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Harbour Centre, Hapee Toothpaste, Magnolia Pure Water, Bacchus Energy
Drink, one of them will become the 2008 – 2009 PBL PG Flex
Cup champion. Among the four teams only Bacchus has not won a PBL
championship in recent memory. Harbour Centre is of course the hands-down
favorite being champion in the last five PBL tournaments. They may
no longer have the star-studded lineup of tournaments past but they
are still the best team in the league.
Head
coach Jorge Gallent still has a deep and talented roster with the
Batang Pier that has bought into his system lock, stock and barrel.
Rico Maeirhofer is arguably the most talented and productive frontline
player in the PBL outside of Jervy Cruz. Maeirhofer is among the
league leaders in both rebounds and blocks. Unlike other forwards
and centers who rely more on bulk and strength, at a long 6-foot-5
he uses his speed and springs to great effect to collar tough caroms
and reach after shots.
Reed Juntilla, the star-crossed 6-foot-1
Cebu recruit, spreads the floor with his incredible perimeter shooting.
Juntilla is among the league leaders from three-point range. Running
the show is 5-foot-9 FEU star pointguard Mark Barroca. Barroca may
not have the eye-popping statistics but he does have the patience
and discipline to keep his team running smoothly. Speaking of FEU,
other Tamaraws have done very well with the Batang Pier including
6-foot guard Benedict Fernandez, 6-foot-4 swingman JR Cawaling,
6-foot-5 power forward Riel Cervantes and 6-foot-6 center Aldrech
Ramos.
Veteran holdovers Jerwin Gaco and
Edwin Asoro have also been vital cogs in the Harbour Centre cause.
Both are broad-shouldered 6-foot-3 power forwards who crash the
boards, play excellent low post defense and provide much-needed
toughness to keep the opposition honest. Gaco – described
by PBL Chair and team owner Dr Mikee Romero as his “franchise
player” – is among the league leaders in field goals.
When they go up against the Lamoiyan
franchise in the semis though, the Batang Pier need to bring their
“A” game. Hapee has been bridesmaid to Harbour Centre
in the last two PBL championships and the Complete Protectors understandably
want to exact some payback. Cruz is arguably the best center in
the PBL today and is pretty familiar with Maeirhofer, Gaco, Asoro
and the FEU boys of Gallent. They saw plenty of each other in the
UAAP wars. Cruz is obviously not quite at his listed height of 6-foot-5;
he may be just a shade over 6-foot-3. He does however have large,
powerful hands, is very quick off his feet and incredibly strong
underneath. He gets all those rebounds through smart and solid positioning
and exploding into the air quickly using his underrated strength.
He will have very interesting and very exciting battles in this
series versus the highly-touted Batang Pier frontline.
Head
coach Gee Abanilla’s Complete Protectors had a hell of an
elimination campaign, getting themselves extended to a rubber match
by the Pharex Generix – a team that lost all of its games
in the first round of eliminations – in the quarterfinals.
They were the last team to complete the Final 4 cast, very uncharacteristic
for a squad that made the last two PBL Finals. Their backcourt has
been suspect in this conference, unable to compete consistently
against the other guards in the league.
5-foot-11 sentinel Chris Tiu, fresh
off a UAAP championship with Ateneo, should help remedy that situation.
He already showed how valuable he can be for Hapee as his on-court
intelligence, recognition and vision helped get the Complete Protectors
past the stubborn Generix in their do-or-die quarterfinal match.
Tiu should help keep the likes of Barroca, Fernandez and 5-foot-7
Boyet Bautista very busy. If Tiu can get 6-foot-1 Lance Convento
and 6-foot-3 Josh Vanlandingham even more involved, that will open
things up for Cruz and 6-foot-3 forward Jim Viray. Harbour Centre
better be ready because Tiu is a much better guard on and off the
ball compared to Hapee residents like 5-foot-7 Earn Saguindel and
5-foot-8 Ely Olarte.
In the other semifinal match, the
Magnolia Pure Water Wizards were mostly holding on to second spot
throughout the eliminations and are facing the unpredictable Bacchus
Energy Warriors. Magnolia last won a PBL championship in 2005 when
they still had reigning PBA most valuable player Kelly Williams,
and two-time UAAP champion and MVP award winner Arwind Santos. Head
coach Koy Banal would like to bring the glory back to the San Miguel
PBL franchise. Defense will be critical for the Wizards because
the Energy Warriors can pile up points in a hurry.
A
pair of very experienced 6-foot-5 forward-center types will lead
Magnolia: Al Magpayo, who won an NCAA championship with St Benilde,
and former PBA draft pick Neil Raneses from Cebu. Magpayo and Raneses
are practically identical not only in terms of size and position
but in playing styles. While both are natural post players who swing
between the 4 and 5 positions, they also have well-developed perimeter
shots and passing skills. So while they crash the boards and defend
the low blocks, they can also shoot all the way out to the three-point
arc and find open teammates.
Up front there is another exciting
duo of doppelganger players, a pair of multi-skilled and highly
versatile 6-foot-4 forwards in Dylan Ababou out of the Santo Tomas
Tigers, and another prized provincial recruit and one-time FEU Tamaraw
Eder Saldua. Both can play the 3 and 4 spots with equal aplomb with
their ability to put the ball down on the floor and create off the
dribble, post up at the high and low blocks, get rebounds, run in
transition and act as trap guys on defense. Saldua however is the
better defender, since Ababou is still a matador-type defender at
this stage of his career. Ababou however is a better scorer with
a middle game that is rare for players of this generation.
In the backcourt, Magnolia will lean
on the leadership of former Letran star JP Alcaraz, a 5-foot-10
pointguard who can set the table as easily as he can look for his
own score. Alcaraz will have former Ateneo pointguard 5-foot-9 Yuri
Escueta and 5-foot-7 Leomer Losentes out of St Francis of Assisi
backing him up or playing alongside him. Escueta is known for pushing
a breakneck pace at every opportunity and is a dogged defender who
picks up his guy three-quarters court. Losentes, unlike Escueta
and Alcaraz, is more along the mold of the tough guy guard who likes
to play physical in the backcourt.
Bacchus head coach Lawrence Chongson
will lean on the core of the UE Red Warriors plus some prize recruits
form the collegiate circuit and should give the Wizards the fight
of their lives. If Magnolia is trying to relive championship glory,
Bacchus is trying to get their first PBL championship. Bacchus had
a sub-.500 first round in their elimination campaign but got going
in the second round. No one quite figured them to be in the Final
4, and hopefully they will not adopt the “just happy to be
here” attitude.
Leading the Energy Warriors is 6-foot
guard Paul Lee, the tournament’s leading scorer who averaged
over 16 points per game. In the first round of eliminations, Lee
was also the leader in steals, proving to all and sundry that he
has the complete game. Lee is joined in the explosive Bacchus backcourt
by several familiar faces: 5-foot-7 guard James Martinez, 5-foot-7
pointguard Rudy Lingganay and 6-foot-2 swingman Val Acuna, all three
of whom are teammates of his over at UE.
Martinez is a dead-eye gunner with
incredible range who can string up three-pointers in a hurry. Perhaps
no other player makes use of the staggered screens with more effectiveness
than Martinez. He can shoot off the dribble, on the hand-off or
on the kick-out. Lingganay is perhaps the most underrated pointguard
in the Final 4. He does not quite have the trigger of Martinez but
his handles allow him to move around very well in setting up the
offense and to get opportunistic baskets. Acuna, who was in the
UE doghouse the last couple of UAAP seasons, has provided a lot
of scoring from the perimeter and with incursions into the lane
and at the wings. He was used very sparingly in the UAAP but has
made quite a name for himself as a very good swingman in the PBL.
Up front the UE duo of 6-foot-5 forward
Hans Thiele and 6-foot-4 center Pari Llagas are unspectacular but
effective. Thiele has great springs and has an incredible fade-away
jumper that is beyond any player’s blocking range. With his
length, leap and quickness he has gotten a lot of mileage with that
fade-away. Llagas on the other hand has been very strong off both
boards and going box to box, using his big strong body to maximum
effect in the lane. These two will have their hands full against
the talented pair of Magpayo and Raneses, but they won’t be
any slouch. Bacchus will have an X Factor up front however in 6-foot-4
power forward Orlando Daroya out of Arellano University, the hardcore
hoops circuit legend. Daroya can nail the three-pointer and drive
as easily as he can post up. A lot of PBL veterans took him for
granted and he has made them pay.
In the end however it looks like
depth and talent will win out. As big a fight as Hapee and Bacchus
can provide for their semifinal opponents, they simply cannot match
up in terms of depth of roster. Both Harbour Centre and Magnolia
simply have too many weapons and too many players who can produce.
It should be a Finals showdown between the Wizards and the Batang
Pier in the PG Flex Cup.
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