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UST Growling Tigers basketball

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Intercollegiate men's basketball program
Further information:UST Growling Tigers
UST Growling Tigers
2024 UST Growling Tigers basketball team
UniversityUniversity of Santo Tomas
Founded1920
HistoryUST Glowing Goldies (1924–1992)
UST Golden Tigers (1992–1993)
UST Growling Tigers (1993–present)
Head coachPido Jarencio
LocationManila
NicknameGrowling Tigers
ColorsGold, black, and white[1]
     
UAAP Champions (18)
UAAP Final Four
NCAA Champions
1930
Offseason Tournament Champions
Philippine Collegiate Champions League
2012

TheUST Growling Tigers basketball is theintercollegiate men's basketball program of theUniversity of Santo Tomas. The school has won 19 basketball titles including one in theNational Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). They are one of the winningest teams in theUniversity Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) with 18 championships, the last coming in2006 duringPido Jarencio's rookie year of coaching. Jarencio returned as the team's head coach after ten years since resigning in2013. He formally replacedBal David on February 3, 2023.[2][3]

Schedule overview

[edit]

The Growling Tigers' preparation for the season begins in late-March, or at the tailend of theacademic year. It was recently moved to late-April following a shift in the opening of theschool calendar from June to August. UST usually plays in two majorpreseason tournaments for two to three months and they sometimes join provincial pocket tournaments in the lead-up to the UAAP tournament. On many occasions, a Team B lineup from their training pool is fielded to competitions that run parallel to another tournament.[4][5]

Among theoff-season tournaments that the Growling Tigers participate in are theFiloil Flying V Preseason Cup, MILCU Under-25 Summer tournament, Breakdown Basketball Invitational tournament,PBA D-League Aspirants' Cup and theFather Martin Cup.

In the 14-gameUAAP men's basketball tournament, the Tigers play from twice to thrice weekly against the seven other member collegiate teams in the course of the two round-robin elimination games from early September until mid-November.Playoff games may last until December, after which the postseason tournaments begin.[6][7][8]

In the postseason, UST usually qualifies to participate in thePhilippine Collegiate Champions League, depending on their rank from the concluded UAAP season.[9]

History

[edit]
See also:Category:UST Growling Tigers basketball team seasons

The Growling Tigers were originally known as the "Glowing Goldies," with the name derived from UST'sschool colors of gold and white. Their colors were in turn inspired by the flag of thePapal States since theirpontifical status was obtained in 1902.[10]

Early years

[edit]

The history of UST's basketball program dates back to 1920 when they joined theLiga Catolica, an interscholastic sports league of Manila-based Catholic schools that was founded bySan Beda,La Salle,Ateneo,Letran, and San Vicente de Paul College.[11]

The Glowing Goldies co-founded the NCAA in 1924 and won their first and only championship in 1930. They were coached byChito Calvo who also served as the school's director of physical education. The team improved from being cellar dwellers in 1928 to finishing second in the standings behindUniversity of the Philippines in 1929.[12][13]

An experimental sports meet among the triumvirate of UP, UST andNational University called the "Big Three" and formed in 1930, arose from the schools' dissatisfaction with the NCAA's plan to incorporate the league with theBureau of Commerce. A permission to stage the games was eventually granted by the league on the condition that NCAA events would be given priority over the use of sports facilities. The three schools later withdrew from the NCAA and the Big Three was formally inaugurated as a league in 1932. The Goldies won the championships from 1931 to 1934 behind the exploits of their three national team members,Jacinto Ciria Cruz,Primitivo Martinez, and Herminio Silva.[14][15]

Apart from the Big Three League, the Goldies also competed in the National Open Championship and tournaments organized by thePhilippine Amateur Athletic Federation where they won titles in 1935, 1937, 1940, and 1941.[16]

With the addition ofFar Eastern University to the group in 1938, the Big Three League was dissolved and the UAAP was inaugurated. The Goldies lost to the Tamaraws in a game that decided the tournament's first champion. UST went on to record their first back-to-back championships in the next two years, although the 1939 crown was shared with FEU and UP when they all finished with identical 4–2 win–loss records. Herr Silva, who had ventured into coaching after the 1938 season took over the Goldies whenDr. Jose Rodríguez resigned. The 1940 champion team became known to sports scribes as the "Captains' Team" due to the presence of five skippers in the lineup. Aside from then team captainGabby Fajardo, the others who had served as the Goldies' leaders in past tournaments wereFrancisco Vestil, Salvador Siao, Enrique Novales, and Gabby's brotherFely who was a transferee from Letran.[17][18][19]

Postwar era

[edit]

Thepostwar resumption of the UAAP in 1946 after a five-year absence saw the Glowing Goldies record their first undefeated season when they won all six of their games to claim their third straight championship. The team was honored in a ceremony on May 12, 1996, to commemorate the 50th year of the championship.[20]

UST Glowing Goldies 1946 UAAP men's basketball champions
Ramoncito Campos ∙ Edward Dee ∙Francisco Vestil ∙ Benjamin Aranza ∙ Francisco Nepomuceno ∙ Demosthenes Nagtalon ∙Tito EduqueJulian Malonso ∙ Pepito Genato ∙ Felipe Tiongco ∙ Ricardo Pineda ∙ Antonio Castillejo ∙Pocholo Martinez
Head coach: Herminio Silva
UST Glowing Goldies 1947 UAAP men's basketball champions
Pepito Genato ∙Julian MalonsoFrancisco VestilGabby FajardoFely Fajardo ∙ Ramon Hechanova ∙ Tony Dimayuga ∙ Edward Dee ∙Ramoncito CamposPocholo Martinez ∙ Pepe Esteva ∙Tito Eduque ∙ Francisco Nepomuceno ∙ Demosthenes Nagtalon
Head coach: Herminio Silva

The following year, the Goldies were declared co-champions with FEU for the second time in the UAAP. In the deciding match, UST was leading towards the end of regulation when apower outage struck theRizal Memorial Coliseum, forcing play to stop. When power had not been restored after an hour, the tournament organizers decided to award the 1947 championship to both teams. Francisco Vestil was namedMost valuable player of the season.[17][21]

UST won over FEU again in 1949 for their sixth straight championship. It was their fourth straight title in the postwar era. The Tamaraws got their revenge when they defeated the Goldies for the UAAP, as well as the Intercollegiate championships in 1950.[22][23]

Redemption came early for UST when they won the 1951 National Open Championships in January after defeating theSan Miguel Braves team of their former coach Chito Calvo, 47–41 in theFinals. This was the last time that a team from the UAAP won the National Open. The Glowing Goldies went on to win their first unsharedthree-peat championship in the UAAP from 1951 to 1953. In the 1951 UAAP Finals, Coach Silva put into play his peculiar strategy of dribbling the ball until time ran out. UST preserved their lead over FEU and went on to win the championship on a 43–34 score.Ning Ramos was selected MVP by thePhilippine Sportswriters Association in 1952. He was joined by teammateRamon Manulat in the Mythical team selection.[22][23][24][25]

The Goldies finished third behind FEU and first time champions NU in 1954. Francis Wilson was included in the PSA's Mythical first team selection, whileEddie Pacheco made it to the second team.[26][27]

In 1955, Fely Fajardo replaced longtime coach Herr Silva after the latter had fallen ill during his coaching stint at the1954 World Championship in Brazil. UST was back to their winning ways when they dethroned NU for the UAAP title and then claimed the National Intercollegiate Championship in the postseason after beatingUniversity of the Visayas, 76–66. In the National Finals, the Goldies forced anovertime when team captain Andy Bautista converted both free throws to tie the score at 62–all. Wilson led the team in scoring with 21 points, while Jose Petel, Egie Serafico, and Benjamin Cabrera added 15, 12, and 10 points respectively.[28][29]

UST Glowing Goldies 1953 UAAP men's basketball champions
Napoleon Flores ∙ Francis Wilson ∙ Andy Bautista ∙Ramon Manulat ∙ Rogelio (Egie) Serafico ∙ Ludovico Yambao ∙Paing HechanovaNing Ramos (C) ∙ Francisco Bato ∙ Jose Tapia ∙ Baltazar Garcia ∙ Jose Petel ∙ Filemon Cober
Head coach: Herminio Silva

UST–UE rivalry

[edit]

The Glowing Goldies metUniversity of the East in the 1957 Final, in what was to be their first of eight championship meetings that spans until the beginning of the 1970s decade. The Warriors joined the league as anexpansion team in 1952 withManila Central University,Adamson, and theUniversity of Manila. UST lost to UE, 55–64.[30]

UST got back at UE in 1959 by breaking their back-to-back championship streak after winning, 66–55. The Goldies who won the first round pennant struggled in the next round and had to go through aplayoff against FEU in order to qualify for the right to face the defending champions in the Finals. They defeated the Tamaraws, 84–67 and then went on to deploy a tightman-to-man defense against the Warriors in the championship game. They had succeeded in limiting UE's leading scorer Roehl Nadurata to only four points, all of which came fromfree throws. The 6'3" Asencion Aparicio who hardly played long minutes was responsible for the defense on Nadurata. The Goldies'center was equally effective on offense when he scored 20 points in the game. This was the 11th championship won by UST since their 1939 title.[31]

A loss to FEU in the four-team championship round prevented the Glowing Goldies from defending their championship. They made it to the semifinals by defeating the MCU Tigers, 87–72 in a playoff for the fourth and last berth where UE, FEU and UP had already qualified. FEU'sRomy Diaz set a new scoring record when he tallied 40 points in ousting UST, 91–81 from the 1960 Finals. Valentino Rosabal won the 1960Rookie of the year award.[32][33][34][35]

In 1963, the UAAP introduced thetwice-to-beat advantage format for the first time to replace the existing one-game championship. UST defeated UE in two games, but the victory was placed under protest by the Warriors. The subject of the protest was a UST player's ineligibility for having played for a commercial team in the National Open in the summer, which was against league rules.[36] The protest was upheld by the UAAP board, and as a result awarded the championship to UE. The Warriors also became the recipients of theEl Oro trophy for having been champions for three straight years. Rosabal was named MVP, whilepoint guardAric del Rosario won the 1963 Rookie of the year award.[37][38][34][39]

UST did not have a promising start to their 1964 season. They lost to the University of the Visayas in the National Collegiate Championship in March and Fajardo had stepped down as coach at the start of the UAAP tournament in September.Sonny Reyes andOrly Bauzon, their team's top scorers dropped out of the team to play in theMICAA. Herr Silva returned as their interim coach, but the Goldies still lost their opening game against UE, 81–82. Things began to look up whenCaloy Loyzaga, who had just retired as a player in April got on board to be the team's permanent head coach. The Goldies won their next games and got back at UE on a close 58–57 win to qualify to the Finals against FEU. UST had erased FEU's twice-to-beat advantage and turned the championship into a best-of-three affair when they won, 61–60. Aric del Rosario scored all of his team's points to put the Goldies ahead 60–55 from a 53–54 deficit. In the next game, FEU's Rolando Mojica scored 35 points to lead his team over UST, 69–58 and extend the Finals to a deciding third game. It was another close game with a series of one-point lead changes until the final ten seconds when the Goldies' Romeo Ramos was fouled by an FEU defender while driving to the basket. Ramos split his free throws to tie the score at 64–all as time ran out in regulation. UST managed to get the 71–68 overtime win and the championship. According to sports historian Jose Maria Escoda, newspapers at that time described the UST–FEU series as the most exhilarating matchup in the postwar history of the UAAP.[40][41]

Championship head-to-head
No.YearChampionRunner-up
11957UEUST
21959USTUE
31963UEUST[a]
41965UEUST
51966UEUST
61967co-champions
71968UEUST
81971UEUST
91984UEUST
101985UEUST
Series: UE leads 9–2

The Goldies met UE again in the 1965 UAAP Finals. They prevented the Warriors from scoring a season sweep after winning their second-round game, 74–70 in overtime. They ended up tied at first place in the standings with identical 7-1 records. The Goldies won the first game of the best-of-three series, 69–67 afterDanny Florencio, their rookieforward out ofFEATI University made back-to-back steals that were converted to baskets in the game's final seconds. The Warriors retaliated with a 72–65 win in Game 2, and then took the crown in the deciding third game of the series. Florencio erupted for 40 points, but fouled out after committing two quick fouls on UE'sSonny Jaworski, the last coming in the final ten seconds of the game and with the score tied at 84–all. The Warriors forced twoturnovers on UST and scored the last four points for an 88–84 victory.[42][43]

The 1966 preseason bore testament to the tenacity of the Goldies' rivalry with the Warriors when their National Collegiate game ended in a brawl. UST was trying to prevent UE from once again completing a sweep when in the last four seconds of the game, a ten-minute long fight broke out on the playing court. The game was stopped as the referees were unable to take control of the situation, with the Goldies trailing 67–73. As a result of a hearing held by theBasketball Association of the Philippines, six players from both teams were each handed down a one-year suspension. UE's Jaworski,Nat Canson, Fernando Paseos, and UST's Florencio, team captain Manuel Tan, and Ceferino dela Paz were the recipients of the ban for throwing fists and elbows during the altercation. The penalties were later reduced to six months upon appeal by both schools, but the players would still miss the first month of the UAAP tournament which was set to start in August. The Warriors were awarded the National Collegiate championship, citing a rule that if the game is interrupted after the 35th minute, the team that leads is declared the winner. The two teams met again to contest the UAAP crown after finishing the elimination rounds with identical 6–2 records. The Goldies were swept in the best-of-three series, with the second game ending on a close 77–78 score.

Egie Serafico was appointed head coach after the 1966 season when Caloy Loyzaga resigned to assume coaching duties for the national team. UST faced the Warriors for the third straight year in the 1967 UAAP Finals. The series had been contested once again in a deciding third game, which took a strange turn at the start of the second half. Both Serafico andBaby Dalupan, coaches of the two opposing teams refused to be the first to submit to the game officials their list of their starting five prior to thetip-off. Even as the Glowing Goldies led by 11 points at 51–40 at halftime, their starters led byBogs Adornado,Lawrence Mumar, and Cirilo Fabiosa were already infoul trouble. After repeated warnings to both teams, referee Antonio Esclabanan declared the game ano contest, citing the unsportsmanlike behavior of the two coaches. The league later recognized UST and UE as co-champions of the season.[44][45]

The Goldies ended up as runners-up to the Warriors for two more years in 1968 and 1971, sandwiching UE's two undefeated seasons in 1969 and 1970 where they were declared automatic champions. UST was the last team to try to prevent the sweep in 1969 after all the other three teams lost to UE in the elimination games. The Goldies went unsuccessful and bowed to the Warriors, 96–105. UE won two more games for a 10–0 sweep the following year, adding victories over the UAAP's sixth member, the Adamson Falcons who had been readmitted to the league that year.[37]

UST Glowing Goldies 1964 UAAP men's basketball champions
Romeo Ramos (C) ∙Aric del Rosario ∙ Bobby Salonga ∙ Manuel Tan ∙ Alfredo Reyes ∙ Cristino Reynoso ∙ Juanito Petel ∙ Hector Hipolito ∙ Rene Hawkins ∙ Jaime Manalon ∙ Ernesto Arcales ∙ Anselmo Briones ∙ Fernando Lipata ∙ Ceferino dela Paz
Head coach:Carlos Loyzaga
UST Glowing Goldies 1967 UAAP men's basketball champions
George Lizares ∙ Manuel Veles ∙Lawrence Mumar ∙ Maximo Laurel ∙ Jesse Caimol ∙ Andrew Malkinson ∙ Remigio Concepcion ∙ Alfonso Lao ∙ Benjamin Arriola ∙ Francis Lobres ∙ Cirilo Fabiosa ∙Bogs Adornado ∙ Amor Gonzales ∙ Tommy Gutierrez
Head coach: Egie Serafico

Cordero and Jarencio eras

[edit]

Former UST forward Francis Wilson was appointed head coach in 1975. He had only managed to steer the team to a fifth-place finish that year, and despite a turnaround season in 1976 where they ended up as third placers, four of the Goldies' senior players left to play in theMICAA after a rumored falling-out with the coaching staff. This left the 1977 roster with eight rookies and six second-stringers, with the exception of third year guard Ray Obias who became a scoring revelation the previous season. While the Glowing Goldies were no longer championship contenders, their rivalry with UE continued when the two teams battled towards the end of eliminations for the #4 rank in the standings. UST prevailed with a down-the-wire 76–75 win. They were actually leading at 76–72 with 43 seconds left in the game, but the Warriors scored three straight unanswered points. The Goldies weathered the uprising by keeping possession from the remaining five seconds until the buzzer. UST next defeated UP to prevent them from entering the Finals against FEU. Edmund Yee, Ricky Valero, and Danny Calsado led the Goldies with their balanced scoring, but it was the team's 18steals that carried UST to victory. The Goldies ended up at fourth in the standings with 5 wins and 5 losses, while UE fell to fifth with a 4–6 record.[46][47][48]

Serafico came back to replace Wilson as UST's coach in 1978. He had laid out a two-year rebuilding plan for the team that has failed to advance to the postseason in recent years. The Glowing Goldies had again become UE's adversary when they met in 1979 for the playoff that would determine FEU's opponent in the Finals. Both teams ended the eliminations with a 9–3 record. UST came out on top with a 114–104 win and dethroned the Warriors, who held the 1978 title. Yee led in scoring with 34 points, but it was his collaboration withEd Cordero and Frank Natividad that gave the team the win. The three combined for 28 points in an eight-minute stretch to surmount UE's 60–45 lead in the second half. Serafico's program saw an early success with the Goldies' entry to the Finals. UST's offense was anchored mainly on Cordero, the team's center who had set a scoring record when he finished with 54 points against Adamson in the first round. He later revealed that he had been nursing a fever prior to the playoff game against UE. His condition worsened and was hospitalized after the game, making him unavailable to play in the championship where FEU held a twice-to-beat advantage. Natividad and Yee took up the scoring cudgels with 38 and 25 respectively, but were soundly beaten, 89–100. The team trailed FEU at the half, 27–51.[49][50]

Like in 1969, the Goldies were again faced with the task of preventing an automatic championship by a rival team. FEU went undefeated in 11 games and their last scheduled match in the two round-robin eliminations of the 1980 season was against UST. Cordero, who was still the center of the team's offense was supported in their starting lineup by Edgar Bilasano, Louis Cu, Nestor Lugue, and Paquito Maristela. Maristela had replaced the already graduated Edmund Yee at the forward position. The 6'4" Cesar Calayag alternated with Lugue in guarding Anthony Williams, their opponent's high-scoring American forward. The Goldies who had trailed FEU, 37–42 at the half opened up a rally led by rookie Raymond Fran to put the team to within two at 49–51. The lead changes went back and forth until the 69–70 count, with UST trailing. Both teams went scoreless in the next three minutes until Cu and the Tamaraws' Jojo Valle traded baskets to up the score to 71–72 with 34 seconds left in the game. A botched play off the Goldies' lasttimeout caused the team a30-second violation. In the next play, FEU held on to the ball until the buzzer sounded and were declared champions of the season. Serafico later resigned and was replaced by Eddie Pacheco, another former Goldie as the team's head coach.[51][52]

Pido Jarencio set the scoring record for the season in 1982 when he made 50 points in their 116–93 win over NU in the first round. The team opened their season with an 82–91 loss to Adamson where Jarencio topscored for 15 points.Charlie Badion, who ledMapúa to the 1981 NCAA championship replaced Pacheco as coach of the Glowing Goldies. UST had the chance to qualify to the 1983 Finals when they tied UP at second place at the end of eliminations with an 8–4 record. They defeated the Maroons both times in the eliminations, with the second-round game ending on a 76–71 score. UP got payback by beating the Goldies in the playoff for the second Finals slot, which ended on a close 87–85 score. Jarencio was selected to the Mythical team that year.[53][54][55][56][57]

The 1984 UAAP Finals was abest-of-three series, where the Glowing Goldies were once again facing UE. UST won in Game 2, behind Jarencio's 34 points to avenge their Game 1 loss to the Warriors. The Goldies kept up with UE's offense until the first five minutes of the second half when the Warriors started to shift gears to win the championship on a 112–99 score. Jarencio and UE'sAllan Caidic, front runners in the MVP race turned the game into a shooting contest by scoring 48 and 46 points respectively. Jarencio, who was hobbled with four fouls from as early as the 22nd minute failed to get support from his teammates as he scored most of their points in the second half. The Goldies trailed by as much as 19 points late in the game. They had defeated UE in both games of the elimination rounds.[54]

The Goldies and the Warriors met again in the 1985 UAAP Finals. The two teams were on equal footing as UE topped the first round with a 5–1 record, while the Goldies became the tournament's #1 seed with 9 wins against 3 losses. UE's lone loss in the first round was to the Glowing Goldies with Jarencio scoring a season high 43 points. The Warriors defeated FEU in a playoff for the second seed qualifier and then handily defeated UST in two games to crown themselves as champions for the second straight year.[58]

Player migration

[edit]

In 1987, the Glowing Goldies had to drop their top scorer Bennett Palad and big man Rabbi Tomacruz from the roster due to academic deficiencies. Tomacruz had failed to enroll in time for the submission of the lineup, making him ineligible for the season.Sophomore recruits Fedencio Oblina, and Rohimust Santos, Jr. stepped up in place of Palad and Tomacruz. After placing fourth at the end of the first round, UST won back-to-back games to move up to a tie for third place at the standings. It was then that officials of Adamson filed a protest against one of their players. The UAAP Board found Oblina to be ineligible for failing hisNCEE qualifying tests which resulted to the reversal of four of UST's won games. The Glowing Goldies dropped to 7th place in the standings at 2–7 from their original 6–3 record. Aric del Rosario sat out in their next game and was replaced by then coach of the women's team Orly Bauzon. Oblina was handed a lifetime ban by the UAAP. The Goldies ended the season with 3 wins against 11 losses.[59][60][61]

Bauzon formally replaced Del Rosario as the Goldies' head coach for the 1988 season. Palad was excluded from the roster for the second straight year for having exceeded the five-year playing limit in the UAAP. The league counted his participation in thePABL in 1987 as a playing year despite his absence from the UAAP. To add to the team's woes, starting point guardAlfrancis Chua quit the team in the first round of eliminations after a misunderstanding with a member of the coaching staff. Chua's decision to leave was finalized after a meeting with Bauzon and PE director Fr. Franklin Beltran. UST ended their season at seventh place for the second year with the same 3–11 record.[62][63][64]

1989 saw a shakeup in UST's basketball program when the nucleus of their Golden Nuggets juniors basketball team made a surprising transfer to rival Adamson in the summer. The Nuggets, regarded as the tallest basketball team in the country with their 6'11" team captainEJ Feihl, 6'8"Marlou Aquino, and 6'6" Giovanni Pineda in the lineup had lost Aquino, Pineda, Manuel Cucio, and Gerard Hipolito in the transfer. Joining the high school players were the Nuggets' head coach Hector Hipolito and his assistant Charlie Dy, as well as seniors coach Orly Bauzon and sophomore player Bong dela Cruz, who was also a former Golden Nugget. Reports say that the exodus was caused by a rift between the school's administration and the coaching staff.[65]

The Glowing Goldies made a turnaround in 1990 from their dismal 2-win season in 1989. They won eight straight games, with one coming from a reversal of their 10-point first round loss to La Salle after Green ArcherNoli Locsin was declared ineligible by the board. The strong start was partly attributed to the presence of Feihl, their now 7-foot tall rookie center. Feihl unfortunately fell ill in the middle of the season and UST went on to lose all their remaining games for an 8–6 record and a tie at fourth place with FEU in the standings.[66][67]

Despite Feihl's transfer to Adamson in 1991, the Goldies had a winning season, where they began their UAAP campaign on a five-gamewinning streak. They defeated FEU, 114–84 on opening day and went on to beat Ateneo, NU, and Adamson in their next games. They trailed the Falcons by more than ten points at the half, but made a comeback to win, 103–101. Their next match against UE also yielded a close 74–72 win before suffering back-to-back losses to close out the first round at second place with a 5–2 record. They won all but one game in the second round with an 80–85 loss to La Salle. They ended up tied with FEU at second place with an 11–3 record. They lost by six points to the Tamaraws in the playoff to determine La Salle's opponent in the Finals on an 89–95 score. The Goldies had complained of spotty officiating in the game, which at one point in the second half resulted to a 20-minute debris-pelting protest from the stands. The game, though, had not been close with FEU leading by as much as 23 points, and even as the Goldies were able to limit them to only two points coming from free throws in the last three and a half minutes, they were only able to come within nine points. The Goldies were also outrebounded by their opponents, 23–35.Dennis Espino, who made it to the Mythical selection topscored for UST with 23 points.[68][69][70][71]

The Growling Tigers

[edit]

As hosts of the 1992 tournament, UST unveiled a newmascot during the UAAP opening ceremonies following a change in their varsity moniker from the "Glowing Goldies" to the "Tigers". The move behind the renaming of the team was recalled in a 2007 speech by returning rector Fr. Rolando dela Rosa when he first assumed the position in 1991. Because the Goldies literally represented the gold and white school colors, UST never had a mascot for their varsity teams. The Tiger was chosen after Dela Rosa instructed Bro. Rolando Atienza, UST's PE moderator to come up with an appropriate mascot. For the second time in UAAP history, the Golden Tigers met FEU in a game that was interrupted by a power outage. Prior to the game, UST was tied with the Tamaraws at first place with a 10–2 record. They lost to La Salle, 80–82 and FEU lost to Adamson, resulting to a quadruple tie among the four teams with 10–3 records. In the Tigers' last game in the eliminations, power went out at the Loyola Center with 3:47 remaining in the game and with UST trailing, 56–68. The UAAP board decided to reschedule the last three minutes of the game on a later date. UST ended up losing, 76–87 and settled for fourth place with 10 wins against 4 losses. Team captainUdoy Belmonte andRey Evangelista were chosen to the Mythical first team, while Espino made it to the second team.[72][73][74][75][76][77]

14–0 season

[edit]

In 1993, the UAAP implemented theFinal Four semifinal playoffs to replace the outright Finals series between the top two teams. The Tigers started their season with a 27-point blowout win over Ateneo, and then went on to have easy wins in their next three games, including another 31-point rout over NU. Their next game against FEU was once again marred by a power failure when they played at theAraneta Coliseum, though the game was finished after a long delay with UST prevailing, 78–66. The team had been winning their games consistently that even when Aric del Rosario failed to show up in their match against NU due to a scheduling conflict, they were still able to win by 17 points. The Final Four was negated as the Tigers went on to sweep all 14 of their games and were declared automatic champions. Espino, who was declared MVP made it to the Mythical selection with teammates Patrick Fran and Rey Evangelista. Udoy Belmonte was selected to the Mythical second team.[78]

UST–La Salle rivalry

[edit]
See also:La Salle–UST rivalry

The Growling Tigers met La Salle in the 1994 UAAP Finals for the first time since their overtime loss in the 1948 National Open Championship title match. The Green Archers joined the league as the UAAP's eighth member in 1986 under controversial circumstances. The school first applied for membership in 1981, but was denied when three of the seven-member schools voted against their acceptance due to the violent reputation brought about by their recent championship game in the NCAA. UST was among those that voted out La Salle. The school managed to get two-thirds of votes in their favor in 1985, paving the way to their entry to the UAAP.[79][80]

Even with Adamson'ssuspension in 1994, the Tigers still struggled and could only manage to land at fourth place at the end of the first round with 3 wins against 3 losses. They turned the season around by winning five games including four straight in the second round for an 8–4 record that was good for third place and a spot in the Final Four playoffs. The Tigers also denied La Salle a season sweep when they won, 68–66 in the second round to also avenge their 73–83 loss in the previous round. They overcame UE's twice-to-beat advantage in the semifinals and had to force a deciding Game 3 in the Finals against La Salle to win their third back-to-back title since the 1948–49 and 1952–53 seasons. The Tigers also helped to achieve the UAAP's first and onlytriple championship after the Tiger Cubs and the Tigresses earlier won the titles in their respective divisions. Espino was named season MVP for the second straight year.[81][82][83]

UST met La Salle and won the championship two more times in 1995 and 1996 for their second four-peat since the 1946–49 seasons. They topped the 1995 eliminations with an 11–3 record, but like in 1994, they had to beat the Archers in three games to win the title. They also struggled to defeat their Finals opponent in the second round by overcoming two overtime periods for an 87–84 win. They came in at second behind La Salle in the standings after the 1996 eliminations with a 10–4 record, but were able to sweep them in the best-of-three Finals. With the 1996 title, the Tigers became the second winningest team in the UAAP behind UE after claiming their 17th title.Chris Cantonjos won the 1995 MVP award, while Estong Ballesteros was selected to the 1996 Mythical team.[84][85]

The Growling Tigers met the Green Archers yet again in the 1997 Final Four playoffs with UST holding a twice-to-beat advantage. The two teams split their two round-robin elimination games and finished with identical 10–4 records, but the Tigers had a superior +5 quotient over the Archers. UST lost in two games, with Game 2 going into overtime at 72–74.[86]

After winning, 80–72 against UP in the playoff for the fourth semifinal slot, the Tigers faced the top-seeded Green Archers for their 1998 Final Four match. They lost in two games after taking Game 1 on a 55–51 win.

Championship head-to-head
No.YearChampionRunner-up
11994USTLa Salle
21995USTLa Salle
31996USTLa Salle
41999La SalleUST
52013La SalleUST
Series: UST leads 3–2

The Growling Tigers made it back to the Finals in 1999 and went up against La Salle for the fourth time since 1994. UST featured a rookie-laden roster, but among the players were four junior MVPs in Alwyn Espiritu, Derick Hubalde, Marvin Ortiguerra, andEmmerson Oreta. They won their first ten games and ended up tied at first place in the standings with La Salle at 11–3. It was their second best start since winning 17 straight from the 1993–94 seasons. The Tigers' second-round game against Ateneo had to be stopped after the referees failed to control the players' physicality which resulted to a melee at theCuneta Astrodome. UST was leading, 50–46 before the stoppage. The last quarter of the game was continued a week later in a closed door match at theLyceum Gym. The Tigers ended up losing to Ateneo, 60–63. UST ended up tied with La Salle at first place at the end of the elimination rounds with 11 wins and 3 losses, but lost the playoff for the #1 seed against the Green Archers. They met Ateneo again in the Final Four and won, 75–74. The championship series went down to a deciding Game 3 and the Tigers had the chance to win in regulation, with a two-point lead. UST'sGilbert Lao was fouled with 15 seconds remaining and split his free throws for a 67–64 score. La Salle's Dino Aldeguer then converted athree-point shot to send the game into overtime. The Archers went on to win, 78–75.[87][88][89][90]

2000s

[edit]

UST opened their 2000 season with a 54–65 loss to FEU, but bounced back with four straight wins. They then suffered back-to-back losses to end the first round with a 4–3 record in a tie for fourth place with UE. The team's inconsistency carried over to the second round and brought them the same fourth-place result at 8 wins and 6 losses for another tie with UE, who they defeated in the playoff for the fourth semifinal slot, 65–61. They once again lost to the #1 ranked La Salle in the Final Four, 62–65. The Tigers fell to a 0–11 scoring drought near the end of the first half for a 32–39 score. Derick Hubalde shot three straight three-pointers to come within three at 62–65 in the last 1:03 of the game. He was also able to force a La Salle turnover by stealing offMon Jose, however, he failed to pass to the unguardedCyrus Baguio and opted to take the shot himself. Hubalde missed a game-tying three to give La Salle the win and were again eliminated from the Finals for the third time since 1997.[91][92][93]

Cyrus Baguio (pictured left) played for the Growling Tigers from 1998 until 2002

The departure of key players caused the Growling Tigers to miss the Final Four for the first time in 2001 since the implementation of its format in 1993. Ortiguerra had already turnedprofessional, while Baguio and Lao were all dropped from the roster due to academic deficiencies. They started the season on a 4-game losing streak and ended the first round in a tie with UP at sixth place with a 2–5 record. The Tigers' back-to-back wins over Adamson and the front-running Ateneo to start the second round gave the team a resurgence at the Final Four, but went on to lose crucial games against NU, La Salle and FEU. They ended the season at sixth place with 6 wins and 8 losses, topped by a 76–72 win over UE. Warren de Guzman was selected to the All-rookie team at the awarding ceremonies.[94][95][96]

With Cyrus Baguio back in the lineup for the 2002 season, the Growling Tigers also made it back to the Final Four. UST qualified to the semifinals despite losing to the #2 seed UE on the last game of the eliminations to finish at fourth place with an 8–6 record. They lost to La Salle once again in the Final Four, but the season for the Tigers had been promising after finishing as runners-up in the Ambrosio Padilla Cup in the summer and as semifinalists in theFather Martin Cup. They also qualified to participate in theCollegiate Champions League in the postseason.[97][98][99][100]

Aric del Rosario stepped down as head coach at the end of the 2003 season after the Growling Tigers finished in a tie for fifth place with a 5–9 record. They won their last game of the eliminations over UP in overtime, 92–89.[101]

Nel Parado replaced Del Rosario as interim coach beginning in the postseason when UST participated in the2003 PBL Platinum Cup. Their respectable showing in the tournament earned Parado a nod and a permanent tenure from the school's Institute of the Physical Education and Athletics. The Growling Tigers were off to a fair start in their 2004 UAAP campaign as they ended the first round tied at third place with La Salle and UE with a 4–3 record. UST, however failed to win a single game in the second round to finish the season at seventh place with a 4–10 record.[102][103][104]

The Growling Tigers broke their 1989 record for their worst start when they went 0–5 to open the 2005 season. Their 12-game losing streak which began at the start of the second round of the previous season ended with their 107–100 overtime win over the winless NU Bulldogs. NU got back at UST with a 74–73 second round win for their first and only victory of the season. The Tigers ended the elimination rounds with the same 4–10 record from 2004, but on a higher rank at sixth place above Adamson and NU. The lone highlight of their campaign was when they stopped Ateneo's seven-game win streak in the second round by winning, 77–73. It was a turnaround for the team after placing third in the Father Martin Cup and winning thePRISAA tournament in the offseason.Jervy Cruz, who was a member of their training pool won the PRISAA MVP award. He was set to play his first year in the UAAP, but was pulled out of the roster due to academic deficiencies.[105][106][107][108][109]

"Re-live '96 at Season '69!": The Thomasian crowd at the deciding game of theSeason 69 men's basketball finals

When Parado's contract expired in February 2006, UST hired Pido Jarencio, their former star player who had made a name for himself in thePhilippine Basketball Association. Jarencio, though, had no prior coaching experience which made critics question the school's decision to choose him as Parado's replacement. This observation was made evident when the Tigers went 2–4 in the first round of eliminations of the 2006 season. The teams had played one less game in each of the rounds with the absence of La Salle due to their suspension for the season. Things began to turn around for UST in their third game in the second round when they defeated the NU Bulldogs, 75–67 to end a four-game losing streak and improve their record to 3–5 to move to a tie for fourth place with Adamson and NU. The Tigers went on a three-game win streak, the last of which was an 88–80 overtime win over league-leading Ateneo to snap the Blue Eagles' undefeated record and avenge their 78–114 blowout loss in the first round. UST defeated Adamson, 77–74 in their last game of the eliminations to tie the Falcons at third place with a 6–6 record. They defeated Adamson again in the playoff for the #3 seed prior to the Final Four pairings. In defeating the second-seeded UE Red Warriors, the Growling Tigers became the fifth team in the UAAP Final Four era to advance to the Finals on a twice-to-beat disadvantage. They had reached the Finals for the first time since the 1999 playoff games. UST captured the UAAP title in three games after a 76–74 overtime win against Ateneo for their 18th championship in the league.Jojo Duncil was named Finals MVP, while Jarencio was hailed Coach of the Year. Jervy Cruz was earlier selected to the Mythical team during the ceremony for the individual awards.[110][111][112][113][114][115][116]

Jervy Cruz (leftmost) won the 2007 UAAP MVP award

UST failed to defend their championship after they were eliminated in the 2007 playoffs. The Tigers, who ended up tied at fourth place with FEU at the end of eliminations with an 8–6 record, were looking to qualify to thestepladder semifinals after UE went undefeated and automatically qualified to the Finals. They defeated the Tamaraws in a playoff for the remaining semifinal slot where their opponents were limited to just six points in the second quarter. They then lost their knockout game to the third-seeded Ateneo Blue Eagles, 64–69 in the first round of the stepladder semifinals, signifying the end of their UAAP season. Jervy Cruz, who topped the statistical points tally was named season MVP.[117][118][119]

The Tigers missed the playoffs for the fifth time in the last eight years when they ended the 2008 season at fifth place with a 6–8 record. Cruz was selected to the Mythical team for the third straight year.[120]

Despite winning only six games, the Growling Tigers had qualified to the Final Four after the NU Bulldogs defeated and eliminated La Salle at the end of the 2009 eliminations. UST finished the first round with 4 wins against 3 losses, but only managed to win two games in the second round. The Adamson Falcons had the same 4–3 record in the first round, but fared worse by winning only a single game in the next round. La Salle had a chance to overtake UST had they won over NU due to a superior +13 quotient over the Tigers. UST lost to defending champions Ateneo, 64–81 in their Final Four match. Team captainDylan Ababou was named MVP and scoring leader of the season, whileJeric Teng won the Rookie of the year award.[121][122][123]

2010s

[edit]

In what was Jarencio's worst win–loss record as coach in the UAAP, the Growling Tigers ended their 2010 season at seventh place with a 4–10 record. UST placed fifth after the first round of eliminations with a 3–4 record, but were only able to secure a single win in the next round. Except for their opening game against the UE Red Warriors where they won by 13 points, the scores of the rest of their wins were from close-scoring matches, including their first round match against UP which went into overtime.[124][125]

The Growling Tigers who celebrated theirquadricentennial year in 2011 made it back to the Final Four after finishing the eliminations at fourth place with an 8–6 record. They were beaten anew by the four-peat seeking Ateneo Blue Eagles in their playoff game, 66–69. UST had trailed Ateneo by ten points in the last three minutes of the game, but were able to bring the lead down to three with five seconds remaining.Jeric Fortuna missed a three-point attempt to end the game in defeat.[126]

UST made it back to the Finals in 2012 after defeating the NU Bulldogs, who qualified to the Final Four for the first time in 11 years. The Tigers finished second at the end of eliminations with a 10–4 record, but were swept in their championship series by the Ateneo Blue Eagles, making their opponents five-peat champions of the tournament.Karim Abdul was selected to the Mythical team during the awarding ceremony for individual players. UST won thePhilippine Collegiate Champions League title in the postseason after beating Ateneo in a three-game series. Jeric Teng was named tournament MVP.[127][128][129][130]

The Growling Tigers reached the Finals again and faced the La Salle Green Archers for the first time since their 1999 championship series. Their 73-72 Game 1 win snapped the Archers' nine-game winning streak. La Salle went on to win the next two games to bag the 2013 championship. UST made it to the Finals when they defeated the NU Bulldogs in the Final Four with a twice-to-win disadvantage and became the first fourth-ranked team in UAAP history to eliminate the #1 seed in a playoff series.[131][90][132]

Jarencio resigned in January 2014 after accepting an offer to coach in the PBA. His assistant Bong dela Cruz who was also a former Glowing Goldie was appointed as his replacement. With their key players falling to injuries and the unfamiliarity of a new system, the Growling Tigers failed to advance to the semifinals. They finished the season on a four-game losing streak to place sixth with a 5–9 record. Karim Abdul made it to the Mythical team for the third straight year. The team had a successful preseason with their runner-up finish in the Father Martin Cup in the summer.[133][134][135][136]

UST made it to the Finals for the third time in four years after defeating the 2014 champions, the NU Bulldogs in the Final Four. NU has been the Tigers' semifinal opponent for the third time in the last four years. The Growling Tigers became the fifth team in UAAP history to reach the Finals after missing the playoffs in the previous season. FEU defeated UST in three games to win their 20th championship and their first after a decade. The Tigers who were facing FEU in the finals for the first time since 1979 won both games against them in the eliminations.Kevin Ferrer andEd Daquioag were selected to the Mythical team during the presentation of awards for Season 78.[137][138][139][140]

Another former Glowing Goldie was tapped to be the new head coach of the Growling Tigers beginning in the 2016 season. Controversies hounded the team immediately after the 2015 season ended which prompted Dela Cruz to step down and be replaced by Boy Sablan, who was a teammate of Pido Jarencio in the 1980s. The ill-prepared Tigers who lost Ferrer, Daquioag and Abdul to graduation only managed to win three games to record their worst win–loss record in the Final Four era.[141][142]

The Tigers sank further when they almost went winless in 2017. The team went on a 17-game losing streak that dated back from the second round of the previous season. Their lone win, which has become UST's worst record eclipsed their 2–12 season in 1989. Sablan was terminated at the end of the season.[143]

When champion coachAldin Ayo announced his resignation from La Salle in December 2017, talks of his transfer to UST went abuzz. He eventually confirmed his appointment in January through a post on hissocial media account. During the elimination rounds, the Tigers' key players suffered injuries with Steve Akomo getting a concussion and CJ Cansino tearing his left ACL, causing both to bow out of the 2018 season. They were fourth in the standings at one point during the second round, but they lost all four of their remaining games to crash out of the Final Four and finish sixth with a 5–9 record.[144][145][146][147]

The Growling Tigers overcame two semifinal do-or-die matches to reach the 2019 Finals against the undefeated Ateneo Blue Eagles. They ended the eliminations having the same 8–6 record of FEU, but were ranked lower at fourth place due to an inferior -6 quotient. They defeated the Tamaraws, 81–71 in a knockout match and then took down the second-seeded UP Fighting Maroons in two games in the second stage of the stepladder playoffs. They were then swept by Ateneo in their best-of-three championship series. Soulémane Chabi Yo was named season MVP, while Mark Nonoy won the Rookie of the Year award.[148][149][150][151]

2020s

[edit]

When news broke out on August 20, 2020, that Cansino had been kicked out of the team, it was revealed that the Tigers had been staying inSorsogon since June. Ayo resigned amid ongoing investigations by the school, the UAAP, theCommission on Higher Education, and theGames and Amusements Board on possible health protocols and quarantine violations that may have been committed by the group. Former Tigers team captainJino Manansala was appointed interim coach in place of Ayo. In the aftermath, 12 of the 16 players from the 2019 team transferred to other schools, with Cansino going to UP, the trio ofRhenz Abando, Brent Paraiso and Ira Bataller to Letran, and Mark Nonoy and Deo Cuajao to La Salle. Tiger Cub center JB Lina withdrew his commitment to play for the Tigers' senior men's team and proceeded to enroll at UP.[152][153][154]

The UAAP Board announced the cancellation of Season 83 on December 11, 2020. It marked the first time since World War II that an entire season is cancelled by the league. Season 82 was also cut short with the similar cancellation of the games in the second semester of the academic year due to the extended community quarantine from theCOVID-19 pandemic.[155]

The belatedly-run 84th season of the UAAP began in the second semester of the 2021–22 school year in March 2022, and even as training and preparations for the tournament had been ongoing since Manansala took over the team in October 2020, the composition of their roster could not immediately be finalized due to player transfers. Reigning MVP Soulémane Chabi Yo left the team in November 2021 after the announcement of the cancellation of Season 83. He decided to join a semi-professional team in theLiga EBA inSpain.[156][157][158]

The2021 squad won only three games and were riddled with blowout losses throughout the season, as they ended the tournament on a six-game losing streak. Their 50-point defeat at the hands of the Ateneo Blue Eagles, in particular, broke the league's record for the largest losing margin since record-keeping has been automated in 2003.[159][160]

Manansala's assistant coaches, led by McJour Luib tendered their resignation at the end of the tournament. The futile efforts to reinstate former coach Aldin Ayo played a big role in the coaching staff's departure. Manansala, meanwhile, was reassigned to coach the school's high school program, as rumors of a corporate backer taking over team management began circulating around the sporting community.[161][162]

The IPEA announced in July 2022 the appointment of former Growling Tiger and PBA playerBal David as the team's new head coach. With sporting events all around going back to normal, UST participated in the preseason tournaments by joining the PBA D-League and Filoil. Manansala and former Tiger Cubs coach Albert Alocillo served as interim coaches to the two tournaments as they were transitioning to a new system under David.[163][164]

Even as the Tigers fared well in the preseason, they were waylaid by the decommitment of their prized recruits.Filipino-American Gani Stevens, who was recruited in April 2022 made a surprise transfer to the UE Red Warriors' camp in August. Kean Baclaan, their high-scoring point guard, meanwhile decided to leave for the NU Bulldogs a few days after news on Stevens was reported. The team's lineup was further depleted after veterans Sherwin Concepcion and Bryan Santos were both ruled ineligible by the UAAP for having exceeded the league's age limit. With seven new players in the roster, the Tigers won only one game in the2022 season. After winning their opening game against the Adamson Falcons, UST went on a 13-game losing streak to match their2017 record for the fewest games won in the team's history. At the end of the elimination rounds, Nic Cabañero and Adama Faye led the league in scoring and rebounds with averages of 17.6 points and 12.2 rebounds per game respectively.[165][166][167][168]

The Tigers' losing streak continued into their2023 season, when they opened the first round of eliminations with six straight losses. Their 19 consecutive defeats has surpassed their worst record for the longest winning drought of 17 back in 2017. Their season ended early again after finishing with a 2–12 record. Faye, who was again the team's foreign student-athlete, played limited minutes in their opening game against UE and had to sit out after complaining of back pains. He left the roster midway in the season to fly back to his home country in Senegal.[169][170][171]

Bal David earlier stepped down after only a six-month tenure, paving the way for Pido Jarencio's return as the Growling Tigers' head coach. With him came the long-awaited entry of one of Philippine basketball's corporate powerhouse, San Miguel Corporation as the team's main sponsor and backer.[3][172]

Cabañero once again led the league in scoring with an average of 16.8 points per game. He was ranked 8th in the players' MVP tally with 60.1 statistical points at the end of the second round of eliminations.[173]

The Growling Tigers made it back to the Final Four for the first time since the 2019 season, with the past year's recruitment paying dividends. Transferees Forthsky Padrigao and Kyle Paranada solved their point guard problems, which the team lacked in the past three seasons. They also found an able replacement for their foreignstudent-athlete in theirMalian center, Mo Tounkara, who led the team in rebounds with an average of 10.2 per game. Padrigao led the league in assists with 6.1 per game, and Cabañero finally cracked the Mythical team on his fourth season with the Tigers.[174]

Coaches

[edit]

The Growling Tigers have had 20 coaches in around a century's existence of their basketball program. Pido Jarencio returned after a couple of coaching changes since Aldin Ayo's departure in the wake of the Sorsogon Bubble controversy. Jarencio resigned at the end of the 2013 season after leading the Tigers for eight years which resulted to one championship and two runner-up finishes.[154][163][3]

In the team's history, five of their head coaches became coaches of thenational team,[24][175][44] and four went on to coach teams in the Philippine Basketball Association.[176]

Herr Silva and Aric del Rosario are the team's longest tenured coaches, each compiling 17 years in service. Silva's years at the helm of the Goldies were interwoven with Fely Fajardo's tenure in the 1950s and included a one-game stint as an interim coach in 1964 after Fajardo's abrupt resignation prior to the start of the UAAP season. He is also the school's winningest coach with nine championships, the first of which were six straight titles from 1939 until 1949 (interrupted by the war), and then a three-peat from 1951 to 1953. Del Rosario was promoted head coach in 1985 following a stint with UST's junior basketball program. He stepped down after three years following a controversy involving one of his players' eligibility. He came back in 1990 and led the Tigers to a four-year championship run, the first of which was an undefeated 1993 campaign.[22][23]

Silva was also enshrined to thePSC'sPhilippine Sports Hall of Fame in 2010 as coach of the 1954 national team that competed in theBrazil World Championship.[177] Chito Calvo was included in the fourth batch of inductees in 2021. He was also enshrined to theFIBA Hall of Fame as a contributor to the sport in 2007.[178] Both coaches were honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award by the National Basketball Hall of Fame Foundation in 1999.[179]

Succession of head coaches
No.Head coachTenureRef.
1Unknown1920–1928[11]
2Chito Calvo1929–1930s[180]
3Jose Rodríguez1930s–1938[14]
4Herminio Silva1939–1954[14]
5Felicisimo Fajardo1955–1956
6Herminio Silva1957–1958[30]
7Felicisimo Fajardo1959–1964[31]
8Herminio Silva1964 (interim)[40]
9Carlos Loyzaga1964–1966[40]
10Egie Serafico1967–1974[45]
11Francis Wilson1975–1977[46]
12Egie Serafico1978–1980[52]
13Eddie Pacheco1981[52]
14Charlie Badion1982–1984[52]
15Aric del Rosario1985–1987[181]
16Orly Bauzon1988[63]
17Fred Reyes1989[182]
18Tonichi Pujante1989[183]
19Aric del Rosario1990–2003[184]
20Reonel Parado2004–2005[102]
21Pido Jarencio2006–2013[110]
22Bong dela Cruz2014–2015[133]
23Boy Sablan2016–2017[141]
24Aldin Ayo2018–2020[144]
25Jino Manansala2020–2022[154]
26Bal David2022[163]
27Pido Jarencio2023–present[3]
Coaches in the national team
No.Head coachYearTournamentRank
1Chito Calvo1936
1948
1951
Berlin Olympics
London Olympics
New Delhi Asian Games
5th
12th
1st
2Felicisimo Fajardo1952
1963
1965
1966
1970
Helsinki Olympics
Taipei ABC Championship
Kuala Lumpur ABC Championship
Bangkok Asian Games
ABC Youth Championship
9th
1st
2nd
6th
1st
3Herminio Silva1954
1954
Manila Asian Games
Brazil World Championship
1st
3rd
4Carlos Loyzaga1967
1968
Seoul ABC Championship
Mexico Olympics
1st
13th
5Aric del Rosario2003
2003
2003
5th SEABA Championship
Harbin ABC Championship
Vietnam SEA Games
1st
15th
1st
Coaches in the PBA
No.Head coachTeamTenure
1Felicisimo FajardoN-Rich Coffee Makers
Tefilin Polyesters
1976
1980–1981
2Carlos LoyzagaU/Tex Weavers
Tanduay ESQ
1975–1976
1977–1979
3Pido JarencioNorthPort Batang Pier2014–2015
2017–2023
4Aldin AyoConverge FiberXers2022–2024

Season-by-season record

[edit]
UST as season hostChampionRunner-upThird place

Pre-UAAP era

[edit]
NCAA
SeasonFieldFinishRef.
192992nd[13]
193091st[12]
Big Three
SeasonFieldFinishRef.
193131st[14]
193231st[14]
193331st[14]
193431st[14]

Pre-Final Four era

[edit]
Round robin era
SeasonFieldFinishHead coachRef.
19394T-1st[b]Herminio Silva[14]
194041stHerminio Silva[19]
194641st[c]Herminio Silva[20]
One-game championship era
SeasonFieldFinishHead coachRef.
19474Co-champions with FEU[d]Herminio Silva[17]
19484Won Final vs FEUHerminio Silva[23]
19494Won Final vs FEUHerminio Silva[22]
19504Lost Final vs FEUHerminio Silva[22]
19514Won Final vs FEUHerminio Silva[24]
19528Won Final vs NUHerminio Silva[23]
19538Won Final vs FEUHerminio Silva[185]
19548Did not qualify; finished 3rd
Won 3rd place game vs UP (74–66)
Herminio Silva[26]
19556Won Final vs NUFelicisimo Fajardo[186]
19576Lost Final vs UE (55–64)Herminio Silva[30]
19596Won #2 seed playoff vs FEU (84–67)
Won Final vs UE (66–55)
Felicisimo Fajardo[31]
19606Did not qualify; finished 4th
Won #4 seed playoff vs MCU (87–72)
Lost semifinal game vs FEU (81–91)
Felicisimo Fajardo[32][33]
19616Did not qualify; finished 3rd
Won 3rd place game vs NU (71–61)
Felicisimo Fajardo[187]
Twice-to-beat championship era
SeasonFieldFinishHead coachRef.
19635Finished 2nd in the eliminations
Won Finals vs UE (2–0)
Championship overturned[a]
Felicisimo Fajardo[36]
19645Finished 2nd in the eliminations
Won Finals vs FEU (2–1)
Carlos Loyzaga[40]
19655Finished T-1st in the eliminations, 7–1 (.875)
Lost Finals vs UE (1–2)
Carlos Loyzaga[43]
19665Finished T-1st in the eliminations, 6–2 (.750)
Lost Finals vs UE (0–2)
Carlos Loyzaga
19675Co-champions with UE[e]Egie Serafico[45]
19685Lost Finals vs UEEgie Serafico
19695Finished 2nd in the eliminations
UE declared automatic champion after elims sweep
Egie Serafico
19716Lost Finals vs UEEgie Serafico
19756Did not qualify; finished 5thFrancis Wilson[46]
19766Did not qualify; finished 3rdFrancis Wilson[46]
19776Did not qualify; finished 4th, 5–5 (.500)Francis Wilson[48]
19797Finished T-2nd in the eliminations, 9–3 (.750)
Won #2 seed playoff vs UE (114–108)
Lost Finals vs FEU (0–1)
Egie Serafico[49]
19807Finished T-2nd in the eliminations, 7–5 (.583)
FEU declared automatic champion after elims sweep
Egie Serafico[51]
19837Finished T-2nd in the eliminations, 8–4 (.667)
Lost #2 seed playoff vs UP (85–87)
Charlie Badion[56]
19847Finished T-1st in the eliminations
Lost Finals vs UE (1–2)
Charlie Badion[54]
19857Finished 1st in the eliminations, 9–3 (.750)
Lost Finals vs UE (0–2)
Aric del Rosario[58]
19878Did not qualify; finished 7th, 3–11 (.214)Aric del Rosario[188]
19888Did not qualify; finished 7th, 3–11 (.214)Orly Bauzon[64]
19898Did not qualify; finished 7th, 2–12 (.143)Reyes/Pujante[189][190]
19908Did not qualify; finished T-4th, 8–6 (.571)Aric del Rosario[67]
19918Finished T-2nd in the eliminations, 11–3 (.786)
Lost #2 seed playoff vs FEU (89–95)
Aric del Rosario[69]
19928Did not qualify; finished 4th, 10–4 (.714)Aric del Rosario[74][76]

Final Four era

[edit]
SeasonTeamEliminationsPlayoffsHead coachRef.
FinishGPWLPCTRoundOpponentResult
199319931st141401.000Automatic championsAric del Rosario[78]
199419943rd1284.667Final Four
Final Four
Finals
#2UE Red Warriors
#2 UE Red Warriors
#1La Salle Green Archers
W 87–81
W 83–74
W 2–1
Aric del Rosario[81][191]
[192][90]
199519951st14113.786Final Four
Final Four
Finals
#4FEU Tamaraws
#4 FEU Tamaraws
#2 La Salle Green Archers
L 65–76
W 74–68
W 2–1
Aric del Rosario[193]
199619962nd14104.714Final Four
Finals
#3UP Fighting Maroons
#1 La Salle Green Archers
W 63–56
W 2–0
Aric del Rosario[194][195]
[193]
199719972nd14104.714Final Four
Final Four
#3 La Salle Green Archers
#3 La Salle Green Archers
L 73–82
L 72–74OT
Aric del Rosario[196][197]
[86]
19981998T–4th1477.500#4 seed playoff
Final Four
Final Four
UP Fighting Maroons
#1 La Salle Green Archers
#1 La Salle Green Archers
W 80–72
W 55–51
L 51–56
Aric del Rosario[198][199]
19991999T–1st14113.786#1 seed playoff
Final Four
Finals
La Salle Green Archers
#3Ateneo Blue Eagles
#1 La Salle Green Archers
L 79–84
W 75–74
L 1–2
Aric del Rosario[89][193]
20002000T–4th1486.571#4 seed playoff
Final Four
UE Red Warriors
#1 La Salle Green Archers
W 65–61
L 62–65
Aric del Rosario[200][92]
[93]
20012001T–6th1468.429Did not qualifyAric del Rosario[95]
200220024th1486.571Final Four#1 La Salle Green ArchersL 84–97Aric del Rosario[97][201]
20032003T–5th1459.357Did not qualifyAric del Rosario[101]
200420047th14410.286Did not qualifyReonel Parado[104]
200520056th14410.286Did not qualifyReonel Parado[202][107]
20062006T–3rd1266.500#3 seed playoff
Final Four
Final Four
Finals
Adamson Soaring Falcons
#2 UE Red Warriors
#2 UE Red Warriors
#1 Ateneo Blue Eagles
W 85–71
W 79–75
W 82–81
W 2–1
Pido Jarencio[203][114]
[204][205]
20072007T–4th1486.571#4 seed playoff
Stepladder semis
FEU Tamaraws
#3 Ateneo Blue Eagles
W 80–69
L 64–69
Pido Jarencio[206][118]
200820085th1468.429Did not qualifyPido Jarencio[120]
200920094th1468.429Final Four#1 Ateneo Blue EaglesL 64–81Pido Jarencio[122]
201020107th14410.286Did not qualifyPido Jarencio[124]
201120114th1486.571Final Four#1 Ateneo Blue EaglesL 66–69Pido Jarencio[207][126]
201220122nd14104.714Final Four
Finals
#3NU Bulldogs
#1 Ateneo Blue Eagles
W 63–57
L 0–2
Pido Jarencio[208][128]
201320134th1486.571Final Four
Final Four
Finals
#1 NU Bulldogs
#1 NU Bulldogs
#2 La Salle Green Archers
W 71–62
W 76–69
L 1–2
Pido Jarencio[209][132]
[90]
201420146th1459.357Did not qualifyBong dela Cruz[134]
201520151st14113.786Final Four
Finals
#4 NU Bulldogs
#2 FEU Tamaraws
W 64–55
L 1–2
Bong dela Cruz[137][210]
201620168th14311.214Did not qualifyBoy Sablan[142]
201720178th14113.071Did not qualifyBoy Sablan[143]
201820186th1459.357Did not qualifyAldin Ayo[147]
201920194th1486.571Stepladder semis
Stepladder semis
Stepladder semis
Finals
#3 FEU Tamaraws
#2 UP Fighting Maroons
#2 UP Fighting Maroons
#1 Ateneo Blue Eagles
W 81–71
W 89–69
W 68–65
L 0–2
Aldin Ayo[148][149]
[150]
20202020Tournament cancelledJino Manansala[154][155]
202120217th14311.214Did not qualifyJino Manansala[159]
202220228th14113.071Did not qualifyBal David[211]
202320238th14212.143Did not qualifyPido Jarencio[170]
202420243rd1477.500Final Four#2 UP Fighting MaroonsL 69–78Pido Jarencio[212]
Eliminations430208222.48417 playoff appearances
Playoffs and Finals543024.5569 Finals appearances
Overall record484238246.4925 championships


Final Four seeding history

[edit]
Year'94'95'96'97'98'99'00'02'06'07'09'11'12'13'15'19'24
Seed31224244344424143

Current roster

[edit]
UST Growling Tigers roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.Nat.NameHeightYearHigh School
SG1United StatesLeland Reuben Estacio6'2" (1.88m)3rdFranklin High School
PG2PhilippinesBevir Ivanne Calum5'11" (1.8m)2ndSt. Louis School – Don Bosco
PG3United StatesKyle Brandon Paranada5'9" (1.75m)3rdMontgomery High School
PF4PhilippinesChristian Manaytay6'4" (1.93m)4thSacred Heart School-Ateneo de Cebu
PF5United StatesChase Lane6'4" (1.93m)5thCovenant College Prep
SG9PhilippinesNicael Dominie Cabañero (C)6'3" (1.91m)4thUniversity of Santo Tomas
PF10PhilippinesMark Angelo Crisostomo6'5" (1.96m)2ndSta. Teresita National High School
PG11PhilippinesRence Keith Sean Padrigao5'11" (1.8m)3rdAteneo de Manila
SF12PhilippinesGlenn Isaac Danting6'3" (1.91m)1stUniversity of the Assumption
PF14PhilippinesMark Allen Llemit6'3" (1.91m)2ndUniversity of Santo Tomas
SF17PhilippinesMiguel Pangilinan6'2" (1.88m)5thNational University Nazareth School
SG20PhilippinesLeonardo Amiel Acido6'3" (1.91m)1stUniversity of Perpetual Help
C21CanadaZain Mahmood6'7" (2.01m)1stMaranatha High School
SG23United StatesGeremy Jaylen Robinson Jr.6'1" (1.85m)1stMoanalua High School
C29PhilippinesJoachim Eddie Laure6'5" (1.96m)3rdNational University Nazareth School
C36MaliHinda Mady dit Mohamed Tounkara6'7" (2.01m)1stLycée Public deKalabancoro
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)
Strength & conditioning coach(es)
  • Reil Vinard Espino
  • Ronald Christopher Cua
  • Jose Avelino Vergara
Team manager
  • Waiyip Chong
  • Eric Ang

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • Injured Injured

Depth chart

Pos.Starting 5Bench 1Bench 2
CTounkaraLaure
PFManaytayCrisostomo
SFDantingLlemitPangilinan
SGCabañeroEstacioAcido
PGPadrigaoParanada

Awards

[edit]

Team

[edit]
  • UAAP
Champions:
  • 1939
  • 1940
  • 1946
  • 1947
  • 1948
  • 1949
  • 1951
  • 1952

  • 1953
  • 1955
  • 1959
  • 1964
  • 1967
  • 1993
  • 1994
  • 1995
  • 1996
  • 2006
Runners-up:
  • 1950
  • 1957
  • 1963
  • 1965
  • 1966
  • 1968
  • 1971
  • 1979

  • 1980
  • 1984
  • 1985
  • 1999
  • 2012
  • 2013
  • 2015
  • 2019
3rd place:
  • 1954
  • 1961
  • 1976
  • 1983
  • 1991
  • 1997
  • 2024
  • NCAA
Champions: 1930
Runners-up: 1929
  • Big Three League
Champions:
  • 1931
  • 1932
  • 1933
  • 1934
  • National Open Championships
Champions:
  • 1937
  • 1940
  • 1941
  • 1949
  • 1951
Runners-up: 1948
  • National Intercollegiate
Champions:
  • 1952
  • 1955
  • 1993
Runners-up:
  • 1950
  • 1964
3rd place: 1966
  • National Students Basketball Championship
Runners-up: 1988
3rd place: 1992
  • National Seniors Basketball Championship
Champions: 1996
  • Philippine Collegiate Champions League
Champions: 2012
3rd place: 2002
  • Fr. Martin Cup Basketball Tournament
Champions: 1996
Runners-up:
  • 1995
  • 2014
  • 2015
3rd place: 2005
  • PRISAA Basketball Tournament
Champions:
  • 2001
  • 2005
  • Home and Away Invitational League
Runners-up: 2005
  • McDonald's Cup Battle of Champions
Champions: 1994
Runners-up: 1996
  • Millennium Basketball League
Champions: 2011, 2013
Runners-up: 2009
  • Ambrosio Padilla Cup
Runners-up: 2002

Individual

[edit]
  • Francisco Vestil
1947 UAAP MVP
  • Ning Ramos
1952 UAAP MVP
1952 UAAP Mythical team
  • Ramon Manulat
1952 UAAP Mythical team
  • Francis Wilson
1954 UAAP Mythical team
  • Eddie Pacheco
1954 UAAP Mythical 2nd team
  • Valentino Rosabal
1960 UAAP Rookie of the Year
1963 UAAP MVP
  • Aric del Rosario
1963 UAAP Rookie of the Year
  • Pido Jarencio
1983 UAAP Mythical team
2006 UAAP Coach of the Year
2012 PCCL Coach of the Year
  • Dennis Espino
1991, 1993, 1994 UAAP Mythical team
1992 UAAP Mythical 2nd team
1993, 1994 UAAP MVP
  • Rudolf Belmonte
1992 UAAP Mythical team
1993 UAAP Mythical 2nd team
  • Rey Evangelista
1992, 1993 UAAP Mythical team
  • Patrick Fran
1993 UAAP Mythical team
  • Chris Cantonjos
1995 UAAP MVP
1995 UAAP Mythical team
  • Gerard Francisco
1995 UAAP Rookie of the Year
  • Ernesto Ballesteros
1996 UAAP Mythical team
  • Marvin Ortiguerra
1998, 1999 UAAP Mythical team
  • Richard Yee
1998 UAAP Mythical 2nd team
  • Warren de Guzman
2001 UAAP All-rookie team
  • Cyrus Baguio
2002 UAAP Mythical team
  • Jervy Cruz
2005 PRISAA MVP
2006, 2007, 2008 UAAP Mythical team
2007 UAAP MVP
  • Jojo Duncil
2006 UAAP Finals MVP
  • Clark Bautista
2008 UAAP All-rookie team
  • Dylan Ababou
2009 UAAP MVP
2009 UAAP Mythical team
2009 UAAP Scoring leader
  • Jeric Teng
2009 UAAP Rookie of the Year
2012 PCCL MVP
2012 PCCL Mythical team
  • Allein Maliksi
2009 Millennium Basketball League MVP
  • Jeric Fortuna
2011 Millennium Basketball League MVP
2012 PCCL Mythical team
  • Karim Abdul
2012, 2013, 2014 UAAP Mythical team
2012 PCCL Mythical team
  • Ed Daquioag
2013 Millennium Basketball League MVP
2015 UAAP Mythical team
  • Kevin Ferrer
2015 UAAP Mythical team
  • Renzo Subido
2018 Kim Lope Asis Invitational MVP
  • Soulémane Chabi Yo
2019 UAAP MVP
2019 UAAP Mythical team
  • Mark Nonoy
2019 UAAP Rookie of the Year
  • Nic Cabañero
2022, 2023 UAAP Scoring leader
2024 UAAP Mythical team

Notable players

[edit]
See also:Category:UST Growling Tigers basketball players

Succession of team captains

[edit]
No.PlayerYearRef.
1Gabby Fajardo1939[19]
2Paing Hechanova1951[24]
3Ning Ramos1952–53[213]
4Andy Bautista1955[29]
5Angel Pavilando1958[31]
6Sonny Reyes1963
7Romeo Ramos1964
8Manuel Tan1965
9Rene Ugalde1977[48]
10Edmund Yee1978[214]
11Ed Cordero1979[215]
12Benjie Gutierrez1982[216]
13Raymond Fran1983[217]
14Alfrancis Chua1989[218]
15Billy Reyes1991[69]
16Rudolf Belmonte1992[219]
17Patrick Fran1993[220]
18Lester del Rosario1995[221]
19Chris Cantonjos1996[222]
20Dale Singson1998
21Gelo Velasco1999[223]
No.PlayerYearRef.
22Marvin Ortiguerra2000[224]
23Emmerson Oreta2001[225]
24Derick Hubalde2002[226]
25Jino Manansala2003[227]
26Christian Luanzon2004[228]
27Warren de Guzman2005[229]
28Allan Evangelista2006[230]
29Anthony Espiritu2007
30Francis Allera2008[231]
31Dylan Ababou2009[232]
32AC Marquez2010
33Jeric Fortuna2011–12[233]
34Jeric Teng2013[234]
35Aljon Mariano2014[235]
36Kevin Ferrer2015[236]
37Louie Vigil2016[237]
38Marvin Lee2017–18[238]
39CJ Cansino2019[152]
40Vacant2020[152]
41Paul Manalang2021–23[239]
42Nic Cabañero2024–present[240]

Retired jerseys

[edit]
UST Growling Tigers retired jerseys
No.PlayerPositionTenure
15Chris CantonjosCenter1993–96

Chris Cantonjos' jersey No. 15 has been retired in recognition of his contributions to the team's four-peat championship that includes an undefeated season in 1993, as well as for being named MVP and a two-time member of the Mythical team.[241] The No. 15, however, remains in circulation and has since been used by the following players:

Robert Hainga, 2012–13
Jeepy Faundo, 2014–17
Toby Agustin, 2018
Kenji Duremdes, 2022–23

Jino Manansala had used the No. 15 during his rookie year in 1999 before settling for the No. 11 in 2001.

Hall of Fame inductees

[edit]
See also:Philippine Basketball Association Hall of Fame andPhilippine Sports Hall of Fame
No.YearNameInducted asAward bodyRef.
11990Francisco VestilPlayerCebu Sports Hall of Fame[21]
22000Francisco VestilPlayerNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
31999Felicisimo FajardoPlayerNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
41999Gabby FajardoPlayerNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
51999Jacinto Ciria CruzPlayerNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
61999Primitivo MartinezPlayerNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
71999Ramoncito CamposPlayerNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
81999Julian MalonsoLifetime achievementNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
91999Chito CalvoLifetime achievementNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
102007Chito CalvoContributorFIBA Hall of Fame[178]
112021Chito CalvoCoachPSC Sports Hall of Fame[178]
121999Herminio SilvaLifetime achievementNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
132010Herminio SilvaCoach of the 1954 PH teamPSC Sports Hall of Fame[177]
142000Paing HechanovaPlayerNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
152000Pocholo MartinezPlayerNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
162000Tito EduqueLifetime achievementNational Basketball Hall of Fame[179]
172005Bogs AdornadoPlayerPBA Hall of Fame[242]
182007Danny FlorencioPlayerPBA Hall of Fame[242]
192010Ramon ManulatPlayer for the 1954 PH teamPSC Sports Hall of Fame[177]
202010Napoleon FloresPlayer for the 1954 PH teamPSC Sports Hall of Fame[177]

National team appearances

[edit]
  • Jose Rodriguez
1923 Far Eastern Games
  • Jacinto Ciria Cruz
1930, 1934 Far Eastern Games
1936 Olympics
  • Primitivo Martinez
1934 Far Eastern Games
1936, 1948 Olympics
  • Herminio Silva
1934 Far Eastern Games
1954 FIBA World Championship (coach)
1954 Asian Games (coach)
  • Ramoncito Campos
1948 Olympics
  • Francisco Vestil
1948 Olympics (flag bearer)
  • Felicisimo Fajardo
1948 Olympics (captain)
1952 Olympics (coach)
1963, 1965 ABC Championship (coach)
1966 Asian Games (coach)
  • Gabby Fajardo
1948 Olympics
  • Pocholo Martinez
1951 Asian Games (captain)
1952 Olympics (captain)
  • Genaro Fernandez
1951 Asian Games
  • Ning Ramos
1951, 1954 Asian Games
1971 ABC Championship (coach)
1972 Olympics (coach)
  • Paing Hechanova
1951 Asian Games
1954 Asian Games (captain)
1952 Olympics
  • Napoleon Flores
1954 FIBA World Championship
1954 Asian Games
  • Ramon Manulat
1954, 1958, 1962 Asian Games
1954, 1959 FIBA World Championship
1956 Olympics
  • Francis Wilson
1958, 1962 Asian Games
1959 FIBA World Championship (alternate)
  • Roberto Yburan
1959 FIBA World Championship
1960 Olympics
1960 ABC Championship
  • Eddie Pacheco
1960 Olympics
1960, 1963 ABC Championship
1962 Asian Games
  • Cristobal Ramas
1960 Olympics
  • Sonny Reyes
1963, 1965, 1967 ABC Championship
1966, 1970 Asian Games
1968 Olympics
  • Orly Bauzon
1965, 1967 ABC Championship
1968 Olympics
1970 Asian Games
  • Danny Florencio
1966, 1970, 1974 Asian Games
1967 ABC Championship
1968, 1972 Olympics
  • Bogs Adornado
1968, 1972 Olympics
1970 ABC Youth Championship (captain)
1973 ABC Championship
1974 FIBA World Championship
1974 Asian Games
  • Lawrence Mumar
1969, 1971 ABC Championship
1973 ABC Championship (alternate)
  • Genny Lucindo
1969 ABC Championship
  • Edmund Yee
1978 ABC Youth Championship
  • Ray Obias
1978 FIBA World Championship
  • Ed Cordero
1980 ABC Youth Championship
1981 ABC Championship
1981 Southeast Asian Games
  • Pido Jarencio
1985 ABC Championship
  • Benjie Gutierrez
1985 ABC Championship (alternate)
  • Bobby Jose
1986 ABC Youth Championship
  • Gido Babilonia
1989, 1999 ABC Championships
1989 Southeast Asian Games
  • EJ Feihl
1990 ABC U-18 Championship
  • Joaquin Dindo Torres
1990 ABC U-18 Championship
  • Renato Cabaluna
1990 ABC U-19 Championship
1993 ABC Championship
  • Patrick Fran
1992 ABC U-18 Championship
1993, 1995 ABC Championship
  • Dennis Espino
1992 ABC U-18 Championship
1993 ABC Championship
1998, 2002 Asian Games
  • Chris Cantonjos
1992 ABC U-18 Championship
1995, 1997 Southeast Asian Games
1995, 1997 ABC Championship
1996 ABC U-22 Championship
1996, 1998 SEABA Championship
  • Rudolf Belmonte
1993 ABC Championship (captain)
  • Edmund Reyes
1993 ABC Championship
  • Rey Evangelista
1993 ABC Championship
1994 Asian Games
  • Siot Tanquingcen
1993, 1995 ABC Championship
1993 Southeast Asian Games
  • Dale Singson
1993 Southeast Asian Games
1996 ABC U-22 Championship
1996 SEABA Championship
  • Joel Villanueva
1994 SEABA U-19 Championship
  • Billy Reyes
1995 ABC Championship
1996 ABC U-22 Championship
1996 SEABA Championship
  • Bal David
1995 Southeast Asian Games
  • Richard Melencio
1995, 1997, 2003 Southeast Asian Games
1996 ABC U-22 Championship
1997, 1999, 2003 ABC Championship
1998, 2003 SEABA Championship
  • Ernesto Ballesteros
1996 SEABA Championship
  • Melchor Latoreno
1996 SEABA U-18 Championship
1996 ABC U-18 Championship
2005 SEABA Championship
  • Gerard Francisco
1996 ABC U-22 Championship
1997 ABC Championship
1997 Southeast Asian Games
  • Emmerson Oreta
1998 SEABA U-18 Championship
2003 ABC Championship
2003 SEABA Championship
  • Cyrus Baguio
1998 SEABA U-18 Championship
1998 ABC U-18 Championship
2009 FIBA Asia Championship
2009 SEABA Championship
  • Niño Gelig
1998 SEABA U-18 Championship
1998 ABC U-18 Championship
  • Aric del Rosario
2003 ABC Championship (coach)
2003 SEABA Championship (coach)
2003 Southeast Asian Games (coach)
  • Dylan Ababou
2004 SEABA U-18 Championship
2011 SEABA Championship
  • Mark Canlas
2004 ABC U-18 Championship
  • Dondon Villamin
2005 SEABA Championship
  • Christian Luanzon
2005 SEABA Championship
  • Jervy Cruz
2007 Southeast Asian Games
  • Kent Lao
2012 SEABA U-18 Championship
  • Kevin Ferrer
2015 SEABA Championship
2015 Southeast Asian Games
  • Allein Maliksi
2017 SEABA Championship
2019 FIBA World Qualifying

Growling Tigers in the PBA draft

[edit]
YearPlayerRoundPickTeam
1975Orly BauzonElevated[f]Toyota Comets
1975Danny FlorencioElevated[f]U/Tex Weavers
1975George LizaresElevated[f]U/Tex Weavers
1975Lawrence MumarElevated[f]U/Tex Weavers
1975Bogs AdornadoElevated[f]Crispa Redmanizers
1975Bobby SalongaElevated[f]Carrier Weather Makers
1975Genny LucindoElevated[f]Carrier Weather Makers
1976Ed CamusElevated[f]Quasar TV Makers
1978Mario MarasiganElevated[f]Honda Wildcats
1980Frank NatividadElevated[f]Crispa Redmanizers
1980Butch OrozcoElevated[f]Tefilin Fibermakers
1981Ray ObiasElevated[f]San Miguel Beermen
1982Ed CorderoElevated[f]Toyota Super Corollas
1986Pido JarencioElevated[g]Magnolia Cheese Makers
1989Bobby Jose15San Miguel Beermen
1990Gido Babilonia14Purefoods Hotdogs
1991Bennett PaladUndrafted[h]Ginebra San Miguel
1992Rabbi Tomacruz213San Miguel Beermen
1992Raymond FranUndrafted[h]Alaska Aces
1994Rey Evangelista12Coney Island Ice Cream Stars
1994Rudolf Belmonte216Swift Mighty Meaties
1994Billy Reyes320Coney Island Ice Cream Stars
1994Renato Cabaluna422Tondeña 65 Rum
1995Dennis Espino11Sta. Lucia Realtors
1995Edmund Reyes17Purefoods TJ Hotdogs
1995Bal David322Sunkist Orange Juicers
1996Patrick Fran210Purefoods TJ Hotdogs
1996Siot TanquingcenUndrafted[h]Sunkist Orange Juicers
1997Estong Ballesteros14Formula Shell Zoom Masters
1999Chris CantonjosElevated[g]Tanduay Rhum Masters
1999Richard Yee15Purefoods Tender Juicy Hotdogs
1999Gerard Francisco210Sta. Lucia Realtors
1999Boy ValeraUndrafted[h]Barangay Ginebra Kings
2000Gelo Velasco213Mobiline Phone Pals
2000Joaquin Dindo Torres217Shell Velocity
YearPlayerRoundPickTeam
2000Dale SingsonUndrafted[h]Shell Velocity
2001Marvin Ortiguerra18Sta. Lucia Realtors
2001Ryan Bernardo434Mobiline Phone Pals
2002Gilbert Lao211Coca-Cola Tigers
2002Aries Dimaunahan326Barangay Ginebra Kings
2002Richard Melencio432Shell Turbo Chargers
2003Cyrus Baguio214Red Bull Thunder
2004Niño Gelig214Talk 'N Text Phone Pals
2006Christian Luanzon218Alaska Aces
2007Jojo Duncil215Red Bull Barako
2009Jervy Cruz14Rain or Shine Elasto Painters
2009Francis Allera213Burger King Whoppers
2010Khasim Mirza216Meralco Bolts
2010Emmerson OretaUndrafted[h]Talk 'N Text Tropang Texters
2011Allein Maliksi18Petron Blaze Boosters
2011Dylan Ababou110Barako Bull Energy
2011Mark CanlasUndrafted[h]Shopinas.com Clickers
2013Jeric Teng212Rain or Shine Elasto Painters
2013Jeric Fortuna214Barako Bull Energy Cola
2014Clark Bautista334Blackwater Elite
2015Aljon Mariano216Barangay Ginebra San Miguel
2015Robert Hainga649Mahindra Enforcer
2016Kevin Ferrer12Barangay Ginebra San Miguel
2016Ed Daquioag16Meralco Bolts
2017Louie Vigil217San Miguel Beermen
2018Jeepy Faundo215Magnolia Hotshots
2018Kent Lao330Rain or Shine Elasto Painters
2019Renzo Subido224NorthPort Batang Pier
2023Bryan Santos214Converge FiberXers
2023Sherwin Concepcion327Rain or Shine Elasto Painters
2023Zach Huang443Meralco Bolts
2023Ian Herrera767NorthPort Batang Pier
2023Enrique Caunan870Terrafirma Dyip
2023Regie Boy Basibas1179NorthPort Batang Pier

Facilities

[edit]
Quadricentennial Pavilion
The old UST Gymnasium
See also:Quadricentennial Pavilion andList of University of Santo Tomas buildings § Athletic facilities
  • Quadricentennial Pavilion 2012–present
The Growling Tigers train and practice at the Quadricentennial Pavilion (formerly called the UST Sports Complex), located across theFaculty of Engineering's Fr. Roque Ruaño Building onEspaña Boulevard. The four-story building houses a basketball court with a seating capacity of 5,792. Construction began in 2011, with the facility forming part of the school's numerous projects in commemoration of the 400th year of their foundation.[243]
  • UST Gymnasium 1932–2011
The old gym, which was demolished in April 2011 used to host home games of the then Glowing Goldies during the prewar UAAP until early 1946 prior to the games' transfer to theRizal Memorial Coliseum. The transfer and the shift from the home-and-away format was necessitated after an accident occurred at the UST Gym.[244]

Controversies

[edit]

In the early part of the 2016, the Growling Tigers management investigated UST head coachBong dela Cruz for the alleged involvement in game-fixing. A report from sports news website Fastbreak states from a source that the management disbanded the men's basketball team due to game-fixing and sell-out games allegations.[245]

Another report from Spin.ph notes that Dela Cruz accused for maltreatment and abusive incidents against some of the players, particularly players from Team B, during his two-year term as a coach. Sooner, the media has yet to confirm the statement regarding the issue on Dela Cruz.[246]

Dela Cruz, later in a statement released on February 1, 2016, said that since the issues emerged, he decided to keep quiet about it. He denies the allegations against him and is confident that he will be proven innocent of the issues against him.[247]

In 2017–2018 season, two players named Mario Bonleon and Renzo Subido decided not to play with UST under Sablan for different reasons, the team standing of the senior's basketball is one of the worst in the history of the UST Growling Tigers at 1 win and 13 losses. Because of that standing, Sablan and the entire coaching staff were sacked by no other than the Rector of the UST effective November 30, 2017, terminating their contracts which will be expiring in August 2018. UST Tigresses Assistant Coach Arsenio Dysangco Jr. was appointed as overseer during practices.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abUST's 1963 championship was overturned after UE's protest was upheld by the board
  2. ^Championship shared with FEU and UP
  3. ^Undefeated at 6–0
  4. ^Game discontinued due to power failure
  5. ^Deciding Game 3 discontinued at 51–40 (UST) after both coaches refused to submit their 2nd half starting lineups
  6. ^abcdefghijklmThe first PBA Rookie draft was instituted in 1985
  7. ^abPlayer elevated to the PBA from the amateur ranks by an expansion team
  8. ^abcdefgPlayer was not picked during the draft but was later signed by a PBA team

References

[edit]
  1. ^University of Santo Tomas Visual Identity Manual(PDF). March 2019. RetrievedJune 1, 2020.
  2. ^"Jarencio open to coaching UST "if position is vacant"".The Philippine Star. Retrieved16 Dec 2016.
  3. ^abcdAgcaoili, Lance."Pido Jarencio back as UST Growling Tigers coach".Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved3 Feb 2023.
  4. ^Ansis, JC (18 April 2018)."Chooks-To-Go presents the 12th Filoil Flying V Preseason Cup on ESPN5".ESPN 5. Retrieved18 Apr 2018.
  5. ^Ganglani, Naveen (4 February 2015)."UAAP 78 to open on Sept 5 – FEU athletic director".Rappler. Retrieved4 Feb 2015.
  6. ^"SCHEDULE: UAAP Season 79 basketball first round".Rappler. 25 August 2016. Retrieved25 Aug 2016.
  7. ^Li, Matthew Henry (7 October 2016)."Official UAAP Men's Basketball second round schedule".Tiebreaker Times. Retrieved7 Oct 2020.
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Awards and achievements
Preceded byNCAA Men's Basketball Champion
1930
Succeeded by
Preceded byUAAP Men's Basketball Champion
1939, 1940
Vacant
Title next held by
UST Glowing Goldies
Vacant
Title last held by
UST Glowing Goldies
UAAP Men's Basketball Champion
1946, 1947, 1948, 1949
Succeeded by
Preceded byUAAP Men's Basketball Champion
1951, 1952, 1953
Succeeded by
Preceded byUAAP Men's Basketball Champion
1955
Succeeded by
Preceded byUAAP Men's Basketball Champion
1959
Succeeded by
UAAP Men's Basketball Champion
1964
UAAP Men's Basketball Champion
1967
Preceded byUAAP Men's Basketball Champion
1993,1994,1995,1996
Succeeded by
Preceded byFr. Martin Cup Seniors Champion
1996
Succeeded by
Preceded byUAAP Men's Basketball Champion
2006
Succeeded by
Preceded byPCCL Champion
2012
NCAA season
UAAP season
Round robin era
Pennant era
Twice to beat
Finals era
Final Four era
Boldface denotes championship;Italic denotes final four appearance
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