Monday, August 22, 2011

Ateneo outlasts UE in women's basketball



MANILA, Philippines – The Ateneo Lady Eagles conquered the University of the East Lady Warriors, 61-57, in the 2nd round of the women’s basketball tournament of UAAP Season 74 at the Araneta Coliseum last Sunday.

The Lady Eagles were led by Sarah Mercado’s double-double production of 16 points and 14 rebounds.
The game saw 11 deadlocks and 12 lead changes.

UE was unable to keep Ateneo off the boards, as the Lady Eagles dominated the rebounding category, 52-36.

Reports from: ABS-CBN News

Pumped-up Stags seek win No. 10



MANILA, Philippines - San Sebastian, buoyed up by its victory over arch rival San Beda, goes for win No. 10 as it takes on unfancied Emilio Aguinaldo today at the start of the second round elims in the 87th NCAA men’s basketball tournament at The Arena in San Juan City.

Drawing strength from the prolific duo of Ronald Pascual and Calvin Abueva, the Stags humbled the San Beda Lions in a pulsating 70-68 victory last Friday in a duel of unbeaten teams as they completed a nine-game first round sweep.
The win also snapped the defending champions’ stirring 26-game run that included a historic 18-game sweep for the crown last season.

San Sebastian coach Topex Robinson said their first round sweep was just the first half of the battle.

Gametime is at 4 p.m.

Bulldogs Chew on Hapless Maroons



MANILA, Philippines - The National University (NU) Bulldogs had one of their best games of the season, defeating the University of the Philippines (UP) Fighting Maroons, 65-43, in their 2nd round meeting of UAAP Season 74.
The Bulldogs showed improved offensive execution, with main men Bobby Ray Parks and Emmanuel Mbe both finishing in double figures.
The Maroons, meanwhile, could not get anything going on offense. They finished with only 13 first half points, their lowest output in the 1st half for the season.
The 2 teams only combined for 40 points in the 1st half, 27-13, the lowest combined output of 2 teams for Season 74.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Gilas holds alternative tune-up Games for Asian tiff



Smart Gilas Pilipinas hopes to step up its buildup for the FIBA Asia Championship with tune-up matches with Jordan here and a stint in China after it pulled out of the Doha meet due to the unavailability of the Talk n Text players.

"We really don't have an alternative for Doha," said Smart Gilas coach Rajko Toroman, referring to the four-team tournament that would have pitted the Nationals against the Lebanese, Syrians and the host Qataris.

"But we will try to play two games against Jordan in Manila and something in China," he added.

Toroman said the team needs at least five tune-up games to blend well heading into the FIBA-Asia Championship slated Sept. 15-25 in Wuhan, China which stakes a lone berth in next year’s London Olympics.

Reports from: ABS-CBN News

Petron Takes Game 7, Wins PBA Governors Cup




MANILA, Philippines - It was sweet redemption for the Petron Blaze Boosters as they defeated the Talk N Text Tropang Texters in Game 7 of the PBA Governors Cup Finals, 85-73, taking home the title by winning the series, 4 games to 3.

Arwind Santos named finals MVP.

With their victory, Petron not only won the championship, but also avenged their loss to Talk N Text in last conference's Finals. They also prevented Talk N Text from achieving a historic grand slam.

 Coach Ato Agustin became the 2nd coach to win a championship in his rookie season.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Grand Night for TnT or Petron



MANILA, Philippines - The banner 2010-11 PBA season comes to a climactic end as the Talk n Text Tropang Texters and the Petron Blaze Boosters decide who bring home the Governors Cup crown in a do-or-die setto at the Smart Araneta Coliseum today.

It's a fitting finish in a battle for no ordinary championship.

Talk n Text’s quest for grand slam and Petron Blaze's bid for revenge and redemption boil down to one final game to be tipped off at 7 p.m.

There's no more room for error; no more time to relax, and so the contending teams are only expected to give it all that they've got.

It's an ultimate match to close the classic series earlier seen as a lopsided one.

Petron, under the San Miguel Beer banner, has gone 3-2 while Talk n Text 1-2 in do-or-die (Game Seven) final matches.
The Tropang Texters fought with great resolve and kept their grand slam hopes alive with a 104-78 mighty conquest of the Boosters Friday.



Gilas Skips Doha Tourney



Smart Gilas Pilipinas will no longer participate in the four-team pocket tournament set Aug. 24-30 in Doha, Qatar as Talk N' Text players supposed to reinforce the Nationals are not available.

Reigning MVP Jimmy Alapag, Kelly Williams, Ranidel de Ocampo and, more recently, Larry Fonacier and Ryan Reyes are expected to join the Nationals in the weeklong meet but couldn’t make it because of the ongoing PBA finals where their team is playing Petron in the deciding Game 7 today.

This gives them only one rest day since Smart Gilas is leaving Tuesday.
"The Talk N' Text players can't go because they have little time to rest since their best-of-seven series would only end on Sunday (today)," said Smart Gilas coach Rajko Toroman.


The cancellation of the Doha trip, meanwhile, will allow Smart Gilas players who applied for the PBA rookie draft to attend the rookie camp starting Tuesday and the draft day itself on Aug. 28 at the Robinson’s Place Manila.
The Smart Gilas players that sent their application to the annual draft were JV Casio, Marcio Lassiter, Chris Lutz, Mark Barroca, Mac Baracael, Dylan Ababou and Jason Ballesteros, who are all potential first rounders.

Houston assistant Chris Finch will Coach the British Team in EuroBasket later this Month



After a career as a Division III All-American at Franklin & Marshall College ended in 1992, financial problems for the Globetrotters resulted in Finch joining the expansion Sheffield Sharks in England. Four years later, the head coach left and Finch, at 27, was offered the job.


"At that point," he said, "I figured my playing career wasn't going anywhere fast, so it was an opportunity to jump over to the coaching side, which is where I wanted to be, and see how far it could take me."
Finch won a championship in the British Basketball League, then moved to Germany and two different clubs in Belgium, winning another league title in the process. He was a guest summer league coach with the Dallas Mavericks when the Rockets first made contact.
"To be honest, I was surprised that they knew who I was," Finch said. "It turns out the organization is always casting a wide net looking for talent and that's how they pulled me in."
And nobody knows better already than Finch that life is a journey.

2011 NBA Preseason Schedule




The NBA yesterday released its 2011 preseason schedule, in the event that the NBA is able to reach a new collective bargaining agreement with the NBPA in a timely fashion.
The 114-game schedule tips off Sunday, Oct. 9 with five games and continues until Friday, Oct. 28, when three games wrap up the preseason. Kia Motors NBA Tip-Off '11 is scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 1. The schedule is as follows: click this.


PRESEASON SCHEDULE READY TO KICK


In a perfect, lockout-free NBA world, our first glimpse of the Mike Brown-led Los Angeles Lakers will come early this season.
The Lakers and Golden State Warriors kick off the 114-game preseason schedule on Oct. 9 at the Save Mart Center in Fresno, Calif. The complete preseason schedule was released this afternoon. The exhibition season concludes Oct. 28; the NBA’s 66th regular season tips off — or it’s supposed to, anyway — Nov. 1.
Brown’s Lakers promise to be one of the most interesting teams to watch early on, as do the new-look Warriors with their new head coach, Mark Jackson, running the show.
TNT’s preseason games include the Eastern Conference champion Miami Heat visiting the Memphis (Hang TimeGrizzlies on Oct. 20 (8 p.m. ET), and the Lakers hosting their intra-city rivals, the Los Angeles Clippers, Oct. 27 (10 p.m. ET) in a game scheduled to be played in Rabobank Arena in Bakersfield, Calif. ESPN will air a doubleheader the following night, with the Heat hosting the Washington Wizards (7 p.m. ET) followed by the NBA champion Dallas Mavericks visiting the New Orleans Hornets (9:30 p.m. ET).
Israel’s Maccabi Haifa is slated to play a friendly against the Magic in Orlando on Oct. 23. Maccabi Haifa secured a Top 16 finish in the 2010-11 FIBA EuroChallenge. It would be a return trip for Maccabi Haifa, which visited the the states for the first time during the 2010 NBA preseason, dropping a contest to the New Jersey Nets, 108-73.

Friday, August 19, 2011

All About Basketball

Basketball is a team spot in which two teams of five players try to score points by throwing or “shooting” a ball through the top of a basketball hoop while following a set of rules. Basketball is one of the world’s most popular and widely viewed sports.

Basketball was invented in December 1891 by the Canadian clergyman, educator, and physician Dr. James Naismith. Naismith introduced the game when we was an instructor at the Young Men’s Christian Association Training School (now Springfield College) in Springfield, Massachusetts. At the request of his superior, Dr. Luther H. Gulick, he organized a vigorous recreation suitable for indoor winter play. The game involved elements of American football, soccer, and hockey, and the first ball used was a soccer ball. Teams had nine players, and the goals were wooden peach baskets affixed to the walls. By 1897-1898, teams of five became standard. The game rapidly spread nationwide and to Canada and other parts of the world, played by both women and men; it also became a popular informal outdoor game. U.S. servicemen in World War II (1939-1945) popularized the sport in many other countries.

A number of U.S. colleges adopted the game between about 1893 and 1895. In 1934 the first college games were staged in New York City’s Madison Square Garden, and college basketball began to attract heightened interest. By the 1950s basketball had become a major college sport, thus paving the way for a growth of interest in professional basketball.
The first pro league, the National Basketball League, was formed in 1898 to protect players from exploitation and to promote a less rough game. This league only lasted five years before disbanding; its demise spawned a number of loosely organized leagues throughout the northeastern United States. One of the first and greatest pro teams was the Original Celtics, organized about 1915 in New York City. They played as many as 150 games a season and dominated basketball until 1936. The Harlem Globetrotters, founded in 1927, a notable exhibition team, specializes in amusing court antics and expert ball handling.

In 1949 two subsequent professional leagues, the National Basketball League (formed in 1937) and the Basketball Association of America (1946) merged to create the National Basketball Association (NBA). The Boston Celtics, led by their center Bill Russell, dominated the NBA from the late 1950s through the 1960s. By the 1960s, pro teams from coast to coast played before crowds of many millions annually. Wilt Chamberlain, a center for the Los Angeles Lakers, was another leading player during the era, and his battles with Russell were eagerly anticipated. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, also a center, came to prominence during the 1970s. Jabbar perfected his famed “sky hook” shot while playing for the Los Angeles Lakers and dominated the opposition.

The NBA suffered a drop in popularity during the late 1970s, but was resuscitated, principally through the growing popularity of its most prominent players. Larry Bird of the Boston Celtics, and Magic Johnson of the Los Angeles Lakers are credited with injecting excitement into the league in the 1980s through their superior skills and decade-long rivalry. During the late 1980s Michael Jordan of the Chicago Bulls rose to stardom and helped the Bulls dominate the NBA during the early 1990s. A new generation of basketball stars, including Shaquille O’Neal of the Orlando Magic and Larry Johnson of the Charlotte Hornets, have sustained the NBA’s growth in popularity.

In 1959 a Basketball Hall of Fame was founded in Springfield, Massachusetts. Its rosters include the names of great players, coaches, referees, and people who have contributed significantly to the development of the game.