Pop Cola Panthers Explained

Pop Cola Panthers
Founded:1990
History:Pop Cola Sizzlers (1990, 1997)
Sarsi Sizzlers (1990)
Diet Sarsi Sizzlers (1991)
Swift Mighty Meaty Hotdogs (1991–1993)
Swift Mighty Meaties (1994)
Sunkist Orange Juicers (1995–1996, 2000)
Sunkist Orange Bottlers (1996)
Pop Cola Bottlers (1997)
Pop Cola 800s (1998–2000)
Pop Cola Panthers (2000–2001)
Swift Panthers (2000)
Colors:Swift, Diet Sarsi and Pop Cola
Blue, Red, White

Sunkist
Orange, Blue, White
Company:RFM Corporation
Owner:Jose Ma. "Joey" A. Concepcion III
Gm:Elmer Yanga-->
Coach:Yeng Guiao, Derrick Pumaren, Turo Valenzona, Norman Black, Chot Reyes
Championships:4 championships

1992 Third Conference
1993 Commissioner's
1995 All-Filipino
1995 Commissioner's

7 Finals Appearances

Dissolved:Sold in 2001
1 Title:Light uniform
1 Body:ffffff
1 Shorts:ffffff
2 Title:Dark uniform
2 Body:0000ff
2 Shorts:0000ff

The Pop Cola Panthers were a professional basketball team that played in the Philippine Basketball Association from 1990-2001. The franchise was owned by RFM Corporation. In 2001, when RFM Corporation sold its entire stake in Cosmos Bottling Corporation to Coca-Cola Bottlers Philippines, Inc. (CCBPI), the PBA franchise was included in the transaction. Upon ownership by CCBPI, the PBA franchise renamed the Coca-Cola Tigers beginning the 2002 PBA season[1] and was considered as an expansion team.

The franchise also played under the names Pop Cola/Diet Sarsi Sizzlers, Swift Mighty Meaty Hotdogs, Swift Mighty Meaties, Sunkist Orange Juicers/Bottlers and Pop Cola 800s.

History

Pop Cola was one of two expansion franchises to enter the league in the 1990 season, joining softdrink rival Pepsi-Cola, increasing the number of member teams in the pro league to eight.

In their 12-year stint in the PBA, they were known as the Pop Cola Sizzlers, Sarsi, Swift Mighty Meaty, Sunkist Orange Juicers, Sunkist Orange Bottlers and Pop Cola 800s. The team has used the Pop Cola name from 1997 until their final season in the PBA in 2001, although the team was known as Sunkist in the 2000 Commissioners Cup and was known as the Swift Panthers for the first few games of the 2001 Governors Cup. Their first finals appearance came in 1991 All-Filipino, as Diet Sarsi, lost to corporate rival Purefoods TJ Hotdogs, 3 games to 2 in a Best of Five finals series. The team's first PBA title came in 1992, when Swift defeated 7-Up four games-to-none to win the PBA Third Conference under head coach Yeng Guiao.

The franchise also fielded one of the dominant imports in PBA history in Tony Harris, who scored a PBA record 105 points for Swift when they defeated Ginebra 151–147 in a game held in Iloilo City on October 10, 1992.

In 1993, Swift traded Jack Tanuan, Ricric Marata and Andy De Guzman for Sta. Lucia in exchange for their former players in their PABL days, Vergel Meneses and Zaldy Realubit, and this gave Swift its second championship in the newly called Commissioners Cup, gaining revenge over their business rival, Purefoods Oodles, 4 games to 2, the Hotdogs were powered by best import Ronnie Thompkins. the team was title-less the following season in which head coach Yeng Guiao decided to moved over to Pepsi Mega, and Derek Pumaren taking over the coaching chores, Swift made it to the finals in the season-ending Governor's Cup, losing to Alaska in six games.

The 1995 season became a banner year for the team. Under the name Sunkist Orange Juicers, the team almost achieved a rare back-to-back winning the All-Filipino and Commissioner's Cup titles before finishing third overall in the season-ending Governor's Cup. The team was bannered by season MVP Vergel Meneses, Bonel Balingit, Boybits Victoria, Kenneth Duremdes and Rudy Distrito (who was banned in 1995 for his infamous hard foul on Alaska rookie Jeffrey Cariaso during the All-Filipino finals series).

Sunkist/Pop Cola suffered hard times in the 1996 and 1997 seasons before their fortunes changed in 1998 when the team won a few third-place finishes under head coach Norman Black, who even played one game during the Commissioner's Cup to lead the 800s to a third-place finish in the said tournament.

Pop Cola suffered two more losing seasons in 1999 and 2000 seasons but had a decent run in their final PBA season in 2001 under head coach Chot Reyes, copping third place honors in the All-Filipino Conference.

The franchise ended when RFM Corporation sold its PBA franchise to Coca-Cola Bottlers Philippines, Inc. (CCBPI), in connection to its sale of Cosmos Bottling Corporation to CCBPI in 2001.

Season-by-season records

See main article: List of Pop Cola Panthers seasons.

Awards

Individual awards

PBA Most Valuable PlayerFinals MVPPBA Best Player of the Conference
  • Vergel Meneses - 1994 Governors', 1995 All-Filipino, 1995 Commissioner's
PBA Rookie of the Year AwardPBA All-Defensive TeamPBA Mythical First Team
PBA Mythical Second TeamPBA Most Improved PlayerPBA Sportsmanship Award
PBA Best Import

PBA Press Corps Individual Awards

Executive of the YearBaby Dalupan Coach of the YearDefensive Player of the Year
  • Elmer Yanga - 1993–1995
Bogs Adornado Comeback Player of the YearMr. Quality MinutesAll-Rookie Team

All-Star Weekend

Notable players

PBA's 25 greatest players

Other notable players

Imports

Notes and References

  1. News: Navarro . June . Pop Cola now Coca Cola: Chot to get P32.9M as Tigers coach . February 18, 2022 . Philippine Daily Inquirer . January 10, 2002 . en.
  2. News: Hernandez . John . Mobiline frees Agustin via P3.38-M pact buyout . February 18, 2022 . Manila Standard . December 28, 1997 . en.
  3. News: Navarro . June . Aces find new Johnny A in Mike Cortez . February 18, 2022 . Philippine Daily Inquirer . January 9, 2006 . en.
  4. News: Pop Sends Duremdes, Tanuan To Alaska For Lago, Fernandez . February 18, 2022 . Manila Standard . October 27, 1997 . en.
  5. News: Reyes . Marc Anthony . Alaska Milk In Mourain As Pop Snares Lastimosa . February 18, 2022 . Philippine Daily Inquirer . January 20, 2000.
  6. News: We Deserve A Player Of Meneses Caliber Black . February 18, 2022 . Manila Standard . June 16, 1999.
  7. News: Zarate . Noel . 00-46: The best PBA players who wore these jersey numbers . February 18, 2022 . ESPN.com . April 9, 2021 . en.