Meralco Reddy Kilowatts
The MERALCO Reddy Kilowatts was a basketball team owned by the Manila Electric Company (MERALCO) that played in the basketball tournament of the Manila Industrial and Commercial Athletic Association (MICAA) from 1968 to 1972. Its moniker and mascot, Reddy Kilowatt, was a licensed branding character used by the company during that period.
In 1968, MERALCO joined the Manila Industrial and Commercial Athletic Association (MICAA). Its basketball team consisted of players from the just-disbanded Ysmael Steel Admirals – namely, Alberto “Big Boy” Reynoso, Alfonso “Boy” Marquez, Jimmy Mariano and Orlando Bauzon. Other players included, Ramon Lucindo, Robert Jaworski, Fort Acuña, Francis Arnaiz, Bobby Salonga, Arthur Herrera, Larry Mumar and Jumbo Salvador. The team was originally coached by Valentin “Tito” Eduque. In 1970, Lauro Mumar took over the position of head coach.
With the demise of the YCO-Ysmael Steel rivalry following the breakup of the Ysmael Steel Admirals in 1968, the Reddy Kilowatts and the Crispa-Floro Redmanizers began its own rivalry beginning in 1970. The rivalry came into full bloom during the 1971 MICAA All-Filipino championship, when Reynoso and Jaworski mauled referees Eriberto “Ting” Cruz and Jose “Joe” Obias in retaliation for what Reynoso and Jaworski perceived to be dubious calls against them. Reynoso and Jaworski were meted lifetime suspensions. The suspensions were lifted through the efforts of Presidential Assistant, Guillermo “Gimo” de Vega in time for the 1973 FIBA Asia Championship.
The Reddy Kilowatts won one MICAA championship, the 1971 MICAA Open.[1]
The team disbanded in early 1973 in the wake of the declaration of Martial Law in the Philippines, wherein the Marcos government seized the company from Eugenio López, Sr.
Reynoso, Jaworski, Bauzon, Acuña and Arnaiz went on to form the nucleus of the Toyota Comets in 1973. The Comets carried on MERALCO’s rivalry with Crispa beginning in 1974, during the 1974 MICAA All-Filipino tournament.
Notable players
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Imports:
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Coaches
- Valentin Eduque (1968-1970)
- Lauro Mumar (1970-1972)
Team manager
- Manuel López