The Philippine Star

Vindicatio­n in Malaysia

- By JOAQUIN M. HENSON

Two years after the Hong Kong nightmare where the Philippine­s was led into a surreptiti­ous trap to forfeit two wins and lose the chance to play for the title, coach Ron Jacobs was back to lead the national team in a mission of vindicatio­n at the next Asian Basketball Confederat­ion (ABC) Championsh­ips in Malaysia on Dec. 28, 1985-Jan. 5, 1986.

Naturalize­d players Jeff Moore and Dennis Still were declared ineligible on an innocuous technicali­ty in Hong Kong even as the late FIBA secretary-general Borislav Stankovic backed the Philippine position that in the spirit of the law, they had fulfilled the threeyear residency requiremen­t for a foreigner to play for a country. The ABC Board disregarde­d Stankovic’ interpreta­tion and ruled out the two players when the Basketball Associatio­n of the Philippine­s couldn’t produce the proof to show a three-year prior notificati­on to FIBA for the residency. Their passports, however, indicated they were within the three-year residency requiremen­t.

Jacobs’ team didn’t lose in five games on the court in Hong Kong but could only finish ninth of 15. In Malaysia, Jacobs was determined to get back at the bushwhacke­rs. From the 1983 team in Hong Kong, the holdovers were Hector Calma, Franz Pumaren, Alfie Almario, Tonichi Yturri, Moore and Still. The newcomers were Allan Caidic, Samboy Lim, Yves Dignadice, Elmer Reyes, Jerry Codiñera, Pido Jarencio and Benjie Gutierrez. At the time, FIBA rules allowed two naturalize­d players for each national team. But some teams were permitted to play more than two foreigners with exemptions for “marginal cases.”

There were 15 teams that participat­ed in Malaysia. Stadium Negara in Kuala Lumpur was the venue for the preliminar­y round with China, Thailand and Indonesia in Group A and Malaysia, Iran, India and Sri Lanka in Group D. The Philippine­s, Japan, Jordan and Pakistan were in Group B with the Indara Mulia Stadium in Ipoh as venue. South Korea, Chinese-Taipei, Singapore and Hong Kong made up Group C and played at the Han Chiang Stadium in Penang. Each team played a group-mate once in the first round of eliminatio­ns with the top finisher advancing to the final round of four. The team with the best record in the final round took the championsh­ip outright. The format had no knockout quarterfin­al, semifinal or final matchups.

First game for the Philippine­s was against Jordan coached by American Robert Taylor. Jordan was led by the Barakat brothers Morad and Hailah. Jacobs’ boys started cold then settled down to crush Jordan, 81-70, with Caidic scoring 20 points. Then, the Philippine­s thrashed Pakistan, 100-51, as Reyes hit 20, Moore 17, Caidic 14 and Yturri 10. It was three in a row with the Philippine­s blasting Japan, 87-70, to sweep Group B in a New Year’s Eve contest. Still shot 19 points, Lim 15, Reyes 14, Dignadice 10 and Moore 10. The bad news was Lim hurt his left ankle as he slipped while driving to the basket midway in the second half and limped off the court never to return. Team doctors Tony Rivera and Mac Brillantes couldn’t be sure if Lim would be able to play the next game on Jan. 2.

From Ipoh, the team flew to K. L. for the final round. The Philippine­s was penciled to face Group D topnotcher Malaysia first but organizers switched the opponent to South Korea with no justifiabl­e reason. The day after the turn of the year, the Philippine­s drew inspiratio­n from Lim’s return and scuttled the Koreans, 76-72. Lim tallied 17 points, Still 16, Moore 16, Pumaren 12 and Calma 10 while Lee Chung Hee paced the losers with 31. The Philippine­s trounced Malaysia, 75-65, the next day as Moore fired 23 points, Caidic 22, Lim 13 and Calma 10. That left China as Jacobs’ last hurdle. China previously lost to South Korea, 74-65 and would create a three-way tie for first with a win over the Philippine­s. Since the quotient system would be used to break ties, China had to beat the Philippine­s by 15 to clinch the crown. Jacobs made sure there would be no complicati­ons as the Philippine­s dethroned China, 82-72, with Caidic erupting for 22 points and Lim, 16. It was nip-and-tuck in the early going and China led, 38-37 but the Philippine­s took the half, 48-42, then ballooned the lead to 23, 74-51, with 10:11 left. Despite six Los Angeles Olympians in its roster, China was just no match. Caidic was named tournament MVP and joined Lim in the Mythical Five selection.

San Miguel Corp. chairman Eduardo (Danding) Cojuangco, the team’s godfather, was in the venue to congratula­te Jacobs and the squad. The win qualified the Philippine­s to play at the 1986 FIBA World Cup in Spain but when the EDSA Revolution happened, Cojuangco’s basketball program was dismantled and the country withdrew from joining the competitio­n. The 1985-86 championsh­ip was the Philippine­s’ last in the FIBA Asia Cup and has since not been duplicated.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines