^

Sports

Chiefs win anew; Mariners stay unscathed in Fr. Martin Cup

Philstar.com

MANILA, Philippines – The Arellano University Chiefs scored back-to-back wins, while the Philippine Merchant Marine School Mariners stayed unbeaten over the weekend in the 12th Fr. Martin Cup Collegiate Open basketball tournament.

Donald Gumaru sank the winning basket at endgame to carry the Chiefs past the Adamson University Falcons, 77-76, in a thrilling encounter last Sunday at the Far Eastern University gym in Morayta.

It was the Chiefs’ third straight triumph, and it came a day after they trounced Philippine College of Criminology, 124-51, at the Arellano University-Legarda gymnasium.

Elvin Chan shot 14 points while Jake Yagonia added 13 for the Mariners, who subdued the Ateneo Blue Eagles, 65-56.

The Chiefs are now in the lead of Group B with their third straight win, with Letran-A trailing after they won over University of the East, 58-53, for their second consecutive triumph.

In other games, Manuel L. Quezon University prevailed over the College of St. Benilde, 66-50, to hike their slate to 2-1 in Group A while Mapua (1-1) turned back Letran-B, 96-52.

The Warriors were ahead, 75-76, when Gumaru found his range in the dying seconds.

The Mariners leaned on a 12-0 blast in the start of the third, and this PMMS to pick their way out of a 25-all deficit.

The absence of Blue Eagle shooter CJ Perez surprised them, and they had little trouble in taking a 45-27 spread off Yagonia’s triple.

Vince Tolentino led with 11 points for the Blue Eagles, who now have a 4-1 slate in Group A.

ADAMSON UNIVERSITY FALCONS

ARELLANO UNIVERSITY CHIEFS

ARELLANO UNIVERSITY-LEGARDA

ATENEO BLUE EAGLES

BLUE EAGLE

BLUE EAGLES

COLLEGE OF ST. BENILDE

DONALD GUMARU

ELVIN CHAN

FAR EASTERN UNIVERSITY

GROUP A

Philstar
  • Latest
  • Trending
Latest
Are you sure you want to log out?
X
Login

Philstar.com is one of the most vibrant, opinionated, discerning communities of readers on cyberspace. With your meaningful insights, help shape the stories that can shape the country. Sign up now!

Get Updated:

Signup for the News Round now

FORGOT PASSWORD?
SIGN IN
or sign in with