Oct 15
2009
11:27 am

N.S.W.F. 1989

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By AbsolutVerde

(a Eduardo Galeano, una sonrisa tímida)

Everywhere one looked, eras were ending and eras were beginning. Wood panels finally sealed the windows of the Benilde building, the last on the main campus to be fully air-conditioned. A VAX 8350 computer that cost USD 449,089 moved into its ground floor to lord over the five mini-computers and 240 microcomputers on the university grid. Behind green monitors and on floppy disks, the C-Brain and Pentagon viruses lay in wait. A "University Mall" rose over Syfu's parking lot with Pizza Hut, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and Maxim's Tea House on ten-year leases. Gone were the 280 parking spaces that the chickers and their bebis used for tambayan, tsibugan…and kangkungan. The administration suggested the front lot at the newly opened College of Saint Benilde across Taft. Bomalabs naman, the students complained: who would want to pay PhP 6 a day for parking?!

Alejandro Lichauco came to speak on Nationalist Economics. University Week celebrations featured a tribute to Jose Wright Diokno. Bienvenido Santos discussed how to tap the creativity of students and Isagani Cruz discoursed on Balagtas and Engleton. Someone from the Kabataang Makabayan painted an alibata symbol on the backstairs wall of the SPS building, warning of mayhem if tuition fees hit PhP 5,000 a term. One Brother yelled to another: "Stop running the University like ShoeMart!!!" La Salle Students for Democratic Action, PoliSci, Tapat, Malate and Plaridel demanded a democratic, autonomous, assertive, socialist, feminist, and nationalist education. Santugon, on a second consecutive year of Executive Board dominance, called for a "less snobbish and more approachable Student Council". The La Sallian discussed the perfume choices of students.

Things were coming to a head. Discipline Officers had their hands full stopping students from sitting on the floor along hallways. Security guards were conscripted to quiet students who were "abusing the cool surroundings" of the new Library. The SPS building was the first to be declared smoke-free while the Campus Ministry Office tried harder to define "proselytising". A Political Science thesis split the College of Liberal Arts: the failing grade given by the departmental panel was disregarded by the Dean, who appointed a new panel. C. Bautista, Abueg, Lota, and Gojocco protested in writing. A brawl broke out "at the flick of a switch" during the last 13 seconds of friendly match between La Salle and Ateneo on the third anniversary of EDSA. The venue was the Ultra, the game was abandoned with Ateneo leading 72-84, and team manager Atty. Rafael Dinglasan formally apologised. The rest of us were exhorted to be B.O.B.O. -- to "Bring Out the Best in Ourselves". Paul Zaldarriaga returned to campus to defend the trimestral system -- it had been based on his IME thesis (a cash flow study) some years before.

For eight days in December, the fate of the Aquino government hung in the balance. Two reporters from The La Sallian followed the events with a Ricoh 135 and a Canon 110 instamatic. One of them was shot in the leg for his pains.

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From The La Sallian (September 1989 Issue)

Adamson University hosted the 52nd season of the UAAP, urging "Brotherhood through Sports". Frederick S. Pumaren sent the following Green Archers to challenge for the crown: Richard del Rosario, Eddie Viaplana, Johnedel Cardel, Rafa Dinglasan, Teddy Monasterio, Jun Limpot, Jonas Mariano, Lincoln Lim, Joey Sta. Maria, Gee Abanilla, Arnel Guste, Dong Vergeire, Oliver Bunyi, and Jun Torral. Richard Bachmann, who started the previous year, suffered an injury and had to sit out the season. A cheering group called the Green Rooters was formed, with 31 boys and 14 girls. The girls wore skirts that were longer than Limpot's shorts.

La Salle opened against the UST Glowing Goldies one Sunday at the Araneta Coliseum, and won handily 88-69. Against FEU, who had eight of its players also in the Philippine Amateur Basketball League (PABL), the Archers were nearly flawless, winning 111-101. Shortly after, Cardel, Pumaren, and a vastly improved Limpot would leave on national duty to play in the SEA Games. There they would team up with Gilbert Reyes, Jr. who had tormented them the year before. Everyone prepared for a first-round derby with La Salle missing its coach and two top players, and Ateneo missing the league's reigning Most Valuable Player. But they all made it back for the showdown at high noon, which La Salle won 77-69. "Parang natanggalan ng tinik", Pumaren said. In their second round meeting, La Salle were without their three aces, who were off to the ABC tournament in Beijing, but Ateneo kept Reyes home "to attend to his studies". With La Salle shooting 29%, they succumbed to Ogie Narvasa's Blue Eagles 61-67.

In the last game of the second round, La Salle met the FEU of Turing Valenzona, de Guzman, Postanes, Pablo, Punzalan, Pat Codinera, Cruz, Mondarte, Tiu, and a young Johnny Abarrientos for a twice-to-beat advantage in the Finals. Dinglasan of the Archers shot six triples in that game but FEU's de Guzman only needed two free throws at the end of it to carry his team to the cusp of a championship. Pumaren was defiant: "We are not yet second". His secret weapon? Senior second-stringer Gelacio Abanilla, who scored seven points -- or eight or ten or forty -- in the extra period of the do-or-die match, after Monasterio had fouled out.

15 October 1989, Rizal Memorial Coliseum. The end of the season, the parquet slick, the ceiling steamy. Someone hung an "Animo La Salle" streamer on the official scoreboard. In the crowd, halfway through a Grand Slam with the San Miguel Beermen, a young Franz Pumaren sat and watched. His coach Norman Black had given him leave that day. He remembered his first season in the UAAP: four wins, ten losses, including a heart-rending game against Ateneo in which his seven three-point shots were not enough. He wondered if he would ever see La Salle win a UAAP championship.

The battle was titanic. Neither team led by more than one point for the first six minutes until Pablo carved out a five point lead for his Tamaraws at the half. La Salle adjusted, assigning Monasterio to double on Pablo while he and Cardel alternated on FEU's other threat, Alejandro de Guzman. The result -- a 13-1 run, capped by a swooping Cardel lay-up off a Monasterio fastbreak that gave La Salle the lead for good. The game ended 74-69, with Eddie Viaplana nailing an open three point shot with 16 seconds left. Everywhere one looked, eras were ending and eras were beginning.

[Many thanks to ArcherPride.com's Rektikano for the clippings and the shoptalk.]

Photos below courtesy of GreenWithin as posted in Archerpride.com

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  1. I was a 3rd year student then. ahhh the glory days, very nostalgic indeed. watching the team practice at the gym during vacant periods, walking to rizal memorial to watch every game and cheering our hearts out… these events were priceless! :D

  2. I was 10 years old back then but I remember watching this game on TV.

  3. I was only a 7 year old Grade-1 student at LSGH that year, but already a UAAP fan.

    It’s ironic that La Salle is entering the “dark ages” exactly twenty years after it first stepped into the limelight.

  4. Wow, it’s been 20 years na pala since La Salle won it’s 1st UAAP title.

  5. Nice piece of history Absolut Verde (it sounds like a La Salle shirt Absolut La Salle circa 1989-1990). I was a freshman then and Santugon was the dominant political party sitting on the 2nd floor of SPS. Fortunately, I’m from TAPAT and LSDA. 1989 indeed was a very good year for La Salle. That was the start of our basketball dominance. The likes of Limpot, Cardel, Santamaria, etal versus those FEU Tamaraws plus George Gallent in Game 3 of the 1989 Finals was a classic game. The jampacked and sweaty Rizal Memorial was the edifice of the team’s dominance and sound basketball system. I think Yvette White was one of our cheerleaders during that game together with Dingdong A.(Nota Bene: It was only La Salle and Ateneo who have Pep Squads during that time. Other schools brought with them their respective brass band)I still have with me the September issue of the La Sallian and I cannot help but remember that fruitful day. By the way, if my memory serves me right, I don’t think that Oliver Bunyi was a member of the 1989 Team.
    I still have with me my old “Hunting Season “, “Shut Them Up in your Beak” shirts which I proudly wore in Araneta during my 1989 freshman days. I still have with me my 1989 Tapat (the black one with orange “T” on the right) and Poliscy shirt.
    1989 was the year when B.O.B.O. La Salle was introduced. BRINGING OUT THE BEST in OURSELVES. It was copied by FEU in 2006 exactly with the same meaning. Oh boy, that clearly shows that we are head above waters with other schools, right Dr. Echauz? Incidentally, Dr. Echauz and PYT (Paulino Y Tan) were our school’s officers circa 1989 and went to FEU after they left La Salle.
    I earnestly hope that our academic excellence and social responsibility continue to flourish and rebuild our nation for the future of our children. ID No. 8931488

  6. I think 1989 was the year when Jun Limpot wore a mask and Teddy Monasterio sustained some cut in a brawl at Faces. And yes, Bunyi was a member of the 1989 Team.
    By the way, FEU got the twice to beat advantage in the Finals due to our second round loss to FEU.

  7. may 1998 version ba nito? =D

    i lost all my la salle memorabilia in the flood. pampa-cheer up lang…

  8. ronn,

    You were referring to 1990. Limpot and Monasterio missed their game against UE, which I think was our last game in the elimination round. We came back from 18 points down behind John Cardel and Dwight Lago to beat UE and thus, “swept” the elims.

  9. the dark ages may have come..but the green and white will see it thru!animo forever!animo La Salle!

  10. I wish the Archers would start wearing the classic uniforms again. Original color, original style. Not as tight as these though, a bit more baggy of course.=)


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