
Sunday, April 06, 2008
NBA's Best Turnaround

Shiver
But you pay me no attention, do you?
I know you don't listen to me
'Cos you say you see straight through me, don't you?
on and on
From the moment I wake, to the moment I sleep
I'll be there by your side; just you try and stop me
I'll be waiting in line, just to see if you care
Oh…
Did you want me to change?
Well I'd change for good
And I want you to know that you'll always get your way
I wanted to say…
Don't you shiver
Shiver
Sing it loud and clear
I'll always be waiting for you
So you know how much I need you
But you never even see me, do you?
And is this my final chance of getting you
And on and on
From the moment I wake, to the moment I sleep
I'll be there by your side; just you try and stop me
I'll be waiting in line, just to see if you care
Oh…
Did you want me to change?
Well I'd change for good
And I want you to know that you'll always get your way
I wanted to say…
Don't you shiver
Don't you shiver
Sing it loud and clear
I'll always be waiting for you
Yeah I'll always be waiting for you
Yeah I'll always be waiting for you
Yeah I'll always be waiting for you, for you
I will always be waiting…
And it's you I see but you don't see me
And it's you I hear so loud and so clear
I sing it loud and clear
And I'll always be waiting for you
So I look in your direction
But you pay me no attention
And you know how much I need you
But you never even see me
Sunday, March 23, 2008
giggly fun
My iPod hanged!!!

Thursday, March 20, 2008
Funny Videos!
Current books



Friday, February 22, 2008
A night of latin jazz
Monday, February 18, 2008
My new iMac

Yup, that's right, that's my flight day. I just lugged my things up to the apartment, put them down, and was on my way to the store. At first, I was shopping for a white MacBook. Before I left, the 2.2GHz Intel MacBook was priced at 144,800 yen, 15,000 yen less than the 20" iMac. Both had promos of 30,000 yen less when bought together with an Internet connection.
Alas, when I went to the store, the discount was gone! Plus, the YahooBB promo was stopped, too! Think, think! With the cash discounts gone, it suddenly became a level playing field for the MacBook and iMac [As light and wonderful the MacBook Air seemed to me, it just wasn't a very good first PC, er Mac rather. I can be an application-intensive user, and I need higher specs and a bigger disc space to be able to do what I normally do - watching movies and editing photos].
Specs-wise, the iMac was the clear winner. But can anyone really lug around almost 14kg of computing power? But is the portability of the MacBook enough to pass up on the higher specs of the iMac?


Tuesday, January 22, 2008
My Bohol Trip In Pictures [Part 1]
Initially, I had mixed feelings about Bohol... But a little research did wonders on my hesitations. For the longest time, I really wanted to see the Chocolate Hills. And knowing that our beach destination had white sand was enough for me.
Here are some pictures from our vacation.
Beach
You can see from the pics that the sand is really distinctly fair. It was quite a sight to behold once we got out of the coconut groves leading to the beach. We went straight to the water!
Watch out tomorrow: Chocolate Hills and Tarsiers
Monday, January 21, 2008
Blogging Again
I haven't blogged for like 4 months! Happy 2008 to all!
For 2008, I'll try to document my everyday life as often as possible and not just limit my entries to anything G&W basketball-related.
Before I go back to Japan, I'd really like to go to the beach and snorkel. Me and the family just got back from Bohol yesterday, but more on that later.
So happy new year to everyone!
Tuesday, October 09, 2007
I'm Glad That's Over
Well, I am very very pleased that my Green Archers won the plum after a one-year absence, mind you. I hope this season shuts up all those naysayers out there.
With all the excitement of the previous month, my heart needs to rest. If it were weaker, I may have had suffered a heart attack already [kow - knock on wood]. I'm so glad I'm cutting out on cholesterol-heavy food.
Anyways, to those reading my blog and find it lacking in various subjects, my apologies. I'll try to write about a wider spectrum of ideas from now on. Thanks for indulging me the last 3 months for writing only about LaSalle / UAAP.
Hmm, so what's a nice topic?
Monday, October 08, 2007
The Road to the Championship
First, they came back from their one-year suspension, the decision of the UAAP board of which some argue as unfair. After all, LaSalle itself was the whistleblower in this. They didn't need to tell that 2 of their players had falsified DECS papers. But they did tell on them, in the spirit of honesty and transparency, in sportsmanship and competition. We had to give up the 2004 Championship, which we would have won anyway because no other team can match us then. I dare every other collegiate institution to check their own ranks and come clean.

In the eliminations, they were beaten twice by both UE and Ateneo, once by UST - the 3 other teams in the Final Four.
La Salle had to fight for every basket with Ateneo in their 3rd meeting, which gave them the 2nd spot and the twice to beat advantage.
Then, they had to go 2 games again with the same Ateneo squad, losing the heartbreaker of a first game by just a point, then soundly beating them in the 2nd game to finally advance to the Finals, where they feel right at home.
You could say a miracle happened after that. UE, who swept the elimination round (14-0), played their last game Sept 13 and earned the first Finals slot. Then they had to wait out for an opponent, which seemed like an eternity -- 3 weeks without any games is indeed just that for a UAAP team. La Salle finally came in with enough emotional momentum to, would you believe, dictate the Finals matches? UE was supposed to control the series. UE seemed unstoppable on paper, with its 2nd unit equally as strong as their 1st five. La Salle's bench was depleted with the injury of Marko Batricevic before the start of the conference, the suspension of Brian Ilad, and with Rico Maierhofer playing hurt. But you cannot coach toughness and heart to a team. You can not teach experience to a squad. UE didn't have that. UE, even after going 14-0, was a child in the Finals. Their last Finals appearance was in 1990, which they lost, yup, you guessed it, to the Archers. So their 16-0 Season dream vanished. This year is La Salle's year! No UAAP board, no Anton Montinola, no LaSalle-bashing can put us down!!! Today is when we take our rightful place in the basketball land.
So thanks to all the other teams for making this season one of the best in recent memory. Thanks to UST for proving that you could not have one Season 69 if La Salle were around. Thank you to Ateneo for giving us one hell of a series - 5 games - and helping us prove that 2 is indeed greater than 3. Thank you to UE for accepting defeat with grace. Thank you to Coach Franz Pumaren for being unfazed in some of the more hopeless situations and fighting and winning right back. Thank you to all the players, the graduating ones: TY and Cholo, next years leaders, JVee and Rico, and to the rest of the boys. We will be back next year to defend our title.
Now, shut up already and let us sing our Alma Mater song, for crying out loud!

Hail, Hail
Alma Mater,
Hail to De La Salle!
We'll hold your banner high and bright,
A shield of green and white,
We'll fight to keep your glory bright,
And never shall we fail,
Hail to thee our Alma Mater!
Hail! Hail! Hail!!!
DLSU is the 2007 Champions!!!
La Salle Sweeps East In Final Series
Two games, right when it matters most. The De La Salle University (DLSU) Green Archers are definitely back in the UAAP basketball supremacy as they swept the University of the East (UE) Red Warriors in their best-of-three Finals series with a convincing 73-64 victory on October 7 at the Big Dome.
Finals Most Valuable Player Joseph Evans “JV” Casio led the way for the Green and White community as he was exceptional chipping 17 points, 3 rebounds, 2 assists and 1 steal.
Pocholo Villanueva played his last year with a bang as he rewarded himself with an MVP award. He contributed 14 points, 5 rebounds and 6 assists.
La Salle totally dominated the game as they only let UE lead in the first quarter and after spurring with an 8-1 advantage, the Taft-based squad tightened up and never looked back.
Casio and Villanueva came to life in the fourth. Casio buried a 3-pointer in the 8:20th minute mark to further increase the DLSU cushion to five points after UE managed to cut the lead with back-to-back 3 point shots from James Martinez and Mark Borboran. Red Warrior Mark Fampulme posted the scare back against the Green Archers as he brought down the lead of the Archers to 2 at 55-53, 8:03 minutes left in the regulation.
Villanueva converted his charities after a Paul Lee foul to further increase the lead at 57-53.
Lee was exceptional despite fouling out in the game as he converted four straight points, two of which were free throws from OJ Cua’s foul. Lee was the main gunner for UE with 12 points, 5 rebounds and 1 assist.
Casio split his freebies that gave La Salle a 3-point cushion over UE at 62- 59.
TY Tang’s rebound less than two minutes left in regulation was crucial as he fished another foul from Lee, forcing the latter to commit his fifth and final foul. The former converted his freebies to increase the lead of the Archers at 64-59.
Borboran missed his free throws after a Cua foul. Casio nailed buzzer-beater 2-pointer less than a minute left. Borboran converted 12 points, 10 rebounds and 2 assists.
Marcy Arellano converted with a field goal to cut the UE bleeding at 66-61.
Casio connected with two more free throws coming off a Jorel Canizares foul 40.7 ticks left. The Archers were on top by 7 points at 68-61.
Arellano was also fouled out giving Cua the opportunity to shoot 2 freebies, 24.1 ticks left.
Casio split his free throws to give La Salle a further icing on the cake.
Martinez converted the last field goal for the Warriors.
Rico Maierhofer wrapped the victory of the Archers with his 2-free throws.
Canizares was the main man for the Recto-based squad in the third quarter. He nailed a field goal that gave the Red and White squad a lift as they cut the Archers’ lead by 3 at 46-43.
Bader Malabes completed his free throws that gave La Salle a 5-point bubble at 48-43.
Tang shot his freebies 9 seconds left giving La Salle a 7-point margin at the end of the third quarter.
La Salle was in total control of the second quarter as it posted the biggest lead of the game at 30-16 with Villanueva completing his free throws, 2:43 minutes left in the half.
La Salle was still on top in the second quarter at 34-23 outscoring the Warriors 19-12.
UE blasted with an 8-1 advantage courtesy of its veterans, Elmer Espiritu, Borboran and Kelvin Gregorio.
La Salle managed to crawl back slowly fishing fouls from Martinez, Lee and Rudy Lingganay.
The Taft-based squad was in the lead 15-11 at the end of the first quarter.
Villanueva was very happy being crowned as the Finals MVP alongside JV Casio. He is leaving La Salle through graduation with a Finals stint under his belt and an MVP award. Cholo said “It was really a sort of redemption for our part with this win and it’s a pretty game to end my college years and I thank God for it. We were out for a Season but we came back, we proved to them that we are one and we stand for what we believed in.”
Friday, October 05, 2007
La Salle halts UE's winning season!!!
TY Tang unleashed 17 points, including nine in the fourth quarter, while fellow veterans JV Casio and Cholo Villanueva added 12 and 11 points, respectively, as the Archers took a 1-0 lead in the best-of-three series the Warriors were fancied to dominate.
Rico Maeirhofer, who has recovered from a sprained ankle he sustained two weeks ago, split his charities with 14 seconds remaining in the contest to shatter a 63-all tie forced by Mark Borboran’s three-pointer from way out.
That, however, turned out to be the marginal basket as the Warriors fumbled on their make-or-break play – another Borboran attempt from behind the arch on top of the key.
“Man for man, we’re no match against them. But we have the experience and the veteran savvy to offset our disadvantages,” said La Salle coach Franz Pumaren whose Archers came off two tough Final Four matches with the Ateneo Eagles.
The Taft-based quintet, which came into the final the clear underdogs after getting swept in the elimination round by the Warriors, goes for its own sweep Sunday, also at the Big Dome.
A decider, if necessary, is on Wednesday.
UE, which last won 22 years ago during the days of Allan Caidic and Jerry CodiƱera and which took a three-week long layoff after sweeping the elims, actually had two chances of stealing Game 1 but a three-point try by Borboran and Marcy Arellano’s tip in the dying seconds missed their marks.
Maierhofer plucked the rebound as the final buzzer sounded, triggering off a wild celebration from
But the Archers, also out to redeem themselves from a season-long suspension last year, showed experience and grace under pressure are what it takes to win championship games.
That more than made up for La Salle’s setback in the rebounding department where the Warriors plucked a whopping total of 60 boards, including 29 on the offensive end as against the Archers’ 31.
That, however, hardly mattered.
It was also UE’s lowest scoring total of the season.
“I know they dominated the boards but we found some ways to offset it,” said Franz Pumaren, who steered
Borboran, playing on final season, led the Warriors with 13 points, including a triple over the outstretched arms of Villanueva that knotted the count with 34.8 ticks left.
But the veteran Warrior couldn’t drain an uncontested three-point shot at endgame that could’ve lifted the UE side.
The Recto-based cagers actually threatened to rip the game apart in the early going, but each time, the Archers displayed a big fighting heart behind Villanueva, Tang, Casio and Maeirhofer.
Monday, October 01, 2007
Ateneo-La Salle: Too big for the Philippines
THE GAME OF MY LIFE By Bill Velasco
Monday, October 1, 2007
On Sept. 23, the New York Times published an article on the rivalry between Ateneo de Manila and De La Salle, written by Fulbright scholar Raphael Bartholomew, a graduate of Northwestern who earned a grant to come to the Philippines in November 2005, to write a book about basketball. Almost before he was off the plane, he was bombarded about comments on the most compelling rivalry in Philippine sports.
"People said, 'You haven't seen anything untIl you've seen La Salle-Ateneo,'" explains the 6'4" Bartholomew, who played basketball for Northwestern. "They said that the games were so intense, and people from all levels of society were so loud, they were just losing it, and the stadium would be packed beyond belief."
According to Vic Sison of the Ateneo Sports Hall of Fame (ASHOF), the rivalry began even before the 1930's, when members of high society studied at what were considered the best schools in the country.
"You became a La Salle alumnus, and your children will go to school, and your grandchildren will follow," explained Sison, who himself is enshrined in the ASHOF as an outstanding football player. "The same with Ateneo."
The good-natured ribbing that followed defeat of one school at the hands of the other school pricked the pride of the members of the alta sociedad, and it became increasingly unacceptable to lose.
"The competition became very strong because these people were very close together," he adds. "They belonged to the same social strata. They mingled with one another in business and other affairs. And when it came to sports competition, it was the best against the best."
In the 1950's, things picked up a notch, as both schools used their intellect to craft cheers that played up their school's attributes, while subtlely (or often not so subtlely) degrading the other's.
"It was building competition, not only on the playing floor, on the playing field, but in the stands," Sison elaborates. "Every time Ateneo and La Salle would play each other – in whatever sport – where there was an audience represented by both schools, there would be that build-up of intense emotion."
Despite the absence of the rivalry for over a decade when Ateneo left the NCAA to join the UAAP, today's game has actually amplified the one-upmanship. Now, every Ateneo-La Salle game is on the evening news, in the morning papers, and bannering Internet headlines round the clock. After a year of waiting, Rafe Bartholomew finally got his first taste ot the blue-green war this July.
"Senators, foreign diplomats, Cabinet ministers, a smattering of Forbes's 40 richest Filipinos, movie stars and enough professional basketball players to play five-on-five. They are the elite of Philippine society, and they all gather at Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City to watch the men's basketball rivalry between the universities Ateneo de Manila and De La Salle," Bartholomew wrote in the New York Times. He also characterized the teams' contrasting images: the Green Archers with their shaved heads, tattoos and attitude, and the Blue Eagles with their clean-cut, good boy image, which also fueled the animosity between them.
"I think it has exceeded expectations," Bartholomew gushed. "The noise, the crowd, everybody moving together, and at the end of the games, pumping their fists and singing the school songs. Nothing could have prepared me for it. There's really no way to explain it without experiencing it. People are so passionate, they're screaming for every pass, every tip. Not just every score. They're celebrating possessions. It's something I've never seen before anywhere."
And with the first four games having been decided by a total of just seven points, the quality and unpredictability of the games has been heightened.
"The games have become more physical, faster and more technical," Sison says. "The players are bigger, and the quality has improved. And when the quality of the games improve, the passion in the rivalry improves with it."
"It doesn't matter if one team seems weak on paper," Bartholomew reflects. "Even if one team doesn't have its usual squad. You can throw all the records out the window. If it's a La Salle-Ateneo game, you don't know what's going to happen."
And according to Sison, it's a passion that will never die out.
"When you leave an Atenean and a La Sallite in a room together, one will always think that he is number one, and the other is number two. They simply refuse to lose to each other. It's as simple as that."
Truer words were never spoken.Archers avenge 3 losses, eliminate Eagles!
In the end, no big shots came from Chris Tiu of Ateneo. Cholo Villanueva delivered them for La Salle with a Big D to boot.
Villanueva came through with clutch baskets in the fourth quarter and shackled Tiu all game as the Archers finally put away the Eagles, 65-60, yesterday in their sudden death for the second final berth in the UAAP men's basketball tournament at the packed Araneta Coliseum.
Playing his last season as an Archer, Villanueva pumped in nine of his 13 points in the final period while neutralizing Tiu in the other end as the Taft-based squad took a step closer to making a successful return from a one-year suspension.
"It's nice to be back in the finals," said La Salle coach Franz Pumaren moments after steering the Archers to the final for the first time since losing the crown to the Far Eastern U Tams three seasons ago.
The Archers face a well-rested University of the East side on Thursday at the start of the best-of-three showdown for this year's crown.
The Dindo Pumaren-mentored Warriors swept the two-round elims to clinch the first championship berth.
The final will also mark the first time that the Pumarens will clash in a championship game.
"It has been long overdue, we're finally facing each other in the finals," said Franz, who will be appearing in the finals for the eighth time since taking over the coaching reins from Jong Uichico a decade ago.
Rico Maeirhofer sealed the emotional win with a foul shot that sent half of over 23,000 fans into frenzied celebration and the other half into tears.
Tiu, who scored a couple of crucial shots in a 76-75 Ateneo squeaker Thursday to force the rubber match for the No. 2 spot, failed to come up with even one this time as he was held to just two points in the last quarter.
Credit that to La Salle's no-nonsense defense.
The Archers, in fact, held the Eagles to just two field goals in the final period and a season-low total output.
"This is the only game in the season that we responded to the challenge by playing good defense," said Pumaren.
Their failure to control the defensive board, particularly in the closing minute, proved costly for the Eagles, last year's losing finalist to the UST Tigers but out of this year's championship despite beating the Archers thrice in a record-tying five games this year.
Ateneo swept elimination round meetings, an 80-77 win in overtime in the first round an 89-87 triumph in the second, lost to La Salle, 70-69, in a playoff for the twice-to-beat advantage before forcing a fifth and final duel with a 76-75 triumph on Tiu's endgame brilliance.
It turned out to be the last.
"I told Cholo and even TY (Tang) before the game that this will be their last game against Ateneo because they'll be graduating, and they rose to the challenge," said Pumaren.
The Archers dictated the pace early under deafening roars from both sides as they led by as many as nine points in the first quarter, 15-6.
A 14-1 blast bridging the first and second quarters turned things around for the Eagles, who wrested the lead at 20-16 as Eric Salamat took over.
Simon Atkins, a rookie out of reigning UAAP high school champion La Salle-Zobel, fired a jumper and a triple to spark a closing run that gave the Taft-based school a 29-26 upper hand at the break.
Maeirhofer, the MVP in both the Nike and Fil-Oil tournaments last summer, led the Archers' attack early with seven first half points while Tang, who turned 23 Thursday, fired six points.
The scores:
La Salle 65 – Villanueva 13, Tang 12, Maeirhofer 12, Casio 10, Malabes 5, Atkins 5, Walsham 4, Ferdinand 2, Cua 2, Mangahas 0, Co 0, Barua 0.
Ateneo 60 – Arao 14, Tiu 10, Salamat 10, Baclao 7, Al-Hussaini 6, Reyes 5, Long 4, Baldos 2, Escueta 2, Monfort 0, Laterre 0.
Quarterscores: 16-14; 29-26; 48-43; 65-60Sunday, September 30, 2007
Only in the UAAP: 2 > 3!!!
De La Salle proved mathematicians everywhere wrong, when they won only their 2nd out of the 5 meetings with Ateneo this season.
These 2 wins are the most crucial; the first win gaining them a twice to beat advantage, while the 2nd propelled them to the Finals.
Ateneo can keep their elimination round wins and only 1 of 2 sorely-needed triumphs.
De La Salle had the chance to go the Finals last Thursday, since they only needed to win once in the stepladder format to advance. Sadly, Ateneo pulled the rug from under them, squeaking by with a 65-64 decision.
The game today avenges that loss. The prize: a chance to win the Finals, an opportunity to win the championship after a year-long Sabbatical.
Props go to Cholo Villanueva, who with his cool head, was able to douse cold water on Ateneo's hot streaks. Rico Maierhoffer also hustled his heart out at the opposite ends of the court. Jvee Casio also nonchalantly sank both freethrows at the dying seconds of the ballgame, to make it 64-60. Nonoy Baclao cut the lead to two in the previous play, hitting a very surprising three-pointer to make it 62-60.
More on this tomorrow!
Coincidentally, my above equation is true in another aspect: La Salle, as the No.2 seed, edges out Ateneo, the #3.
I gotta sleep!
Ateneo Still Survives (for Sep 28)
Ateneo Lives Another Day
“One big fight” turned out to be one more game. Chris Tiu came alive in the second half then pumped in the killer shots in the homestretch as Ateneo stunned archrival La Salle, 64-65, to live one more day in the 70th UAAP stepladder semifinals at the packed and rocking Araneta Coliseum.
Tiu fired bricks in the first 20 minutes of play, but buried a long triple in the last two minutes before driving inside for the go-ahead layup with 7.3 seconds left. The second-seeded Green Archers, who came into the game carrying a twice-to-beat advantage, missed out on the last play with Bader Malabes misfiring on a three-point attempt as time expired.
Ateneo’s scrambling win thus forged a winner-take-all match on Sunday at 3 pm. The winner will face University of the East, who took outright the first finals slot after sweeping the elimination round.
The Blue Eagles were given up for dead, trailing by five to start the fourth period and were almost done in with two minutes remaining. JV Casio’s split freethrow made it 64-58 but Ateneo erased the deficit on a 7-0 run, on Tiu’s exploits and on a layup by Ford Arao with 51 seconds to play.
Tiu’s triple closed the Eagles to within 64-61, 1:54 remaining. Casio’s three-point try rimmed out in the next play before PJ Walsham bungled another attempt from beyond the arc. Kirk Long rebounded Tiu’s missed triple and fed Ford Arao for an easy layup to beat the shotclock, 64-63.
Malabes then muffed an off-balanced layup to set up Tiu’s winning play in the final 7.3 seconds. La Salle inbounded to Casio from the top of the key before finding a wide-open Malabes from the left side.
The loss was a nail-biter for the Archers, who led most of the way and took control early on. They gained headway after the half, thanks to a seven-point third-quarter output from Ty Tang, who topscored with 20 points. Casio added 11 but struggled with only two treys in the game and scored only one point in the fourth quarter.
“We’re happy we won the game,” said Coach Norman Black. “We couldn’t do anything on offense. Luckily, our defense held up.”
“Tiu struggled the entire game, but he came up with the big shots when the game’s on the line,” Black said of Tiu, who’s apparently taken La Salle’s number with three game-winning shots against the Archers this season.
Tiu, who finished with 14 markers, erupted with seven points in the final period after being held to only one point in the first half. Arao led the Eagles with 19, including 10 in the first quarter. Noy Baclao and Eric Salamat each had eight.
The win was the Eagles’ third in four meetings against the Archers, whose only victory earned them the no. 2 slot in the stepladder semifinals. Sunday’s meeting assured the two teams’ a fifth encounter, with the winner advancing in the best-of-three championship series against the Red Warriors next week.
La Salle led at the end of every quarter, and was poised to put the game under wraps after entering the fourth period at 52-47. The Archers took a six-point lead twice, the first one at 54-48 on Rico Maierhoffer’s foiled three-point-play attempt.
Baclao’s back-to-back tip-in shots tied the game for the last time at 54-all. But Cholo Villanueva made a fastbreak layup and Tan hit four straight points to put the Archers again on top, 63-58, time down to 2:20.