PBA’s first playdate

 

PBA’s first playdate
TRADITIONALLY, April 9 has been a “red-colored” national holiday in the Philippines as we Filipinos commemorate the fall of Bataan to the invading Japanese military forces during the four-year World War II hostilities.

During my younger days, the holiday was called “Bataan Day.” Now it’s called “Araw ng Kagitingan.”
In sports, April 9 also is a special date to local basketball fans.

The first game (and playdate) in the history of Asia’s first and oldest professional league, the Philippine Basketball Association, was held on April 9, 1975.

On that day, an estimate crowd of 18,000 trooped to the Araneta Coliseum to witness a doubleheader that featured Mariwasa Noritake vs. Concepcion Carrier and Toyota vs. Universal Textiles.

Nine trailblazing franchises – none of which was related to the other one way or another – punched in their participation in the PBA’s inaugural campaign in 1975.

These are the CFC (Consolidated Foods Company) Presto Ice Cream Makers, Crispa-Floro Redmanizers, Conception Carrier Weathermakers, Mariwasa Noritake Porcelain Makers, Royal Tru-Orange Orangemen, Seven-Up Uncolas, Tanduay Distillers, Toyota Comets and Universal Textiles Weavers.

Months earlier, the nine clubs had ceded from the Manila Industrial and Commercial Athletic Association (MICAA), the country’s premier commercial and post-graduate league at the time.

Founded in 1938, the MICAA was organized by companies dealing in sporting goods and equipment and consumer products.

The league enjoyed tremendous success through the early seventies but a major disagreement with the Basketball Association of the Philippines (BAP) – then the country’s amateur basketball-governing body and a member of the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) – over financial matters led the group to break away from the BAP and establish a professional league that it would call the Philippine Basketball Association in March 1975.

With their professional status, the top players from the PBA were no longer eligible to suit up for the Philippine national team in international competitions (until the FIBA instituted an open-basketball policy in 1990).

The first-day PBA games saw Mariwasa Noritake defeat Concepcion Carrier, 101-98, and Toyota knock off U-Tex, 105-101.

American import Israel (Cisco) Oliver, he of the old Alaska Milk commercial fame (along with a little boy by the name of Wilfred Uytengsu, who would decades later become the Alaska team owner), topscored for the winning Mariwasa outfit with 48 points. “The Rifleman” Adriano (Jun) Papa, a former Crispa Redmanizer and a two-time Olympian (1968 Mexico and 1972 Munich) with the Philippine national squad, contributed 17 for the Porcelain Makers.

Carrier got 24 markers from “The Ironman” Jimmy Noblezada, 17 from two-time Olympian (1968 Mexico and 1972 Munich) Jimmy Mariano, and 10 from 1972 RP Youth Team member Gregorio (Joy) Dionisio.

Though he played on the losing side, Dionisio, a 5-foot-10 guard, carved his name in the PBA record books as the first player ever to score a field goal in the league.

In the main game of the twinbill, Toyota picked up the first victory in franchise history behind five Comets with double-digit scores – Rodolfo (Ompong) Segura, 23; Francis (Mr. Clutch) Arnaiz, 22; Alberto (Big Boy) Reynoso, 17; Ramon (El Presidente) Fernandez, 13; and Robert (The Big J) Jaworski, 11.

U-Tex, on the other hand, was powered by former national teamers Danilo Florencio, Lawrence Mumar, Rudolf Kutch and Arturo (Turing) Valenzona along with Edgardo (Egay) Gomez, Jaime (Jimmy) Otazu, George Lizares and Virgilio (Billy) Abarrientos, the smallest player in PBA annals at 5-foot-5 who is an uncle of future PBA playmaker Johnny Abarrientos.

The Weavers’ head coach during the first of three conferences in Season One was Carlos (Caloy) Loyzaga, who undisputedly is also the greatest all-around player in Philippine cage history.

 

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