2018 MPBL finals
This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2018) |
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Dates | April 12–19 | |||||||||
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MVP | Val Acuña | |||||||||
The 2018 Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL) Rajah Cup Finals is the best-of-5 championship series of the 2018 MPBL Rajah Cup and the conclusion of the conference's playoffs. The Batangas City Athletics and the Muntinlupa Cagers competed for the inaugural Rajah Cup championship and also the very first championship contested by the league.[1] In four games, league founder, Sen. Manny Pacquiao, gave one million pesos (₱1,000,000) to the Batangas City Athletics as they were crowned as the inaugural MPBL Finals Champions with an 18-karat gold trophy, while five hundred thousand pesos (₱500,000) was given to the Muntinlupa Cagers as the losing finalist.[2]
Background
Road to the finals
Batangas City Tanduay Athletics | Muntinlupa Cagers | ||
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Finished 8–1 (.889) 1st place | Elimination round | Finished 6–3 (.667) tied for 2nd place with Bulacan and Valenzuela | |
— | Tiebreaker* | 1–1 win-loss record, +1 goal difference (3rd place) | |
Def. 8th-seeded Bataan Defenders, 2–0 | Quarterfinals | Def. 6th-seeded Navotas Clutch, 2–0 | |
Def. 4th-seeded Valenzuela Classics, 2–0 | Semifinals | Def. 7th-seeded Parañaque Patriots, 2–1 |
Head-to-head matchup
February 27
07:00 pm |
Batangas City Tanduay Athletics | 82–77 | Muntinlupa Cagers |
Scoring by quarter: 23–21, 18–25, 27–13, 14–18 | ||
Pts: Bernabe Teodoro 24 Rebs: Jaymo Eguilos 13 Asts: John Quinto, Lester Alvarez 4 each |
Pts: Chito Jaime 18 Rebs: Chito Jaime 9 Asts: Allan Mangahas 4 |
Navotas Sports Complex, Navotas
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Series summary
Game | Date | Venue | Winner | Result |
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Game 1 | April 12 | Batangas City Coliseum | Batangas City Athletics | 70–64 |
Game 2 | April 14 | Batangas City Coliseum | Batangas City Athletics | 78–74 |
Game 3 | April 17 | Muntinlupa Sports Center | Muntinlupa Cagers | 82–77 |
Game 4 | April 19 | Muntinlupa Sports Center | Batangas City Athletics | 68–66 |
Game summaries
Game 1
April 12
08:00 pm |
Batangas City Athletics | 70–64 | Muntinlupa Cagers |
Scoring by quarter: 16–14, 10–16, 22–14, 22–20 | ||
Pts: Bernabe Teodoro 20 Rebs: Mark Olayon 9 Asts: Bernabe Teodoro 4 |
Pts: Dave Moralde 12 Rebs: Felix Apreku 9 Asts: Allan Mangahas 4 | |
Batangas leads series, 1–0 |
Batangas City Coliseum, Batangas City
Referees: Geraldo Gabriel, Don Al De Dios, Julius Tiquio |
Tey Teodoro made 20 points to pave the way for the Batangas City Athletics to claim the finals opener, as Val Acuna also added 14 points to help the team in the win. With the game tied at 64-all, Teodoro hit a free throw before scoring on a jump shot with 25 seconds left in the fourth period to give the Athletics a three-point lead. As the Cagers were unable to convert a basket, Teodoro managed to draw a foul from an Athletic and split his two charities given, which gave them a four-point lead in the final 14 seconds. And from there on, they were able to seal the victory and draw the first blood in the title series.[3]
Game 2
April 14
08:00 pm |
Batangas City Athletics | 78–74 | Muntinlupa Cagers |
Scoring by quarter: 13–14, 25–10, 22–22, 18–28 | ||
Pts: Jaymo Eguilos 16 Rebs: John Quinto 9 Asts: Lester Alvarez 7 |
Pts: Chito Jaime 18 Rebs: Felix Apreku 10 Asts: Allan Mangahas 4 | |
Batangas leads series, 2–0 |
Batangas City Coliseum, Batangas City
Referees: Jorge Serapia, Jhovet Ocfemia, Rommel Alcoran |
Jaymo Eguilos of the Athletics scored a jumper to extend their lead to 9, 74–65, with the final 1:14 left on the clock. After that shot, the Cagers went on to storm a 9-2 scoring run to cut the deficit to 2 points, 76–74, going in to the final 17 seconds. With Batangas holding to their tight defense, Teytey Teodoro was able to draw a foul on Chito Jaime, resulting to two charities being made as they hold on to their four-point victory, extending the series lead to 2–0 and one more win gives them the inaugural league championship and the possible first-ever finals sweep in the history of the league.
Game 3
April 17
08:00 pm |
Muntinlupa Cagers | 82–77 | Batangas City Athletics |
Scoring by quarter: 27–14, 17–22, 20–15, 18–26 | ||
Pts: Allan Mangahas 23 Rebs: Felix Apreku 13 Asts: Allan Mangahas 8 |
Pts: John Quinto 14 Rebs: Jaymo Eguilos 12 Asts: Mark Olayon 5 | |
Batangas leads series, 2–1 |
Muntinlupa Sports Center, Muntinlupa
Referees: Dan Marabe, Geraldo Gabriel, Bert Gica |
This game marked the first loss of the Athletics since losing to the Bulacan Kuyas in the elimination round last March 3, also marks the team's first loss of the playoffs. In the fourth quarter, Batangas scared Muntinlupa with an 11-5 scoring run after being down by 15 points, 64–49, in the 1:04 mark of third quarter, with this run, the deficit was cut down to 9, 69–60, in the 6:38 mark of fourth quarter. But as Athletics not giving up to the fight, they would eventually cut down further the Cagers lead as close as 2, 79–77, in the final 49 seconds of the game. Dave Moralde had an answer to stop the bleeding, to reextend the lead to 4 with a one-hand jumper. As they were able to hold to their defense, they would eventually spoil the possible championship celebration and extend the series to a Game 4.[4]
Game 4
April 19
08:00 pm |
Muntinlupa Cagers | 66–68 | Batangas City Athletics |
Scoring by quarter: 12–16, 16–27, 19–11, 11–14 | ||
Pts: Pari Llagas 19 Rebs: Pari Llagas 14 Asts: Allan Mangahas 3 |
Pts: Moncrief Rogado 14 Rebs: Paul Varilla 9 Asts: Mark Olayon, Bernabe Teodoro 4 each | |
Batangas wins series, 3–1 |
Muntinlupa Sports Center, Muntinlupa
Referees: Geraldo Gabriel, Don Al De Dios, Rey Dillena |
The Muntinlupa Cagers entered the match facing a do-or-die situation, with a 1–2 series deficit. In the early minutes of the fourth period, the Athletics led by 9 points, 57–48. However, a 10-0 run was blasted by the Cagers to regain the lead, 58–57, which all of the 10 points in the run came from Pari Llagas. Then the succeeding minutes, it was a seesaw battle where no team led more than 4 points. In the final 3.6 seconds of the game, Muntinlupa had a chance to send the game to an overtime coming off a foul from Mark Olayon. However, Llagas missed both charities that sealed the victory and the first MPBL Championship for the Batangas City Athletics.
Broadcast notes
The Rajah Cup Finals were aired on ABS-CBN's sports channel, ABS-CBN Sports and Action. The league aired its S+A broadcasts online via livestreaming through Facebook Live on the official MPBL page.
Game | S+A | ||
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Play-by-play | Analyst(s) | Courtside reporters | |
Game 1 | Martin Antonio | Christian Luanzon | Gianna Llanes |
Game 2 | Cedelf Tupas | Jayvee Gayoso | Shiela Salaysay |
Game 3 | Cedelf Tupas | Christian Luanzon | Gianna Llanes |
Game 4 | Martin Antonio | Jayvee Gayoso | Gianna Llanes |
- Additional Game 4 crew:
- Trophy presentation and Awarding Ceremonies: Kyla Realubit
- Dugout celebration interviewer:
References
- ^ "It's Muntinlupa vs Batangas City in MPBL Rajah Cup Finals". Rappler.com. 10 April 2018. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
- ^ Tupas, Cedelf (12 April 2018). "Muntinlupa advances to the Finals". Inquirer.net. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
- ^ Terrado, Reuben (13 April 2018). "Tey Teodoro stars as Batangas City beats Muntinlupa in Game One of MPBL Finals". Spin.ph. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
- ^ Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin (17 April 2018). "Muntnlupa stays alive in MPBL Finals after escaping Batangas in Game 3". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 6 June 2018.