1,338 views | February 10th, 2010

Patriots vs Satria Muda – ABL finals preview by Louis Angeles

Story contributed by Red Hoops reader Louis Richard R. Angeles

In the finals, both Patriots and Satria Muda are expected to gain significant contributions from their locals and their bench players. The Patriots will certainly bank on Jerwin Gaco, Noynoy Baclao (#21, in blue) and company to complement the efforts of the imports Gabe Freeman and Jason Dixon. (Photo © Red Sports file photo)

On February 12, 2010, the ASEAN Basketball League (ABL) will tip off the inaugural championship final series between the Philippine Patriots and Satria Muda BritAma at the Ynares Sports Arena in Pasig City, Philippines. This best-of-five series is expected to be an exciting one with both teams putting a lot on line for reasons of pride, tradition, and bragging rights.

Satria Muda, a team that has been together for years before the formation of the ABL, won four Indonesian Basketball League (IBL) titles in 2004, 2006, 2008, and 2009. Satria Muda also proved to the Southeast Asian region that they are a force to be reckoned with by winning the SEABA Champions Cup in 2008 in Jakarta. Satria Muda will certainly want to keep that tradition and take it to a whole new level.

The Philippine Patriots, on the other hand, were formed only a month before the ABL tipped off and do not have a tradition to back them up. However, they’re a team from Philippines. The Philippines, having a rich basketball tradition and culture in Asia which dates back from the early 1900s when the United States colonized the country, with numerous titles in the Asian region from the early 50s to the mid-80s, including a bronze medal in the 1954 FIBA World Championships (the best finish of any Asian country to date).

The Philippines is also the dominant force in Southeast Asia having won almost every SEABA and SEA Games tournament for men and junior men at the national and club level. Thus, Philippine basketball tradition and pride will be at stake here and anything less than a championship in the ASEAN region is a failure.

We should also expect to see a battle of two owners who pride themselves on winning: Erik Thohir of Satria Muda, and co-owner Mikee Romero of the Philippine Patriots. Both owners are actually tied in their head-to-head encounter in championship series. The Mikee Romero owned Harbour Centre beat Satria Muda 85-67 in their 2007 SEABA Champions Cup encounter in Jakarta.

The following year, Satria Muda came back and beat Harbour Centre 93-85 also in Jakarta. Therefore, the ABL championship series will reignite a historical rivalry between the owners.

Both teams faced off in the ABL regular season with the Philippine Patriots winning all three of their head-to-head matches. However, that was then and this is now.

Back then, there was no Gabe Freeman for the Philippine Patriots, and no Mario Wuysang for Satria Muda. Brandon Powell is gone for the Patriots and so is Rensy Bajar for Satria Muda. So things will be a little bit different now, which makes it a little bit unpredictable.

The Patriots will bank on their home-court advantage over Satria Muda on games one and two (and game 5 if necessary), having been undefeated at home all season long (8-0) and beating teams by an average winning margin of 14 points, including a 34-point thrashing of the KL Dragons in game 1 of their semi-final playoff series.

The KL Dragons, ironically, is also the team that posted the smallest losing margin (loosing by six on December 19) in Manila.

“We have to win the first two home games. That’s a must. Because we have home-court advantage, if we don’t then we’re just wasting our time,” said Freeman on ABS-CBN News. The Patriots defense is also the league’s best at 67 points per game (including the playoffs) compared to Satria Muda’s 71.

The Patriots are banking on the momentum of a four-game winning streak since Gabe Freeman first suited up for the Patriots against the Thailand Tigers on January 17th. Since then, the Patriots have improved their offensive output from 72 ppg (points per game) to 81.5 ppg with Freeman averaging double figures in every game.

Satria Muda also have a momentum that they have built up in the last two games. A grueling semi-final series with the Singapore Slingers saw Nakiea Miller and Alex Hartman anchor their team with impressive numbers.

Jason Dixon of the Patriots spoke about the Indonesian imports on ABS-CBN News saying that, “The key to stopping them is to stop their imports from having big-time games. We can’t allow them to score 20-30 points.”

Dixon’s comments were also echoed by Coach Louie Alas.

“The Indonesian team is a disciplined team and boasts of two imports in Alexander Hartman and Nakiea Miller who can explode at any point in the game,” said Alas to GMA News TV.

Fictor Roring, having learned from Filipino coaches in the past, will be familiar with the Filipino style of play. This will be a concern for Louie Alas.

“I was really expecting the Indonesian team to win because their play is similar to how the Filipinos play,” said Alas.

For both teams, they have to gain significant contributions from their locals and their bench players. This has been the theme all season long. The Patriots will certainly bank on Jerwin Gaco, Noynoy Baclao and company to complement the efforts of Gabe Freeman and Jason Dixon.

Satria Muda will bank on their experienced locals that showed some brilliance in their semi-final series against Singapore. Expect Mario Wuysang (the Mike Cortez look-a-like), Rony Gunawan and company to pick things up were they left off. The bench players will also be a factor since they can provide the quality minutes in the floor to keep their imports well rested.

Overall, it seems that the Patriots have a slight advantage because of the home-court advantage, and a deep roster that can contribute. However, Satria Muda played inspired basketball to beat the Slingers on home court in a playoff series. Notably, the Patriots were not able to do that in Singapore this season.

Expect the games to be close as both teams will lay it all on the line with emotions likely to run to an all-time high. The very first championship is certainly the one that will be remembered in years to come.

As Louie Alas said on Malaya.com.ph, “Nobody remembers the runner-up. That’s why we want to become the champions of the first ABL tournament.”

Fictor Roring would echo the same sentiments.

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Categories: Patriots , Satria Muda