UAAP Season 82 basketball tournaments

The UAAP Season 82 basketball tournaments were the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) basketball tournaments for the 2019–20 school year.

UAAP Season 82
All For More
Host schoolAteneo de Manila University
Men's Finals G1 G2Wins
Ateneo school colors Ateneo Blue Eagles 91 862
UST school colors UST Growling Tigers 77 790
DurationNovember 16 & 20, 2019
Arena(s)Smart Araneta Coliseum
Mall of Asia Arena
Finals MVPThirdy Ravena
Winning coachTab Baldwin (3rd title)
SemifinalistsUP school colors UP Fighting Maroons
FEU school colors FEU Tamaraws
TV network(s)ABS-CBN Sports and Action
Liga
ABS-CBN
iWant
Women's Finals G1 G2Wins
NU school colors NU Lady Bulldogs 70 662
UST school colors UST Tigresses 65 540
DurationNovember 20 & 23, 2019
Arena(s)Mall of Asia Arena
Finals MVPMonique Allison del Carmen
Winning coachPatrick Aquino (6th title)
SemifinalistsFEU school colors FEU Lady Tamaraws
Adamson school colors Adamson Lady Falcons
Boys' Finals G1 G2Wins
NU school colors NUNS Bullpups 79 872
FEU school colors FEU–D Baby Tamaraws 61 800
DurationMarch 6 & 9, 2020
Arena(s)Filoil Flying V Centre
Finals MVPCarl Tamayo
Winning coachGoldwin Monteverde (2nd title)
SemifinalistsAdamson school colors Adamson Baby Falcons
Ateneo school colors Ateneo Blue Eaglets
Girls' Finals G1 G2G3[i]Wins
Adamson school colors Adamson Lady Baby Falcons 68 791[i]
UST school colors UST Junior Tigresses 73 741[i]
DurationMarch 6 & 9, 2020
Arena(s)Filoil Flying V Centre
Winning coachEwon Arayi (Adamson) and
Aileen Grajales (UST)
< Season 81 2019–20 Season 84 >

Jensen Ilagan, the technical director of the regional ASEAN Basketball League was appointed commissioner for the season's basketball tournaments on August 6, 2019.[1]

The senior men's and women's tournaments began on September 4, 2019,[2] while the juniors' division which was sub-hosted by National University held their opening games on November 13 for the boys' tournament[3] and on January 11, 2020 for the newly formed girls' competition.[4]

The men's defending champions Ateneo Blue Eagles won all 14 elimination round games to become the only second men's basketball team to advance to the UAAP Finals outright (after UE in 2007). The remaining Final Four teams figured in the stepladder format to determine Ateneo's finals opponent. UST defeated FEU in the first round to meet UP in the second round, who are holding their first twice-to-beat advantage in the Final Four era. The Growling Tigers defeated the Fighting Maroons twice to deny UP's finals rematch against Ateneo and become the lowest-seeded basketball team in UAAP history to have competed in the championship round.

In the first #1 vs #4 UAAP Finals match-up in any of the league's events, the Blue Eagles swept the finals for a second consecutive year, being crowned undefeated champions (and the first men's basketball team in UAAP history to pose a 16–0 season win sweep record). Graduating player Thirdy Ravena became the first athlete in UAAP history to win three consecutive Finals MVP awards.

The women's defending champions NU Lady Bulldogs also won all elimination round games. In the stepladder, FEU outlasted Adamson in the first round, to meet #2 seeded UST in the next round. UST needed its twice-to-beat advantage to eliminate the Lady Tamaraws from contention. The Tigresses fell short against the NU Lady Bulldogs, who were without their best player Jack Animam, who was injured. The Lady Bulldogs won their sixth consecutive title, all undefeated seasons.

The juniors' division introduced a girls' tournament, a demonstration sport. The boys' defending champions, the NSNU Bullpups, finished the elimination round undefeated. Last year's finalist, the Ateneo Blue Eaglets, were defeated by the Adamson Baby Falcons in the first round of the stepladder. FEU arranged a Finals match-up with the Bullpups after beating the Baby Falcons in the second round. The Bullpups finished the season undefeated though, winning both Finals games.

The inaugural girls' tournament featured four teams, with the top 2 teams qualifying for the Finals. The Adamson Lady Baby Falcons finished the elimination round undefeated, while the UST Junior Tigresses fended off the DLSZ Lady Junior Archers in their last elimination round game to qualify for the Finals. The two teams split the first two Finals games, with the second game held behind closed doors due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The UAAP then canceled the tournament, declaring both teams co-champions.

Teams edit

All eight member universities of the UAAP fielded teams in all two divisions. Only four high schools fielded in teams for the inaugural girls' basketball tournament.

University Men's team Women's team High school Boys' team Girls' team
Adamson University (AdU) Soaring Falcons Lady Falcons Adamson University (AdU) Baby Falcons Lady Baby Falcons
Ateneo de Manila University (AdMU) Blue Eagles Lady Eagles Ateneo de Manila University (AdMU) Blue Eaglets Lady Eaglets
De La Salle University (DLSU) Green Archers Lady Archers De La Salle Santiago Zobel School (DLSZ) Junior Archers Lady Junior Archers
Far Eastern University (FEU) Tamaraws Lady Tamaraws Far Eastern University Diliman (FEU-D) Baby Tamaraws No team
National University (NU) Bulldogs Lady Bulldogs Nazareth School (NSNU) Bullpups No team
University of the East (UE) Red Warriors Lady Warriors University of the East (UE) Junior Warriors No team
University of the Philippines Diliman (UP) Fighting Maroons Fighting Maroons University of the Philippines Integrated School (UPIS) Junior Maroons No team
University of Santo Tomas (UST) Growling Tigers Tigresses University of Santo Tomas (UST) Tiger Cubs Tigress Cubs

Coaches edit

The UE Red Warriors' Lawrence Chongson and the De La Salle Green Archers' Jermaine Byrd were both recognized by the UAAP as active consultants of their respective teams. Gian Nazario who had been listed by La Salle as their coach clarified that the school is yet to make an announcement regarding Byrd's official appointment.[5] Bong Tan, who had replaced Joe Silva as coach explained the unique setup in their team. With Chongson as consultant, he is able to trust him and take a backseat during games.[6]

Tan died on November 11, 2019. It was reported that he had collapsed while playing in a basketball game in Mandaluyong.[7]

University Men's coach Women's coach Boys' coach Girls' coach
Adamson University (AdU) Franz Pumaren Ewon Arayi Mike Fermin Ewon Arayi[8]
Ateneo de Manila University (AdMU) Tab Baldwin Katrina Quimpo Reggie Varilla Ron Camara[9]
De La Salle University (DLSU) Gian Nazario[10] Pocholo Villanueva Boris Aldeguer Ginny Velarde[9]
Far Eastern University (FEU) Olsen Racela Bert Flores Michael Oliver No team
National University (NU)
  • Nazareth School (NSNU)
Jamike Jarin Patrick Aquino Goldwin Monteverde No team
University of the East (UE) Bong Tan[11] Aileen Lebornio Estong Ballesteros No team
University of the Philippines Diliman (UP)
  • University of the Philippines Integrated School (UPIS)
Bo Perasol Paul Ramos Paolo Mendoza No team
University of Santo Tomas (UST) Aldin Ayo Haydee Ong Bonnie Garcia Aileen Grajales[12]

Coaching changes edit

Team Outgoing coach Manner of departure Date Replaced by Date
De La Salle Green Archers Louie Gonzales Fired December 14, 2018[13] Gian Nazario May 5, 2019[10]
UE Junior Warriors Florence Conlu Resigned May 23, 2019 Anton Brodett May 23, 2019[14]
Ateneo Lady Eagles Anthony John Flores Katrina Quimpo [15]
UP Lady Maroons Kenneth Marius Raval Paul John Ramos [16]
UE Red Warriors Joe Silva Resigned September 3, 2019 Bong Tan September 3, 2019[11]
UE Junior Warriors Anton Brodett Resigned October 16, 2019[17] Estong Ballesteros October 21, 2019[18]

Venues edit

The Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay and the Smart Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City are the primary venues for the men's tournament, and the venues for the Finals series for the women's tournament. The Ynares Center in Antipolo is an alternative venue for the men's tournament. The Quadricentennial Pavilion in UST Manila and the Blue Eagle Gym in Quezon City are the alternate and main venue for the women's and boys' tournaments, respectively.

The girls tournament is held at the Paco Arena in Manila.[12]

Men's tournament edit

Elimination round edit

Team standings edit

Pos Team W L PCT GB Qualification
1   Ateneo Blue Eagles (H) 14 0 1.000 Advance to the Finals[a]
2   UP Fighting Maroons 9 5 .643 5 Twice-to-beat in stepladder round 2
3   FEU Tamaraws 8 6 .571[b] 6 Proceed to stepladder round 1
4   UST Growling Tigers 8 6 .571[b] 6
5   De La Salle Green Archers 7 7 .500 7
6   Adamson Soaring Falcons 4 10 .286[c] 10
7   UE Red Warriors 4 10 .286[c] 10
8   NU Bulldogs 2 12 .143 12
Source: ABS-CBN Sports
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) if tied for #2 or #4, one-game playoff; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head point differential; 5) overall point differential
(H) Hosts
Notes:
  1. ^ As Ateneo won all of their elimination round games, the stepladder format was used instead of the regular Final Four format.
  2. ^ a b Head-to-head record: FEU 1–1 UST (FEU +6)
  3. ^ a b Head-to-head record: Adamson 1–1 UE (Adamson +5)

Match-up results edit

 Round 1Round 2
Team ╲ Game1234567891011121314
  Adamson              
  Ateneo              
  La Salle              
  FEU              
  NU              
  UE              
  UP              
  UST              
Source: [citation needed]
  = Win;   = OT win;   = Loss;   = OT loss

Scores edit

Results on top and to the right of the dashes are for first-round games; those to the bottom and to the left of it are second-round games.

Teams AdU ADMU DLSU FEU NU UE UP UST
Adamson Soaring Falcons 52–70 61–68 71–83 84–83* 91–80 82–83* 78–71
Ateneo Blue Eagles 80–74 81–69 63–46 71–50 85–68 89–63 71–70
De La Salle Green Archers 89–63 69–77 55–66 83–82 88–89 71–72 92–77
FEU Tamaraws 63–60 55–65 81–60 39–61 81–65 55–61 74–82
NU Bulldogs 53–72 51–88 61–85 85–79* 72–78 79–80 74–87*
UE Red Warriors 80–74 50–84 59–65 58–82 79–77 56–62 82–95
UP Fighting Maroons 81–77 64–86 71–68 79–82* 80–77 78–75 69–85
UST Growling Tigers 80–74 52–66 79–80 58–72 88–76 101–73 84–78
Source: ABS-CBN Sports
Legend: Blue = left column team win; Red = top row team win.
Matches with lighter background shading were decided after overtime.

Bracket edit

Stepladder round 1
(Single-elimination)
Stepladder round 2
(No. 2 has twice-to-beat advantage)
Finals
(Best-of-three series)
1  Ateneo9186
2  UP69654  UST7779
3  FEU714  UST8968
4  UST81

Stepladder semifinals edit

(3) FEU vs. (4) UST edit

This is a single-elimination game. FEU sustains the current longest playoffs streak, appearing in all playoffs since 2013. For UST, this is their first playoffs appearance since their 2015 runner-up finish.

November 6
4:00 p.m.PHT
FEU Tamaraws   71–81   UST Growling Tigers
Scoring by quarter: 16–26, 12–28, 28–16, 15–11
Pts: Ken Tuffin 20
Rebs: Patrick Tchuente 11
Asts: Ljay Gonzales 9
Pts: Soulémane Chabi Yo 25
Rebs: Soulémane Chabi Yo 11
Asts: Mark Nonoy 7
UST advances to the stepladder round 2
Smart Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City
Referees: Nestor Sambrano, Mollie de Luna, Aaron Cañete

UST led by 26 at halftime. Ken Tuffin led an FEU scoring run in the third quarter that cut the lead to 10. Rhenz Abando and Renzo Subido scored back-to-back three-pointers to end the third quarter with UST up by 14. FEU then again had 9–0 run to cut the lead to five, but Subido and Soulemane Chabi Yo scored eight points together to put the Tigers up for good. Tuffin and Xyrus Torres cut the lead 78–71 but that was the closest the Tamaraws can get.[19]

(2) UP vs. (4) UST edit

The UP Fighting Maroons have a twice-to-beat advantage. This is UP's second consecutive playoffs appearance, and the first time they have the twice-to-beat advantage.

November 10
4:00 p.m.PHT
UP Fighting Maroons   69–89   UST Growling Tigers
Scoring by quarter: 13–19, 11–22, 23–19, 22–29
Pts: Juan Gómez de Liaño 20
Rebs: Bright Akhuetie 18
Asts: Ricci Rivero 5
Pts: Abando, Chabi Yo 17, each
Rebs: Soulémane Chabi Yo 15
Asts: Renzo Subido 12
Smart Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City
Attendance: 17,722
Referees: Ricor Buaron, Julius Medillo, John Lester Celeste
November 13
4:00 p.m.PHT
UP Fighting Maroons   65–68   UST Growling Tigers
Scoring by quarter: 6–18, 22–11, 16–20, 21–19
Pts: Bright Akhuetie 16
Rebs: Bright Akhuetie 17
Asts: Bright Akhuetie 4
Pts: Soulémane Chabi Yo 22
Rebs: Soulémane Chabi Yo 16
Asts: Mark Nonoy 6
UST wins series in two games
Mall of Asia Arena, Pasay
Attendance: 18,548
Referees: Edgar Orpilla, Mollie de Luna, Aaron Cañete

UST, which has never lost to UP this season, led 19–13 in the first quarter, with Renzo Subido and Rhenz Abando converting multiple three-pointers. Abando and CJ Cansino scored for the Tigers in the second quarter, to extend the lead to 18. Trailing at halftime 41–24, Juan Gomez de Liaño scored seven consecutive points to cut the lead to 12, but he injured his ankle, and the Tigers had another run to lead 52–33. Bright Akhuetie and the return of Gomez de Liaño cut the deficit to 11, but UST closed out the quarter scoring on each of its possessions to lead 60–47. UP cut the lead again to 11, but Sherwin Concepcion and Mark Nonoy made back-to-back three pointers to put UST up for good, extending the series to a deciding Game 2.[20]

UST started the deciding Game 2 the same way Game 1 started, making a double-digit lead, and limiting UP to just 6 points after the first quarter. The Fighting Maroons outscored the Tigers in the second quarter though to cut the lead to one point at halftime. In the fourth quarter, UP led for the first time in the series, off a Gomez de Liaño jump-shot, and extended the lead further off a Jun Manzo lay-up. Akhuetie then suffered from cramps, that led to Manzo fouling a UST player to stop the clock; it was his fifth and he was disqualified from the game. UP led by four just after the two-minute warning off a Kobe Paras slam dunk, but Abando scored on a fast-break to cut the lead to a single possession. Ricci Rivero missed on a lay-up for UP, Renzo Subido made a three-pointer to give UST the lead for good, and the Tigers advance to the Finals.[21]

Finals edit

This is a best-of-three playoff. This is Ateneo's fourth consecutive Finals appearance, and their first after winning all elimination round games. This is UST's first Finals appearance since their 2015 runner-up finish vs. FEU.

November 16
4:00 p.m.PHT
Ateneo Blue Eagles   91–77   UST Growling Tigers
Scoring by quarter: 32–17, 22–22, 22–19, 15–19
Pts: Thirdy Ravena 32
Rebs: Angelo Kouame 12
Asts: Matt Nieto 6
Pts: Mark Nonoy 26
Rebs: CJ Cansino 13
Asts: CJ Cansino 6
Smart Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City
Attendance: 19,176
Referees: Michael Tolentino, Mollie de Luna, Julius Medillo
November 20
4:00 p.m.PHT
Ateneo Blue Eagles   86–79   UST Growling Tigers
Scoring by quarter: 31–18, 11–14, 25–30, 19–17
Pts: Thirdy Ravena 17
Rebs: Angelo Kouame 8
Asts: Ravena , Ma. Nieto 5 each
Pts: Rhenz Abando 16
Rebs: Soulémane Chabi Yo 19
Asts: Nonoy, Subido 5 each
Ateneo wins series, 2–0
Mall of Asia Arena, Pasay
Attendance: 20,198
Referees: Ricor Buaron, Jaime Rivano, Aaron Cañete

Ateneo started Game 1 on an 18–2 run and never looked back to take a wire-to-wire victory. A UST scoring run led by Mark Nonoy cut the lead to two in the second quarter, but that's the closest the Tigers could get as Ateneo had its own 13–1 to end the first half. Ateneo increased its lead to 23 in the third quarter, and Nonoy's back-to-back three-pointers in the fourth period were canceled out by Angelo Kouame and Matt Nieto's baskets. Thirdy Ravena scored a season-high 32 points, Kouame had 18 points and 12 rebounds, and SJ Belangel scored 12 for Ateneo, who shot 52.05% from the field as a team.[22]

Awards edit

 UAAP Season 82 men's basketball champions 
 
Ateneo Blue Eagles
11th title, third consecutive title
  • Most Valuable Player: Soulémane Chabi Yo (UST Growling Tigers)
  • Rookie of the Year: Mark Nonoy (UST Growling Tigers)
  • Mythical Team:
    • Soulémane Chabi Yo (UST Growling Tigers)
    • Justine Baltazar (De La Salle Green Archers)
    • Jamie Malonzo (De La Salle Green Archers)
    • Kobe Paras (UP Fighting Maroons)
    • Rey Suerte (UE Red Warriors)
  • PSBankable Player of the Season: Thirdy Ravena (Ateneo Blue Eagles)[23]
  • AXA Know You Can Player of the Season: William Navarro (Ateneo Blue Eagles)

Players of the Week edit

Week ending Player Team Ref.
September 8 Rhenz Abando   UST Growling Tigers [24]
September 15 Rey Suerte   UE Red Warriors [25]
September 22 Kobe Paras   UP Fighting Maroons [26]
September 29 Ange Kouame   Ateneo Blue Eagles [27]
October 6 Justine Baltazar   De La Salle Green Archers [28]
October 20 CJ Cansino   UST Growling Tigers [29]
October 27 Jun Manzo   UP Fighting Maroons [30]
November 3 SJ Belangel   Ateneo Blue Eagles [31]

Statistics edit

Players' statistical points edit

# Player Team Total
1   Soulémane Chabi Yo   UST Growling Tigers 76.00
2   Angelo Kouame   Ateneo Blue Eagles 72.93
3   Adama Diakhite   UE Red Warriors 70.54
4   Bright Akhuetie   UP Fighting Maroons 67.21
5   Justine Baltazar   De La Salle Green Archers 64.00

Season player highs edit

Statistic Player Team Average
Points   Alex Diakhite   UE Red Warriors 17.62
Rebounds   Soulémane Chabi Yo   UST Growling Tigers 14.71
Assists   Jun Manzo   UP Fighting Maroons 4.29
Steals   Bright Akhuetie   UP Fighting Maroons 1.57
Blocks   Angelo Kouame   Ateneo Blue Eagles 3.86

Game player highs edit

Statistic Player Team Total Opponent
Points   Jamie Malonzo   De La Salle Green Archers 34   Adamson Soaring Falcons
Rebounds   Justine Baltazar   De La Salle Green Archers 25   NU Bulldogs
Assists   Jerom Lastimosa   Adamson Soaring Falcons 9   NU Bulldogs
Steals   Kobe Paras   UP Fighting Maroons 6   FEU Tamaraws
Blocks   Angelo Kouame   Ateneo Blue Eagles 7   NU Bulldogs
  UP Fighting Maroons

Game team highs edit

Statistic Team Total Opponent
Points   UST Growling Tigers 101   UE Red Warriors
Rebounds   De La Salle Green Archers 66   NU Bulldogs
Assists   Ateneo Blue Eagles 26   NU Bulldogs
Steals   UP Fighting Maroons 13   FEU Tamaraws
Blocks   Ateneo Blue Eagles 11   UE Red Warriors

Season team highs edit

Statistic Team Average
Points   UST Growling Tigers 79.21
Rebounds   De La Salle Green Archers 51.29
Assists   Ateneo Blue Eagles 16.93
Steals   UP Fighting Maroons 7.07
Blocks   Ateneo Blue Eagles 7.14

Broadcast notes edit

ABS-CBN Sports is the last broadcaster of the UAAP Season 82 Men's Basketball games to aired on S+A and Liga the network was a 20 years of UAAP games. However, their contract with the network's sports division expired and leaved in jeopardy, due to the issue of legislative franchise renewal and the denial of the franchise, which leads to the sports division's dissolution following their retrenchment on August 31, 2020. As of October 21, 2020, the league chose Cignal TV/One Sports as a new partner to air the UAAP games next season.


Game Play-by-play Analyst Courtside Reporters
Semis R1 Nikko Ramos Mikee Reyes Makyla Chavez and Mariz Domingo
Semis R2, Game 1 Mico Halili Marco Benitez Makyla Chavez and Yani Mayo
Semis R2, Game 2 Boom Gonzalez Christian Luanzon Makyla Chavez and Yani Mayo
Finals, Game 1 Mico Halili Ronnie Magsanoc Frannie Reyes and Makyla Chavez
Finals, Game 2 Nikko Ramos Christian Luanzon Frannie Reyes and Makyla Chavez

Women's tournament edit

The NU Lady Bulldogs won their 96th straight match when they annexed their sixth straight championship on November 23, 2019.[32]

The UST Growling Tigresses ended a 13-year finals drought when they defeated the FEU Lady Tamaraws in the second round of the stepladder semifinals on November 16. UST has been eliminated in the semifinals for two years in Seasons 80 and 81, and were defeated in the fourth-seed playoff the previous year. The Tigresses last qualified for the finals in Season 69, under coach Peque Tan and league MVP Marichu Bacaro, when coach Haydee Ong was still handling Ateneo.[33]

The UP Lady Maroons ended their 38-game losing streak when they defeated University of the East in the second round of eliminations on October 12, 2019. Graduating player Pat Pesquera's three-point attempt from the halfcourt line went in before the buzzer sounded for a 55–52 lead, effectively avoiding an overtime period.[34]

Elimination round edit

Team standings edit

Pos Team W L PCT GB Qualification
1   NU Lady Bulldogs 14 0 1.000 Advance to the Finals[a]
2   UST Tigresses 11 3 .786 3 Twice-to-beat in stepladder round 2
3   Adamson Lady Falcons 9 5 .643 5 Proceed to stepladder round 1
4   FEU Lady Tamaraws 8 6 .571 6
5   De La Salle Lady Archers 7 7 .500 7
6   Ateneo Lady Eagles (H) 5 9 .357 9
7   UP Fighting Maroons 1 13 .071[b] 13
8   UE Lady Warriors 1 13 .071[b] 13
Source: ABS-CBN Sports
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) if tied for #2 or #4, one-game playoff; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head point differential; 5) overall point differential
(H) Hosts
Notes:
  1. ^ As NU won all of their elimination round games, the stepladder format was used instead of the regular Final Four format.
  2. ^ a b Head-to-head record: UP 1–1 UE (UP +1)

Match-up results edit

 Round 1Round 2
Team ╲ Game1234567891011121314
  Adamson              
  Ateneo              
  La Salle              
  FEU              
  NU              
  UE              
  UP              
  UST              
Source: [citation needed]
  = Win;   = OT win;   = Loss;   = OT loss

Scores edit

Results on top and to the right of the dashes are for first-round games; those to the bottom and to the left of it are second-round games.

Teams AdU ADMU DLSU FEU NU UE UP UST
Adamson Lady Falcons 68–58 46–63 67–73 78–99 82–57 100–74 88–86
Ateneo Lady Eagles 60–65 92–90 64–79 51–78 74–65 76–62 73–91
La Salle Lady Archers 86–87 62–53 66–67 58–112 91–58 78–47 47–76
FEU Lady Tamaraws 59–61 71–66 47–63 60–80 70–59 73–67 55–56
NU Lady Bulldogs 75–56 76–59 98–44 75–62 109–54 105–53 90–48
UE Lady Warriors 56–66 70–81* 57–64 41–64 62–80 68–66 49–58
UP Fighting Maroons 50–83 46–62 49–73 46–76 33–109 55–52 48–103
UST Tigresses 57–53 68–66 71–49 71–67 70–74 65–26 72–40
Source: ABS-CBN Sports
Legend: Blue = left column team win; Red = top row team win.
Matches with lighter background shading were decided after overtime.

Bracket edit

Stepladder round 1
(Single-elimination)
Stepladder round 2
(No. 2 has twice-to-beat advantage)
Finals
(Best-of-three series)
1  NU7066
2  UST46762  UST6554
3  Adamson734  FEU4865
4  FEU79

Stepladder semifinals edit

(3) Adamson vs. (4) FEU edit

This is a single-elimination game.

November 10
12:00 p.m.PHT
Adamson Lady Falcons   73–79   FEU Lady Tamaraws
Scoring by quarter: 12–21, 17–19, 22–17, 22–22
Pts: Nat Prado 34
Rebs: Nat Prado 10
Asts: Mamaril, Quiapo, 6 each
Pts: Val Mamaril 22
Rebs: Clare Castro 17
Asts: Kat Araja 6
FEU advances to the stepladder round 2
Smart Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City
Referees: Edgar Orpilla, Jaime Rivano, Jesus Borras


(2) UST vs. (4) FEU edit

The UST Growling Tigresses have a twice-to-beat advantage.

November 13
12:00 p.m.PHT
UST Tigresses   46–48   FEU Lady Tamaraws
Scoring by quarter: 19–15, 11–11, 9–9, 7–13
Pts: Ruby Portillo 12
Rebs: Grace Irebu 12
Asts: Ruby Portillo 5
Pts: Fatima Quiapo 18
Rebs: Clare Castro 15
Asts: Choy Bahuyan 2


November 16
12:00 p.m.PHT
UST Tigresses   76–65   FEU Lady Tamaraws
Scoring by quarter: 14–11, 29–10, 16–24, 17–20
Pts: Grace Irebu 28
Rebs: Grace Irebu 14
Asts: Shen Callangan 6
Pts: Valerie Mamaril 23
Rebs: Princess Jumuad 11
Asts: Fatima Quiapo 5
UST wins series in two games

Finals edit

This is a best-of-three playoff.

November 20
12:00 p.m.PHT
NU Lady Bulldogs   70–65   UST Tigresses
Scoring by quarter: 21–22, 20–16, 16–15, 13–12
Pts: Rhena Itesi 17
Rebs: Rhena Itesi 13
Asts: Monique del Carmen 6
Pts: Grace Irebu 17
Rebs: Grace Irebu 18
Asts: 3 players, 3
November 23
12:00 p.m.PHT
NU Lady Bulldogs   66–54   UST Tigresses
Scoring by quarter: 25–8, 11–15, 10–13, 20–18
Pts: Del Carmen, Pingol 15 each
Rebs: Mikka Cache 10
Asts: Monique del Carmen 4
Pts: Reynalyn Ferrer 16
Rebs: Grace Irebu 10
Asts: Ruby Portillo 3
NU wins series, 2–0
  • Finals Most Valuable Player: Monique Allison del Carmen (NU Lady Bulldogs)

Awards edit

 UAAP Season 82 women's basketball champions 
 
NU Lady Bulldogs
Sixth title, sixth consecutive title
  • Most Valuable Player: Grace Irebu (UST Tigresses)
  • Rookie of the Year: Kent Pastrana (De La Salle Lady Archers)
  • Mythical Team:
    • Grace Irebu (UST Tigresses)
    • Nathalia Prado (Adamson Lady Falcons)
    • Jack Animam (NU Lady Bulldogs)
    • Clare Castro (FEU Lady Tamaraws)
    • Kent Pastrana (De La Salle Lady Archers)

Players of the Week edit

Week ending Player Team Ref.
October 13 Pat Pesquera   UP Fighting Maroons [35]
October 20 Mar Prado   Adamson Soaring Falcons [29]

Statistics edit

Players' statistical points edit

# Player Team Total
1   Grace Irebu   UST Tigresses 90.00
2   Mar Prado   Adamson Lady Falcons 86.00
3   Jack Animam   NU Lady Bulldogs 78.57
4   Rhena Itesi   NU Lady Bulldogs 67.07
5   Clare Castro   FEU Lady Tamaraws 66.64

Season player highs edit

Statistic Player Team Average
Points   Mar Prado   Adamson Lady Falcons 23.14
Rebounds   Grace Irebu   UST Tigresses 15.14
Assists   Jearzy Ganade   UE Lady Warriors 5.93
Steals   Mar Prado   Adamson Lady Falcons 3.43
Blocks   Clare Castro   FEU Lady Tamaraws 3.36

Game player highs edit

Statistic Player Team Total Opponent
Points   Mar Prado   Adamson Lady Falcons 40   UP Lady Maroons
Rebounds   Grace Irebu   UST Tigresses 25   Ateneo Lady Eagles
Assists   Jearzy Ganade   UE Lady Warriors 12   UP Lady Maroons
Steals   Tacky Tacatac   UST Tigresses 9   UP Lady Maroons
Blocks   Clare Castro   FEU Lady Tamaraws 8   UP Lady Maroons

Game team highs edit

Statistic Team Total Opponent
Points   NU Lady Bulldogs 112   De La Salle Lady Archers
Rebounds   UST Tigresses
  NU Lady Bulldogs
68   Ateneo Lady Eagles
  UP Lady Maroons
Assists   NU Lady Bulldogs 34   De La Salle Lady Archers
Steals   NU Lady Bulldogs 32   UP Lady Maroons
Blocks   FEU Lady Tamaraws 9   UP Lady Maroons

Season team highs edit

Statistic Team Average
Points   NU Lady Bulldogs 90.14
Rebounds   NU Lady Bulldogs 54
Assists   NU Lady Bulldogs 22.93
Steals   Adamson Lady Falcons 13.29
Blocks   FEU Lady Tamaraws 4.07

Boys' tournament edit

Elimination round edit

Team standings edit

Pos Team W L PCT GB Qualification
1   NUNS Bullpups 14 0 1.000 Advance to the Finals[a]
2   FEU–D Baby Tamaraws 12 2 .857 2 Twice-to-beat in stepladder round 2
3   Ateneo Blue Eaglets (H) 8 6 .571[b] 6 Proceed to stepladder round 1
4   Adamson Baby Falcons 8 6 .571[b] 6
5   UST Tiger Cubs 7 7 .500 7
6   UE Junior Warriors 3 11 .214[c] 11
7   DLSZ Junior Archers 3 11 .214[c] 11
8   UPIS Junior Maroons 1 13 .071 13
Source: ABS-CBN Sports
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) if tied for #2 or #4, one-game playoff; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head point differential; 5) overall point differential
(H) Hosts
Notes:
  1. ^ As NSNU won all of their elimination round games, the stepladder format was used instead of the regular Final Four format.
  2. ^ a b Head-to-head record: Ateneo 1–1 Adamson (Ateneo +5)
  3. ^ a b Head-to-head record: UE 1–1 DLSZ (UE +12)

Match-up results edit

 Round 1Round 2
Team ╲ Game1234567891011121314
  Adamson              
  Ateneo              
  DLSZ              
  FEU–D              
  NSNU              
  UE              
  UPIS              
  UST              
Source: [citation needed]
  = Win;   = OT win;   = Loss;   = OT loss

Scores edit

Results on top and to the right of the dashes are for first-round games; those to the bottom and to the left of it are second-round games.

Teams AdU ADMU DLSZ FEU NSNU UE UPIS UST
Adamson Baby Falcons 61–69 89–57 81–89 60–82 72–65 95–71 69–62
Ateneo Blue Eaglets 76–79 81–78 75–82 71–102 80–81 99–70 85–81*
De La Salle Junior Archers 81–89* 52–79 63–80 57–86 75–74 84–72 65–68
FEU Baby Tamaraws 67–59 67–57 65–46 49–64 74–45 67–56 80–73
NSNU Bullpups 94–79 81–78 100–76 80–73 82–60 115–56 89–77
UE Junior Warriors 68–124 54–78 81–68 46–70 60–124 77–70 76–86
UPIS Junior Maroons 70–81 84–104 81–94 66–115 76–113 86–81 59–102
UST Tiger Cubs 88–80 74–79 95–87 73–81 66–77 90–63 87–63
Source: ABS-CBN Sports
Legend: Blue = left column team win; Red = top row team win.
Matches with lighter background shading were decided after overtime.

Bracket edit

Stepladder round 1
(Single-elimination)
Stepladder round 2
(No. 2 has twice-to-beat advantage)
Finals
(Best-of-three series)
1  NU7987
2  FEU782  FEU6180
3  Ateneo754  Adamson65
4  Adamson84

Stepladder semifinals edit

(3) Ateneo vs. (4) Adamson edit

This is a single-elimination game.

February 12 (12-02)
3:00 p.m.PHT
Ateneo Blue Eaglets   75–84   Adamson Baby Falcons
Scoring by quarter: 22–8, 9–21, 27–28, 17–27
Pts: Forthsky Padrigao 22
Rebs: Forthsky Padrigao 8
Asts: Josh Lazaro 10
Pts: John Erolon 16
Rebs: Nicole Quinal 6
Asts: John Figueroa 22
Adamson advances to the stepladder round 2


(2) FEU Diliman vs. (4) Adamson edit

FEU Baby Tamaraws have a twice-to-beat advantage.

February 28 (28-02)
3:00 p.m.PHT
FEU–D Baby Tamaraws   78–65   Adamson Baby Falcons
Scoring by quarter: 24–17, 19–14, 19–20, 16–14
Pts: Anfernee Estacio 18
Rebs: Patrick Sleat 5
Asts: Cholo Añonuevo 14
Pts: Joshua Barcelona 12
Rebs: John Erolon 6
Asts: Joshua Barcelona 12
FEU Diliman wins series in one game

Finals edit

This is a best-of-three playoff.

March 6 (6-03)
3:00 p.m.PHT
NUNS Bullpups   79–61   FEU–D Baby Tamaraws
Scoring by quarter: 17–22, 26–14, 24–12, 12–13
Pts: Terence Fortea 24
Rebs: Ernest Felicida 8
Asts: Quiambao, Tamayo 14 each
Pts: Cholo Anonuevo 13
Rebs: John Pasaol 3
Asts: Cholo Anonuevo 11
Filoil Flying V Centre, San Juan City
Referees: Edgar Orpilla, Mollie de Luna, John Lester Celeste
March 9 (9-03)
3:00 p.m.PHT
NUNS Bullpups   87–80   FEU–D Baby Tamaraws
Scoring by quarter: 24–17, 29–28, 22–17, 12–18
Pts: Carl Tamayo 26
Rebs: Terence Fortea 4
Asts: Carl Tamayo 22
Pts: John Pasaol 20
Rebs: Cholo Anonuevo 5
Asts: Cholo Anonuevo 11
NSNU wins series, 2–0
Filoil Flying V Centre, San Juan
Referees: Edgar Orpilla, Julius Medillo, Jaime Rivano
  • Finals Most Valuable Player: Carl Tamayo (NUNS Bullpups)

Awards edit

 UAAP Season 82 boys' basketball champions 
 
NUNS Bullpups
Eighth title, second consecutive title
  • Most Valuable Player: John Jake Figueroa (Adamson Baby Falcons)
  • Rookie of the Year: Jean Lorenz Canillas (UPIS Junior Maroons)
  • Mythical Five:
    • John Jake Figueroa (Adamson Baby Falcons)
    • Joshua Lazaro (Ateneo Blue Eaglets)
    • Francis Lopez (Ateneo Blue Eaglets)
    • Kevin Quiambao (NUNS Bullpups)
    • Sean Aldous Torculas (UPIS Junior Maroons)

Girls' tournament edit

Elimination round edit

Team standings edit

Pos Team W L PCT GB Qualification
1   Adamson Lady Baby Falcons 6 0 1.000 Advance to the Finals
2   UST Junior Tigresses 4 2 .667 2
3   DLSZ Junior Lady Archers 2 4 .333 4
4   Ateneo Lady Eaglets 0 6 .000 6
Source: ABS-CBN Sports
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) if tied for #2, one-game playoff; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head point differential; 5) overall point differential

Match-up results edit

 Round 1Round 2
Team ╲ Game123456
  Adamson      
  Ateneo      
  DLSZ      
  UST      
Source: [citation needed]
  = Win;   = OT win;   = Loss;   = OT loss

Scores edit

Results on top and to the right of the dashes are for first-round games; those to the bottom and to the left of it are second-round games.

Teams AdU AdMU DLSZ UST
Adamson Lady Baby Falcons 121–44 56–39 81–70
Ateneo Lady Eaglets 38–109 36–105 27–112
DLSZ Junior Lady Archers 70–80 88–24 45–63
UST Junior Tigresses 64–70 108–28 50–48
Source: ABS-CBN Sports
Legend: Blue = left column team win; Red = top row team win.

Finals edit

This is a best-of-three playoff.

March 6 (6-03)
12:00 p.m.PHT
Adamson Lady Baby Falcons   68–73   UST Junior Tigresses
Scoring by quarter: 22–17, 17–17, 9–21, 20–18
Pts: Joan Camagong 24
Rebs: Crisnalyn Padilla 5
Asts: Charlene Carcallas 13
Pts: Erika Danganan 19
Rebs: Nicole Danganan 7
Asts: Rachel Lacayanga 12
March 9 (9-03)
12:00 p.m.PHT
Adamson Lady Baby Falcons   79–74   UST Junior Tigresses
Scoring by quarter: 23–22, 29–22, 14–11, 13–19
Pts: Joan Camagong 29
Rebs: Charlene Carcallas 13
Asts: Crisnalyn Padilla 7
Pts: Nicole Danganan 23
Rebs: E. Danganan, Estudillo 10 each
Asts: Nicole Danganan 7
March 13 (13-03)
12:00 p.m.PHT
Adamson Lady Baby Falcons    –
  UST Junior Tigresses
  Cancelled
Series cancelled tied 1–1; Adamson and UST were declared co-champions[i]

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, game two was held behind closed doors, while Game 3 was initially postponed to a later date, then cancelled. The UAAP then declared both finalists as co-champions.[36]

Awards edit

  • Most Valuable Player: Crisnalyn Padilla (Adamson Lady Baby Falcons)
  • Mythical Five:
    • Crisnalyn Padilla (Adamson Lady Baby Falcons)
    • Joan Camagong (Adamson Lady Baby Falcons)
    • Katrina Agojo (Adamson Lady Baby Falcons)
    • Erika Danganan (UST Junior Tigresses)
    • Brigette Santos (UST Junior Tigresses)

Overall championship points edit

In case of a tie, the team with the higher position in any tournament is ranked higher. If both are still tied, they are listed by alphabetical order.

How rankings are determined:

  • Ranks 5th to 8th determined by elimination round standings.
  • Loser of the #1 vs #4 semifinal match-up is ranked 4th
    • If stepladder: Loser of stepladder semifinals round 1 is ranked 4th
  • Loser of the #2 vs #3 semifinal match-up is ranked 3rd
    • If stepladder: Loser of stepladder semifinals round 2 is ranked 3rd
  • Loser of the finals is ranked 2nd
  • Champion is ranked 1st

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d The winner-take-all Game 3 of girls' basketball was cancelled as a result of COVID-19 pandemic. Hence, Adamson and UST have been declared co-champions.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "UAAP appoints Jensen Ilagan as commissioner for Season 82". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  2. ^ "UAAP Season 82 Men's and Women's Basketball Schedule". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved August 8, 2019.
  3. ^ Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin. "Bullpups begin title defense vs Baby Tams". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  4. ^ "UST, Adamson triumph in historic first day of UAAP girls' basketball". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved January 11, 2020.
  5. ^ Leongson, Randolph B. "Gian Nazario - not Jermaine Byrd - officially listed as La Salle coach". SPIN.ph. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  6. ^ Leongson, Randolph B. "Head coach Bong Tan explains curious set-up with Chongson on UE bench". SPIN.ph. Retrieved October 6, 2019.
  7. ^ "UE Red Warriors hold hands in prayer as coach-backer Bong Tan passes away". SABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved November 11, 2019.
  8. ^ "UAAP: Adamson foils UST attempt to secure girls basketball finals berth". ABS-CBN News. 2022-02-08. Retrieved 2020-02-10.
  9. ^ a b Carandang, Justin Kenneth. "UAAP begins inaugural basketball tournament for high school girls". GMA News Online. Retrieved January 11, 2020.
  10. ^ a b Riego, Norman (2019-05-05). "La Salle's new head coach has long been a mentor to Aljun Melecio". Rappler.
  11. ^ a b "UE coach Joe Silva resigns a day before UAAP Season 82". Rappler. 2019-09-03. Retrieved 2019-09-05.
  12. ^ a b "Adamson, UST notch historic wins in girls basketball". ABS-CBN Sports. 2020-01-11. Retrieved 2020-01-12.
  13. ^ Olivares, Rick (2018-12-14). "Sources: La Salle to fire coach Louie Gonzales as part of major overhaul". The Philippine Star. Retrieved 2019-09-05.
  14. ^ Leongson, Randolph B. "Anton Brodett new head coach of UE juniors basketball team". SPIN.ph. Retrieved May 23, 2019.
  15. ^ "Joanne Nimes shoots Lady Eagles to first win in UAAP 82". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
  16. ^ Valderrama, Aeron Paul. "Kent Pastrana scintillates in debut as La Salle romps UP". Tiebreaker Times. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
  17. ^ Leongson, Randolph B. "Anton Brodett resigns as coach of UE Junior Warriors". SPIN.ph. Retrieved October 18, 2019.
  18. ^ Leongson, Randolph B. "Estong Ballesteros named UE Junior Warriors head coach". SPIN.ph. Retrieved October 21, 2019.
  19. ^ "UST survives FEU fightback, moves on to face UP". ESPN.com. 2019-11-06. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  20. ^ Naredo, Camille B. (2019-11-10). "UAAP 82: UST downs Fighting Maroons, sends semis to do-or-die". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  21. ^ Naredo, Camille B. (2019-11-13). "UAAP 82: UST eliminates Fighting Maroons, sets finals duel vs Ateneo". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  22. ^ "Still unstoppable: Ateneo shuts down UST as Ravena catches fire". Rappler. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
  23. ^ "UAAP: UST's Chabi Yo, Nonoy crowned ahead of Game 2". ABS-CBN Sports. 20 November 2019. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  24. ^ "UST unleashes Player of the Week Abando in surprising start to UAAP 82". ABS-CBN Sports. 9 September 2019. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  25. ^ "UAAP 82: UE's luck finally turns thanks to Player of the Week Rey Suerte". ABS-CBN Sports. 16 September 2019. Retrieved 18 September 2019.
  26. ^ "UAAP 82: Player of the Week Paras wastes no time proving worth for UP". ABS-CBN Sports. 23 September 2019. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  27. ^ "MVP far from the mind of UAAP 82 Player of the Week Kouame". ABS-CBN Sports. 30 September 2019. Retrieved 30 September 2019.
  28. ^ "La Salle continues climb behind UAAP 82 Player of the Week Baltazar". ABS-CBN Sports. 7 October 2019. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
  29. ^ a b "UST's Cansino, Adamson's Prado share UAAP Player of the Week honors". CNN Philippines. 21 October 2019. Archived from the original on 21 October 2019. Retrieved 21 October 2019.
  30. ^ "UP has its moment again thanks to UAAP 82 Player of the Week Manzo". ABS-CBN Sports. 28 October 2019. Retrieved 28 October 2019.
  31. ^ "Ateneo's future still bright with Player of the Week SJ Belangel". ABS-CBN Sports. 4 November 2019. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  32. ^ Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin. "Lady Bulldogs win 96th straight for six-peat". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved November 23, 2019.
  33. ^ Li, Matthew. "Haydee Ong looks back on three-year odyssey with UST". Tiebreaker Times. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
  34. ^ "Pesquera puts an end to UP's three-year suffering". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved October 12, 2019.
  35. ^ "UAAP 82 Player of the Week Pat Pesquera plays hero for UP anew". ABS-CBN Sports. 14 October 2019. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  36. ^ Lozada, Bong (March 14, 2020). "UAAP declares UST and Adamson co-champions in girls basketball". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved March 15, 2020.
Preceded by UAAP men's basketball seasons
Season 82 (2019)
Succeeded by
Preceded by UAAP women's basketball seasons
Season 82 (2019)
Succeeded by
Preceded by UAAP juniors' basketball seasons
Season 82 (2019)
Succeeded by