Tempo

‘Boss’ Danding, sports godfather, passes away

- By JONAS TERRADO

The local sports community on Wednesday mourned the loss of San Miguel Corporatio­n Chairman and CEO Eduardo “Danding” Cojuangco, who passed away at the age of 85.

The PBA was among the organizati­ons and sports personalit­ies that paid tribute to Cojuangco, who outside of his role in business and politics was active as a sports patron.

“Thank you for your countless contributi­on to the PBA and Philippine sports! Our prayers and condolence­s to his family and loved ones,” the PBA said in a tweet Wednesday morning.

Under Cojuangco, San Miguel was one of the companies that broke away from the MICAA to form the PBA in 1975. The company currently has three teams in the profession­al league — the San Miguel Beermen, Barangay Ginebra and Magnolia Hotshots Pambansang Manok.

SMC also owned the Coca-Cola Tigers from their inception in 2002 when the food and infrastruc­ture conglomera­te held a majority stake of Coca-Cola Bottlers Philippine­s.

SMC relinquish­ed ownership of the PBA franchise as part of the subsidiary’s sale to the Atlantabas­ed Coca-Cola Company in 2006.

Cojuangco, however, is famously known for bankrollin­g the national team program in the 1980s under the Northern Consolidat­ed banner.

Appointed basketball godfather by President Ferdinand Marcos, Cojuangco tapped the services of American coach Ron Jacobs to run the NCC program with aim of bringing Philippine basketball back to respectabi­lity.

A er hiring eight Americans as naturalize­d players, subsequent­ly resulting in winning the 1981 William Jones Cup in Taiwan, the NCC eventually settled on Dennis Still, Jeff Moore and Chip Engelland as naturalize­d players while recruiting amateur standouts like Samboy Lim, Allan Caidic and Hector Calma.

Calma was part of the national squad that beat China for the 1982 ABC Youth Championsh­ip played before a packed crowd at the Araneta Coliseum.

The NCC squad went on to capture the 1984 Asian Interclub and the 1985 Jones Cup and PBA Reinforced Conference as a guest teambefore­winningthe­prestigiou­s ABC Championsh­ip that same year in Kuala Lumpur. The program became inactive a er Cojuangco went into exile following the EDSA People Power Revolution.

Former PBA Commission­er and Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas Executive Director Noli Eala and current NorthPort owner and 1Pacman party list representa­tive Mikee Romero cited the NCC program as a blueprint for their national team programs they formed in the past.

“His NCC concept was my inspiratio­n for the Gilas program,” said Eala, who launched the first Gilas team in 2009 with a group of collegiate stars and coached by Serbian Rajko Toroman under a long-term program that ended in 2011.

“Danding Cojuangco’s contributi­ons to Philippine Basketball history can be described in one word ‘phenomenal.’ He is the real phenom of Philippine Basketball,” said Romero, who bankrolled the Philippine team that won the gold in the 2007 Nakhon Ratchasima Southeast Asian Games.

“First, he taught all of us how a Philippine team should be put up, by creating the Northern Consolidat­ed bannered Philippine national team in the 80s. The creation of this national team has been the gold standard and prototype for the many Gilas teams that followed suit. I myself copied this formula in 2007 by putting up the Harbour Centre Philippine team which won gold in the 2007 SEA Games,” he added.

Cojuangco made his way back in 2012 as benefactor of the La Salle basketball program, which underwent hardships a er winning the UAAP crown five years earlier.

The Green Archers would win the UAAP title in 2013, overcoming a 3-4 record in the first round behind coach Juno Sauler and star forward Jeron Teng to beat the University of Santo Tomas Growling Tigers in three games.

 ??  ?? EDUARDO ‘Danding’ Cojuangco Jr.
EDUARDO ‘Danding’ Cojuangco Jr.
 ??  ?? DANDING Cojuangco
DANDING Cojuangco

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