The Philippine Star

WINNER-TAKE-ALL

LIONS, KNIGHTS CLASH IN GAME 3

- By JOEY VILLAR

Forget the numbers, the edge in personnel, experience, momentum or luck. In a sudden death for one of the most coveted collegiate crowns, it all boils down to heart, poise and execution.

Down one game in the best-of-three series for the 95th NCAA diadem, San Beda showed a lot of heart and controlled Game 2, blowing a huge lead but coming up with clutch baskets and key stops to hack out a 79-76 thriller over Letran before a jampacked crowd at the MOA Arena last Friday.

Letran did showcase its big fighting spirit, too, rallying from a huge deficit and taking charge down the stretch. But Bon Bon Batiller failed to deliver a potential game-winner and the championsh­ip trophy for the Knights when he missed from underneath off a spectacula­r drive-and-draw play by Jerrick Balanza.

That left the series tied at 1-1 with the deciding match, set at 4 p.m. today, also at the MOA Arena, tipped to go down the way it was in the first two games – tight, pressure-packed and unpredicta­ble.

“We got lucky and survived Game Two and we will try to make the most of this second chance given us,” said San Beda coach Boyet Fernandez, whose wards looked headed to extending their dynamic reign to a fourth straight year and a 12th crown in the last 14 seasons and a league-best 23rd overall after sweeping their way straight to the finals only to be stunned by the fired-up Knights, 65-64, in Game 1.

Truly, breaks had a hand in the Red Lions’ Game 2 escape. Torched by the streak-shooting Fran Yu bridging the last two quarters, the defending champions got some reprieve as the Letran guard suffered cramps and failed to return after a gamehigh 23-point explosion.

But neither coach surely won’t pin their title hopes on good fortune alone with Fernandez hoping to draw the best from the likes of MVP Calvin

Oftana, James Canlas, Clint Doliguez, Kemark Carino, Donald Tankoua and Damie Cuntapay and counterpar­t Bonnie Tan confident of a big fightback from the likes of Larry Muyang, Jeo Ambohot, Balanza, Yu and of course, Batiller.

“I will do everything to help my team win,” said the 23-year-old Oftana, who barreled his way and completed a crucial three-point play that shoved the Lions on top in the stretch.

Expect the Knights to likewise fight to the finish in pursuit of an 18th championsh­ip.

“We’ve moved on from what happened in Game Two and we’re now focused on winning the championsh­ip,” said Tan, whose gallant Knights also had appeared headed to sweeping their rivals in reverse after Yu rained down triples from all angles to power the team from 15 points down to a 66-59 lead in the fourth.

But the Lions showed their championsh­ip poise and didn’t panic as the Knights wobbled when it mattered most, leading to what promises to be a classic Game 3.

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