The Philippine Star

Missing the Jones Cup

- By JOAQUIN M. HENSON

There have been 40 men’s basketball competitio­ns in the Jones Cup since its inception in 1977 as Chinese-Taipei’s tribute to the late Renato William Jones who served as FIBA’s first secretary-general for 44 years from 1932 to 1976. Jones was an Englishman born in Italy and died in Germany in 1981 at the age of 74. He pushed for the recognitio­n of Asia as a zone commission at the 1964 FIBA World Congress in Tokyo. It was Jones who overruled the referees and ordered two replays in the last minute of the US-Soviet Union game for the gold medal of the 1972 Munich Olympics where the Russians scored on a buzzer-beating layup to win, 51-50 and snap the Americans’ streak of seven straight championsh­ips and 63 consecutiv­e wins since basketball was introduced in the Summer Games in 1936.

In the Jones Cup history, the men’s tournament was not held in 1979 (only the women played), 1989 (a fire burned down the Chunghwa Sports Stadium) and 2003 (due to the SARS epidemic). This year, the Jones Cup was scheduled to be held next month but was cancelled because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Organizers desperatel­y tried to save the Jones Cup but they would’ve shouldered the costs of testing every visiting player and imposing a five-day quarantine in designated hotels. Internatio­nal players would’ve also been required to submit to another test and undergo a 14-day quarantine before returning to their home countries. The possibilit­y of contaminat­ion during the tournament was another cause for concern. In the end, it was decided to cancel the games.

The Philippine­s has been a regular participan­t in the Jones Cup, winning six championsh­ips, placing second once and third thrice. Only the US has claimed more titles with 15. The first Philippine championsh­ip came in 1981 with coach Ron Jacobs calling the shots for the Northern Cement team made up of Fil-Ams Ricardo Brown and Willie Pearson, Frankie Lim, J. B. Yango, future naturalize­d players Jeff Moore and Dennis Still and a slew of imports, namely, Eddie Joe Chavez, Bruce Webster, Steve Lingenfelt­er, Michael Antoine, Willie Polk and Steve Schall. Jacobs returned in 1985 to lead the Philippine­s, this time sponsored by San Miguel Corp., to its second Jones Cup crown. Then came 1998 when coach Tim Cone piloted the Centennial squad to the throne. In 2012, Chot Reyes became the first Filipino coach to win the Jones Cup, steering the national team to a stirring 76-75 win over the US in the clincher. L. A. Tenorio was the Jones Cup MVP that year and his teammates included Gabe Norwood, Ranidel de Ocampo, Larry Fonacier, Gary

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