UAAP Season 68 men's basketball tournament

The UAAP Season 68 men's basketball tournament is the men's basketball tournament of A.Y. 2005–06 season of the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP). The tournament was hosted by Adamson University. ABS-CBN covered the games on Studio 23.

UAAP Season 68
Host schoolAdamson University
Men's Finals G1 G2Wins
FEU school colors FEU Tamaraws 75 732
La Salle school colors De La Salle Green Archers 73 710
DurationSeptember 29 to October 6
Arena(s)Araneta Coliseum
Finals MVPArwind Santos
Winning coachBert Flores
SemifinalistsAteneo school colors Ateneo Blue Eagles
UE school colors UE Red Warriors
TV network(s)Studio 23 and TFC
< Season 67 2005 Season 69 >

At the end of the elimination round, the FEU Tamaraws finished on top of the team standings; the defending champions De La Salle Green Archers was tied with the Ateneo Blue Eagles and the UE Red Warriors for second. By virtue of a better point differential from games among the three teams, La Salle clinched the second seed; Ateneo and UE played for the #3 seed, a game Ateneo won. FEU and La Salle won convincingly against Ateneo and UE respectively in the semifinals to set up a rematch of the previous year's finals series. In the finals, the FEU Tamaraws defeated De La Salle Green Archers in two close games (both games were decided in the final minute) to win the championship.

FEU Tamaraw Arwind Santos was named season and finals Most Valuable Player.

At the end of the tournament, La Salle returned their 2005 runner-up and 2004 championship trophies to the league after it was revealed they fielded two ineligible players. The league decided to suspend La Salle for the succeeding season in both divisions for all events, and the 2004 championship trophy was awarded to FEU.

Coaches

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Elimination round

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Pos Team W L PCT GB Qualification
1   FEU Tamaraws 12 2 .857 Twice-to-beat in the semifinals
2   De La Salle Green Archers[a] 10 4 .714[b] 2
3   Ateneo Blue Eagles 10 4 .714[b] 2 Twice-to-win in the semifinals
4   UE Red Warriors 10 4 .714[b] 2
5   UP Fighting Maroons 6 8 .429 6
6   UST Growling Tigers 4 10 .286 8
7   Adamson Falcons (H) 3 11 .214 9
8   NU Bulldogs 1 13 .071 11
Source: UBelt.com
(H) Hosts
Notes:
  1. ^ This "final" team standings is overturned when La Salle forfeited their games after the season was over. See Suspension of De La Salle University for details.
  2. ^ a b c Head-to-head record: La Salle 3–1, Ateneo 2–2, UE 1–3; third-seed playoff: Ateneo 76–65 UE

Match-up results

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

Scores

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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 75–91 58–65 51–68 116–103 69–90 61–77 83–68
Ateneo Blue Eagles 71–58 60–78 54–65 83–51 65–63 71–63 79–72
De La Salle Green Archers 100–70 72–55 62–69 91–70 56–57 56–61 98–78
FEU Tamaraws 66–56 60–69 70–69 83–68 82–66 75–67 76–51
NU Bulldogs 67–93 65–70 54–78 43–76 64–71 59–81 100–107
UE Red Warriors 78–57 69–75 67–79[a] 62–57 68–50 57–51 84–68
UP Fighting Maroons 70–63 57–67 45–59 63–71 72–67 61–65 69–66
UST Growling Tigers 65–62 77–73 72–98 63–64 73–74 53–66 92–85*
Source: Philippine Daily Inquirer
Legend: Blue = left column team win; Red = top row team win.
Matches with lighter background shading were decided after overtime.
Notes:
  1. ^ Game originally played on September 1 with La Salle winning over UE 86-83 in overtime, however, the UAAP Board nullified the game and called for a replay on September 18 after it upheld UE's protest against a timeout given to La Salle in the final 1.8 seconds of the game.[1]

Third seed playoff

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Since La Salle, Ateneo and UE finished the eliminations with identical 10-4 cards, the quotient system was used. La Salle emerged with the best quotient among the three, so UE and Ateneo figured for a one-game playoff for the third seed. The winner will face the second seed, while the loser will face the first seed. The top two seeded teams possess the twice-to-beat advantage.

September 22
4:00 p.m.
Ateneo Blue Eagles   76–65   UE Red Warriors
Scoring by quarter: 21–19, 20–13, 18–23, 17–10
Pts: JC Intal 21 Pts: Bonbon Custodio 17

Bracket

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Semifinals
(Nos. 1 & 2 have twice-to-beat advantage)
Finals
(Best-of-three series)
1  FEU78
4  UE57
1  FEU7573
2  La Salle7371
2  La Salle74
3  Ateneo57

Semifinals

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Both FEU and La Salle only has to win once in the series, while their opponents have to win twice to qualify for the Finals.

(1) FEU vs. (4) UE

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September 25
4:00 p.m.
FEU Tamaraws   78–57   UE Red Warriors
Scoring by quarter: 15–14, 24–14, 24–11, 15–18
Pts: Fernandez, Barcellano 12 each Pts: Mark Borboran 11
FEU wins series in one game

First seed FEU Tamaraws eliminated the UE Red Warriors 78–57. FEU coach Bert Flores remarked that one of the reasons why Arwind Santos skipped the 2005 PBA Draft was to win the championship for the year after losing last year's championship series.[2]

(2) La Salle vs. (3) Ateneo

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September 25
1:30 p.m.
De La Salle Green Archers   74–57   Ateneo Blue Eagles
Scoring by quarter: 11–10, 11–15, 28–11, 24–21
Pts: Joseph Yeo 28
Rebs: Junjun Cabatu 13
Asts: Junjun Cabatu 3
Pts: LA Tenorio 20
Rebs: LA Tenorio 6 each
Asts: Intal, Tenorio 3 each
La Salle wins series in one game

With La Salle routing Ateneo in their two elimination round games, Ateneo's LA Tenorio led the Eagles in the first half, with the Eagles leading by three points at halftime. Tenorio will finish the game with a team-high 20 points, along with six rebounds, three assists and four steals. La Salle's go-to guy Joseph Yeo scored 23 of his 28 points in the second half to blow the game wide open; he led the 11–0 run at the third quarter to erase Ateneo's three-point halftime lead to a 43–31 La Salle lead. Ateneo will not catch up, and La Salle qualifies for the finals with a 74–57 victory.[2]

Finals

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The Finals is a best-of-three series; the team that wins twice wins the championship.

Game 1

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September 29
3:30 p.m.
FEU Tamaraws   75–73   De La Salle Green Archers
Scoring by quarter: 17–28, 25–15, 17–16, 16–14
Pts: Arwind Santos 29
Rebs: Arwind Santos 14
Asts: Jonas Villanueva 3
Pts: Joseph Yeo 26
Rebs: Ryan Araña 6
Asts: Joseph Yeo 6
FEU leads series 1–0

La Salle led for much of the first half, leading 43–29. Arwind Santos led a 13–0 run to trim the lead by one point at halftime. FEU led for the third quarter, but La Salle cut the gap to one point at the end of that quarter. La Salle continued their run at the fourth quarter, capped off by Joseph Yeo who gave the lead to La Salle 73–70 with 1:37 left in the game. Later, Santos made a three-pointer to tie the game at 73–all with 48.6 seconds left. With La Salle failing to score on their possession, Santos scored on a put-back with 5.5 seconds remaining. JV Casio missed a three-pointer at the other end, and Rico Maierhofer missed the put-back to clinch FEU's game 1 victory. Yeo finished with 26 points, while Santos had a double-double of 29 points and 14 rebounds. At the end of the game, La Salle assistant team manager Manny Salgado rushed to the court and hit Santos at the back of the head. The act was seen on national television.[3]

FEU coach Bert Flores had to be restrained as he tried to go after Salgado who had run for safety. Salgado later said that while Santos and Yeo were exchanging words, he tried to pacify them but Santos uttered some foul words. Salgado lost his temper and threw a closed fist at the back of Santos' head. Salgado later issued an apology as La Salle condemned the act and will accept the decision of the UAAP Board. Subsequently, the UAAP Board unanimously banned Salgado for life at all UAAP events, the stiffest penalty on a team official.[4]

Game 2

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October 6
3:30 p.m.
FEU Tamaraws   73–71   De La Salle Green Archers
Scoring by quarter: 21–13, 19–25, 17–24, 16–9
Pts: Arwind Santos 14
Rebs: Arwind Santos 13
Asts: Jonas Villanueva 6
Pts: Ryan Araña 20
Rebs: Ryan Araña 11
Asts: TY Tang 8
FEU wins series 2–0

The Tamaraws led at the end of first quarter by eight points, but La Salle cut the lead to two by halftime. In the third quarter, Ryan Araña scored three three-pointers to put La Salle up by 11. The Tamaraws cut the lead to three early in the fourth quarter, capped off by Jeff Chan's three-point play. La Salle would still lead up to the final minute when Yeo fouled Mark Isip, who converted the three-point play to put FEU up 72–71. La Salle failed to score on their next possession, and they fouled Jonas Villanueva, who split his free-throws to end the game. Santos was named Finals MVP after having another double-double performance with 14 points, 13 rebounds and three blocks.[5]

Awards

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 UAAP Season 68 men's basketball champions 
 
FEU Tamaraws
19th title, third consecutive title

La Salle's suspension

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On August 15, La Salle had received reports that the papers of their men's basketball players Mark Benitez and Tim Gatchalian were spurious. However, they took no action until a month later when the allegations were made public. At the end of the finals series, La Salle voluntarily gave up the 2004 championship trophy and the 2005 runner-up trophy to the league. The league, on April 22, 2006, suspended La Salle for the following season in all sports and in both Seniors and Juniors divisions for negligence, "as La Salle violated existing UAAP rules and regulations when it submitted the documents of Mark Benitez and Tim Gatchalian during the 2003-2004 season which proved to be spurious."[6]

Broadcast notes

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Game Play-by-play Analyst Courtside reporters
Game 1 Boom Gonzales TJ Manotoc Yvette Gavieres and Micky Deles
Game 2 Sev Sarmenta Alex Compton Yvette Gavieres and Micky Deles

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Payo, Jasmine W. (September 10, 2005). "UAAP orders replay of La Salle–UE match". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
  2. ^ a b Payo, Jasmine (2005-09-26). "La Salle, FEU, rip foes, enter finals". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 2010-10-07.
  3. ^ Payo, Jasmine (2005-09-30). "Santos powers FEU Tams". Philippine Daily Inquirer. p. 26. Retrieved 2010-10-07.
  4. ^ Cordero, Abac (2005-10-01). "UAAP bans Salgado for life". Philippine Star. p. 26. Retrieved 2010-10-07.
  5. ^ Payo, Jasmine (2005-10-07). "Inspired Tams hang tough, clinch crown". Philippine Daily Inquirer. p. 19. Retrieved 2010-10-07.
  6. ^ "UAAP: LA SALLE BANNED FOR ONE SEASON". Newsflash.org. 2006-04-22. Retrieved 2010-10-07.
Preceded by UAAP men's basketball seasons
Season 68 (2005) basketball
Succeeded by