Meralco Bolts’ six steps to PBA immortality


Meralco Bolts celebrate their first franchise PBA championship. – PBA Images

MANILA, Philippines—In order to make a masterpiece of a film, a movie needs six things.

Meralco showed how it made its magnum opus with coach Luigi Trillo and active consultant Nenad Vucinic behind the camera, commanding the Bolts in making a historic film; winning their first-ever PBA Philippine Cup.

Inquirer Sports breaks down how the Bolts achieved history in the most fascinating and cinematic way possible while doing it in six steps—or games.

STEP 1: STUNNING EXPOSITION

Meralco Bolts' Cliff Hodge, Allein Maliksi and Raymond Almazan during Game 5 of the PBA Philippine Cup Finals against San Miguel Beermen

Meralco Bolts’ Cliff Hodge, Allein Maliksi and Raymond Almazan during Game 5 of the PBA Philippine Cup Finals against San Miguel Beermen. –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

Meet the heroes.

In order to make a sound movie, it has to give an introduction to its main protagonists. In this case, the Bolts.

After finishing as the third-seed in the elimination round of the All-Filipino Conference, Meralco was set up to face the top-seeded San Miguel Beermen, who finished with a 10-1 record.

On paper, it was obvious that the season-ending best-of-seven series was set to be a David and Goliath affair.

READ: Meralco wins first PBA title, survives San Miguel in Game 6

Trillo, obviously, wasn’t reading the same paper.

“San Miguel, we have a lot of respect for them but we can match up with them,” said the top coach just days before Game 1 of the Finals.

That same confidence, of course, bore amazing results.

After all, the Finals is a completely different beast compared to the elimination round. So the Bolts channeled their inner Jay-Z and said, “allow us to reintroduce ourselves.”

And reintroduce themselves, they did.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXMcgXSA6ME

In Game 1 of the Philippine Cup’s finalè, Meralco reintroduced itself in a stunning way, shocking the fans who thought the Beermen would have an easy go-around against the Bolts.

Those expectations of a San Miguel domination turned out to be a 93-86 win for Meralco to take the upper-hand.

However, one win in a series opener means nothing. Just ask Trillo, who made it clear that this movie’s just starting. Meralco needed to embark on an adventure in the coming games with hopes of solving the mighty Beermen’s puzzle.

READ: PBA: Aaron Black fulfills championship dream in unexpected way

“We need to prepare,” said a dazed Trillo.

“The more we zone in and lock in on those [plans], the better chance—50-50 chance—we have of beating this team. Then again, we know they’ll come in with adjustments. We need to see the same mistakes we did here,” said the top tactician.”

And what do you do once you introduce your valiant main characters?

STEP 2: ENTER CONFLICT

San Miguel's June Mar Fajardo PBA Finals

San Miguel’s June Mar Fajardo during the PBA Philippine Cup Finals. –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

There’s a reason why San Miguel posed to be one of the best antagonists in recent PBA history.

Imagine Thanos having the Infinity Gauntlet to help with his already brute physique.

Now imagine having June Mar Fajardo and giving him reinforcements like Marcio Lassiter, CJ Perez, Jericho Cruz and Chris Ross to name a few. Just how would you approach that mammoth of a team?

Well, like Thanos, San Miguel activated one of their stones to take down the emerging hero of this story.

READ: PBA: Unable to stop June Mar, Meralco still finds way to win

Enter “Super Marcio.”

Marcio Lassiter, who had a habit of hitting clutch shots for the Beermen, showed up big to avoid Meralco from snatching a 2-0 advantage.

The Bolts held a slim 94-92 lead over San Miguel when CJ Perez ran the length of the floor and found a ready and waiting Lassiter in the left corner of the hardwood.

“I just knew if I can get to my spot, read the defense and pump fake, I can be open. I got a good look at the basket and that’s all I really need,” said the San Miguel sniper.

“Anytime I can get a good look and see the rim, I really feel like I can make it. A few times before, I was able to stay poised and when given an opportunity, I took it,” he added.

Lassiter’s heroics gave the Beermen a 95-94 victory, further making this film of a series more exciting.

STEP 3: RISE IN ACTION

Chris Newsome PBA Finals MVP Meralco Bolts

Meralco Bolts’ Chris Newsome. –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

Revenge is a dish best served cold… or just a day before a heartbreaking loss.

When Chris Newsome watched Lassiter step back and sink the dagger in the heart of his beloved team, he had 48 hours to respond.

When the Bolts faithful thought about how Meralco would answer from a tragic loss, Newsome had the answer in the 34-second mark of Game 3’s fourth quarter.

In almost the exact spot where Lassiter pummeled Meralco’s heart into bits in Game 2, the Gilas Pilipinas guard waited patiently while Chris Banchero set up a play.

The Beermen led, 89-88, until Newsome found breathing room—yes, in the same left corner of the Big Dome’s court—and hit a triple in front of well-renowned defender Mo Tautuaa to give San Miguel a taste of its own medicine.

After all, what’s more cinematic than seeing parallels?

“To be honest, I wasn’t thinking. I was just being in the moment,” said Newsome after their 93-89 dub that put them up the series, 2-1.

“It felt good that my shot did fall but at the end of the day, you can’t let your guard down until it [the clock] says 0:00.”

However, if you know the Beermen as well as any PBA fans do, you know they’re brewing up a vengeance and they had three days to draw it up.

STEP 4: ABSORB THE CLIMAX

A climax is the most intense, exciting, or important point of something; a culmination or an apex.

And in this All-Filipino Conference, the apex was Fajardo, the most dominant player in PBA history with a league-best seven MVP awards.

In this part of the film, he was crowned as the Best Player of the Conference, his 10th overall. Seeing Fajardo hailed for his dominance was nothing new. For the Bolts, though, it was a concerning sight.

The Bolts defeated this mammoth of a man three days ago and just when he had enough motivation from a harrowing defeat, he was given another trophy to add to his already packed cabinet of hardwares?

Cue Darth Vader’s theme song, because that was the most fitting sound seeing Fajardo raise up the BPC award; it’s awe-inspiring, breathtaking and borderline terrifying—if you’re his opposition.

And the Bolts were, indeed, his opposition.

As expected, the rested and undisputed GOAT of the PBA toyed with Meralco from start to finish, showing fans what they haven’t seen for the past three games of the series; clear-cut dominance.

Meralco never led in the entire game. Fajardo, meanwhile, turned in a monster performance to the tune of 28 points and 13 rebounds. If that wasn’t impressive enough, he also missed just five of his 14 shots for a waxing-hot 64 percent field goal clip.

In Fajardo’s explanation, the trophy wasn’t really the main motivation for his in-game rampage. No, you can thank the Bolts for provoking him with a win three days ago.

The BPC plum? Well, that’s just the cherry on top.

“I’m motivated because we were down by one game in this series. The BPC [award] is just a bonus,” said Fajardo in Filipino.

“I’m happy to get the BPC but [I give] credits to my teammates because I wouldn’t get that if it wasn’t for them.”

With the series pushed back to square one at 2-2, leaving the question: Which team would fall into a dangerous 2-3 disadvantage.

STEP 5: LET ‘EM FALL

Meralco Bolts guard Chris Banchero

Meralco Bolts guard Chris Banchero. –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

That team was not the Meralco Bolts.

Trillo’s wards took what was predicted to be an easy go-around for the Beermen and that has been the theme thus far into the series, hasn’t it?

Every time Meralco would score a goal, spectators would move the goalpost even farther. The Bolts would reach that goalpost anyway, showing how truly valiant a protagonist could be.

But this win felt different from other Meralco victories in the back-and-forth series. Instead of moving just one win away from history, the Bolts had little to no smile after the buzzer sounded on their 92-88 victory over San Miguel.

“What’s there to be happy about?” asked Maliksi post-game.

“We don’t think about the future, we’ll stay in the moment and prepare for Sunday’s game,” added the Meralco sniper after finishing with 22 points to topple the Beermen down to a twice-to-win disadvantage.

Despite moving a step closer to finishing what has been a glorious story, the Bolts are well-aware not to close the book and celebrate right away.

Just ask Chris Banchero, who can quite literally be the lead actor of this adventurous flick.

“We know they’ll come out and give it their all and we’ll do the same. We know we’re in no position to do anything because we haven’t done anything,” said the floor general, fresh off a 12-point outing.

Things were looking fine and dandy for this movie’s protagonists but there still was Sunday.

STEP 6: ELECTRIFYING RESOLUTION

Meralco Bolts PBA Finals championship

Meralco Bolts win their first-ever PBA title after beating San Miguel Beermen in the PBA Philippine Cup Finals.–MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

Meralco, as its team name suggests, has Bolts, who are capable of electrifying the crowd and even the history books.

That’s exactly what they did on Sunday, June 16, inside the Big Dome.

With just one win from finishing what has been a tremendous story, Trillo, Vucinic and the entire Meralco squad buckled up for an impending Beermen effort.

“We had to pivot and work through things. There were times when we were down but our staff members helped each other out, challenged the guys, we challenged the players and they responded to get out of holes,” Trillo said after exorcising Meralco’s demons of never winning a title with an 80-78 thriller.

But he wouldn’t have done it without the help of his right-hand man, the mentor out of Serbia and New Zealand.

“For coach Nenad and me, it’s not just about one or two games, looking at him and what he does, he puts pressure on guys and I’m glad the guys stepped up.”

Despite the antagonists’ best efforts highlighted by another double-double performance by Fajardo with 21 points and 12 rebounds, Meralco hung on until the end, repulsing any possibilities for a do-or-die Game 7.

In the ending scene of a remarkable movie, Allein Maliksi left his stamp in the record books with 14 points and three rebounds

Of course, Newsome’s heroics weren’t left unacknowledged as he won the Finals MVP award, willing the Bolts to a masterpiece of a series with norms of 22.5 points, 5.3 rebounds and 4.5 assists after six games.

At the end of it all when the credits rolled, the protagonists rose to the occasion against a franchise that’s almost synonymous with the word “dynasty.”



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The Beermen’s run to a 30th championship wasn’t to be. No, that story will probably be in production very soon with only a few months away from the next PBA season.

Tonight, this series and this conference belonged to one team and one team only. They didn’t just accomplish that feat historically, they also did it quite cinematically.

Ex-barista Bates helps brew winning concoction for Bolts


Brandon Bates –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

Meralco rookie Brandon Bates feels his time working in a coffee shop in his hometown Australia was “the most cathartic job” he has ever done in his life.

“In case you guys still haven’t noticed, I love talking to people, serving people,” he said in a candid chat with the Inquirer.“I’d be up at four or five o’clock in the morning for the opening shift and sometimes, if I have to stay for the whole day, until 4 p.m. then 4:30 for the end of [the shift]. I just love doing it.”

Bates may have to soon reconsider his answer as he is shaping up to become a key figure in the Bolts’ future campaigns following a riveting performance that helped deliver the franchise’s first-ever PBA title.

Picked eighth overall in the last Rookie Draft, the La Salle product who traces his Filipino lineage through his mom, held his own against the league’s premier big men Japeth Aguilar, Christian Standhardinger, and ultimately the highly revered and the PBA’s seven-time MVP, June Mar Fajardo.

Bates said that going up against the PBA’s top-flight frontline talents is going to be transformative for his career—especially considering the frequency of those meetings.

“I think it’s incredibly important [to be] playing against the best of the best in a seven-game series. I’ve learned a lot from it, so hopefully, I’ll be able to take it into my second season,” he said.

Bates played against the Aguilar-Standhardinger tandem for seven grueling games, and then another six tightly contested matches against Fajardo, whose peers call the most dominant of this era.

As rich as the praise heaped upon him, Bates felt he wouldn’t have unlocked such a fine play if not for his teammates. And that is also the same thing that fuels his optimism heading into the next season.

“We have so many other great players. So many other vets who have guided me, who have shown me the ropes, showed me how to play,” he went on. “All things considered, It’s just part of the course.”

Bates has repeatedly likened the progression of his young career to a movie—having gone from serving espresso shots to hitting and blocking them in Asia’s pioneering pro league. INQ



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Bolts will now know feeling of playing as the hunted


Meralco Bolts. Photo: PBA Images

Now that the long chase for a first-ever PBA championship has finally been fulfilled, the Meralco Bolts will come into the next season with a different role.

From hunters, the Bolts acknowledged that they’ll go into the league’s 49th season as the hunted.

“The next conference will test us as we will have a bull’s-eye on our chest,” coach Luigi Trillo said when asked by the Inquirer of the Bolts’ outlook going into the season-opening Governors’ Cup in August.

Meralco pulled off one of the most memorable title runs in recent history, defying previous heartbreaks to defeat San Miguel Beer and win the prestigious Philippine Cup title with Sunday’s 80-78 Game 6 win at Smart Araneta Coliseum.

Under the combined stewardship of Trillo and active consultant Nenad Vucinic, the Bolts overcame the danger of missing a playoff berth to becoming just the third team outside of the Beermen, Barangay Ginebra and TNT Tropang Giga to win a title since the 2014-15 season.

During that span, San Miguel won 10 titles, Ginebra claimed seven and TNT bagged three. Two teams had one each in Rain or Shine (2016 Commissioner’s Cup) and Magnolia (2018 Governors’ Cup).

San Miguel, Ginebra and Magnolia, which in the same period has appeared in five Finals only to fall short four times, are seen as among those figuring prominently in the title picture next season, while TNT will be aiming to get itself in the discussion after an otherwise underwhelming 2023-24 campaign that saw two quarterfinal exits.

Meanwhile, the Bolts have started savoring their well-deserved break, though the offseason is also a time to address the need to pick well in the July Rookie Draft and getting a dependable import.

The 2024-25 season will open in August with the Governors’ Cup, which will see teams tap imports that are 6-foot-6 and below coupled with a format that divides the 12 teams into two groups.

Return of AD?

Trillo bared that Meralco is looking at bringing back Allen Durham, who won three Best Imports awards after powering the Bolts to Finals appearances in the 2016, 2018 and 2019 Governors’ Cup but has been playing the past few seasons in Japan’s B.League.

Initial talks have been “good,” said Trillo, but Durham, who last played for the Ryukyu Golden Kings, is also attracting offers from other B.League teams.

“I’ve spoken with coach Nenad and [Meralco team manager and brother Paolo Trillo] and [we] would love to have AD join us. We have to come to terms with his agent,” said Trillo.

If negotiations with Durham don’t pan out, the Bolts may look at potential reinforcements elsewhere like in the NBA Summer League in Las Vegas.

Regardless of who they eventually sign, the Bolts hope that he turns out to be the guy who could put them in a position to once again march back into center court and lift another trophy.



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“We have to really lock in and have a good two weeks of preseason training before we get on the court again,” Trillo said.

After very long wait, Bolts now belong in company of PBA immortals


Chris Newsome –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

At long last, the Meralco Bolts, perhaps the team with the most number of heartbreaks in terms of chasing a PBA championship, were able to write a happy ending to this story.

And it took one of the longest-tenured players in franchise history to deliver the winning shot that announced Meralco’s coming—after a 14-year wait—as a league immortal.

“There was a time that we really got discouraged because we kept failing and failing,” said Chris Newsome, whose baseline shot with a second left sealed the 80-78 victory and a 4-2 best-of-series win, that gave the Bolts the Philippine Cup, the most prestigious prize in the big league.

A missed three-pointer from June Mar Fajardo, who earlier tied the count at 78 with three seconds left with a desperate triple, sealed the upset as the Beermen failed to prevent the Bolts from finally completing their long chase of a crown.

But Newsome, who in his first of four previous Finals appearances in the 2016 Governors’ Cup didn’t convert a potential winning shot in Game 5, came through when it mattered, his promise to bring a title to the Meralco headquarters in Ortigas finally fulfilled.

“That’s a sign that if you work harder, you keep improving yourself and keep believing in yourself, good things will happen,” added Newsome, who before the season savored the taste of winning as part of Gilas Pilipinas’ run to the gold medal in the Hangzhou Asian Games.

Meralco not only won the PBA title for the first time, it also ended a 53-year search for a trophy in big-time basketball which it last tasted when Robert Jaworski led the Reddy Kilowatts to glory in the 1971 MICAA Open.

That league is long gone, and the championship trophy hasn’t been seen since the canteen at the Meralco gym was closed. Now, it can add the Jun Bernardino Trophy to its collection.

To say that the Bolts won it unexpectedly is fair. At one point, the team handled by coach Luigi Trillo and active consultant Nenad Vucinic was staring at an early vacation when a stunning loss to winless Converge dropped to 3-5 in the eliminations.

But Meralco persevered, snatching the third seed in the playoffs after denying San Miguel an elimination round sweep in Batangas City, before surviving old nemesis Barangay Ginebra in a semifinal that went the full seven games.

“That was the goal, to just overcome [Ginebra] and we were able to do that,” said Newsome. “I think that allowed us to gain that confidence to come out and give it a good run. We peaked at the right time.”

Newsome and Cliff Hodge, another Meralco lifer, played with a spirit never seen in the past. Allein Maliksi used negative press to fuel himself to vital performances in the last two games of the Finals, while Raymond Almazan, Bong Quinto, Brandon Bates, Anjo Caram and many others delivered.



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Tears of joy were all over the court when the final buzzer sounded as the Bolts finally reached the mountain top. INQ

Maliksi makes sure there are no weak links with Bolts


Meralco Bolts’ Allein Maliksi in during Game 5 of the PBA Philippine Cup Finals. –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

With four PBA titles under his belt, Meralco gunner Allein Maliksi knows a thing or two about winning where lights shine the brightest and stakes are at their highest.

And he proved just that on Friday night, figuring prominently in the Bolts’ 92-88 Game 5 conquest of defending champion San Miguel Beer that also put the club on the threshold of a historic first championship.

“I remember during my San Mig (Coffee) days, coach Tim Cone would always tell us that a team is only as strong as its weakest link,” he told the Inquirer on the heels of the contest at Smart Araneta Coliseum.

“So we just wanted to hold each and everyone accountable. We wanted nobody to be the weakest link,” he wanted.

Maliksi, who won all his first four PBA championships with Cone and the Purefoods franchise, took such a lesson to heart with 22 points to lead—alongside Chris Newsome’s identical output—Meralco’s scorers that night.

‘Dirty work’

His performance was also a triumphant return from a lackluster showing, as he was contributing only 8.3 points in the last three contests before Friday’s duel.

“I have Raymond (Almazan), he motivates me. Cliff (Hodge) and (Chris) New(some) always tell me to stay ready. Bong (Quinto) reminds me to stay positive. We motivate each other, and we lift each other whenever someone’s feeling down,” he said.

Maliksi may have the wealth of championship experience, but he knows that it will take much to pull through this coming Sunday when the Bolts take the first crack at knocking the Beermen off their lofty porch.

“It will take a lot of mind-setting—our willingness to do the dirty work, the littlest of things,” he said. “Close-out games are the hardest to play in a series because the other team will do everything just to stay alive.”

“And we’re playing San Miguel—a veteran team when it comes to stages like this, a championship series. They also have a June Mar Fajardo who is almost automatic (with his baskets).”



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History on the side of Meralco Bolts after Game 5 win


Meralco Bolts’ Cliff Hodge, Allein Maliksi and Raymond Almazan during Game 5 of the PBA Philippine Cup Finals against San Miguel Beermen. –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

MANILA, Philippines–Meralco is on the edge of a historic first crown in the PBA.

After nipping San Miguel, 92-88, Friday night at Smart Araneta Coliseum, the Bolts are now up 3-2 in the best-of-seven championship series with a chance to finish off the defending champion this coming Sunday.

History is on the side of the Luigi Trillo and Nenad Vucenic-mentored crew as 15 of the 19 clubs in the last 12 years who won Game 5 after a 2-all deadlock went on to win the title, according to stats chief Fidel Mangonon III.

READ: PBA Finals: Meralco Bolts need to ‘play with poise’ to close out San Miguel

Mathematically, that’s a 79 percent possibility favoring the Bolts.

But standing in the way is a San Miguel squad that has a veritable chokehold of PBA titles. And the Beermen, having won 29 titles, know what it takes to pull through in a stage where stakes are at their highest.

San Miguel owns three comebacks in the Finals. The Beermen have figured in 2-3 series deficits thrice and still managed to win the title, the last being against TNT four years ago, also in the Philippine Cup.

READ: Meralco on brink of first PBA title after Game 5 win over San Miguel

The other two instances are against Magnolia during the 2019 All Filipino, and against crowd darling Barangay Ginebra in the 2009 edition of the Fiesta Cup.

Safe to say Meralco has its work cut out for itself this coming Sunday when it tries to finish off the vaunted side at the fabled Big Dome.



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Allein Maliksi helps put Bolts on threshold of first PBA title


Meralco Bolts’ Allein Maliksi tries to slip past the defense of San Miguel Beermen’s Chris Ross during Game 5 of the PBA Philippine Cup Finals. –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

Allein Maliksi admitted coming into Game 5 of the PBA Philippine Cup Finals with a chip on his shoulder, especially from the number of articles he read over the past 48 hours.

“Nakaka-challenge (It challenges you),” Maliksi said late Friday evening after playing a pivotal role in Meralco’s 92-88 victory over San Miguel Beer at Smart Araneta Coliseum.

The win gave Bolts a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven series to move within a win of their franchise’s first championship.

Maliksi noted how he, Bong Quinto and Raymond Almazan were maligned for their off-shooting the previous game when the Bolts practically subsisted on Chris Newsome’s career-high 40 points, which eventually were not enough for the result they had wanted.

Offensively, the three were nonfactors in Game 4, which they were able to atone for in a contest where Meralco also got its defensive swagger back while surviving a late San Miguel rally.

“‘Pag maganda laro mo, maganda mga writeups. Pero ‘pag struggling ka, may mababasa kang write-ups (When you play good, the writeups are good. But if you’re struggling, you read [negative] writeups),” said Maliksi, who wound up with 22 points on 10-of-17 shooting while also doing his share on the other end.

“I really challenged myself to be aggressive, to be a leader and to be a veteran,” he continued in Filipino.

Roles reversed

Almazan had 14 while Quinto chipped in eight, which eased much of the weight Newsome carried from Game 4.

“I told Bong and Raymond that we have to step up because sometimes even when I struggle, the team is playing well. Even if I struggle, I give way to my teammates and we are able to step up,” Maliksi said.

The roles were reversed this time, as Newsome struggled early on, then put up shot after shot to help Meralco gain control in the fourth, eventually equaling Maliksi’s output of 22 points for the Bolts. Chris Banchero and Cliff Hodge were also crucial on both ends too. And now the Bolts will try to close it out with the first of two chances on Sunday at the Big Dome.

A victory allows Meralco to not only capture a PBA crown for the first time, but end a 52-year wait to be on top of the mountain in big-time basketball, having been MICAA Open champions in 1971.

Meralco won despite San Miguel star June Mar Fajardo producing a season-high 38 points, much of which he had to work for against a tough Meralco defense led by Almazan and rookie Brandon Bates.

Crucial miss

But like Newsome the previous time, it was Fajardo which sorely needed a support as CJ Perez was the only other San Miguel player in double figures with 17, and the fiery swingman needed 16 attempts—missing 12 of them—to reach that total.



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Perez also missed a crucial free throw late when San Miguel rallied from a 10-point deficit. The split from the line pulled the Beermen within two, 90-88, but Newsome iced it by knocking down two of his freebies, time down to six seconds, for the final count.