts and serves as the goat for his team.

Well, not in tonight's Game 4 of the high scoring and super tight series between the Talk 'n' Text Tropang Texters and Powerade Tigers, and definitely not with Gary "Bataan Bomber" David who scattered 35 points behind 11/12 free throws.

There's no other way around it. The Texters lost this one behind a half-assed, "back to his Marlou Aquino tendencies" effort from Ranidel de Ocampo. The KKS proclaimed "Doctor" scored 3 points the entire game and was out-hustled on all fronts by the double-double machine Doug Kramer and ageless Rommel Adducul.

Is it time for the Texters to panic?

Hardly. They played their worst game of the series and still only lost by 3 in a tight (and tied) ball game going into the fourth. Jayson Castro could've played much closer to the basket, while more effort should be squeezed out from the likes of de Ocampo and Jarred Dillinger (who was man handling Marcio Lassiter in the last two outings).

Can the Tigers claw their way back and force a Game 7?

The way things are going and how the series is being played (guard-heavy, with superstars feeding into their own respective egos and trading 3s) don't be surprised if the Tigers force a Game 6 (a 7th game would take us by surprise and would start a maddening rally for "benta" which the league doesn't need at the moment).

Again, we wonder why Texters coach Chot Reyes hasn't decided to take control of the chaos and commotion, ask his boys to play half court basketball and pound the rock with de Ocampo, Ali Peek and even garbage man Harvey Carey. Adducul is playing quite nice, ditto with Kramer, but once those two guys are caught in foul trouble, the Tigers' title hopes are over.

And, after going berserk in Game 3 and scoring 25 (albeit in a losing cause), Sean Anthony provides the sidekick scoring punch usually reserved for Lassiter with 19. At this point, only Kelly Williams can cancel this guy's hustle out. Asking de Ocampo to guard him is a little too much for the talented Caviteno-- who owns Anthony in the paint, but shouldn't be expected to chase Hatfiel 2.0 all over the court.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Bo's to blame

Can Coach Bo get the Bataan Bomber a ring before its all over?
Much has been said about the Powerade Tigers’ unbelievable, nay, magical run to the PBA Philippine Cup Finals. Hurdling powerhouse and top seed B-Meg Llamados in two games before prevailing over the gritty, well-balanced yet youthful Rain or Shine Elasto Painters in the semifinals.

Alas, the magical ride has to stop somewhere much like it did for Cinderella when the clock struck 12.

The Tigers’ stayed true to form, sticking to what brought them to the big dance—enticing opponents to play their style in a good, old fashion shootout where their advantage in top notch scorers are highlighted and failures at the defensive end are, at the very least, minimized.

Problem is, they are doing it against a team that has no qualms about playing any style of basketball—the defending champions, Talk ‘n’ Text Tropang Texters.

Perasol has his Tigers believing in themselves and having each other’s backs on the floor—an admirable trait and commendable act for a coach. His words to the media are fixated on positives such as “believing,” “fighting” and “winnable.” But we all know the truth.

In game 3’s most crucial moments, Perasol failed to call time-outs TWICE. One right after Jimmy Alapag’s lead-getting three pointer in the dying seconds—forgotten/ forgiven only because of JVee Casio’s heroics. And the other, in overtime when the Texters were starting to pull away and his Tigers were bent on just throwing up shots and not running plays for each other.

Another mistake was Perasol entrusting Sean Anthony, who was playing out of his mind on offense (and, well, on the defensive end but to a negative slant) to try and guard a rampaging Ranidel de Ocampo (Dr. de Ocampo) in the 4th. Yes, they had the luxury of having the lead at the time, but the Texters were slowly chipping away and drawing fouls which is the biggest reason why TNT almost won in regulation.

Some of the other “what ifs” that can be taken against Perasol is his opting for trigger happy point guard Celino Cruz (who made some timely baskets in the series, to his credit, but still shoots too much and does a lot of “heat checks”) over rookie free agent Rudy Lingganay (who, just months ago, was arguably the ASEAN Basketball League’s best PG and almost got his team into the Finals).

Another one is Ricky Calimag. A sturdy power forward who has a knack for drilling in top of the key jumpers, this guy has the muscle to make things difficult for Dr. De Ocampo and more discipline than Alex Crisano (who has been sparingly used in the Finals, thank God). For Perasol’s sake, we pray that Calimag’s injured or hurt otherwise, he could’ve been a big contributor for the Tigers’ weak frontline.

When the Tigers escaped the Elasto Painters in seven games, Perasol admitted that he was coaching for his job together with his staff. That team manager JB Baylon has put them all on notice (probably because they had the best line-up possible since the Chot Reyes-Jeff Cariaso years). Right now, we don’t see Perasol receiving the boot just yet. Not with this impressive showing and system (more or less) that has been bought into by the Tigers’ and its growing number of fans.

We do pray however, the Gary David (now 34) wins a title at some point while he’s still in his prime and not a la Jun Limpot (who won it at the end of his career with Purefoods).

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

TNT 1 win away, Tigers unravel in OT

The Mighty Mouse and Dr. De Ocampo take the lead
As we watch Ranidel de Ocampo a.k.a. KKS' "The Doctor" spray paint the number "3" on the floor-level tarpaulin c/o the AKTV production team behind their 133-126 OT Game 3 win, the realization that the PBA Philippine Cup Finals is just about ready to end in Talk 'n' Text's favor is finally starting to sink in.

Not that we're counting out the Powerade Tigers, but there's just no chance in hell that TNT loses 4 games straight. Not with this team finally healthy on all fronts, not with Jimmy Alapag proving to his haters and those who doubted his MVP award because of an abysmal season ending performance that he still is the barometer for elite PGs in the land and definitely not with Ranidel de Ocampo playing like "Jun Limpot with a meaner post game and sharper elbows."

The game was there for the Tigers to take come 3rd quarter, the refs were letting them get away with a lot of heavy handed defensive tactics (seriously, keep your eyes on Gary David and you'll see him tuck, pull, grab and clinch at his man the whole game out while on the other end, fouls are sure to be called in his favor) while calling it tight against the Texters.

Come the 4th, the Tigers were still up and were playing with a lot of energy behind a great offensive showing from Sean Anthony. Problem was, whatever he put up on offense, he gave up on defense by leaking out too early (for gimmes) and not battling for rebounds (which was an oddity because he's usually in there grinding it out). As for the Texters, they finally decided to take advantage of the one truth that we all know.

Go to the Doctor and let him do his thing.

On three straight plays RDO beasted Sean Anthony with free throws to boot. This didn't give the Texters the lead outright, but it was enough to slow the game down, put the Tigers in early penalty and keep the Texters in the hunt.

The game was all but over in the Texters' favor save for that three pointer by JVee Casio which forced overtime. Why the referees didn't even bother to at least warn David for his excessive grabbing on Larry Fonacier is beyond me. This created the turnover that led to Casio's open, lean-in three to tie.

In overtime, Jayson Castro decided to take it strong to the rim. The Doctor went nuts with a three and some sweet moves in the paint before Alapag, the MVP, came in to seal the deal with crisp passes and by working the shotclock.

Credit should also go to Ryan Reyes for putting up another herculean effort, playing both on offense and defense. Fonacier also gets the nod from KKS for his brilliant play and for forcing David to work on defense as well (Fonacier wasn't settling for jumpers this time around and was trying to take David off the dribble).

Come 4th quarter, Marcio Lassiter didn't seem to have enough legs. Casio was limping from time to time and David was Nelson Asaytono-ing his way to try and salvage a win. Great effort and heart, but all for nothing.

In the end, the Texters are winning behind their superior firepower and class A coaching.

PS

Who knows, perhaps the Powerade "Gilas" Tigers (Casio-Lassiter-Charles Tiu) will consider replacing coach Bo Perasol with Rajko Toroman (who doesn't seem to be on the re-signing block with SMART Gilas/ Team MVP)?

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Outgunned and outnumbered


Who're you calling old? Alapag 34, David 3
The Powerade Tigers entered the PBA Philippine Cup Best-of-Seven Finals behind a never-say-die, run and gun philosophy that quickly captured the hearts of many. Slaying one dragon after another, it seemed as though the Cinderella-story would end with nothing less than a “happily ever after” for the Tigers, which in this case is a championship.

Two games in and their “kontrabidas” or the mighty “evil witch” (in the Tigers’ point of view of course), known in these circles as the Talk ‘n’ Text Tropang Texters, have brought the Tigers right back down to earth—and how.

In the first game, the Tigers lost but had the luxury of using star rookie guard JVee Casio’s absence as an excuse. In the second, they were simply outplayed in several instances and out-hustled in key stretches that could’ve tilted the game in their favor (and quite possibly, tied the series).

Let’s get one thing straight, we are going to be treated to a shootout. Not a grind-it-out chess match akin’ to the 90s PBA. The scores will be high and close—but only because this style of play concentrates more on the offensive rather than the defensive end.

Quickening the pace means surrendering more shot attempts for both parties, a big reason why this series looks much closer at first glance than how it really is when you break everything down.

That, plus as long as the Tigers’ have the Bataan Bomber, JVee Casio and Marcio Lassiter free to put up 10 three point attempts EACH per game, KKS says they have as good a puncher’s chance as any to steal a game or two.

Still, yesterday’s game was another display of supremacy by the Tropang Texters—effortlessly grabbing a double digit lead in the first quarter with arguably their two best players, Jayson Castro and Ranidel de Ocampo, watching from the sidelines.

Jimmy Alapag wanted to showcase how he invented the “three point shooting point guard with no conscience prototype” over the returning Casio early. Japeth Aguilar was jumping around the place with his hands up and perhaps the biggest key to the series to date, Jarred Dillinger was being a problem for Marcio Lassiter.

Dillinger, at 6”4 and 225 lbs, was creating so many match-up problems for the 6”2, 187 lbs. Lassiter that the much-heralded rookie (currently leading the ROY stats race) wasn’t his usual aggressive self on the offensive end. Defensively, Lassiter tried to stay with Castro in a cross-match, but it was obvious by the 4th quarter that he was winded from having to stay in front of the Blur and having to deal with the Daredevil.

Back to Dillinger, who was mixing it up with jumpers and slashes that the Tigers’ just didn’t have anyone to check him with. Lassiter’s to small, Sean Anthony would be too slow. The only guy who could really challenge Dillinger and cancel him out, would be Will Antonio. In 2003. When he was lighter and quicker on his feet. Not 2011.

Then came Castro, followed by Ranidel de Ocampo.

THE DOCTOR IS IN.

Dr. de Ocampo methodically dissected whatever defense the Tigers put up, and had an easy time grabbing rebounds over his opponent’s hapless frontline who didn’t put up much of an effort on that end of the floor. There’s just no one on the Tigers’ roster who can match-up with RDO. Hell, there’s no one in the league today that can match-up with RDO when he’s on his A game (closest would be Kelly Williams, who has the height, muscle and athleticism, but they’re teammates so…).

The commentators, namely Jason Webb, nailed it when he said that both teams like to “run and gun”—it’s just that, the other squad has the better tools for the job and does it behind a solid 8 to 9 man rotation. The other? Just 3 guys and a couple of solid role players.

Quinito Henson, being the detached commentator that he usually is, was suggesting, nay, practically begging the Tigers’ coaching staff to play at a slower pace (as though they could hear him). Uhm, with all due respect sir, if you ask the Tigers to slow down, you’ll pretty much force Gary David to play in tighter floorspace (which he doesn’t excel in). The Tigers would also need to have a reliable post player to make that work—and despite all his improvements, Doug Kramer isn’t exactly Rabeh Al Husaini on the block.

Oh, and that gameplay would completely undress JVee Casio as a point guard who can’t create shots (yes, KKS is debunking Ryan Gregorio’s statements that Casio is a shot creator for his teammates—he’s a solid point guard who can handle the ball and makes correct passes to teammates ala NBAers Jarret Jack, Derek Fisher, Earl Watson, Jose Calderon. He’s not a shot creator like Ricky Rubio, Steve Nash, Chris Paul, Luke Ridnour. Get it now?)

Slow or fast, the Texters are proving to be too much for the Tigers. Run and they’ll unleash Castro. Slow down and they’ll set up shop with Dr. de Ocampo and Mountain Peek. It’s not a case of “picking your poison” anymore, it’s simply, “here’s your poison, now go die.”

This is still a winnable series for the Tigers, if they can just play a little bit of defense and control the boards so they can break-out and do what they do best- run.

On a side note, that shouldn't have been a Flagrant One on de Ocampo versus Anthony. He was collaring the rebound and swinging like all grown men are supposed to do (something Chris Bosh should've done when Kevin Garnett was all over his grill in that one Toronto-Boston game years back). Anthony just got what was coming to him. No harm meant, no ill will or drama. Just the natural, brutality of the game.

Friday, January 20, 2012

The PBA Pinoy Cup Finals: Talk N Text vs Powerade

After an exciting semifinals series that could've gone either way if a basket or two were only made, we're now being treated to a rather unexpected yet enthralling Finals match-up with league powerhouse and defending champions Talk 'n' Text Tropang Texters and the "Cinderella" team, the 8th seeded Powerade Tigers.

To win, Tigers' need Lassiter to stay on the floor
Keys for the Tigers

1. Run and gun
- It's pretty obvious that the Tigers lack the legit point guard who makes scoring opportunities for his teammates. They have PGs who can handle the rock and rotate the basketball, but mostly, these guys are natural born shooters (Rudy Lingganay being the odd man out). JVee Casio and Celino Cruz need to run and keep pushing the pace to spread the floor and not let the Texters vaunted defense (which was modified halfway in the Petron series but wasn't recognized outright by most) set-up shop.

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.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Powerade continues Cinderella story, enters finals

In a semifinals match-up that the young Rain or Shine Elasto Painters never fully understood, the Powerade Tigers led by the Bataan Bomber Gary David and his Hitmen won in seven games to march onto the Philippine Cup Finals.

Balik PBA Finals na ako! 
Just when observers thought that the Elasto Painters have finally solved the Tigers' high-octane attack, they fall back into their old habits and allowed the Tigers to shoot freely-- believing in their own coach's philosophy that "shooters are bound to run out of bullets."

Apparently not.

Time and again the Elasto Painters failed to close out on several of the Tigers who survived a rare off night from  star Gary David but had plenty of help from battle-tested rookies JVee Casio and Marcio Lassiter.

And since we're on the subject, Mico Halili, you are starting to become the new Quinito Henson. No one finds "The Smurfinator" cute. Seriously man. We're all basketball geeks/ fanboys here, but a line has to be drawn somewhere.

Was drafting JVee Casio the answer to the Tigers' Cinderella run to the Finals?

Possibly.

Because when David started drawing blanks, Casio was there to pick up the slack and shoot the team back into the fight.

But the real credit should go to Marcio Lassiter.

The hard-working small forward is the sole reason why the Tigers' have made it this far, with his rare combination of lockdown, hard-nosed defense and solid offensive game. Without him, the Tigers' would've been just another trigger happy team with has-been bigs and back-up point guards at the helm.

But the Tigers isn't just about the Big 3 alone. They have solid role players, and arguably another unheralded Atenean alum in big man Doug Kramer.

The beefy center/forward is one of the biggest reasons why the Elasto Painters' guards were unable to slash into the basket at will. He also set up some Grade A sturdy screens for his guards on the other end of the floor.

Congratulations to Tigers' head coach Bo Perasol. He'll probably never be given credit for his coaching exploits, but the man has led two different teams to the Finals and stuck through thick and thin despite hellish, D-League worthy line-ups (Air21) and mish-mash rosters (Powerade).

For Rain or Shine, there's nothing but positives to be gained from this conference. The immaturity is undeniable but with that comes potential. Paul Lee may not be the best rookie in the 2011 PBA Draft, but he is the best fit for this once soul-less team. Jeffrei Chan continues to become one of the league's deadliest snipers while JayR Quinahan and Beau Belga are bound to become top-tier power forwards in the PBA (had they been taller, they'd be beastly as centers subbing for the other).

As for Gabe Norwood, well, he's like the poor man's Lamar Odom. He puts up the numbers, but not when they count. For all the talent that he has, he shies from pressure situation and settles for the easy way out.

There's no point in going around with this, Yeng Guiao was pretty much out oached the entire series except Game 6 when RoS buckled down to work and finally slowed the game down.

Can the Tigers continue their magical run and bag the Philippine Cup title?

We'll touch on that later.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Tigers' Trap

Teams be warned: Do not engage
the Bataan Bomber and his Hitmen in a shootfest
For teams wanting to imitate the Powerade Tigers' run and gun attack which has paid dividends (so far): be warned. Not all run and gun teams blitz their way to the Championship. They usually either face a disciplined team with a strong willed coach and system in place OR run themselves to the ground and shoot blanks due to fatigue.

Credit goes to the Tigers' coaching staff for minimizing their weaknesses (absence of Class A floor generals) and maximizing their strengths (shooters). JVee Casio, a point guard only by size and position but not by game, is more scorer than facilitator. And while die-hard fans would quickly point out his assists numbers from time to time, it's more of having deadeye shooters to play with instead of creating scoring opportunities.

Gary David, Kili-Kili Shot's resident Bataan Bomber, is also another player whose negatives are being taken off the spotlight in favor of the positives. We've seen games wherein he'd try to shoot his team back into the fight by putting up back to back to back three balls even when it's not going in.

Do we hear his team complaining or commentators calling him out? No.

Because the Tigers' frenetic pace allows the action to quicken therefor making you forget that just a play ago, David air balled a shot or was responsible for the violent murder of a hapless tailed wall-crawler. Ditto with Casio and even Marcio Lassiter.

Another Tigers' weakness that is being covered for by their high octane offense is their lack of overall defensive discipline.

Undisciplined teams (or those given too much free rein by coaches) often fall into the Tigers' trap of trying to outpoint the opposition and pushing the pace at an insane, Mike D'Antoni level. The Tigers of course, enjoy the upper hand in such scenarios because while the other team would settle for a quick two, they have guys who have enough credibility to hoist quick threes and live to tell about it.

This is the very same tactic used by NBA coaches such as Greg Popovich and Phil Jackson when their teams face wildcards such as the Golden State Warriors, Phoenix Suns of years passed and in some ways, the pre-2011 Dallas Mavericks.

Their teams are not caught into the allure of a high scoring game and they send out their guards to control the tempo at all times. Emphasis is placed in their post players to further grind away on the shotclock and keep possessions at a minimum.

This isn't rocket science or anything new, Jackson and Popovich didn't create this coaching scheme. So it's quite surprising that old reliables such as B-Meg's Tim Cone and now, Rain or Shine's Yeng Guiao, allows this to continue.

Had Cone been with the Llamados long enough, he'd surely have more control of his team (who probably felt that they had enough firepower to outgun the Tigers, not realizing that they had scorers instead of shooters).

Guiao? We'd be silly to think that he hasn't thought of this (RoS displayed the ball control we've been looking for the whole series in Game 6), but the way he coaches his players- by letting them loose on the floor and making themselves accountable that's the only reason why the Tigers are still in the fight and could very well be looking at their first Finals appearance under the Perasol-led RUN David-Marcio-Casio era.


Thursday, January 5, 2012

Bataan Bomber needs a sidekick

Panginoon, pakibalik po ung laro ni Lassiter para sa Game 2
Last night's PBA Pinoy Cup Semis Game 1 Powerade Tigers loss to the Rain or Shine Elastopainters further cemented what many already know: teams need more than a superstar (no matter how great) to win.

Gary David displayed yet again just how good a scorer he is (and lately, consistently as opposed to the previous years, 20 points one game, 10 the next) and just how better he is offensively than some of the overhyped, flashy guards in the league. Problem was, despite his 30 points (17 in the first half), there was nothing the Bataan Bomber (KKS will keep using this monicker until it sticks) could do to stop the balanced RoS avalanche.

This is not a knock on David, but he is and will always be a scorer. Already in his 30s, don't count on him to add a post up game or develop a drive-and-kick 5 assists per night mentality. That's not who he is, and that's not something he should bother with.

The real problem here is Marcio Lassiter's abysmal 1 for 7 shooting. The usually reliable, do-it-all Scottie Pippen to David's Michael Jordan failed to live up to the hype and probably had a case of rookie semis jitters.

Was he saving up his energy for defense? That's doubtful. Not with RoS rookie counterpart Paul Lee exploding for 25 and marksman Jeffrei Chan for 27. Jayvee Casio tried to put up a fight with 12 markers, but his lack of creativity goes beyond the 9 assists that he norms per outing (that's what playing beside sharpshooters would do for your stats, ask the Boston Celtics' Rajon Rondo who is a great player in his own right, but you'd be joking to rank him over Chris Paul and Deron Williams).

RoS' gameplan was run to perfection: let the Bataan Bomber run amock, but keep everyone else in check. On the flipside, the Tigers couldn't figure out which player they wanted to really stop to disrupt the RoS offense because of the latter's spread out, "call your own number if you're open" philosophy. Yesterday it was Larry Rodriguez. Don't be surprised if Ronnie Matias, Jervy Cruz or even Ryan Arana break free in the coming games.

Against the BMeg Llamados, they went up against a team that was a bit too overconfident and loose and enjoyed an insane shooting clip from David, Casio and Lassiter. With RoS, the Tigers will need more than just the Bataan Bomber to advance to the Pinoy Cup Finals.
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