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I haven’t been away two weeks and already the San Miguel Corporation
Invitational League, este the PBA, has seen some pretty heavy trading
of star players. In the midst of it all is Magnolia, the flagship
team of the SMC brotherhood of PBA teams.
Last
week they traded pointguard LA Tenorio and swingman Larry Fonacier
to Alaska for pointguard Mike Cortez and center-forward Ken Bono.
Tenorio and Fonacier were teammates at the Ateneo De Manila and
were responsible for bringing the 2002 UAAP championship to the
Blue Eagles. Cortez is the multi-titled star guard of the mighty
La Salle Green Archers. Bono was the Season 69 UAAP Most Valuable
Player, but has seen little playing time thus far.
This
week Magnolia went on a trade binge again, sending center-forward
Enrico Villanueva to Purefoods and forward Willie Wilson to Ginebra.
In exchange they got forward-center Marc Pingris from Purefoods
and 2-guard Chester Tolomia from Welcoat. Ginebra gave up two backcourt
men: Swingman Mac Macapagal goes to Coke; guard Macky Escalona goes
to Welcoat. A couple of draft picks were also thrown into this complicated
deal and I stopped caring who would get them.
I’m not quite sure how all of this
went down, but isn’t there supposed to be a rule that prohibits
sister companies from engaging in any player trading amongst themselves
in the PBA? Oh sorry, this just in: apparently Coke is no longer
an SMC concern, so they were used as a bridge aside from Welcoat
in a labyrinthine four-team deal. I wonder if Coke will return to
the SMC group next week after the trade has settled down.
Big picture time: It looks like Villanueva
will be insurance for the Tender Juicy Giants now that Romel “The
General” Adducul has been diagnosed with some form of nasal cancer.
Adducul is not only ill but getting on in years. Although he is
still arguably the best seal-off and back down center in the PBA,
his age and illness may have gotten Purefoods thinking. Villanueva
is cut from the same cloth as Adducul but is several years younger.
Cortez was once considered the cornerstone
of the Alaska franchise. A high-energy guard who does everything
at a high level, who can score as easily as he can create scoring
opportunities for others, who sets the table and passes first, he
was seen as the new face of the Aces. With the MVP play of Willie
Miller though, perhaps Alaska thought more about winning as much
as they can with Miller and getting him complimentary players instead
of rivals for the franchise player throne.
Alaska
now gets a young pointguard who struggled during the last All Filipino
Cup and a heady swingman with a dead-eye shot and the ability to
distribute almost as well as any fulltime guard. Tenorio put up
underwhelming numbers in the All Filipino Cup as the first pointguard
off the bench to relieve super veteran Olsen Racela. Fonacier found
himself on the wrong end of a numbers game. Magnolia had Dondon
Hontiveros, Chris Calaguio and Lourdy Tugade, all of whom play
the same position as Fonacier, but are stronger, tougher and more
natural athletes. Ironically Tugade was even a one-time teammate
of Fonacier’s when both were with Red Bull. Both men will now play
alongside Miller. Tenorio will be a perfect fit for the up tempo
play Miller prefers while Fonacier will be a perfect kick-out receiver
when defenses key in on Miller.
Cortez will likely be asked to run
the offense more than Racela, although Racela will still likely
be the man at the point for the Beverage Masters in the fourth quarter.
The Cool Cat is a perfect counterpoint to the cerebral Racela, and
should provide a good change of pace should Magnolia want to run
and gun more often. Bono is still an odd man out though, as the
athletic Pingris now joins the towering Magnolia skyline of Sam
Eman, Dorian Pena and Danny Ildefonso. Bono will not be alone on
the bench though as Tolomia will likely keep him company on the
pines (see Fonacier).
Caught in the flurry were Escalona
and Macapagal, a couple of players who were playing relatively well
for Ginebra but are now thrust into teams that may or may not give
them time to develop. Escalona was Tenorio’s caddy in college, and
now joins a struggling franchise after receiving the maximum rookie
salary, a problem the supposedly cash-strapped Welcoat franchise
may not have considered. Macapagal may not make the money Escalona
does but he was arguably an effective player for the Barangay, coming
off the bench firing and being a match-up problem no defense wants
to touch. How he will fit into a Coke lineup that has seemingly
discovered a budding superstar swingman of their own in Ronjay Enrile
will be interesting to watch.
My fearless prediction is that this
is not the last of the blockbuster trades. In the next couple of
weeks expect more movement. Scuttlebutt has it that Magnolia coach
Siot Tanquincen wants to bring something Fast and Furious to his
lineup, and may move Cortez yet again plus possibly one of the three
veteran swingmen aforementioned to get his wish. And since SMC is
famous for spreading the wealth (at least among loyal lieutenants)
Ginebra coach Jong Uichico is also making a move to try and bring
some younger and healthier firepower and ceiling to his lineup.
Indeed, it seems the rich get richer.
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