2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship
| |||||||||||||
Duration | December 16–17 | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arena(s) | Filoil Flying V Arena | ||||||||||||
Finals MVP | Jeron Teng | ||||||||||||
Winning coach | Juno Sauler | ||||||||||||
Semifinalists |
FEU Tamaraws San Beda Red Lions | ||||||||||||
TV network(s) | Studio 23 | ||||||||||||
The 2013 Philippine Collegiate Championship was the sixth edition of the Philippine Collegiate Champions League (PCCL), the postseason tournament to determine the national collegiate champions in basketball organized by the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas (SBP), the national basketball federation. The tournament was the sixth edition of the tournament in its current incarnation, and the eleventh edition overall.
The De La Salle Green Archers defeated the SWU Cobras in the best-of-three championship series, 2–0. There was no third-place game in this year's edition of the tournament, and so the FEU Tamaraws and the San Beda Red Lions shared the third-place honors.
Qualifying
# | UAAP | NCAA | CESAFI | Other leagues |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st | De La Salle Green Archers | San Beda Red Lions | UV Green Lancers | various |
2nd | UST Growling Tigers | Letran Knights | SWU Cobras | N/A |
3rd | FEU Tamaraws | San Sebastian Stags | USC Warriors | |
4th | NU Bulldogs | Perpetual Altas | N/A | |
5th | Ateneo Blue Eagles* | EAC Generals | ||
6th | UE Red Warriors | Arellano Chiefs** |
*Replaced by UP.
**Replaced by Lyceum.
Qualified to Final Four
Qualified to regionals
Qualified to zonals
Zonals
- 5th-6th NCAA and UAAP teams seeded to the Metro Manila regionals
- League champions from other than CESAFI, NCAA and UAAP are seeded to nearest zonal tournaments.
Regionals
- 2nd-4th UAAP and NCAA teams seeded to the Metro Manila–Luzon regionals
- Top 3 CESAFI teams seeded to the Southern regionals
Final Four
- NCAA and UAAP champions qualify to the Final Four automatically.
Zonals
The delay in the completion of NCAA Season 89 has led to the rescheduling of the qualifying tournaments. The tournaments were supposed to start on October 25.[1]
Metro Manila
The Metro Manila zonals were held at the Technological Institute of the Philippines (TIP) gym from November 20 to 22.
Group A
Team standings
Qualified to the Metro Manila playoff |
Results
Win |
Group B
Team standings
Qualified to the Metro Manila playoff |
Results
Win |
Luzon
South Luzon/Bicol
- Quezon champion: Calayan Cougars
- Legaspi champion: STI Sta. Rosa Olympians
- Tabaco champion: Amando Cope Green Serpents
- Naga champion: Naga College Foundation Tigers
- Sorsogon champion: Lewis Blazing Fox
- Batangas champion: U of Batangas Brahmans
North/Central Luzon
The North/Central Luzon zonal was held at the University of Northern Philippines (UNP) gym from November 11 to 15.
- Vigan champion: UNP Sharks
- La Union champion: La Finns Scholastica Lionhearts
- Pampanga champion: Lyceum of Subic Bay Sharks
- Pangasinan champion: Lyceum Northwestern Dukes
- Baguio champion: U of Baguio Cardinals
Third-place playoff
November 11 |
U of Baguio Cardinals | 82–87 | La Finn's Scholastica Brave Hearts |
Final
November 11 |
Lyceum of Subic Bay Sharks | 86–74 | Lyceum-NWU Dukes |
Visayas
The Visayas zonals were supposed to be held at the Ormoc Superdome but due to the destruction of Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda), the games were moved to the Cebu Coliseum.[2] Also, due to the typhoon and to the Bohol earthquake a month earlier, the champions from Bohol (Bohol Institute of Technology-International College Crusaders) and Ormoc (Western Leyte College Mustangs) skipped the tournament.[3]
Mindanao
Northern Mindanao
STI-Cagayan de Oro Olympians defeated St. Columbian College, St. Paul University of Surigao, Christ the King College de Maranding, Bukidnon State University, and Mindanao State University-Marawi and Medical Center in the Northern Mindanao zonals.[4]
Southern Mindanao
The Southern Mindanao zonals was held at the Almendras Gym in Davao City from November 10 to 13.
Team standings
Qualified to the zonal final |
Results
Win |
Third-place playoff
Final
Regionals
Luzon–Metro Manila
The first two rounds were held at the First Asia Institute of Technology and Humanities (FAITH) Gym in Tanauan, Batangas from November 25 to 26; the final three rounds are held at the Ynares Sports Arena in Pasig from November 28 to December 3.
First 3 rounds
Zonal finals | Second round | Quarterfinals | |||||||||||
NU | 70 | ||||||||||||
Perpetual | 67 | ||||||||||||
NU | 73 | ||||||||||||
UE | 85 | UE | 63 | ||||||||||
CEU | 77 | UE | 81 | ||||||||||
U of Batangas | 88 | U of Batangas | 60 | ||||||||||
Lyceum of Subic Bay | 81 | ||||||||||||
Final 3 rounds
Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Regional final | |||||||||||
UST | 77 | ||||||||||||
Letran | 60 | ||||||||||||
UST | 68 | ||||||||||||
FEU | 83 | FEU | 71 | ||||||||||
SSC-R | 73 | FEU | 88 | ||||||||||
NU | 73 | NU | 70 | ||||||||||
UE | 63 | ||||||||||||
Southern Islands
The Southern Islands regional was held at Cebu City's Cebu Coliseum from November 18 to 20.
Zonal finals | Semifinals | Regional final | |||||||||||
UV | 100 | ||||||||||||
HTC | 98 | HTC | 80 | ||||||||||
STI-Cagayan de Oro | 94 | UV | 60 | ||||||||||
SWU | 68 | ||||||||||||
SWU | 82 | ||||||||||||
USC | 82 | USC | 73 | ||||||||||
Iloilo Doctors | 73 | ||||||||||||
Final Four
Team standings
Qualified to the finals |
Results
Win |
High school exhibition games
Finals
References
- ↑ Manlosa, Rommel C. (2013-10-21). "NCAA delay destroys PCCL scheduling". Sun.Star Cebu. Retrieved 2013-10-24.
- ↑ "PCCL Ormoc leg moved to Cebu". Philippine Star. 2013-11-16. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
- ↑ Mendoza, Rommel C. (2013-11-17). "Warriors face 'unknown Medics' in PCCL sweet 16". Sun.Star Cebu. Retrieved 2013-11-26.
- ↑ "STI-CdO gains PCCL Sweet 16". The Philippine Star. 2013-11-12. Retrieved 2013-12-12.