1988 PBA/IBA World Challenge Cup

The 1988 Coca-Cola PBA/IBA World Challenge Cup was the 2nd staging of the PBA/IBA series hosted by the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) and the International Basketball Association. The one-week event took place on September 18–25. [1]

1988 PBA PBA/IBA Cup
DurationSeptember 18–25, 1988
TV partner(s)Vintage Sports (PTV)
Finals
ChampionsAñejo Rum 65ers
Runners-upAlaska Milkmen
PBA PBA/IBA Cup chronology
PBA conference chronology

Tournament details

Two PBA basketball clubs; All-Filipino Conference champion Añejo Rum 65ers and All-Filipino Conference third placer Alaska Milkmen were joined by the IBA representative, Los Angeles Jaguars, coached by Paul Howards, and the Australian selection, Aussie All-Stars, coached by Ken Cole. Among those playing for the Jaguars were Sean Chambers, 6'2" NBA veteran Rudy White, Tran Sawyer, Quintin Stephens. The Australian All-star team had two Americans, Jerry Everett and Rick Sharp, although a third American scheduled to play, Mark Davis was unable to make the trip. The 65ers played with only one import, Bobby Parks, borrowed from Shell, while the Milkmen were reinforced by Willie Bland and Eddie Cox.

Results

September 18
Añejo Rum 65ers 121, Aussie All-Stars 105
September 18
Alaska Milkmen 135, Los Angeles Jaguars 118
September 20
Aussie All-Stars 134, Alaska Milkmen 132
September 20
Añejo Rum 65ers 116, Los Angeles Jaguars 113
September 22
Los Angeles Jaguars 115, Aussie All-Stars 110

Battle for third place

September 25
Los Angeles Jaguars 129, Aussie All-Stars 123
Scoring by quarter: 32-31, 28-29, 30-36, 39-27

Finals

September 25
Añejo Rum 65ers 128, Alaska Milkmen 126
Scoring by quarter: 36-23, 35-30, 28-46, 29-27
Pts: Bobby Parks 59 Pts: Willie Bland 44

Romulo Mamaril came from nowhere to deliver the winning basket, struck with a lay-up in the last three seconds that shattered the 126-all deadlock and power Añejo to a 128-126 triumph over Alaska for the PBA/IBA championship. The Rum Masters led by 14 points in the third quarter but Alaska's Willie Bland rallied the Airmen back to tie the count at 97-all, a seesaw battle ensued in the final six minutes before Mamaril came through with his heroics. Añejo's Bobby Parks was named Most Valuable Player of the 2nd PBA/IBA Cup. [2]

Philips Sardines Slam Dunk competition

  • Champion: Willie Bland of Alaska (144 points)
  • Runner-up: Sean Chambers of LA Jaguars (133 points)
  • Third place: Eddie Cox of Alaska (122 points)

IBA and WBL

In May that year, it was reported that the International Basketball Association (IBA) virtually collapsed as eight franchises bolted the organization to form a splinter league called World Basketball League (WBL). The original IBA group was left in control of only two clubs, the Los Angeles Jaguars and Syracuse Shooting Stars.

According to sources, Chicago Express owner Barry Fox led the uprising that left IBA pioneers Dennis Murphy, the man who translated the concept of an international league for 6'4" and under into reality, and Austin (Rocky) Kalish hold a nearly empty back.

The WBL sets a height limit of 6-5 for its players.

References

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