Philippine Daily Inquirer

WARY FAVORITES

Cone erases Kings’ past dominance of rival Bolts as Barangay Ginebra prepares for quarterfin­al battle against Meralco

- By Denison Rey A. Dalupang @sonrdINQ

Barangay Ginebra’s path to the crown runs through Meralco—again. Tim Cone, however, wants the Gin Kings to leave the past behind as they prepare for a vigorous clash when their Philippine Cup best-ofPBA three quarterfin­als gets going this Sunday.

“We’re trying to play as if we have no histhem tory with them,” the Gin Kings mentor told the Inquirer on the eve of the 6:30 p.m. clash at Smart Araneta Coliseum in Cubao, Quezon City.

That would be a strange tactic for a team that could a lot of conderive fidence from looking back to those Ginememora­ble bra-Meralco duel.

After all, the Kings have won most of that.

But this is Tim Cone. And Tim Cone never lays down a path for his team to take with no reason.

“We don’t want to fall into old patterns with them because they’ve evolved as a team,” the Grand Slam mentor said. “What we’ve done in the past with them won’t be good enough now, [so] we need to understand that and take a fresh approach to the series.”

Meralco has truly proven to be a resilient bunch over the years. Despite being on the nasty receiving end of its showdowns with Ginebra, the Bolts have always managed to rejuvenate its confidence. And that couldn’t be more true this time.

“We know they have the pieces. But I think nothing better for us, and the players, than to be in that type of atmoigi sphere. You have that crowd, people talking about it. You want to be there,” said Luof Trillo, the Meralco assistant coach now running the team with Norman Black in the States to attend to family matters.

Much of that optimism is built from Meralco’s recent strides in the All-Filipino. The club has reached the Final Four twice in the last two editions the tournament and one of those two campaigns would’ve lasted a bit longer if not for Scottie Thompson’s triple during the deciding Game 5 of the semifinals back in 2020.

And then there is the fact that the Bolts also handily beat the crowd darlings, 90-73, in their eliminatio­n round contest.

Whatever floats Meralco’s confidence right now is also baked into Cone’s guarded outlook, something coach Chito Victolero is also presenting even his third-seed Magnolia packing heat in its 4:30 p.m. duel with unpredicta­ble NLEX.

“Going into these playoffs, we now have momentum,” he said of the seven-game tear that capped the Hotshots’ eliminatio­n phase. “We’ve also experience­d all sorts of games: a catch-up, a one, a come-from-be-close hind and an overtime. All of that will be good for us.”

“But against NLEX, there’s only a 50-50 chance [of winning],” he said.

Calvin Abueva, who has been the of the Hot anchor shots’ blistering run, is also aware what last year’s Philippine Cup bridesmaid­s are up against in the No. 6 Road Warriors.

“We all know NLEX is not a low-level [team]. We know they fight,” he said.

 ?? —PBA IMAGES ?? Chris Newsome (left) and the Bolts will renew their rivalry against Stanley Pringle and the Kings.
—PBA IMAGES Chris Newsome (left) and the Bolts will renew their rivalry against Stanley Pringle and the Kings.

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