
Ian Sangalang (with ball) and the Hotshots live to fight another day. —MARLO CUETO
The moment the PBA Commissioner’s Cup race heated up, teams battled hard to make sure they would tab one of the four quarterfinal slots with twice-to-beat protection.
Look how that has turned out so far.
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NLEx worked its way to the top seed, while Meralco fought hard enough to cling to the fourth spot, only to see No. 8 TNT and No. 5 Magnolia force them to fish out their twice-to-beat card with a gritty survival win at Ninoy Aquino Stadium last Wednesday.
It’s something that will burden the minds of Rain or Shine and Barangay Ginebra.
The two squads enter the second day of the quarterfinal phase also armed with playoff protection and they are hoping they won’t need it.
Because Elasto Painters coach Yeng Guiao knows one thing about the twice-to-beat advantage.
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“If it reaches the second game, the pressure will [shift to] us,” he said.
It will certainly be on the Road Warriors and the Bolts after stinging defeats last Wednesday.
Magnolia erased Meralco’s bonus with a 95-89 victory behind Clint Chapman.
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“We just extended our lives,” Magnolia coach LA Tenorio said after forcing a rubber match.
TNT followed with a tense 96-93 win over top-seeded NLEx despite a furious Road Warriors comeback.
Cautionary examples
The Tropang 5G will carry a huge advantage into the knockout match as they will have Bol Bol, the enigmatic import who is the closest there is to a sure bucket. He had 24 points and 14 rebounds, while Calvin Oftana, Roger Pogoy and Jayson Castro all scored in double figures for the Tropang 5G.
NLEx did its best to end things on Wednesday, but a late rally fell short following star guard Robert Bolick’s disqualification on fouls.
“It’s a big factor that Bolick wasn’t there in the endgame,” TNT coach Chot Reyes said.
The first two matches will serve as cautionary examples for Rain or Shine and Ginebra, who understand that the teams they are facing are not true underdogs.
“If you look at the teams at the bottom four, any one of them could have been in the top four,” Guiao said.
San Miguel Beer certainly fits that bill. Slowed by import woes early in the conference, the Beermen have bounced back with Benny Boatwright returning to the fold.
San Miguel also owns one of the deepest local talents in the league, something that makes Guiao thankful that they at least have an advantage with a shorter path to the quarterfinals.
“It’s a big thing that we [have a] twice-to-beat [advantage],” Guiao said. “At least we have [an extra] chance to beat them.”
But he’s still hoping he doesn’t have to use it.
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