2017 UST Growling Tigers basketball team

The 2017 UST Growling Tigers men's basketball team represented University of Santo Tomas in the 80th season of the University Athletic Association of the Philippines. The men's basketball tournament for the school year 2017–18 began on September 9, 2017 and the host school for the season was Far Eastern University.[1]

2017 UST Growling Tigers men's basketball
Record
Elims rank #8
Final rank#8
2017 record1–13
Head coachBoy Sablan (2nd season)
Assistant coachesTylon Dar Juan
Bam Ledesma
CaptainMarvin Lee (3rd season)
Seasons
← 2016
2018 →

The Tigers finished eighth and last at the end of the double round-robin eliminations for the second straight year. The team went on a 17-game losing streak that dated back from Season 79, winning only their last assignment to save themselves from having a winless season.

They had a final record of 1 win against 13 losses, the worst for the team in the last 28 years. This is also a new team low in the Final Four era, beating the previous year's record of 3 wins and 11 losses.[2]

They had an average losing margin of 13.9 points against a single 3 point win for the entire season.[3]

Like the previous year, UST suffered three blowout losses, against the FEU Tamaraws by 26 points in the second round, and twice against the De La Salle Green Archers by 29 and 35 points in both rounds of eliminations.[4][5][6]

Cameroonian center Steve Akomo recorded the most rebounds made in a game twice when he hauled down 20 boards against the UP Fighting Maroons on October 11 and against the UE Red Warriors on November 12, both in the second round of eliminations. In the game against UE, the Tigers compiled a league-best total of 11 shot blocks, with six coming from Akomo.[7][8][9]

UST also came in first with team averages of 45.9 rebounds and with 4.4 shot blocks per game.

Roster

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UST Growling Tigers roster
Players Coaches
Pos. No. Nat. Name Height Year High School
C 0   Steve Cedrick Akomo 6'9" (2.06m) 4th Lycée bilingue de Fondonera
SF 5   Regie Boy Basibas 6'3" (1.91m) 3rd Arellano University High School
PG 7   John Jordan Sta. Ana 6'0" (1.83m) 2nd Nazareth School of National University
PG 8   Oliver Wendell de Guzman 5'8" (1.73m) 2nd Nazareth School of National University
SG 9   Dean Marvin Lee (C) 5'8" (1.73m) 3rd Far Eastern University–Diliman
SG 10   Martin Arthur Romero 6'0" (1.83m) 1st De La Salle Santiago Zobel School
PF 11   Enrique Caunan, Jr. 6'5" (1.96m) 3rd Colegio de San Juan de Letran
SF 13   Zachary Lance Eden Huang 6'4" (1.93m) 3rd Sacred Heart School–Ateneo de Cebu
PG 14   Ebenezer Godwin Kwawukumey 5'7" (1.7m) 1st Vaughan Secondary School
C 15   Jeepy Faundo 6'6" (1.98m) 5th José Rizal University
PF 16   Justin Arana 6'5" (1.96m) 3rd Basud National High School
SF 17   Jose Carlos Escalambre 6'2" (1.88m) 3rd San Sebastian College–Recoletos
SG 18   Leon Alfonzo Lorenzana 6'4" (1.93m) 1st University of Santo Tomas
PF 19   Christian Laurent Garcia 6'4" (1.93m) 3rd Arellano University High School
PF 20   Vaughn Jorem Soriano 6'4" (1.93m) 1st University of Santo Tomas
C 21   Jon Cornelius Macasaet 6'3" (1.91m) 3rd San Sebastian College–Recoletos
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)
  • Tylon Filipe Dar Juan
  • Juben Ledesma
  • Ma. Genevieve Francisco
  • Gerald Esplana
  • Roberto Jose
Strength & conditioning coach(es)
  • John Oswald Aquino
  • Kris Anthony Agarao
  • Marvin James Pangilinan

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  •   Injured

Depth chart

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Pos. Starting 5 Bench 1 Bench 2 Bench 3
C Akomo Faundo Macasaet
PF Caunan Garcia Soriano Arana
SF Basibas Escalambre Huang
SG Lee Romero Lorenzana
PG Sta. Ana De Guzman Kwawukumey

Roster changes

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The Growling Tigers' three starting seniors, Louie Vigil, Jon Sheriff and Kent Lao have already graduated, while Mario Bonleon and Renzo Subido both dropped out of the roster to play in the PBA D-League.

UST has eight new players in their roster, composed of four transferees and four rookies that includes former UST Tiger Cubs team captain Jorem Soriano, who last played in 2012. He was set to join the seniors team in 2013, but personal and family matters kept him away from basketball. He returned to the team last year and was included in the Tigers' Team B training pool.[10][11][12]

Subtractions

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Pos. No. Nat. Player Height Year High school Notes
PG 6   Sheak Jamil Sheriff, Jr. 5' 9" 5th Loyola Catholic Secondary School Graduated
PF 7   Jason Strait 6' 4" 2nd Arellano University High School Transferred to the University of the East
PG 10   Henri Lorenzo Subido 5' 9" 4th De La Salle Santiago Zobel School On leave
SG 14   Mario Emmanuel Bonleon, Jr. 6' 3" 3rd La Salle Greenhills On leave
C 17   William Kwabena Afoakwah 6' 6" 2nd Ideal College Senior High School Transferred to Southwestern Christian University
SG 18   Louie Philippe Vigil 6' 3" 5th José Rizal University Graduated
SF 19   Kent Jefferson Lao 6' 4" 5th Saint Stephen's High School Graduated
C 20   Tsutomu Tateishi 6' 9" 2nd Ateneo de Davao University Out on injury

Additions

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Pos. No. Nat. Player Height Year High school Notes
C 0   Steve Cedrick Akomo 6' 9" 4th Lycée bilingue de Fondonera Transferred from the University of the Visayas
PG 7   John Jordan Sta. Ana 6' 0" 2nd Nazareth School of National University Transferred from the University of the East
SG 10   Martin Arthur Romero 6' 0" 1st De La Salle Santiago Zobel School Rookie
PG 14   Ebenezer Godwin Kwawukumey 5' 7" 1st Vaughan Secondary School Rookie
SF 17   Jose Carlos Escalambre 6' 2" 3rd San Sebastian College-Recoletos Transferred from Adamson University
SF 18   Leon Alfonzo Lorenzana 6' 4" 1st University of Santo Tomas Rookie
PF 19   Christian Laurent Garcia 6' 4" 3rd Arellano University High School Transferred from Adamson University
PF 20   Vaughn Jorem Soriano 6' 4" 1st University of Santo Tomas Promoted from Team B

Coaching staff

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Boy Sablan went into his second year as the head coach of the Growling Tigers after signing a one-year contract extension in June 2017.

Former PBA players Gerry Esplana and Bobby Jose replaced Patrick Fran and Rabbi Tomacruz as assistant coaches going into Season 80.[13]

Esplana, who was a former player of the FEU Tamaraws was the head coach of the Emilio Aguinaldo College Generals from 2011 until 2014, while the former Glowing Goldie Bobby Jose is an aspiring public servant in his hometown of Bocaue, Bulacan. Both of them have children who also play basketball for the varsity teams of their respective schools.

Ineligibility issues

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Steve Akomo became the subject of an eligibility probe in September 2017. In the days leading to the opening of the Season 80 men's basketball tournament, the UAAP board had insisted that Akomo needed two years for his transfer residency. He had transferred from the University of the Visayas and did his residency last season. They had cited the case of Ben Mbala, the Cameroonian player of La Salle who underwent two years of residency when he transferred from the Southwestern University in 2013. Sablan countered that former Growling Tiger and fellow Cameroonian Karim Abdul only did one year of residency before he was allowed to play for the team in 2011.[14][15]

In spite of the Republic Act 10676, or the Student-Athletes Protection Act of 2015, a law that put an end to the Jerie Pingoy Rule, or the 2013 UAAP rule which required two years of residency for all incoming collegiate athletes who wished to transfer from another UAAP member university, there appears to be another existing rule specifically made for foreign student-athletes. If the foreign student has attended high school in the Philippines for at least one school year, then he only has to do one year of residency. If he studied for two years, he could play already in college. Otherwise, the two-year residency requirement remains.[16][17][18]

While the league's Board of Managing Directors had recommended Akomo, together with UP Fighting Maroon Ibrahim Ouattara to be ruled ineligible for the season's upcoming tournament, the UAAP Board of Trustees, the official policy-making body made up of the presidents of all-member schools had a meeting at FEU on September 7, 2017 and arrived at a decision "in the interest of justice and fairness," to allow both foreigners to play with finality.[19][20]

Injuries

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Steve Akoma and Jordan Sta. Ana missed the game against FEU in the second round as Akomo was saddled with the flu, while Sta. Ana had a shoulder injury that he suffered in practice prior to the said match.[21]

Close calls

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The Growling Tigers on numerous occasions had chances to steal wins from their higher-ranked opponents, but either turnovers, poor free throws, or simply, bad breaks almost always did them in. Against the UP Fighting Maroons in the first round, UST lost by a single point, on a game-winning three point shot by Paul Desiderio during the last 5 seconds. This was when the iconic "Atin 'to, papasok ito" quote was first mentioned by the Fighting Maroons' captain. They lost again to UP in the second round, with a similar disappointing outcome. UST came to within 2 points with 9 seconds left, but team captain Marvin Lee missed a last-second heave, causing the team to lose for the eighth straight time.[22][23]

Against the Adamson Falcons in the second round, the Tigers came to within 2 with 14 seconds left in the game, but fouls got the better of them. Fil-American guard Jerrick Ahanmisi converted his free throws for the final score of 70–75.[24]

In their only win of the season against UE on their last scheduled game, the Tigers had to rely on perfect free throw shooting by second-year point guard Oli de Guzman to bail them to the final score of 88–85.[25]

In their first-round game against Adamson, UST committed 41 turnovers, the most by any team in a single game since 2003, when record-keeping of UAAP statistics first became official.[26]

Last man standing

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Having the reputation as being one of the most passionate sports fans in the country, the UST community's absence in the gallery became more noticeable as the crowd dwindled down to around fifty people that included the school's drummers and cheering squad. This absence was emphasized on October 25 after the Tigers lost their 11th straight game of the season, cameras were focused on a lone UST student at the stands singing their school hymn. This particular report awakened the community as students trooped back to the Araneta Coliseum in support of the team on the last playing game of the season on November 12. The iconic "Go USTe!" chant was once again heard for the first time after three months.[27][28]

Schedule and results

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Preseason tournaments

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The Filoil Flying V Preseason games were not aired on television for the first time in the tournament's history after the organizers' partnership with ABS-CBN Sports had ended.

Preseason game log
2017 Republica Cup–Collegiate Division: 5–2
Game Date • Time Opponent Result Record High points High rebounds High assists Location
1 Mar 1 Arellano Chiefs W 116–109OT 1–0 Akomo (26) Malolos Sports and Convention Center Bulacan
2 Mar 9 Diliman College Blue Dragons W 78–61 2–0 Arana (16) Malolos Sports and Convention Center Bulacan
3 Mar 12 BulSU Gold Gears W 122–99 3–0 Huang (27) Malolos Sports and Convention Center Bulacan
4 Mar 19 UP Fighting Maroons L 68–78 3–1 Lee (15) Baliuag Star Arena Bulacan
5 Mar 21 AMA University Titans W 98–84 4–1 Akomo (18) Malolos Sports and Convention Center Bulacan
6 Mar 26 Diliman College Blue Dragons W 68–60 5–1 Lee (21) Malolos Sports and Convention Center Bulacan
7 Apr 9 UP Fighting Maroons
Championship game
L 91–100 5–2 Lee (23) Malolos Sports and Convention Center Bulacan
11th Filoil Flying V Preseason Premier Cup: 1–7
Game Date • Time Opponent Result Record High points High rebounds High assists Location
1 May 5 • 5:00 pm Ateneo Blue Eagles L 72–89 0–1 Sta. Ana (11) Filoil Flying V Centre San Juan
2 May 10 • 3:15 pm UE Red Warriors L 67–80 0–2 Akomo (14) Filoil Flying V Centre San Juan
3 May 14 • 5:00 pm De La Salle Green Archers L 81–109 0–3 Lee (18) Filoil Flying V Centre San Juan
4 May 21 • 3:15 pm Perpetual Altas W 63–55 1–3 Akomo (11) Filoil Flying V Centre San Juan
5 May 28 • 11:15 am JRU Heavy Bombers L 55–64 1–4 De Guzman (17) Filoil Flying V Centre San Juan
6 Jun 2 • 3:15 pm Letran Knights L 90–95 1–5 Basibas (16) Filoil Flying V Centre San Juan
7 Jun 4 • 5:00 pm San Beda Red Lions L 59–86 1–6 Faundo (14) Filoil Flying V Centre San Juan
8 Jun 12 • 1:30 pm Lyceum Pirates L 88–127 1–7 Faundo (17) Filoil Flying V Centre San Juan
7th Kim Lope Asis Invitational: 3–2
Game Date • Time Opponent Result Record High points High rebounds High assists Location
1 Jun 27 • 7:00 pm EAC Generals W 85–74 1–0 Macasaet (25) Lope Asis Memorial Gymnasium Bayugan
2 Jun 28 • 10:30 am Xavier University Crusaders W 92–56 2–0 Lope Asis Memorial Gymnasium Bayugan
3 Jun 28 • 8:30 pm UV Green Lancers W 83–82 3–0 Lee (19) Lope Asis Memorial Gymnasium Bayugan
4 Jun 29 • 9:00 am USPF Panthers L 80–88 3–1 Lee (19) Lope Asis Memorial Gymnasium Bayugan
5 Jun 29 • 7:00 pm UV Green Lancers
Championship game
L 89–90 3–2 Sta. Ana (18) Lope Asis Memorial Gymnasium Bayugan
32nd Kadayawan Basketball Invitational: 3–1
Game Date • Time Opponent Result Record High points High rebounds High assists Location
1 Aug 24 • 5:00 pm De La Salle Green Archers L 88–93 0–1 Faundo (15) Davao City Recreation Center
2 Aug 25 • 5:00 pm Davao City All-Stars W 100–89 1–1 Davao City Recreation Center
3[a][b] Aug 26 • 7:00 pm FEU Tamaraws W 2–1 Davao City Recreation Center
4 Aug 27 • 7:00 pm Davao City All-Stars
Championship game
W 87–76 3–1 Basibas (19) USeP Gymnasium Davao City
(#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are in UTC+08:00.
  1. ^ Won by forfeit
  2. ^ A bench-clearing brawl caused La Salle and FEU to be disqualified from the tournament

UAAP games

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Elimination games were played in a double round-robin format and all of UST's games were televised on ABS-CBN Sports and Action and Balls.

UAAP Season 80 game log
Elimination round: 1–13
Game Date • Time Opponent Result Record High points High rebounds High assists Location
1 Sep 10 • 2:00 pm UP Fighting Maroons L 73–74 0–1 Lee (20) Akomo (14) Sta. Ana (6) Mall of Asia Arena Pasay
2 Sep 16 • 4:00 pm Adamson Soaring Falcons L 81–88 0–2 Tied (14) Akomo (15) Sta. Ana (6) Smart Araneta Coliseum Quezon City
3 Sep 20 • 2:00 pm NU Bulldogs L 84–94 0–3 Sta. Ana (14) Akomo (10) Lee (5) Mall of Asia Arena Pasay
4 Sep 23 • 2:00 pm FEU Tamaraws L 65–78 0–4 Faundo (16) Faundo (11) Tied (2) Mall of Asia Arena Pasay
5 Sep 27 • 4:00 pm Ateneo Blue Eagles L 84–94 0–5 Sta. Ana (21) Akomo (9) Sta. Ana (5) Smart Araneta Coliseum Quezon City
6 Sep 30 • 2:00 pm De La Salle Green Archers L 86–115 0–6 Akomo (15) Akomo (13) Lee (6) Smart Araneta Coliseum Quezon City
7 Oct 7 • 2:00 pm UE Red Warriors
End of R1 of eliminations
L 91–96 0–7 Lee (20) Akomo (18) Sta. Ana (5) Mall of Asia Arena Pasay
8 Oct 11 • 2:00 pm UP Fighting Maroons L 69–71 0–8 Soriano (14) Akomo (20) Sta. Ana (4) Smart Araneta Coliseum Quezon City
9 Oct 15 • 12:00 pm FEU Tamaraws L 70–96 0–9 Tied (17) Faundo (13) De Guzman (6) Filoil Flying V Centre San Juan
10 Oct 22 • 2:00 pm NU Bulldogs L 83–91 0–10 Lee (15) Tied (6) De Guzman (6) Filoil Flying V Centre San Juan
11 Oct 25 • 4:00 pm Adamson Soaring Falcons L 70–75 0–11 Basibas (17) Akomo (17) Tied (3) Mall of Asia Arena Pasay
12 Oct 29 • 2:00 pm De La Salle Green Archers L 59–94 0–12 Lee (25) Akomo (10) Sta. Ana (5) Smart Araneta Coliseum Quezon City
13 Nov 4 • 2:00 pm Ateneo Blue Eagles L 83–102 0–13 Tied (12) Faundo (12) Sta. Ana (5) Smart Araneta Coliseum Quezon City
14 Nov 12 • 12:00 pm UE Red Warriors
End of R2 of eliminations
W 88–85 1–13 Basibas (21) Akomo (20) Basibas (4) Smart Araneta Coliseum Quezon City
(#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are in UTC+08:00.
Source: HumbleBola

UAAP statistics

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Player GP GS MPG FGM FGA FG% 3PM 3PA 3P% FTM FTA FT% RPG APG SPG BPG TOV PPG
Steve Akomo 12 10 27.3 52 104 50.0 0 4 0.0 33 69 47.8 13.2 1.7 0.9 2.5 3.8 11.4
Marvin Lee 12 6 26.0 50 118 42.4 17 51 33.3 19 23 82.6 3.3 2.9 1.3 0.1 4.4 11.3
Jordan Sta. Ana 13 11 25.1 60 129 46.5 0 1 0.0 24 57 42.1 2.4 4.3 0.8 0.0 3.6 11.1
Jeepy Faundo 13 3 19.7 41 97 42.3 0 1 0.0 23 36 63.9 8.2 0.4 0.3 0.5 1.2 8.1
Regie Boy Basibas 11 9 15.6 31 73 42.5 2 10 20.0 17 25 68.0 3.7 0.9 0.5 0.2 2.1 7.4
Oli de Guzman 12 6 17.6 29 91 31.9 5 28 17.9 3 6 50.0 2.4 2.1 0.1 0.0 2.0 5.5
Enric Caunan 13 6 13.0 29 50 58.0 0 0 0.0 1 6 16.7 4.0 0.6 0.1 0.6 1.1 4.5
Justin Arana 6 2 8.6 7 18 38.9 0 0 0.0 8 14 57.1 3.5 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.3 3.7
Carlo Escalambre 12 2 9.5 17 56 30.4 7 32 21.9 2 7 28.6 1.1 0.4 0.2 0.1 0.8 3.6
Zach Huang 11 3 9.3 13 37 35.1 0 0 0.0 8 15 53.3 1.9 0.2 0.5 0.0 1.5 3.1
Jorem Soriano 12 2 9.6 8 23 34.8 2 5 40.0 13 22 59.1 1.9 0.6 0.1 0.2 1.1 2.6
Christian Garcia 11 0 9.9 11 33 33.3 2 8 25.0 5 7 71.4 3.3 1.4 0.2 0.2 1.9 2.6
Joco Macasaet 13 4 12.3 12 36 33.3 0 3 0.0 6 8 75.0 2.8 0.8 0.0 0.5 0.5 2.3
MR Romero 12 2 9.6 8 18 44.4 0 0 0.0 2 3 66.7 1.3 0.3 0.1 0.2 1.0 1.5
Onzo Lorenzana 5 2 3.9 1 4 25.0 1 4 25.0 2 2 100.0 1.2 0.2 0.0 0.0 1.2 1.0
Ben Kwawukumey 11 1 4.9 5 14 35.7 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.7 0.1 0.2 0.0 1.1 0.9
Total 14 40.0 374 901 41.5 36 148 24.3 166 300 55.3 45.9 14.7 4.4 4.4 23.4 67.9
Opponents 14 40.0 415 982 42.3 101 306 33.0 188 270 69.6 40.4 19.5 9.4 4.4 15.5 79.9
Legend
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FGM  Field-goal made  FGA  Field-goal attempts  FG%  Field-goal percentage
 3PM  3-point field-goal made  3PA  3-point field-goal attempts  3P%  3-point field-goal percentage
 FTM  Free-throw made  FTA  Free-throw attempts  FT%  Free-throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  TOT  Turnovers per game  PPG  Points per game
Source: HumbleBola

Aftermath

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Boy Sablan tendered his resignation as the team's head coach on November 20, 2017. UST Rector Fr. Herminio Dagohoy announced that the entire coaching staff's tenure was to end on November 30, but they will continue receiving compensations until May of the following year due to existing live contracts. The Tigresses assistant coach Arsenio Dysangco Jr. was tasked to facilitate team practices as the school was finalizing the process for selecting the Growling Tigers' next coach.[29][30][31]

Former head coach Pido Jarencio once again expressed interest in coming back to lead the team, but there was someone else who was being considered for the position. On January 5, 2018, Aldin Ayo, resigned coach of the De La Salle Green Archers, announced his transfer to UST where he will coach the men's basketball team for the next six years. Ayo's appointment was made formal by Institute of Physical Education and Athletics (IPEA) director Fr. Jannel Abogado on January 11.[32][33][34]

Awards

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Name Award Date Ref.
Team Republica Cup runners-up 9 Apr 2017 [35]
Kim Lope Asis Invitational runners-up 29 Jun 2017 [36]
Kadayawan Invitational champions 27 Aug 2017 [37]
Marvin Lee Kadayawan Invitational MVP

Players drafted into the PBA

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Jeepy Faundo was picked 15th overall in the second round of the 2018 PBA draft by the Chito Victolero-led Magnolia Hotshots team on December 16, 2018. Regie Boy Basibas, meanwhile applied for the record 124-strong 2023 PBA draft and ended up as the last pick of the night, with the Bonnie Tan-coached NorthPort Batang Pier team selecting him in the eleventh round for the draft's 79th pick on September 17, 2023.[38][39]

Year Round Pick Overall Player PBA team
2018 2 3 15 Jeepy Faundo Magnolia Hotshots
2023 11 1 79 Regie Boy Basibas NorthPort Batang Pier

References

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  1. ^ Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin. "Host FEU wants UAAP 80 to be 'fan-friendly'". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  2. ^ Anolin, Jan Carlo; Camacho, Mia Arra. "Tigers suffer worst season in 28 years". The Varsitarian. Retrieved 6 Dec 2017.
  3. ^ Lintag, Paul Kennedy. "UAAP By the Numbers: NO SWEEP!". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 13 Nov 2017.
  4. ^ Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin. "Tamaraws send tamed Tigers to unlucky 13th straight loss". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 15 Oct 2017.
  5. ^ Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin. "#MAYHEM makes its return as DLSU vents ire on winless UST". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 30 Sep 2017.
  6. ^ Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin. "Green Archers give tamed Tigers another brutal beating". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 29 Oct 2017.
  7. ^ Naredo, Camille. "UP survives UST once again, snaps 3-game slide". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 11 Oct 2017.
  8. ^ Go, Beatrice. "Growling Tigers snatch first win on their last S80 game against UE". Rappler. Retrieved 12 Nov 2017.
  9. ^ Li, Matthew Henry. "UST escapes UE to end 17-game slide". Tiebreaker Times. Retrieved 12 Nov 2017.
  10. ^ Laqui, Alvin. "With players he recruited himself, Sablan confident about UST bounce back". ABS-CBN Sports. Archived from the original on 8 Sep 2017. Retrieved 6 Sep 2017.
  11. ^ Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin. "Tigers find treasure from scrap heap of other squads". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 5 Sep 2017.
  12. ^ Matel, Philip Martin. "Former Tiger Cubs captain back in basketball after two-year hiatus". The Varsitarian. Retrieved 20 Jul 2017.
  13. ^ Terrado, Reuben. "Gerry Esplana, Bobby Jose to join Boy Sablan's staff at UST as assistants, say sources". SPIN.ph. Retrieved 5 Jun 2017.
  14. ^ Laqui, Alvin. "UST prized recruit Steve Akomo remains positive amid eligibility doubts". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 5 Sep 2017.
  15. ^ "The Big Move: Ben Mbala transfers to La Salle". GoArchers.com. Retrieved 24 Jan 2013.
  16. ^ Bacani, Louis. "New law scraps UAAP's 2-year residency rule, bans huge bonuses". The Philippine Star. Retrieved 28 Aug 2015.
  17. ^ Lim, Francis. "The Pingoy Rule of the UAAP". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 3 Apr 2013.
  18. ^ Jerusalem, Dan; Mercado, Renzo Miguel. "UAAP eligibility rules: Adapting to changing times". The LaSallian. Retrieved 3 Sep 2017.
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  24. ^ Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin. "Adamson dodges upset ax from winless UST". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 25 Oct 2017.
  25. ^ Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin. "UST does not go winless, does all that's needed to down UE". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 12 Nov 2017.
  26. ^ Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin. "Falcons score first win at expense of error-prone Tigers". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 16 Sep 2017.
  27. ^ Lovenia, Karlo. "The different dimensions of heartbreak for the UST Growling Tigers". Scout's Notebook PH. Retrieved 12 Oct 2017.
  28. ^ "The day 'Go Uste!' was heard again". Rappler. Retrieved 12 Nov 2017.
  29. ^ Leongson, Randolph. "Under fire, Sablan quits as UST coach". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 22 Nov 2017.
  30. ^ Lintag, Paul Kennedy. "Boy Sablan out as UST head coach". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 21 Nov 2017.
  31. ^ Anolin, Jan Carlo. "Sablan out by Nov. 30 —UST Rector". The Varsitarian. Retrieved 22 Nov 2017.
  32. ^ Ballesteros, Jan. "Pido Jarencio vows to lead UST back to Final Four if given Tigers coaching job". SPIN.ph. Retrieved 7 Dec 2017.
  33. ^ Lintag, Paul Kennedy. "Pido Jarencio sure is disappointed about the UST–Ayo move". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 29 Dec 2017.
  34. ^ "Aldin Ayo confirms move to UST, set to coach Growling Tigers for 'next six years'". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 5 Jan 2018.
  35. ^ Terrado, Reuben. "UP Maroons defeat UST Tigers in Bulacan for second offseason title after winning in Davao". SPIN.ph. Retrieved 9 Apr 2017.
  36. ^ Panerio, Jonas Rey. "Green Lancers upset Growling Tigers to rule Bayugan Mayor's Cup". Cebu Daily News. Retrieved 30 Jun 2017.
  37. ^ "UST wins Kadayawan basketball crown". SunStar. Retrieved 28 Aug 2017.
  38. ^ Marquez, CJ. "CJ Perez selected as top pick in 2018 PBA rookie draft". CNN Philippines. Archived from the original on 20 December 2018. Retrieved 16 Dec 2018.
  39. ^ Dioquino, Delfin. "Full list: 2023 PBA Season 48 Draft". Rappler. Retrieved 17 Sep 2023.