1988 San Miguel Beermen season

The 1988 San Miguel Beermen season was the 14th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

1988 San Miguel Beermen season
Head coachNorman Black
Owner(s)San Miguel Corporation
Open Conference results
Record16–9
(64%)
Place1st
Playoff finishChampions
All-Filipino Conference results
Record13–11
(54.2%)
Place4th
Playoff finishSemifinals
Reinforced Conference results
Record17–6
(73.9%)
Place1st
Playoff finishChampions
San Miguel Beermen seasons
← 1987
1989  →

Transactions

edit
Players Added Signed Former team
Ricardo Brown Off-season Great Taste

Occurrences

edit

When Purefoods center Ramon Fernandez was benched in game two of the All-Filipino Conference finals and subsequently banished for the rest of the series, San Miguel began to ponder the possibilities. On September 15, San Miguel Beer representative Jose "Nono" Ibazeta reportedly called Purefoods chairman and president Rene Buhain on a possible swap between Ramon Fernandez and their center, two-time MVP Abet Guidaben; the next morning, a deal was sealed sending Guidaben to the Purefoods Hotdogs and a homecoming for Ramon Fernandez, who first played with San Miguel in the early 1970s, the trade between the two league pioneers was a repeat of a similar swapped that took place in 1985.[1]

Championships

edit

For only the second time in PBA history, the best-of-seven finals went into a full route. San Miguel Beermen came back from a 2-3 deficit and won the final series against Purefoods, denying the Hotdogs a championship in their first try. The Beermen won back-to-back titles and duplicated the feat achieved by the famed Toyota Super Corollas back in 1982, by winning the last two games of the seven-game series.

With a new ruling of one-old, one-new import for the Third Conference, disallowing playing-coach Norman Black to teamed up with last year's reinforcement and best import Bobby Parks. Black opted for former Seattle Supersonic and Los Angeles Clipper Michael Phelps as his partner. San Miguel had an easier time winning the championship in the season-ending conference, defeating Shell Rimula-X, led by imports Bobby Parks and Derrick Rowland, 4 games to 1, to retain the title they won last season.

Awards

edit
  • Ramon Fernandez, who played for Purefoods in the first two conferences until he was traded to San Miguel Beer before the third conference, won his record-breaking fourth Most Valuable Player (MVP) award.
  • Alvin Teng was named the Most Improved Player of the season.
  • Two other beermen; Hector Calma and Ricardo Brown, were named in the Mythical team first five selection.

Notable dates

edit

March 20: San Miguel Beer spoiled the debut of newcomer Purefoods Hotdogs in the main game of the league's 14th season opening, leading by as many as 30 points in the fourth quarter and coast to an easy 119-104 victory. Norman Black scored 33 points and Abet Guidaben added 28 points.[2]

May 19: Norman Black scored 45 points as San Miguel clinch the first finals berth in the Open Conference with its 12th victory in 18 games, winning over Great Taste, 173-137.

July 10: San Miguel Beer handed Great Taste their first loss in the All-Filipino Conference after a 4-0 start, scoring a 139-132 win for their second victory after losing their first two games.[3]

July 26: Abet Guidaben topscored with 30 points and scored on a marginal basket from 20 feet after he fumbled the ball with five seconds left to give the beermen a 104-103 win over Añejo Rum, that ended their five-game losing misery against their sister team.[4]

October 2: Import Michael Phelps scored 50 points to lead San Miguel to a 150–122 rout of listless Purefoods Hotdogs at the start of the Reinforced Conference as all eyes were focused on the two players involved in the blockbuster trade, former Purefoods playing-coach Ramon Fernandez played his first game as a Beerman while leading MVP candidate Abet Guidaben is now playing for the Hotdogs.

October 9: San Miguel kept its unbeaten slate to three wins without a loss, beating Shell Rimula-X, 124–115. Norman Black scored 30 points and grabbed 20 rebounds while Bobby Parks, playing against his former teammates for the first time, scored 42 points for the Diesel Oilers.[5]

November 10: In the battle of league-leaders at the beginning of the semifinal round, San Miguel blasts Presto Ice Cream, 144-117. Both teams carry a 7-3 won-loss slate before their game.[6]

November 22: San Miguel ousted Añejo Rum from the finals race with a 127-118 victory for their 11th win at the start of the second round of the semifinals.[7]

Won–loss records vs opponents

edit
Team Win Loss 1st (Open) 2nd (All-Filipino) 3rd (Reinforced)
Alaska 9 6 3-1 3-4 3-1
Ginebra / Anejo 5 8 0-4 2-3 3-1
Great Taste / Presto 11 1 4-0 4-0 3-1
Purefoods 9 8 7-4 0-4 2-0
Shell 10 3 2-0 2-0 6-3
RP Team 2 0 N/A 2-0 N/A
Total 46 26 16-9 13-11 17-6

Roster

edit
1988 San Miguel Beermen roster
Players Coaches
Pos. # POB Name Height Weight DOB (YYYY–MM–DD) From
F 4   Reyes, Elmer 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) San Beda
G 5   Pumaren, Franz 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) De La Salle
G 7   Almario, Alfie 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) De La Salle
F 9   Lim, Samboy 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) Letran
F 10   Teng, Alvin 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) Arellano
C 11   Yturri, Tonichi 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) De La Salle
F 12   Dignadice, Yves 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) STI WNU
G 14   Calma, Hector 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) Adamson
F 15   Cui, Ricardo 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) Lyceum
F 17   Graves, Jeffrey 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) Angeles
C 19   Fernandez, Ramon 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) San Carlos
G 23   Brown, Ricardo 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) Pepperdine
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  •   Injured

Trades

edit
September 1988
To Purefoods Hotdogs
Abet Guidaben
To San Miguel Beermen
Ramon Fernandez

Imports

edit
Name Conference No. Pos. Ht. College
Norman Black Open Conference
Reinforced Conference
24 Center-Forward 6"5' Saint Joseph's University
Michael Phelps Reinforced Conference 25 Guard-Forward 6"3' Alcorn State University

References

edit
  1. ^ "Fernandez, Guidaben swapped". Manila Standard - Google News Archive Search. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  2. ^ "All-Pinoy Great Taste drubs Shell". Manila Standard - Google News Archive Search. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  3. ^ "SMB stops Great Taste". Manila Standard - Google News Archive Search. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  4. ^ "Purefoods roars to solo lead". Manila Standard - Google News Archive Search. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  5. ^ "SMB shoots down Shell for solo lead". Manila Standard - Google News Archive Search. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  6. ^ "SMB blast Presto". Manila Standard - Google News Archive Search. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  7. ^ "SMB drubs Añejo anew". Manila Standard - Google News Archive Search. Retrieved 15 April 2017.