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34 seconds. Seemingly, that was how long it took for the University
of the East Red Warriors to kiss their UAAP Season 72 campaign
goodbye.
In the last 34 seconds of the
Fil Oil Flying V summer tournament’s winner-take-all championship
match, star guard James Martinez raced down court in transition
for a layup against FEU swingman JE Cawaling. When Martinez
landed he was slow to get up, and in fact had to be carried
off the court on a stretcher. UE had mounted a furious comeback
against the Tamaraws in that preseason final, and Martinez’s
layup brought UE within a basket after being down as much
as 22 points. UE eventually lost but not without giving FEU
the scare of their lives. A few days later it was finally
announced: James Martinez suffered an ACL injury and would
not be able to see action in Season 72. With the young hotshot
gunner out, the Red Warriors’ season seemed lost.
True enough when the UAAP rolled
around they struggled throughout the first round, barely hanging
in there at 4-3 to end the first round of eliminations. Without
the insurance provided by Martinez’s strong long range shooting,
the Warriors were finding it tough grinding it out against
the better teams. Reigning champion Ateneo De Manila overcame
a 17-point first half deficit to wallop the Warriors. FEU,
their summer tormentors, also proved steadier going into the
end-game. UST showed it could summon the winners within in
a drag out match. All three teams are now currently in solid
Final 4 positions entering the close-out phase of the eliminations.
Paul Lee was having a whale
of a time trying to get through defenses. He could still slash
and attack the basket, but without Martinez to provide the
outside threat defenses simply collapsed all around him, forcing
him to kick the ball out in awkward situations. Elmer Espiritu
and Pari Llagas had defenses build walls around them at the
low blocks. Espiritu may have improved his jumpshot but that
was clearly not his game. Rudy Linganay might have felt Martinez’s
absence the most, as he was now thrust into unfamiliar territory,
that of being the lead pointguard on a contender, and he found
himself at times forcing the action in transition trying to
do too much in the first round.
UE also had to survive two overtime
games, one against Adamson and the other against UP. They
can thank their lucky stars both of those teams have some
difficulty when it comes to closing out crucial games. Were
it not for the heads-up plays of Lee and Linganay versus the
Falcons, and then Val Acuna against the Fighting Maroons,
the Warriors could just as easily have wound up 2-5 instead
of 4-3 in Round 1.
Then the second round came around,
and UE seemed transformed. They got back at FEU with a sound
87 – 72 beat-down of the Tamaraws. They outlasted Lasalle
66 – 64 in a game whereupon the Final 4 fortunes of both teams
hinged. They nearly pulled a fast one on Ateneo, scoring furiously
in the last two minutes and a half of their Round 2 match.
Eventually however the Blue Eagles settled for the 80 – 75
squeaker.
UE was transformed in the second
round. Llagas was the top scorer against the Tamaraws (24)
and the Green Archers (22). He got plenty of help from Espiritu,
Lee and Linganay. Espiritu has been at his best going after
shots and collaring down rebounds. He might not have gone
a single game thus far without a dunk. It has been expected
that the power-leaping forward would get at least one of his
patented alley-oop dunks in any given game. More than the
highlights it has been his shotblocking that has done more
for the Red and White. He almost singlehandedly made certain
FEU and Lasalle would not be getting any shots in the dying
minutes of both victories for UE.
Lee, Linganay, Raffy Reyes,
Acuna, Lucas Tagarda and Paul Zamar have been like a hive
of hornets. They are by no means the most highly touted perimeter
in the league, but they have gotten the job done. Lee can
score from anywhere, and when he gets on a streak he is nearly
impossible to contain. Acuna has been firing mainly blanks,
but even when he misses his first eight or nine shots, it
has been the one or two that go down that save the wins for
UE. He did precisely that against UP in Round 1, and FEU in
Round 2. Reyes, Tagarda and Zamar have been pesky defenders
and sneaky rebounders, and they have been absolute pains in
transition for opposing teams. Their speed and unbelievable
springs allow them to play bigger than their actual size.
“Players win games,” said head
coach Lawrence Chongson, the league newcomer. Chongson has
had a couple of years in the PBL recently with the Lucio Tan-owned
franchises, but the UAAP is totally new to him. He has always
been a maverick of sorts, with the long hair, head band and
highlights to go with the “emo” fashions on the sidelines.
Barely any one in the UAAP wanted to take him seriously when
he was named UE head coach after Dindo Pumaren was let go.
He was not exactly a known commodity, and he wasn’t collecting
championships in the PBL. Now he is turning heads, and it
isn’t just the hair or the clothes. “We just stick to the
game plan, we practice and prepare for each game, no big secret
at all,” he explained.
In the homestretch of the eliminations
and as of this writing, the Red Warriors need just two more
victories to ensure they make the Final 4 without a hitch.
“Laban lang ng laban, importante makaabot sa Final 4, one
game at a time gaya ng sabi ni Coach,” Llagas said in one
post-game interview. At the rate they are going that does
not sound like it should be too much of a problem.
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