Northern Cement basketball team

The Northern Cement basketball team (popularly known as, the NCC basketball team) refers to the team that represented the national basketball program and training pool for the Philippines men's national basketball team from 1980 to 1986. The team was owned by businessman Eduardo "Danding" Cojuangco, Jr. through his company, Northern Cement Corporation (NCC).

Northern Cement basketball team
LeaguesPhilippine Basketball Association
(19841985)
Founded1980
History1980–1986
ArenaNone
Location Philippines
Team colorsRed, white and black
     
PresidentEduardo M. Cojuangco, Jr.
Head coachRon Jacobs
ChampionshipsNorthern Cement:
1981 William Jones Cup
1985 William Jones Cup (playing as San Miguel Beer)
1985 PBA Reinforced Conference
As the Philippine national team:
1981 Southeast Asian Games
1982 ABC Juniors Championship
1985 Southeast Asian Games
1985 ABC Championship
Websitehttp://www.ncc.com.ph

Beginnings

In 1980, businessman and ambassador Eduardo "Danding" Cojuangco, founder and owner of Northern Cement Corporation, was appointed by the Philippine President Ferdinand E. Marcos to become the project director for basketball in the country. Cojuangco (despite not being an officer or member of the national basketball governing body at that time - the Basketball Association of the Philippines) was tasked to set up, finance, and develop the national basketball team to represent the country internationally. During that time, the best players in the country were playing in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA), the first professional basketball league in the Philippines, and in Asia. With the Fédération Internationale de Basketball Amateur ruling that only amateur basketball players would be allowed to participate in national basketball team tournaments, Cojuangco sought a way to keep the Philippine basketball competitive on the international stage, without the country's best players.

American collegiate coaches Ron Jacobs and Ben Lindsey were brought in to handle the team. Eventually, Jacobs became NCC's head coach.

The first NCC team (1981-1982)

Seeking to fast-track the success of the program, the first team formed in 1981 (known as the RP Training Team) was mainly made up of eight American players who became naturalized Filipinos (a practice also common to European national teams at that time) which included Dennis Still and Jeff Moore. Two Filipino-Americans, Willie Pearson, and National Basketball Association Filipino-American draftee Ricardo Brown were included, along with two local players in JB Yango and Frankie Lim, both from San Beda College. This was done with the intention of passing on new basketball technology to the Filipino cagers.

The team (playing as Northern Cement) easily won the 4th William Jones Cup in 1981, but failed to gain support among Filipino fans, as they viewed the program as merely having foreigners represent the country. This team was eventually scrapped, and Jacobs was then asked to develop local talents instead.

In 1981, at the Southeast Asian Games held in Manila, Jacobs was tasked to retain the country's gold medal in men's basketball. Noting the lack of competition, Jacobs decided to appoint De La Salle University head coach Pilo Pumaren as coach for the Philippine team, made up of players from the Manila Industrial and Commercial Athletic Association. The team successfully retained the gold medal.

In 1982, Jacobs mentored the Philippines' under-19 basketball team to the Asian Basketball Confederation Juniors Championship in his first official tournament as head coach for the Philippines' teams. The team included players such as Alfie Almario, Elmer Reyes, Tonichi Ytturi, Franz Pumaren, Teddy Alfarero, Rey Cuenco, Leo Austria, Jong Uichico, Hector Calma, and Louie Brill. The team beat China in the final at the Araneta Coliseum in Manila. However, even as Jacobs went about developing local talents, the players were still deemed "raw".

The second NCC team (1983 ABC championships)

In 1983, some recruits from the De La Salle squad that was also under the wings of Danding Cojuangco and five naturalized players began training for their ultimate goal of regaining the Asian Basketball Confederation (ABC) title in Hong Kong. It was a formidable team composed of Hector Calma, Franz Pumaren, Tonichi Yturri, Alfie Almario, Jun Tan, Joseph Uichico, Teddy Alfarero and naturalized players Dennis Still, Jeff Moore, Chip Engelland, Johnny Nash and John Hegwood.

Upon arrival, they learned that their naturalized Filipinos were not recognized by the ABC and were therefore disallowed from playing. It was resolved by allowing only two of the five to play and this only because they had field in the minimum residency required by the statutes of law for naturalizing foreigners. Using only Dennis Still and Jeff Moore, coach Ron Jacobs piloted the team to a sweep of its qualifying matches and were all set for a showdown with China when the decision come out that the RP squad had used illegal players and therefore - all their games in which the naturalized players were fielded in were forfeited.

The Philippine contingent accepted the decision with bowed heads and finished the tournament in ninth place despite a clean slate.

PBA (1984-1985)

NCC competed as a guest team for four conferences during the 1984 and 1985 PBA seasons and they won the 1985 PBA Reinforced Conference championship. The team went on to represent the Philippines and captured the 1984 Asian Interclub Championship in Ipoh, Malaysia, as well as the 1985 William Jones Cup championship (playing as San Miguel Beer). Because of their win at the Asian Interclub Championship, the team represented the Asian region at the 1985 World Cup for Champion Clubs at Girona, Spain (playing as Northern Consolidated Cement).[1]

The 1984 roster that first participated in the PBA:

Northern Consolidated roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.Nat.NameHt.Wt.
F 4 Uichico, Jong 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) De La Salle
G 5 Pumaren, Franz 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) De La Salle
G 6 Tan, Leoncio 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) De La Salle
F 7 Almario, Alfie 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) De La Salle
F 8 Reyes, Elmer 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) San Beda College
F 9 Valenciano, Ludovico 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) La Salle-Bacolod
F 10 Engelland, Chip 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) Duke University
C 11 Yturri, Tonichi 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) De La Salle
G 12 Brill, Louie 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) San Beda College
G 14 Calma, Hector 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m) Adamson University
F 15 Moore, Jeffrey 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) Loyola (Maryland)
F 16 Dignadice, Yves 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) West Negros College
F 17 Cuenco, Rey 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) GAUF
F 18 Mendoza, Anthony 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) University of Visayas
F/C 19 Aguilar, Peter 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) Trinity College
G 20 Solis, Al 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) University of Visayas
C 18 & 21 Alfarero, Teddy 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) De La Salle
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • Injured

In December 1984, UAAP stars Allan Caidic, Pido Jarencio, Benji Gutierrez, Jerry Codiñera, and Leo Austria joined the NCC team playing exhibition games against PBA clubs during the third conference. Northerns second team was coached by veteran coach Francisco Calilan. The first team that went to Malaysia for the Asian Interclub championship were composed of Moore, Engelland, Calma, Joseph Uichico, Franz Pumaren, Leoncio Tan, Elmer Reyes, Tonichi Yturri, Avelino "Samboy" Lim and Yves Dignadice.

Caidic, Jarencio and Codiñera became regular members of the national team in the following year while Leo Austria went on to join the first-ever PBA draft.

1985 FIBA Asia Championship

In 1985, the members of the NCC team played for the country's national basketball team. The NCC-powered national team won the 1985 Southeast Asian Games basketball tournament and the Asian Basketball Confederation Championship on January 5, 1986 at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, tournament which the country had not won since 1973. In winning the ABC Championship, the team qualified for the 1986 World Basketball Championship in Madrid, Spain and the 1986 Goodwill Games. At this time, Jacobs mapped out a new plan to ensure continuity in the national team program. New local players such as Benjie Paras, Alvin Patrimonio, Jerry Codiñera were already being eyed to replace the aging Still and Moore. Engelland, on the other hand, was already honing the shooting skills of Allan Caidic, Naning Valenciano and Pido Jarencio. Amateur star Jojo Lastimosa was expected to fill Engelland's slot on the team in the future (Engelland eventually became the shooting coach of the San Antonio Spurs). However, the NCC program was scrapped in the aftermath of the 1986 People Power Revolution in the Philippines. The Philippines was forced to withdraw from the World Championship as a result.

Disbandment

After the fall of the Marcos government in 1986, the program was scrapped by the Basketball Association of the Philippines (BAP), which was the national basketball governing body of the country at that time. The players of NCC went on to play in the Philippine Basketball Association, with most of them ending up in Cojuangco's San Miguel Beer team. Some of the NCC players would again see action for the national team at the 1990 Asian Games in Beijing, China, which copped a silver medal.

In 1994, the San Miguel Beer PBA team won the 1994 PBA All-Filipino Cup championship and earned the right to represent the country in the upcoming Asian Games, held at Hiroshima, Japan. The national team was composed of the San Miguel players serving as the core of the team and other PBA players (notably Alvin Patrimonio from Purefoods and Johnny Abarrientos from Alaska) and amateur standouts (notably Marlou Aquino from the Philippine Basketball League). The team, led by NCC alumni Allan Caidic and Hector Calma, went on to finished fourth with Caidic finishing as the Asian Games basketball tournament top scorer.

List of players

PBA season-by-season records

Legend
  Champion
  Runner-up
  Semifinalist
SeasonConferenceTeam nameOverall recordFinals
WL%
1984First All-FilipinoNorthern Cement3018.625
Second All-Filipino
1985Open Conference3322.600
Reinforced ConferenceNorthern Cement 4, Manila Beer 0
Overall record6340.6111 championship

See also

References

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