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Greg Slaughter (Ateneo Blue Eagles) Terrence Romeo (FEU Tamaraws) Bobby Ray Parks Jr. (NU Bulldogs) Jeron Teng (De La Salle Green Archers) Karim Abdul (UST Growling Tigers) Game Changing Player of the Season: Greg Slaughter (Ateneo Blue Eagles) Todo Bigay Player of the Year: Kiefer Ravena (Ateneo Blue Eagles)
Referees Allan Dasal, Allan Baria, and Dennis Escaros were suspended for three weeks for "failure to enforce the rules of the game" and conduct "disruptive to the integrity of the game" on the first round games between UP vs. FEU, La Salle vs. Adamson, and Ateneo vs. UE. All three referees also failed their respective referee game report cards ...
After winning their first 12 games, the NU Lady Bulldogs clinched the top seed. UST, Adamson, and Ateneo round-up the teams that qualified to the playoffs. [44] As the NU Lady Bulldogs won all elimination round games, received a bye up to the finals, with the next three teams figuring in a stepladder single-elimination tournament. [45]
The basketball tournaments of UAAP Season 76 were held in school year 2013-14. Adamson University was both season host and basketball tournaments host. As season host, Adamson was the producer of the opening ceremony on June 29, 2013.
With a 14–0 sweep giving them a bye up to the best-of-3 finals, La Salle won their first thirteen games; their last game was against arch rival Ateneo. The two teams were locked 43–all when Wesley Gonzales, Rich Alvarez, Larry Fonacier and Andrew Cruz engineered a 21–3 run to put Ateneo up 64–46 with eight minutes left in the fourth quarter.
The senior men's and women's tournaments began on September 8, 2018 [2] while the games of the juniors' division began on November 11. [3] The Ateneo Blue Eagles and the NU Lady Bulldogs successfully defended their championships this season. Ateneo finished first after the elimination round, followed by Adamson.
A win over last year's Finals opponent Ateneo assured the Tigers of an above-.500 record at the end of the first round. On their rematch with the Green Archers, the Tigers forced overtime after coming up with a 13–0 run at the final two minutes of regulation. With a near-flawless game, Jervy Cruz led the team into victory, the first since ...
The Ateneo Blue Eagles won against the FEU Tamaraws in the finals, winning in two games. Ateneo blew out FEU in the first game, and hanged on in the second game to clinch their third consecutive title. Ryan Buenafe, who scored a crucial three-point shot late in Game 2, was named Finals MVP.