

A hodgepodge of posts encompassing various topics ranging from the very mundane to the absolutely insane. Timeline extends from my years in medical school and beyond.. It's a long journey, and you're welcome to tag along for the ride.


Xavier School downed St. Jude Catholic School, 83-75, Thursday night (February 18), to complete a two-game sweep of the best-of-three Juniors Division finals in the 40th Metro Manila Tiong Lian Basketball Association tournament at the Chiang Kai Shek gym in Tondo.
In the title-series opener last February 15 at the Jacinto Tiu Competition Court inside the Xavier School campus, the Golden Stallions defeated the Judenites, 82-77. With the twin victories, Xavier School romped away with its third consecutive championship, joining Chiang Kai Shek College (1978-80 and 1990-92) as the only teams in Tiong Lian history to register three straight titles on two occasions.
Xavier School, which won the Juniors title for a seventh time in the past 10 seasons, also topped the tournament from 2001 to 2003 behind the terrific trio of JosephYeo, Tyrone (TY) Tang and Chris Tiu.
In last Thursday’s Game Two of the 2010 finals, first-year head coach Jonathan (Budds) Reyes’ troops gave up the game’s first two points (a Kim Lo follow-up) before knocking in 14 straight points, including back-to-back triples by Donal Ong and seven points by Jose Anton (Jett) Manuel, to go ahead, 14-2. The Gold and Blue never trailed thereafter and took the first 10-minute quarter, 23-14, on a three-point play by sophomore Jeron Teng, who did not start the game following an ankle sprain injury he suffered in the early minutes of the series opener.
Xavier School grabbed a 32-14 advantage – the biggest in the entire contest – after scoring 16 straight markers (from 16-14) bridging the first and second quarters. Manuel, a senior, was forced to the sidelines with three fouls (two in the first quarter) in the first 20 minutes but Teng’s 11 second-quarter points gave the Jesuits-run school a 40-30 lead at halftime.
Despite Manuel sitting on the bench for the entire third quarter, St. Jude was unable to make any headway as Teng kept the pressure by muscling his way for eight of Xavier’s 18 points for a 58-46 edge by the Stallions after three quarters. Xavier was still ahead by double digits, 64-50, when the Judenites – like in Game One – came roaring back midway through the fourth quarter behind the outside bombs of top gun Jason Ligad, who scattered a dozen markers during the final 10-minute frame.
Ligad and Kim Lo sparked a 7-0 run that trimmed their team’s deficit to seven points, 64-57, at the 4:49 mark. However, Harold Ng completed a three-point play and Donal Ong connected on his third three-pointer to give the Xaverians a 70-57 edge, time down to 3:22.
After the Gold and Blue team went ahead, 74-60, on a Manuel basket, St. Jude threatened again and came within eight, 76-68, with less than a minute to play. Ng, who scored seven points in the last quarter, knocked in a fielder with 31.5 seconds left for a 78-68 Xavier lead that finally broke the backs of the two-time runner-up Judenites.
Teng, the tournament’s No. 1 scorer (23.3 ppg) and No. 3 rebounder (11.6 rpg), finished with 25 points (on 10-for-19 field-goal shooting), 11 rebounds, four assists and two steals in 35 minutes and was voted the league’s Most Valuable Player. Manuel, who hit at a second-best 20.1-point clip for the entire competitions, collected 15 points and two rebounds in just 16 minutes.
Ng tallied 12 and Kevin Lim, Donal Ong and Bryan Tan each had nine points. Lim also grabbed 11 boards for Xavier, which scored 23 points off St. Jude’s 23 turnovers. Ligad, a junior, wound up with 22 points (including 4-for-8 from the three-point area), seven rebounds and two steals for St. Jude, who for the second straight game won the rebounding race, 50-44. Lo, the tournament’s leading rebounder at 11.9 rpg, chalked up 16 points, 15 rebounds, four assists and two blocks. Stocky guard Derrence Lam totaled 14 points and hardworking forward Justin Uy had 11 points and seven reebies for the losers.
Xavier School finished the 2010 season with a perfect 9-0 record and an overall 19-game winning streak over three seasons (including Game Three of the 2008 finals and 9-0 in 2009).
UST def AdU 76-75 (This was the first UAAP game of former King Stallion Jeric Teng, where he came off with 3 markers. Go USTe!)by Henry Liao for gameface.ph (02/22/09)
High-school powerhouse Xavier School made history in the just-concluded 39th Metro Manila Tiong Lian Basketball Association tournament after annexing the Aspirants and Juniors Division titles this season.
The Golden Stallions became the first team in Tiong Lian annals to capture both championships in the same campaign in two consecutive years.
Overall, it marked the fifth time that there was a double-championship winner. Chiang Kai Shek College was the first to accomplish the feat in 1991 and Xavier School also turned in the same trick in 2003, 2006, 2008 and this year.
Xavier School won its second straight title – and third championship in four years – in the Juniors Division (for players age 15 and above) after outclassing St. Jude Catholic School, 116-74 and 83-69, in the best-of-three finals.
Newly-appointed Philippines Sports Commission chair Harry Ang Ping, a Xavier alumnus, showed up for the finals’ Game One at the Uno Gym.
Former Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) No. 1 overall draft selections Joe Devance (2007, now with Alaska) and Gabe Norwood (2008, now with Rain or Shine) and several members of the De La Salle women’s college basketball team also were in attendance in Game Two.
In the series-ending Game Two, Xavier led nearly throughout. The Golden Stallions trailed only in the first few minutes, falling behind 7-4 before knocking in seven straight points to move ahead, 11-7. Xavier never trailed thereafter. Quarter scores: 14-11, 31-21, 61-44 and 83-69.
St. Jude came no closer than six points in the second half, putting together a 7-0 run (from 41-28) early in the third quarter to come within 41-35. Xavier, though, outscored the Judenites, 20-9, for the rest of the third quarter to enjoy a 61-44 advantage entering the payoff period.
Xavier was ahead by at least 10 points in the entire fourth quarter and led by as much as 21 on two occasions (73-52 and 75-54).
Prolific Jeric Teng collected 31 points (8-27 FG, 14-18 FT shooting), 13 rebounds and three assists for Xavier. Ian Umali, a senior like Teng, got 19 points. Jeron Teng, the younger son of former PBA frontliner Alvin Teng, added 13 markers (all in the second half) and 10 boards for the Golden Stallions.
Kim Lo, a junior forward-center, had a monstrous performance for St. Jude with 22 points and 21 boards. Reed-thin guard Jason Ligad connected on five three pointers and totaled 19 points for the first-time Tiong Lian finalists. Derrence Lam was limited to nine markers.
The Golden Stallions also maintained its title stranglehold in the Aspirants Division (for players age 14 and under), collecting its seventh consecutive crown with a 2-1 decision over elimination-round frontliner Chiang Kai Shek College in the best-of-three finals.
In the decisive third contest, Xavier registered a 74-65 decision over CKSC. Xavier took the series opener, 82-76, but CKSC bounced back to take Game Two, 76-70.
Stallions skipper Kyle Lao, a 5-10, seventh-grader, averaged a tournament-best 25.9 points in nine games. The 13-year-old Lao was named the league’s Most Valuable Player in the Aspirants Division.
In the Girls’ High School Division, Chiang Kai Shek College retained the title against host Uno High School.
In the Cheerleading competitions, St. Jude catholic School emerged as the champion for the fourth consecutive year.
For Xavier, the Juniors title was its eighth overall following title successes in 1972, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2006 and 2008. The Gold and Blue thus equalled St. Stephen’s High School for the second most number of championships in Tiong Lian history. Chiang Kai Shek College, with 14, is tops on the all-time list.
Two-time TL scoring leader Jeric Teng scored 31 points in each of the two championship-series games against St. Jude Catholic School. The son of former PBA strongman Alvin Teng subsequently was voted the league’s MVP after hitting at a 39.3-point clip during the tournament.
Coach Joselito Vergara’s troops won all their nine assignments in the seven-school competitions, duplicating the feat of their 2006 counterparts who also went 9 0 behind Woody Co, who’s now with the University of the Philippines Maroons in the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP).
It was a very rewarding 2008-09 campaign for the Xavier Juniors, which earlier grabbed a third straight title in the San Juan Inter-High School tournament and secured the Philippine Athletic Youth Association (PAYA) crown for the third year in a row.
The 6-1 Teng also was a back-to-back MVP awardee in the San Juan tourney. A senior, the son of former PBA strongman Alvin Teng is reportedly headed to either University of Santo Tomas or Ateneo de Manila University in the UAAP in July this year.
By: Henry Liao, YEHEY! Contributors
18 February 2009, 9:35 AM
Powerhouse Xavier School goes for the jugular Friday night (Feb. 20) in Game 2 of the best-of-three Juniors Division finals in the 39th Metro Manila Basketball Association high school tournament at the Uno Gym in Tondo, Manila.
Unblemished with an 8-0 record, the Golden Stallions grabbed the championship series opener against upset-conscious St. Jude Catholic School Tuesday night (Feb. 17) with a smashing 116-74 triumph.
Xavier School is bidding to capture its second consecutive crown and third title in four years. Overall, coach Joselito Vergara’s troops are gunning for the eighth championship in their Tong Lian history.
With a 4-6 win-loss mark in the tournament, St. Jude seeks to win on Friday and extend the finals to a third game on Monday (Feb. 23) but its chances are slim.
St. Jude, which reached the finals for the first time ever, is hard-pressed to find an antidote to Xavier’s dizzying trapping defense that resulted in 37 turnovers in Game 1. The Gold and Blue collected 33 points off those miscues.
The Judenites must not allow itself to play into Xavier’s much-vaunted running game. There’s little chance they can keep in pace with the Stallions, let alone outrun them for 40 minutes. Playing to a crawl – a slowdown game – may just work. Milk the 24-second shot clock to the fullest and try to keep the game score low and close until the fourth quarter for a chance at victory.
How to contain the offensive production of two-time Tiong Lian scoring king Jeric Teng, who’s averaging 40.4 ppg in the tournament so far, is a major problem as much as limiting the production of his teammates is.
In the series opener, Teng hoisted just four field goal attempts and made five points in the first quarter, which St. Jude took by a point, 22-21.
However, Jeric’s teammates stepped up in the second quarter. Xavier grabbed a 56-41 lead at halftime as Jeric’s younger brother Jeron Teng (13), Ian Umali (11) and Jose Anton “Jett” Manuel (7) backed up Jeric’s 15 points with a combined 31.
The Stallions were ahead by double digits throughout the second half. They outscored the Judenites, 38-19, in the third quarter and entered the payoff period with an insurmountable 94-60 advantage. Xavier secured its biggest lead of 43 points on three occasions, 112-69, 114-71 and 116-73.
Despite some leech-like defense against him in the early goings, the 6-1 Jeric Teng still finished with 31 points (on 10-20 FG, 7-8 FT shooting, four three-pointers) along with six rebounds and three assists. Also scoring in twin digits for Xavier were Umali, 17; Jeron Teng, 17 (along with 10 boards); and Manuel, 16 (along with seven assists). Pesky guard Bryan Tan marked his 16th birthday with eight markers (including 6-for-6 from the foul line). Twelve players tallied at least two points for the Stallions.
St. Jude’s star frontliner, Kim Lo, who was averaging 19.7 points and 21.0 rebounds in three previous playoff games, was plagued by foul trouble and held to 16 points (only four in the second half) and nine rebounds. Three-point bomber Derrence Lam knocked in 15 points but nine of them came from the charity stripes (9-for-11).
Martin Go contributed 10 points and Perry Lee added eight for the losers. Long-tom artist Jason Ligad was limited to six markers and like Lam, he failed to make a three-pointer.
History repeats itself.
In Xavier School’s 118-73 shellacking of St. Jude Catholic School during an elimination-round contest last Jan. 30, the Judenites were ahead, 18-14, after the first quarter. In the title series opener, St. Jude was up by a point, 22-21, after the first 10 minutes.
In the Jan. 30 game against St. Jude, Jeric Teng completed a four-point play (a three-pointer plus a free throw following a foul) in the second quarter for Xavier. In Game 1 of the finals, Teng also registered another four-point play (27-25 to 31-25, Xavier ahead) in the second quarter.
Only Teng has had a completed four-point play in the tournament so far. And the son of former PBA Robocop Alvin Teng owns a pair.
Taken from the AAXS website
I smell another championship looming... :D See you on the court...
*Note that King Stallion Jeric Teng outscored the entire opposing team, 52-43!!
Luceat Lux!!
12 January 2009 | 1:11 PM
culled from YEHEY.com
Xavier School opened its title-retention bid in the Juniors Division of the 39th Metro Manila Tiong Lian Basketball Association tournament with a lopsided 120-43 victory over Hope Christian High School Saturday night (Jan. 10) at the Uno Gym.
It was so hard to create an interesting story line to this (mis)match. The revenge factor was not even an afterthought, even if some would like to believe it was a payback for the Golden Stallions’ loss to Hope Christian during the Coca-Cola Summer league some months ago.
Xavier went full throttle with its full-court trapping defense from start to finish, resulting in numerous Hope turnovers and easy fastbreak baskets by the Gold and Blue.
Xavier got off to a 5-0 start and never trailed thereafter. It grabbed a 29-7 lead after the first 10-minute quarter and enjoyed a 66-22 advantage at halftime.
If this were a baseball contest, the game would have been called off right then and there (without the second half) under the “mercy” rule. Hope, after all, scored only 43 points for the entire game and Xavier surpassed that mark as early as midway through the second quarter.
The game, played like those in the playgrounds with a lot of running and gunning, thus went on and Xavier owned a 93-32 edge at the end of the third quarter.
Xavier hit the century mark, 101-35, on a pair of free throws by prolific-scoring Jeric Teng, and took its biggest lead, 80 points (120-40), with a minute and 40 seconds remaining on a three-pointer by Teng.
Jeric, the reigning Tiong Lian scoring champion in the Juniors Division, wound up with 52 points, 13 rebounds and five assists. He went 6-for-16 beyond the three-point arc in the freewheeling game that was completed in less than 80 minutes.
Two other Xaverians finished with double-digit scores – Ian Umali, 16, and Jose Anton Manuel, 12. Nel Lim had nine.
Jeron Teng, Jeric’s younger brother, contributed eight markers while Donal Ong added seven.
Jeron, who was elevated to the Juniors ranks after a sterling performance in the Aspirants Division a year ago during which he powered the school past Chiang Kai Shek College for its sixth consecutive championship while averaging a whopping 34.1 points a game, including a high of 55 against St. Stephen’s High School, was inserted into the starting lineup alongside Jeric.
---------------------