Host: | University of the Philippines |
1979 UAAP season | |
Higherseed: | |
Higherseed Game1: | 100 |
Higherseed Series: | 1+1 |
Lowerseed Game1: | 89 |
Lowerseed Series: | 0 |
Duration: | October 12, 1979 |
Coach: | Arturo Valenzona |
Network: | IBC, GTV Channel 4 |
Prevlink: | UAAP Season 41 men's basketball tournament |
Prev: | 41 |
Seasonlink: | UAAP Season 42 |
Year: | 1979 |
Nextlink: | UAAP Season 43 men's basketball tournament |
Next: | 43 |
The 1979 UAAP men's basketball tournament was the 42nd year of the men's tournament of the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP)'s basketball championship. Hosted by University of the Philippines, the FEU Tamaraws defeated the UST Glowing Goldies in the finals taking their tenth overall UAAP men's basketball championship and the first of their three-peat title run from 1979 to 1981. The Tamaraws would eventually achieve the first sweep of the tournament (12–0) the following year and were automatically declared champions. The UAAP have seven teams then with the admission of Ateneo in 1978. This was the last finals match-up between FEU and UST until 2015 in Season 78. This was also the year when the UAAP first implemented the twice to beat finals format.
Teams | Head Coach | |
---|---|---|
Clemente Bargas | ||
Bobby Littaua | ||
Sonny Paguia | ||
Roehl Nadurata | ||
Rogelio Serafico |
Tournament format:
Number 1 seed FEU only need to win once, while number 2 seed UST need to win twice, to clinch the championship.
Far Eastern University, with a twice-to-beat advantage and displaying its usual bruising brand, clobbered the University of Santo Tomas Goldies who showed up minus its scoring ace Edgardo Cordero, to clinch the UAAP varsity cage title. Cordero, the 6'4" scoring leader of the league, was down with flu. The final score, 100–89, clearly showed FEU's mastery of the Goldies.
Anthony Williams, an ex-US marine who played his finest game in the series, topscored for the winning team with 35 points. And although the usually-unshakable Arturo "Bai" Cristobal was limited to 15, FEU's diminutive skipper Danilo Manalastas poured-in 17 to neutralize the combined effort of 63 tallied by UST's Francisco Natividad and Edmund Yee. Natividad finished with 38, 28 of them in the second half, while the high-leaping Yee, who saw little action with Crispa (MICAA) in the last National Seniors, came-up with 25.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5]