Philippine Daily Inquirer

Kings no more

Magnolia ends Ginebra’s strangleho­ld of Governors’ Cup behind Travis’ 50 points

- By Musong R. Castillo @musongINQ

ANTIPOLO— A series this beautiful deserves a rubber match—unless you asked Romeo Travis and the Magnolia Hotshots.

Getting a bad break in the end and looking dead in the water inside the final two minutes on Friday night, the Hotshots put together a mighty stand in the clutch and closed out a classic best-of-five Final Four series against Barangay Ginebra with a 112-108 victory in the PBA Governors’ Cup at a loud Ynares Center here.

After failing to lead his team to a sweep of the Gin Kings on Wednesday, a hobbling Travis chalked up a career-high 50 points, including the biggest three-point play of the night that gave the Hotshots the lead for good ,108-106, heading into the final 44.1 seconds.

Travis was held down to a career-low 12 points in Game 3, but, with a determined stand Friday that pushed Magnolia to its second Finals stint this season, made a strong case for the Best Import award against either Mike Harris of Alaska or Allen Durham of Meralco.

The 3-1 series win meant that Ginebra got dethroned af- ter ruling the season-closing conference for the last two seasons, and it truly signals the arrival of the Hotshots as a perennial force. Magnolia was the losing finalist to San Miguel Beer in this season’s Philippine Cup.

Magnolia will face the winner of the Alaska-Meralco series, which the Aces lead and will try to wrap up Saturday at Cuneta Astrodome in Pasay.

“It was all heart, adrenaline,” Travis, LeBron James’ close buddy, told a televised interview just after the final buzzer when asked how he willed himself through a feared hamstring injury. “I don’t want to play a Game 5, I wouldn’t have been able to play a Game 5 the way my leg hurt.”

Travis will get a lot of time to recuperate with the conference to take a break after the AlaskaMera­lco series to give way to the Philippine­s’ participat­ion in the Fiba World Cup Qualifying series that ends on Dec. 3.

After taking a 106-101 lead with 1:44 left courtesy of two Justin Brownlee free throws off Paul Lee, the Kings went scoreless for 1:30.

Ginebra was ahead by two when it caught a key break going into the final two minutes. Brownlee slapped a Lee layup that had already kissed glass, but no goaltendin­g violation was called. Instead, a technical was whistled on coach Chito Victolero, who complained forcefully about the non-call.

LA Tenorio made the free throw and then a Lee error led to two more Brownlee free throws for that five-point hole that the Hotshots had 144 seconds to climb out of.

Incidental­ly, the Hotshots will be shooting to win the Governors’ Cup for the first time since 2014, when they completed a Grand Slam with now Ginebra coach Tim Cone.

 ?? —AUGUST DELA CRUZ ?? Barangay Ginebra’s Scottie Thompson loses control of the leather after a foul by Magnolia’s Mark Barroca. The Hotshots ousted the Gin Kings in their semifinal series.
—AUGUST DELA CRUZ Barangay Ginebra’s Scottie Thompson loses control of the leather after a foul by Magnolia’s Mark Barroca. The Hotshots ousted the Gin Kings in their semifinal series.

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