Archive for September, 2007
Fair play (or the lack of emotional control)
A disclaimer: I’m not a bitter Lasallian. I’ve not really written about the UAAP games because I’m not really interested in it, until lately when my sister got bitten by the bug. At this point DLSU faces Ateneo for a fifth time after another one point victory for the Eagles – disappointing for us because, for the entirety of the second half, the game was ours.
I wonder what the crowds that assembled at the Central Plaza felt today. The projectors were bad, and the crowd was growing when I passed there a half-hour before the game was slated to start, but surely when we lead by as much as seven points the cheers grew ever so louder. My RELSFOR class was called off because, apparently, some wanted to watch the game and not counted as absent, thus we got the rollover effect (nobody requested for that even if our class hit the game’s time slot perfectly). Everybody’s expectations probably grew big.
But I’d give it to the Blue Eagles for a good fight. This is probably the closest rivalry I’ve witnessed in my conscious viewing, with all games ending with a one-point lead so far. But for those at the green side at the Araneta Coliseum today, it is probably the most disappointing afternoon ever.
1 comment 27 September 2007
Republished: A nation’s passion lives in a rivalry of green vs blue
Surprise, surprise – just in time for what appears to be a fourth La Salle-Ateneo game, this time for the second UAAP men’s basketball finals slot, an article about the fancied rivalry appears in The New York Times! There’s nothing really new here, but here’s what the Americans probably first know about what we are so much into. At least if you’re from either school. Writer Raphael Bartholomew is writing a book about Philippine basketball, probably partly based on his experiences working on that school in Katipunan. Many thanks to Leslie Sy for the tip on this one.
Senators, foreign diplomats, cabinet ministers, a smattering of Forbes’s 40 richest Filipinos, movie stars and enough professional basketball players to play five-on-five. They are the elite of Philippine society, and they all gather at Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City to watch the men’s basketball rivalry between the universities Ateneo de Manila and De La Salle.
La Salle coach Franz Pumaren said, “The janitors in Araneta always say, ‘If there’s an Ateneo-La Salle game, once everybody’s out of the coliseum, it still smells good because of the all the socialites watching.’”
Add comment 24 September 2007
Of rivalries and breaking the unbroken
FluidShale 2007.09.18: Back on the video trail, and this time, it’s about the crowds that never got tickets but are watching the DLSU-Ateneo game nevertheless. I just got dismissed from RELSFOR class and got to look at the crowd, and interview some people as well. Eventually we won by one point, 70-69. There’s more after the jump.
3 comments 18 September 2007
Campus sports in a chat transcript
I don’t know, but I think I’m lucky enough not to have watched the UAAP cheerdance competition on the television this afternoon. But surely something was wrong when Ariane texted me something I wouldn’t have expected. “Ang bulok ng pep squad natin!“
Apparently the mistakes were so glaring, most of the people I’ve talked to about it thought it was humiliating on the school’s part. But I guess our cheerleaders make mistakes also, so I’d give them a chance. But almost everybody else saw it, and so far that’s something.
I was talking to Charmaine about it, and what follows is the unedited transcript. (And if you’re sensitive to graphic references and safe profanity, then skip this part.)
1 comment 16 September 2007