1980 Toyota Tamaraws season

1980 Toyota Tamaraws season
Head coach Fort Acuña
Owner(s) Delta Motor Corporation
Open Conference results
Record 228
(.733)
Place 2nd
Playoff finish 2
Invitational Conference results
Record 55
(.500)
Place 2nd
Playoff finish 2
All-Filipino Conference results
Record 138
(.619)
Place 2nd
Playoff finish 2
Toyota Tamaraws seasons
1979 1981

The 1980 Toyota Tamaraws season was the sixth season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

Colors

               (dark)
               (light)

Summary

Toyota placed runner-up in all three conferences of the year. During the off-season, the team signed rookies Leopoldo Herrera and Eduardo Merced, with Danny Florencio rejoining the Tamaraws after disappearing for the whole of the 1979 season, imports Andrew Fields and Bruce "Sky " King were back to reinforced the squad. Toyota started the Open Conference by winning eight of their first 9 games, losing only to defending champion Royal Tru-Orange, after 18 games in the elimination round, the Tamaraws were at first place with 15 wins and 3 losses. In the semifinal round, the Tamaraws were tied with Crispa Walk Tall and U/Tex at 4 wins and 2 losses, the Wranglers earn the first ticket to the championship round and Toyota had to beat Walk Tall Jeans, 102-100, in a playoff game on July 22 for the right to meet U/Tex in the finals. The best-of-five title series went into a full route and in the deciding fifth game, the Tamaraws were 16 seconds away in regulation time to win the Open Crown after leading by four points, but the U/Tex Wranglers forces overtime and won by a point, 99-98, in the extension period.

The Second Conference called Invitational championship features foreign squads Nicholas Stoodley of United States and Adidas Rubberworld of France. Toyota won their last three matches to march into the finals against Nicholas Stoodley, the Tamaraws needed to win by at least seven points against Crispa Walk Tall Jeans during the last playing date and they did just that in a 116-109 victory. In the best-of-three finals series, despite the presence of imports Bruce "Sky" King and Andrew Fields, the Tamaraws got blanked by the Americans, losing Game 1, 112-120, and Game 2, 113-118. [1]

For the third time in the season, the Tamaraws ended up as bridesmaid, duplicating the same feat in 1976, with Crispa Redmanizers' domination in the All-Filipino Conference. Toyota were behind Crispa in the team standings during the eliminations, quarterfinals and semifinal phase, and lost to the Redmanizers in four games in the best-of-five championship series.

Notable dates

March 16: Opening before one of the biggest crowds to attend at the Araneta Coliseum, the league's 6th season also introduced the three-point line. Toyota repulses arch rival Crispa in the second game, 112-107, as Sonny Jaworski came up with three conversions from the three-point area to finish with 22 points.

June 12: Toyota Tamaraws nips Crispa Walk Tall Jeans, 107-105, before an overflow crowd of 32,000 at the Big Dome on Independence Day.

July 22: Toyota and Crispa dispute the last finals slot and with the capacity crowd of 25,000 fans on hand to watch the do-or-die game, the Tamaraws won in a classic 102-100 victory.

Occurrences

In Game 3 of the All-Filipino Conference finals, the Toyota Tamaraws snapped the Crispa Redmanizers' winning run of 19 straight wins in a 97-94 victory, but the Toyota players saw the ouster of their coach Fort Acuña at halftime when he refuses to field in Sonny Jaworski in the first two quarters of the game. [2]

Roster

Toyota Tamaraws roster
Players Coaches
Pos. # Name Height Weight DOB (YYYY–MM–DD) From
C 1 Fields, Andrew (I) style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) Cheyney State College
F/C 6 King, Abe style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) San Beda College
G 7 Jaworski, Robert style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) UE
G 8 Arnaiz, Francis style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) Ateneo de Manila
G 9 Merced, Eduardo style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
F/C 10 Fernandez, Ramon style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) University of San Carlos
G/F 11 Tuadles, Arnie style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) University of Visayas
G 12 Javier, Pablo style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 5 ft 11 in (1.8 m) FEU
G 14 Salazar, Quirino style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) Letran College
F 18 Legaspi, Emerito style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 5 ft 11 in (1.8 m) UE
F 20 Bulaong, Nicanor style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) FEU
F 41 Herrera, Leopoldo style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) Wesleyan University
F/C 43 King, Bruce (I) style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) University of Iowa
G/F 44 Florencio, Danny style="text-align:right; white-space:nowrap; | 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) UST
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)



    Legend
    • (C) Team captain
    • (I) Import
    • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
    • (FA) Free agent
    • (IN) Inactive
    • (S) Suspended
    • Injured

    References

    External links