NCAA Season 76 basketball tournaments

The basketball tournaments of NCAA Season 76 are the Philippines' National Collegiate Athletic Association tournaments for basketball in its 2000–2001 season. Mapua Institute of Technology hosted the season, starting with an opening ceremony held at the Araneta Coliseum on July 22, 2000 followed by a quadruple-header.[1][2] Games then are subsequently held at Rizal Memorial Coliseum and aired by PTV-4.

NCAA Season 76
Host schoolMapua Institute of Technology
Men's Finals G1 G2Wins
CSB school colors Benilde Blazers 66 742
SSC-R school colors San Sebastian Stags 64 610
DurationOctober 9–11, 2000
Arena(s)Rizal Memorial Coliseum
Winning coachDong Vergeire (1st title)
SemifinalistsJRU school colors JRU Heavy Bombers
UPHD school colors Perpetual Altas
TV network(s)PTV-4
Juniors' Finals G1 G2Wins
Letran school colors Letran Squires 61 550+1
Mapua school colors Mapua Red Robins 75 772
DurationOctober 9–11, 2000
Arena(s)Rizal Memorial Coliseum
< Season 75 2000 Season 77 >

Men's tournament edit

Elimination round edit

Team standings edit

Pos Team W L PCT GB Qualification
1   JRU Heavy Bombers 11 3 .786 Twice-to-beat in the semifinals
2   Perpetual Altas 10 4 .714 1
3   Benilde Blazers (X) 9 5 .643 2 Twice-to-win in the semifinals
4   San Sebastian Stags 8 6 .571 3
5   Mapúa Cardinals (H) 5 9 .357[a] 6
6   San Beda Red Lions 5 9 .357[a] 6
7   PCU Dolphins 4 10 .286[b] 7
8   Letran Knights 4 10 .286[b] 7
Source: Philippine Daily Inquirer
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) if tied for #2 and #4, one-game playoff; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head point differential; 5) overall point differential
(H) Hosts; (X) Under probation
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Head-to-head record: Mapua 1–1 San Beda (Mapua +8)
  2. ^ a b Head-to-head record: PCU 1–1 Letran (PCU +3)

Match-up results edit

 Round 1Round 2
Team ╲ Game1234567891011121314
  Letran              
  Benilde              
  JRU              
  Mapúa              
  PCU              
  San Beda              
  San Sebastian              
  Perpetual              
Source: Philippine Daily Inquirer
  = 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 CSJL CSB JRU MIT PCU SBC SSC-R UPHR
Letran Knights 63–67 61–62 75–50 47–56 71–60 41–51 71–72
Benilde Blazers 62–58 64–66 77–59 97–77 63–66 60–67 76–78
JRU Heavy Bombers 74–66 73–60 69–67 93–75 78–73 74–79 87–76
Mapúa Cardinals 59–57 65–72 82–78 68–62 66–68 86–89 61–80
PCU Dolphins 55–61 65–71 85–76 63–70 61–68 53–52 75–88
San Beda Red Lions 65–88 83–90 80–72 74–84 78–65 86–76 67–81
San Sebastian Stags 67–58 62–66 87–67 59–78 50–47 85–83 77–87
Perpetual Altas 78–77 63–70 82–83 87–79 88–84 94–78 66–70
Source: Philippine Daily Inquirer
Legend: Blue = left column team win; Red = top row team win.
Matches with lighter background shading were decided after overtime.

Bracket edit

Semifinals
(Nos. 1 & 2 have twice-to-beat advantage)
Finals
(Best-of-three series)
1  JRC5379
4  San Sebastian6097
4  San Sebastian6461
3  Benilde6674
2  UPHR7073
3  Benilde7386

Semifinals edit

JRC and Perpetual Help have the twice-to-beat advantage. They only have to win once, while their opponents, twice, to progress.

(1) JRC vs. (4) San Sebastian edit

October 6
2:30 p.m.
JRU Heavy Bombers   79–97   San Sebastian Stags
San Sebastian wins series in two games

Trailing 22-38 at the half of Game 1, the Heavy Bombers greeted the second half with a fierce 18-0 run to lead by two, with 11:37 to go, but the Stags' Nurjamjam Alfad and Christian Coronel conspired to defeat the Heavy Bombers and secured the win. Alfad finished with 14 points while Coronel sank the important free throws to win the game.[3]

The Stags dominated the Heavy Bombers all throughout Game 2. Mark Macapagal pumped in 25 points, Christian Coronel had 19, and Nicole Uy contributed 15, including a one-handed slam that punctuated the Stags' dominance of the Heavy Bombers.[4]

(2) Perpetual vs. (3) Benilde edit

October 3
4:00 p.m.
Perpetual Altas   70–73   Benilde Blazers
October 6
4:00 p.m.
Perpetual Altas   73–86   Benilde Blazers
CSB wins series in two games

CSB Blazers' star Sunday Salvacion knocked in a triple in the dying moments of the game as the Altas' Jojo Manalo and Milo Bonifacio heaved desperate attempts and failed to capitalized as time expired, leaving the boisterous St. Benilde gallery exploding in pandemonium.[3]

Thanks to their deeper bench, CSB Blazers upset title-favorites Perpetual Altas, thus entered the Finals for the first time since joining the NCAA in 1998.[4]

Finals edit

The San Sebastian Stags are back in the Finals two years after they were beaten by the Letran Knights who were led by Kerby Raymundo and Christian Calaguio. The CSB Blazers, on the other hand, are in their very first Finals appearance since joining the NCAA in 1998.

October 9
3:00 p.m.
Benilde Blazers   66–64   San Sebastian Stags
Scoring by half: 37-33
Pts: Mark Magsumbol 16 Pts: Jam Alfad 18
October 11
3:00 p.m.
Benilde Blazers   74–61   San Sebastian Stags
Scoring by half: 37-32
Pts: Mark Magsumbol 15 Pts: Jam Alfad 15
CSB wins series, 2–0

It was a nip and tuck affair and the Blazers leading most of the way of Game 1. Near the end of the game, San Sebastian took the lead for the first time, 64-61, thanks to Mark Macapagal and Paul Reguerra converting their free throws. However, Al Magpayo drew a three-point play off Macapagal to tie the game with 40 seconds remaining. Magpayo then gave an inbound pass to Mark Magsumbol then coasted on a game-winning layup to lift the Blazers past the Stags.[5]

Duplicating their sister school's feat, the Blazers masterfully beat the Stags in Game 2 from the start, capitalized from the poor free-throw shooting of the San Sebastian squad. With their deep bench, the Blazers easily took the half, 37-25, before speeding to a 16-point margin, 54-38. The Blazers then never looked back, capturing their first title since joining the league in 1998.[6]

Awards edit

 NCAA Season 76 men's basketball champions 
 
Benilde Blazers
First title
  • Most Valuable Player: Jojo Manalo (Perpetual Altas)
  • Mythical Five:
    • Jojo Manalo (Perpetual Altas)
    • Chester Tolomia (Perpetual Altas)
    • Christian Coronel (San Sebastian Stags)
    • Ernani Epondulan (JRU Heavy Bombers)
    • Orlan Tama (Letran Knights)
  • Rookie of the Year: Alejandro Magpayo (Benilde Blazers)

Juniors' tournament edit

Elimination round edit

The Letran Squires finished the elimination round undefeated and advanced to the Finals outright, with the twice-to-beat advantage.

Finals edit

October 11
Letran Squires   55–77   Mapua Red Robins
Scoring by half: 37–32, 18–45
Pts: Ronjay Enrile 16 Pts: Ryan Malig 26
Mapua wins series in two games

On Game 1, the Mapua Red Robins snapped Letran's 14-game winning streak to extend the series to a deciding Game 2.[5]

On the deciding game, the Red Robins won the championship, sweeping the Finals against the Squires.[6]

This would be the last championship by the Mapua Red Robins. The Mapua Technical High School was closed, and stopped competing in 2005. The Malayan High School of Science became Mapua's representative in the juniors' division, starting on 2008.

References edit

  1. ^ Navarro, June (July 23, 2000). "Title favorite Perpetual nips St. Benilde, 78-76". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on April 18, 2001. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
  2. ^ Navarro, June (July 23, 2000). "PCU stuns San Sebastian". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved April 3, 2021.
  3. ^ a b Navarro, June (October 4, 2000). "Benilde, SSC force knockout matches". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on December 19, 2000. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
  4. ^ a b Navarro, June (October 6, 2000). "Benilde vs SSC for NCAA plum". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on October 17, 2000. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
  5. ^ a b Navarro, June (October 10, 2000). "Benilde nears NCAA title". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on October 19, 2000. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
  6. ^ a b Navarro, June (October 12, 2000). "Benilde sweeps SSC". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on December 3, 2000. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
Preceded by NCAA basketball seasons
Season 76 (2001)
Succeeded by