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Deep roster propels Harbour to a 'Five-Peat
By Jonas Terrado (June 5, 2008)
It's been a week since Harbour Centre
captured an unprecendented fifth consecutive championship
with a 3-1 series conquest of Hapee Toothpaste in the
2008 PBL Lipovitan Amino Sports Cup.
The series marked an overwhelming showing
by the Batang Pier to puncture the hopes of the Complete
Protectors to seek revenge from their huge collapse
in the V-Go Extreme Energy Drink Cup finals.
Save for its Game 1 meltdown, Harbour
was in cruise control throughout the best-of-five showdown,
making quick adjustments, hitting key shots, and showing
tremendous defense against the top guns of Hapee such
as Gabe Norwood, Mark Borboran, and Larry Rodriguez.
'It was really an all-out team effort
to get this championship,' said head coach Jorge Gallent
during the team's victory party celebration. 'They made
a consciousness of not making the same mistakes as in
Game 1.'
And of course, the forefront of the team's
attack was Jason Castro. The league and finals Most
Valuable Player plugged it as his swansong, making drives
to the hoop with ease and swiping every Hapee ballhandler
in a cinch.
Castro's 19-point, 5.3-rebound, and 49-percent
shooting averages earned him the nod as the best player
of the finals series. But the 5-9 guard isn't alone
as Harbour had the luxury of having not just one, two,
or three players stepping up in each of the four games.
Pivotal Player winner Jeff Chan embarked
on an 11-point average, including a shooting statistic
of 46 percent from the floor. The former Far Eastern
University sniper complimented the offense with his
outside shooting, and like in Game 2, provided some
defense in the third quarter to even up the series.
Another significant contributor was Jonathan
Fernandez, another gunner who had made decent contributions
in Game 2 and 3. The NU standout shot 42 percent from
three-point region and helped seal a 2-1 edge with a
nine-point fourth quarter performance for a 90-78 win.
Regular starting point guard TY Tang
may have a dismal performance in the series, but Boyet
Bautista resurfaced in two of the four games.
The diminutive guard from Letran College,
a former understudy of Hapee head coach Louie Alas,
Bautista took advantage of his starting role in Game
2, pouring 13 points on four triples and then in Game
4, when Harbour virtually sealed the title in the first
half, he made a last minute show with 16 points, all
in the second half.
Other solid contributors for the team
were another Game 3 hero Beau Belga, short-work efforts
of Edwin Asoro, and Al Vergara, who sparked the team
with six points in the second quarter of the title-clinching
Game 4 to pull away.
The vast lineup of head coach Jorge Gallent
has made it a luxury for the team to have a bunch of
players to join in Castro's fray, and also to make it
miserable for opponents to make adjustments.
In the rich history of the league, the
Batang Pier joins the likes of superpowers Tanduay Rhum
and Welcoat Paints, two clubs who had combined for 12
titles, as the team with at least five titles. Like
its predecessors, its team was filled with a group of
stars and decent role players to built it as a strong
title contender.
But, with several of the team's core
expected to move on to the pros, and with Castro moving
to Australia, it will be a hard task for the team to
come up with a lineup that could bolster another strong
run to the finals.
'It's going to be like the fourth one,
we gonna build up from stratch,' said Gallent, who will
likely to tap the services of the likes of Rico Maierhofer,
Joferson Gonzales, and Benedict Fernandez for next season.
'We have to recruit the same way in order to keep up
with the level of competition.'
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