Tanduay Rhum Masters

Last updated

Tanduay Rhum Masters
Tanduay Rhum Masters logo.png
Founded1975
Dissolved2001 (withdrew in 1987, and readmitted in 1999)
HistoryTanduay Distillery (1975-1977)
Tanduay Esquires (1978-1981)
YCO-Tanduay (1981–1983)
Tanduay Rhum Makers (1983–1987)
Tanduay Gold Rhum Masters (1999)
Tanduay Rhum Masters (2000–2001)
Team colorsTanduay Distillery/Esquires
Red, gold and white
   
Red, black and white
   
YCO-Tanduay
Red, green and white
   
Red, black and white
   
Tanduay Rhum Masters
Red and gold
  
CompanyElizalde and Co., Inc.
(1975-1987)
Tanduay Distillers, Inc.
(1999-2001)
Head coachTanduay Distillery/Tanduay ESQ/YCO-Tanduay/Tanduay Rhum Makers (1975-1987)
Loreto Carbonell
Roberto Littaua
Carlos Loyzaga
Valentin Eduque
Freddie Webb
Sonny Reyes
Orly Castelo
Arturo Valenzona
Ely Capacio
Tanduay Rhum Masters (1999-2001)
Alfrancis Chua
Derrick Pumaren
Ownership Manuel "Manolo" Elizalde (1975-1986)
Lucio C. Tan Sr. (1999-2001)
Championships3 championships

1986 Reinforced
1986 All-Filipino
1987 Open

5 Finals Appearances
Kit body thinredsides.png
Kit body basketball.svg
Kit shorts.png
Kit shorts.svg
Light uniform
Kit body thinyellowsides.png
Kit body basketball.svg
Kit shorts.png
Kit shorts.svg
Dark uniform

The Tanduay Rhum Makers (1975-1987) and Tanduay Rhum Masters (1999-2001) were two basketball franchises associated with the same liquor brand that played in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

Contents

The original franchise, owned by Elizalde & Co., Inc., was a founding member of the PBA. From 1975-1980, the team played under the name Tanduay Distillery; Tanduay ESQ and Tanduay Esquires; then as, YCO-Tanduay in 1981-1983. The final name used by the original franchise was the Tanduay Rhum Makers (1983-1987). The original franchise won a total of three PBA championships. In 1988, its PBA franchise was acquired by Pure Foods Corporation and played as Purefoods.

The second franchise played under the name Tanduay Rhum Masters and was owned by Tanduay Distillers, Inc. (the present owners of the Tanduay liquor business). It first played in the Philippine Basketball League (1997-1999) and joined the PBA (1999-2001). The PBA records of the original Tanduay PBA franchise (1975-1987) were maintained for the second incarnation. Its PBA franchise was sold to FedEx Express in 2002.

The original Tanduay franchise (Elizalde era, 1975-1987)

Businessman Manuel “Manolo” Elizalde formed the Philippines' first basketball dynasty, the YCO Painters, during the post-war era. Players who have donned the famous YCO red and white jersey included Carlos Loyzaga, Carlos Badion, Loreto Carbonell, Ed Ocampo, Mariano Tolentino and Kurt Bachmann. Its rivalry with the Ysmael Steel Admirals preceded that of Crispa and Toyota in the PBA.

The first Tanduay basketball team was organized by Elizalde during the early 1960s to compete in a minor league called Businessmen’s Athletic Association (BAA). This farm team of the YCO Painters had a brief existence. [1]

In 1975, Elizalde became actively involved in the formation of the Philippine Basketball Association as he joined forces with several MICAA team owners to break away from the Basketball Association of the Philippines stranglehold. The YCO Painters maintained their ballclub in the MICAA and their newly-formed professional team was named Tanduay.

1977-1980

With Carlos Loyzaga handling the coaching chores by 1977, replacing Bobby Littaua, Tanduay entered the semifinals for the first time in the 1977 All-Filipino Conference and almost made it to the finals but lost to Mariwasa-Honda Panthers on their last assignment as the Panthers went on to play the Crispa Redmanizers for the championship. The season had a Tanduay player Jaime Taguines becoming the second recipient of the Rookie of the Year honors.

In 1978, Tanduay had their first breakthrough year. After a third and fourth place finishes in the first two conferences of the season, the third conference Invitational Championship allows the Esquires to simultaneously field their two imports. Gene Moore and David Payne led the team to score upset victories and enter the finals series against the Toyota Tamaraws. The Esquires lost to defending champion Toyota in four games. Tanduay again produced another Rookie of the Year awardee for the second straight season in Jaime Manansala.

1979-1984

The next six seasons would remain unfruitful and title-less campaign for the Tanduay ballclub despite being competitive and a darkhorse team in the early 1980s, signing some top amateur stars like Rey Lazaro, former San Beda Red Lions Frankie Lim and JB Yango. The team had a revamp of their lineup in 1984, giving up four of its veteran players, Roberto dela Rosa, Victor Sanchez, Alberto Gutierrez and Mike Bilbao to newcomer Beer Hausen.

1985–1987

Following the disbandment of the famed Crispa Redmanizers, the Tanduay Rhum Makers had a massive rebuilding, acquiring Crispa stars Abet Guidaben, Freddie Hubalde and Padim Israel, along with Willie Generalao from Gilbey's Gin. However, three weeks after the start of the 1985 PBA Reinforced Conference, Guidaben was traded in favor of Ramon Fernandez from Manila Beer. Tanduay's coach at that time, Orly Castelo, was also replaced by former Gilbey's Gin coach Arturo Valenzona.

Tanduay finally won the first of three PBA championships beginning in the 1986 First Conference, behind imports Rob Williams and Andre Mckoy. [2] After winning its first title, the team brought the championship trophy to the grave of their late owner, Manolo Elizalde, who died a year before. Tanduay won their second straight championship in the 1986 PBA All-Filipino Conference and their third title in the 1987 PBA Open Conference with best import David Thirdkill.

Disbandment

A business blackeye occurred in late 1987 when a couple of Tanduay drinkers died allegedly owing to the liquor. This caused a major backlash in terms of sales as revenues collapsed and put parent company Elizalde & Company Inc. near bankruptcy.

Pure Foods Corporation, then a subsidiary of Ayala Corporation, acquired Tanduay's PBA franchise. The franchise would play under the name Purefoods beginning the 1988 PBA season.

The Tanduay business enterprise was acquired by the Lucio Tan group of companies.

Second Tanduay franchise (Tan era, 1997-2001)

In the Philippine Basketball League (1997-1999)

In 1997, the Tanduay name resurfaced in the Philippine basketball scene at the Philippine Basketball League under the ownership of Lucio Tan group of companies and managed by son Lucio "Bong" K. Tan, Jr. Prior to using the name "Tanduay Gold Rhum Masters", this team was originally known as Stag Pale Pilseners from 1995-1996, with Marlou Aquino, Bal David and Jason Webb in the lineup. The Rhum Masters won several PBL crowns under coach Alfrancis Chua and players Eric Menk, Jomer Rubi, Chris Cantonjos and Mark Telan. It also held a PBL-record 18 straight wins in the 1998–1999 Yakult PBL Centennial Cup, but lost in five games to Doctor J Rubbing Alcohol, when the Centennial Rhum Masters blew a 2–0 lead in the best-of-five affair. After the team moved to the PBA, Asia Brewery retained the PBL franchise and was renamed Colt 45 with Renren Ritualo leading the squad. Colt 45 placed fourth in the 1999 PBL Challenge Cup before disbanding.

Return to the PBA (1999-2001)

In 1999, Tanduay made its return to the PBA. As part of the agreement, the league allowed six players from Tanduay's PBL lineup to be elevated. Tanduay also acquired Fil-American Earl Sonny Alvarado as the top pick. The records from the original Tanduay franchise (1975-1987) were retained for this franchise.

In its first season, Tanduay placed second to Shell in the 1999 PBA All-Filipino Conference but their second stint in the PBA were marred by several controversies such as the deportation of alleged "Fil-sham" (bogus Filipino) Alvarado which led to a forfeiture of several Tanduay games during the 2000 season. In the 2001 offseason, Tanduay made soundwaves in the PBA when they signed Danny Ildefonso of corporate rival San Miguel Beermen a whopping 16-year, 98 million peso offersheet. The league though, nullified the said deal since it was believed that the offersheet violated the team's salary cap.

Bong Tan also made a controversial comment calling the PBA, "a San Miguel league", a reference to a speculation that the PBA is favoring the then-San Miguel Corporation teams San Miguel and Barangay Ginebra. It was also said that Tanduay violated the PBA's salary cap many times by having their players sign a separate contract apart from the required PBA Uniform Player's Contract that made the players richer than any PBA team's bench players by a few hundred thousand pesos. This was already denied by the management.

Disbandment

Realizing its failure to win a championship despite a stellar line-up of Fil-American players and established veterans, Tanduay disbanded after the 2001 season, selling its PBA franchise to FedEx Express for a reported sum of PHP 60-75 million. A firesale ensued as the Rhum Masters traded their key players Eric Menk (to Barangay Ginebra Kings), Dondon Hontiveros (to the San Miguel Beermen) and Jeffrey Cariaso (to the Coca-Cola Tigers).

Season-by-season records

Legend
  Champion
  Runner-up
  Third place
SeasonConferenceTeam nameOverall recordFinals
WL %
1975 First Conference Tanduay Rhum618.250
Second Conference
All-Philippine
1976 First Conference 1121.344
Second Conference
All-Philippine
1977 All-Filipino Conference 2928.509
Open Conference
Invitational Conference
1978 All-Filipino Conference 2431.436
Open Conference
Invitational Conference Toyota 3, Tanduay 1
1979 All-Filipino Conference 2423.511
Open Conference
Invitational Conference
1980 Open Conference 1623.410
Invitational Conference
All-Filipino Conference
1981 Open Conference YCO-Tanduay Rhum1329.310
Reinforced Filipino Conference
1982 Reinforced Filipino Conference 2120.512
Invitational Conference
Open Conference
1983 All-Filipino Conference Tanduay Rhum Makers2429.453
Reinforced Filipino Conference
Open Conference
1984 First All-Filipino Conference 1426.350
Second All-Filipino Conference
Invitational Conference
1985 Open Conference 2435.407
All-Filipino Conference
Reinforced Conference
1986 Reinforced Conference 3727.578Tanduay 4, Great Taste 2
All-Filipino Conference Tanduay 3, Ginebra 1
Open Conference
1987 Open Conference 2223.489Tanduay 4, Great Taste 1
All-Filipino Conference
Reinforced Conference
1988 Open Conference Tanduay disbanded from the PBA.
All-Filipino Conference
Reinforced Conference
1989 Open Conference
All-Filipino Conference
Reinforced Conference
1990 First Conference
All-Filipino Conference
Third Conference
1991 First Conference
All-Filipino Conference
Third Conference
1992 First Conference
All-Filipino Conference
Third Conference
1993 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
1994 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
1995 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
1996 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
1997 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
1998 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Centennial Cup
Governors Cup
1999 All-Filipino Cup Tanduay Rhum Masters2921.580 Shell 4, Tanduay 2
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
2000 All-Filipino Cup 155.750
Commissioner's Cup 78.467
Governors Cup 65.545
2001 All-Filipino Cup 59.357
Commissioner's Cup 47.364
Governors Cup 58.385
Overall record336396.4593 championships

Awards

Individual awards

PBA Most Valuable PlayerFinals MVPPBA Best Player of the Conference
PBA Rookie of the Year AwardPBA All-Defensive TeamPBA Mythical First Team
  • Jimmy Taguines - 1977
  • Jimmy Manansala - 1978
PBA Mythical Second TeamPBA Most Improved PlayerPBA Sportsmanship Award
PBA Best Import

PBA Press Corps Individual Awards

PBA Scoring Leader

Notable players

In alphabetical order. Members of PBA Hall of Fame and PBA 25 Greatest Players are in boldface.

First Tanduay team (Elizalde era, 1975-1987)

  • Ramon Fernandez - #19
  • Abet Guidaben - #5
  • Freddie Hubalde - #10
  • Allan Abelgas - #34
  • Dennis Abbatuan - #18
  • Ronnie Albor - #16
  • Zito "Chito" Bacon - #5
  • Raymundo "Chuck" Barreiro - #4
  • Miguel “Mike” Bilbao - #4, #6, #20, #40
  • Rene Canent - #18
  • Eleazar "Ely" Capacio - #15
  • David "Boy" Cezar - #17
  • Benjamin “Benjie” Cleofas - #15
  • Ricardo "Joy" Cleofas - #16
  • Ramon "Onchie" dela Cruz - #9
  • Roberto "Bert" dela Rosa - #7
  • Valerio "Botchok" delos Santos - #10
  • Joselito "Lito" Eguia - #12
  • Angelito "Itoy" Esguerra - #16
  • Wilfredo “Willie” Generalao - #42
  • Alberto "Abet" Gutierrez - #9 & #13
  • Cesar "Boy" Ijares - #36
  • Federico “Padim” Israel #17
  • Rudolfo "Rudy" Lalota - #9
  • Zaldy Latoza - #10
  • Reynaldo "Rey" Lazaro - #12
  • Frankie Lim - #4, #14
  • Geronimo Lucido - #12 1976 Rookie of the Year
  • Jaime "Jimmy" Manansala - #11 1978 Rookie of the Year
  • Alexander "Alex" Marquez #44 - "The Kamikaze Kid"
  • Abelardo "Abe" Monzon #2, #22 & #44
  • Horacio "Ace" Moreno - #88 & #8
  • Jerry Pingoy - #14
  • Marte Samson - #11
  • Quirino "Rino" Salazar - #7
  • Victor "Vic" Sanchez - #14, #12 – "Rambo"
  • David "Dave" Supnet #66 & #6
  • Jaime "Jimmy" Taguines - #44 - 1977 Rookie of the Year
  • Alex Tan -#40
  • Antonio "Tony" Torrente - #7
  • Reynaldo "Rey" Vallejo -#1
  • Luis "Tito" Varela -#32 - "Kojak"
  • Freddie Webb - #14 – "Fastbreak Freddie"
  • Jose Bernardo "JB" Yango - #24 - "The Cuyapo Kid"

Imports

Second Tanduay team (Tan era, 1999-2001)

  • Rene Alforque #18
  • Sonny Alvarado #15 - "The Punisher"
  • Chris Cantonjos #33
  • Jeffrey Cariaso #28 – "The Jet"
  • Jayvee Gayoso #22 – "Mr. Adrenaline"
  • Dondon Hontiveros #7 - "Cebuano Hotshot"
  • Rudy Hatfield – "The H-Bomb" #34
  • Pido Jarencio #25 – "The Fireman"
  • Bobby Jose #11 – "The Firecracker"
  • Noli Locsin #6 – "The Tank"
  • Eric Menk #30 - "Major Pain"
  • Dindo Pumaren #10 – "The Bullet"
  • Mark Telan #13
  • Jomar Rubi #7
  • Jason Webb #1

Imports

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Jaworski</span> Filipino senator, basketball coach and basketball player

Robert Vincent Salazar Jaworski Sr. is a Filipino former professional basketball player, head coach and politician who served as a Senator of the Philippines from 1998 to 2004. He played 23 seasons in the Philippine Basketball Association. He is widely regarded as one of the best and most popular PBA players of all-time. He was named part of the PBA's 40 Greatest Players and was inducted into the PBA Hall of Fame in 2005.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ramon Fernandez</span> Filipino basketball player

Ramon Sadaya Fernandez is a Filipino former professional basketball player and current commissioner of the Philippine Sports Commission. Fernandez won four PBA Most Valuable Player awards and a record 19 PBA titles. Fernandez stood at 6'4 barefoot during his prime but due to mild gigantism grew to 6'5 during his final seasons. He scored 18,996 points to finish as the PBA's all-time scoring leader. He is also the PBA's all-time leader in rebounds, blocked shots, free throws made, playing minutes and second all-time in assists, games played and steals. He played for five teams in his entire PBA career starting with the Toyota, Manila Beer, Tanduay, Purefoods and San Miguel. Fernandez played in many international tournaments as a member of the Philippine basketball team. He is often regarded by tenured analysts as the greatest player to have ever played in the Philippine Basketball Association.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shell Turbo Chargers</span> Philippine basketball team

The Shell Turbo Chargers were a Philippine Basketball Association team from 1985 to 2005. It won four PBA championships, two from 1998 to 1999. Shell sold its franchise to PBL team Welcoat Paints in February 2006.

The Philippine Basketball League (PBL) was a commercial semi-professional basketball league in the Philippines. The league was composed of several commercial teams with several collegiate and provincial stars.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eric Menk</span> Filipino-American basketball player

Eric Conrad Padua Menk is a Filipino-American former professional basketball player who played in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) and the ASEAN Basketball League. Known as Major Pain, Menk is a four-time PBA champion and was the 2004–05 PBA Most Valuable Player.

A team's Grand Slam in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) is winning all three conference championships (tournaments) in a single season, i.e., a treble in the British sports sense. As of 2020, this has been accomplished five times by four teams and four coaches since the league's inception in 1975.

The 1983 PBA season was the 9th season of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

The 1986 PBA season was the 12th season of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

The 1987 PBA season was the 13th season of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

The 1988 PBA season was the 14th season of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1999 PBA season</span> 25th PBA season

The 1999 PBA season was the 25th season of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alfrancis Chua</span>

Alfrancis P. Chua is a Filipino sports executive and former basketball player and coach. He is currently the team manager of Barangay Ginebra San Miguel and the sports director of San Miguel Corporation (SMC), overseeing the professional sports teams of the SMC group.

Alfredo Hubalde, also known as Freddie Hubalde, is a retired Filipino professional basketball player in the PBA.

The Manila Beer Brewmasters were a professional basketball team in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) from 1984-1986. It was formed after Basic Holdings, Inc., a company controlled by Lucio Tan, acquired the PBA franchise of Delta Motor Corporation, owner of league pioneer Toyota. The team was named after the brands of Asia Brewery, Inc., another Tan company - Beer Hausen (1984) and Manila Beer (1985-1986).

The 1999 Tanduay Gold Rhum Masters season was the first season of the new franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

The YCO Shine Masters were a Philippine Basketball League (then known as the Philippine Amateur Basketball League team that played for three conferences through the 1986 and 1987 seasons, winning two PABL titles. The ballclub was owned by the Elizalde Group of Companies, which also owned its predecessor team, the YCO Painters and the original Tanduay franchise in the PBA.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">YCO Painters</span> Basketball team in Philippines

The YCO Painters were the multi-titled Filipino basketball team of the YCO Athletic Club that was active from the late 1940s to 1981 in the now-defunct Manila Industrial and Commercial Athletic Association (MICAA). YCO Athletic Club was founded by businessman and sportsman Manuel “Manolo” Elizalde and owned under his company Elizalde & Co., Inc., manufacturers of YCO floor wax and paints.

The 1997–98 season of the Philippine Basketball League (PBL).

The 2001 Tanduay Rhum Masters season was the final season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

References

  1. "Tanduay clinches BAA cage series".
  2. "Tanduay: Sure of another big year". Manila Standard.
Preceded by
(start)
PBA teams genealogies
1975–1987
Succeeded by
Preceded by
(elevated from the Philippine Basketball League)
PBA teams genealogies
1999–2001
Succeeded by