fbpx
Wikipedia

Tanduay Rhum Masters

The Tanduay Rhum Makers (1975-1987) and Tanduay Rhum Masters (1999-2001) were two basketball franchises associated with the same liquor brand that played in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

Tanduay Rhum Masters
Founded1975
Dissolved2001 (withdrew in 1987, and readmitted in 1999)
HistoryTanduay Distillery (1975-1977)
Tanduay Esquires (1978-1981)
YCO-Tanduay (1981–1983)
Tanduay Rhum Makers (1983–1987)
Tanduay Gold Rhum Masters (1999)
Tanduay Rhum Masters (2000–2001)
Team colorsTanduay Distillery/Esquires
Red, gold and white
    
Red, black and white
    
YCO-Tanduay
Red, green and white
     
Red, black and white
     
Tanduay Rhum Masters
Red and gold
  
CompanyElizalde and Co., Inc.
(1975-1987)
Tanduay Distillers, Inc.
(1999-2001)
Head coachTanduay Distillery/Tanduay ESQ/YCO-Tanduay/Tanduay Rhum Makers (1975-1987)
Loreto Carbonell
Roberto Littaua
Carlos Loyzaga
Valentin Eduque
Freddie Webb
Sonny Reyes
Orly Castelo
Arturo Valenzona
Ely Capacio
Tanduay Rhum Masters (1999-2001)
Alfrancis Chua
Derrick Pumaren
OwnershipManuel "Manolo" Elizalde (1975-1986)
Lucio C. Tan Sr. (1999-2001)
Championships3 championships

1986 Reinforced
1986 All-Filipino
1987 Open

5 Finals Appearances
Light uniform
Dark uniform

The original franchise, owned by Elizalde & Co., Inc., was a founding member of the PBA. From 1975-1980, the team played under the name Tanduay Distillery; Tanduay ESQ and Tanduay Esquires; then as, YCO-Tanduay in 1981-1983. The final name used by the original franchise was the Tanduay Rhum Makers (1983-1987). The original franchise won a total of three PBA championships. In 1988, its PBA franchise was acquired by Pure Foods Corporation and played as Purefoods.

The second franchise played under the name Tanduay Rhum Masters and was owned by Tanduay Distillers, Inc. (the present owners of the Tanduay liquor business). It first played in the Philippine Basketball League (1997-1999) and joined the PBA (1999-2001). The PBA records of the original Tanduay PBA franchise (1975-1987) were maintained for the second incarnation. Its PBA franchise was sold to FedEx Express in 2002.

The original Tanduay franchise (Elizalde era, 1975-1987)

Businessman Manuel “Manolo” Elizalde formed the Philippines' first basketball dynasty, the YCO Painters, during the post-war era. Players who have donned the famous YCO red and white jersey included Carlos Loyzaga, Carlos Badion, Loreto Carbonell, Ed Ocampo, Mariano Tolentino and Kurt Bachmann. Its rivalry with the Ysmael Steel Admirals preceded that of Crispa and Toyota in the PBA.

The first Tanduay basketball team was organized by Elizalde during the early 1960s to compete in a minor league called Businessmen’s Athletic Association (BAA). This farm team of the YCO Painters had a brief existence.[1]

In 1975, Elizalde became actively involved in the formation of the Philippine Basketball Association as he joined forces with several MICAA team owners to break away from the Basketball Association of the Philippines stranglehold. The YCO Painters maintained their ballclub in the MICAA and their newly-formed professional team was named Tanduay.

1977-1980

With Carlos Loyzaga handling the coaching chores by 1977, replacing Bobby Littaua, Tanduay entered the semifinals for the first time in the 1977 All-Filipino Conference and almost made it to the finals but lost to Mariwasa-Honda Panthers on their last assignment as the Panthers went on to play the Crispa Redmanizers for the championship. The season had a Tanduay player Jaime Taguines becoming the second recipient of the Rookie of the Year honors.

In 1978, Tanduay had their first breakthrough year. After a third and fourth place finishes in the first two conferences of the season, the third conference Invitational Championship allows the Esquires to simultaneously field their two imports. Gene Moore and David Payne led the team to score upset victories and enter the finals series against the Toyota Tamaraws. The Esquires lost to defending champion Toyota in four games. Tanduay again produced another Rookie of the Year awardee for the second straight season in Jaime Manansala.

1979-1984

The next six seasons would remain unfruitful and title-less campaign for the Tanduay ballclub despite being competitive and a darkhorse team in the early 1980s, signing some top amateur stars like Rey Lazaro, former San Beda Red Lions Frankie Lim and JB Yango. The team had a revamp of their lineup in 1984, giving up four of its veteran players, Roberto dela Rosa, Victor Sanchez, Alberto Gutierrez and Mike Bilbao to newcomer Beer Hausen.

1985–1987

Following the disbandment of the famed Crispa Redmanizers, the Tanduay Rhum Makers had a massive rebuilding, acquiring Crispa stars Abet Guidaben, Freddie Hubalde and Padim Israel, along with Willie Generalao from Gilbey's Gin. However, three weeks after the start of the 1985 PBA Reinforced Conference, Guidaben was traded in favor of Ramon Fernandez from Manila Beer. Tanduay's coach at that time, Orly Castelo, was also replaced by former Gilbey's Gin coach Arturo Valenzona.

Tanduay finally won the first of three PBA championships beginning in the 1986 First Conference, behind imports Rob Williams and Andre Mckoy. [2] After winning its first title, the team brought the championship trophy to the grave of their late owner, Manolo Elizalde, who died a year before. Tanduay won their second straight championship in the 1986 PBA All-Filipino Conference and their third title in the 1987 PBA Open Conference with best import David Thirdkill.

Disbandment

A business blackeye occurred in late 1987 when a couple of Tanduay drinkers died allegedly owing to the liquor. This caused a major backlash in terms of sales as revenues collapsed and put parent company Elizalde & Company Inc. near bankruptcy.

Pure Foods Corporation, then a subsidiary of Ayala Corporation, acquired Tanduay's PBA franchise. The franchise would play under the name Purefoods beginning the 1988 PBA season.

The Tanduay business enterprise was acquired by the Lucio Tan group of companies.

Second Tanduay franchise (Tan era, 1997-2001)

In the Philippine Basketball League (1997-1999)

In 1997, the Tanduay name resurfaced in the Philippine basketball scene at the Philippine Basketball League under the ownership of Lucio Tan group of companies and managed by son Lucio "Bong" K. Tan, Jr. Prior to using the name "Tanduay Gold Rhum Masters", this team was originally known as Stag Pale Pilseners from 1995-1996, with Marlou Aquino, Bal David and Jason Webb in the lineup. The Rhum Masters won several PBL crowns under coach Alfrancis Chua and players Eric Menk, Jomer Rubi, Chris Cantonjos and Mark Telan. It also held a PBL-record 18 straight wins in the 1998–1999 Yakult PBL Centennial Cup, but lost in five games to Doctor J Rubbing Alcohol, when the Centennial Rhum Masters blew a 2–0 lead in the best-of-five affair. After the team moved to the PBA, Asia Brewery retained the PBL franchise and was renamed Colt 45 with Renren Ritualo leading the squad. Colt 45 placed fourth in the 1999 PBL Challenge Cup before disbanding.

Return to the PBA (1999-2001)

In 1999, Tanduay made its return to the PBA. As part of the agreement, the league allowed six players from Tanduay's PBL lineup to be elevated. Tanduay also acquired Fil-American Earl Sonny Alvarado as the top pick. The records from the original Tanduay franchise (1975-1987) were retained for this franchise.

In its first season, Tanduay placed second to Shell in the 1999 PBA All-Filipino Conference but their second stint in the PBA were marred by several controversies such as the deportation of alleged "Fil-sham" (bogus Filipino) Alvarado which led to a forfeiture of several Tanduay games during the 2000 season. In the 2001 offseason, Tanduay made soundwaves in the PBA when they signed Danny Ildefonso of corporate rival San Miguel Beermen a whopping 16-year, 98 million peso offersheet. The league though, nullified the said deal since it was believed that the offersheet violated the team's salary cap.

Bong Tan also made a controversial comment calling the PBA, "a San Miguel league", a reference to a speculation that the PBA is favoring the then-San Miguel Corporation teams San Miguel and Barangay Ginebra. It was also said that Tanduay violated the PBA's salary cap many times by having their players sign a separate contract apart from the required PBA Uniform Player's Contract that made the players richer than any PBA team's bench players by a few hundred thousand pesos. This was already denied by the management.

Disbandment

Realizing its failure to win a championship despite a stellar line-up of Fil-American players and established veterans, Tanduay disbanded after the 2001 season, selling its PBA franchise to FedEx Express for a reported sum of PHP 60-75 million. A firesale ensued as the Rhum Masters traded their key players Eric Menk (to Barangay Ginebra Kings), Dondon Hontiveros (to the San Miguel Beermen) and Jeffrey Cariaso (to the Coca-Cola Tigers).

Season-by-season records

Legend
  Champion
  Runner-up
  Third place
Season Conference Team name Overall record Finals
W L %
1975 First Conference Tanduay Rhum 6 18 .250
Second Conference
All-Philippine
1976 First Conference 11 21 .344
Second Conference
All-Philippine
1977 All-Filipino Conference 29 28 .509
Open Conference
Invitational Conference
1978 All-Filipino Conference 24 31 .436
Open Conference
Invitational Conference Toyota 3, Tanduay 1
1979 All-Filipino Conference 24 23 .511
Open Conference
Invitational Conference
1980 Open Conference 16 23 .410
Invitational Conference
All-Filipino Conference
1981 Open Conference YCO-Tanduay Rhum 13 29 .310
Reinforced Filipino Conference
1982 Reinforced Filipino Conference 21 20 .512
Invitational Conference
Open Conference
1983 All-Filipino Conference Tanduay Rhum Makers 24 29 .453
Reinforced Filipino Conference
Open Conference
1984 First All-Filipino Conference 14 26 .350
Second All-Filipino Conference
Invitational Conference
1985 Open Conference 24 35 .407
All-Filipino Conference
Reinforced Conference
1986 Reinforced Conference 37 27 .578 Tanduay 4, Great Taste 2
All-Filipino Conference Tanduay 3, Ginebra 1
Open Conference
1987 Open Conference 22 23 .489 Tanduay 4, Great Taste 1
All-Filipino Conference
Reinforced Conference
1988 Open Conference Tanduay disbanded from the PBA.
All-Filipino Conference
Reinforced Conference
1989 Open Conference
All-Filipino Conference
Reinforced Conference
1990 First Conference
All-Filipino Conference
Third Conference
1991 First Conference
All-Filipino Conference
Third Conference
1992 First Conference
All-Filipino Conference
Third Conference
1993 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
1994 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
1995 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
1996 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
1997 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
1998 All-Filipino Cup
Commissioner's Cup
Centennial Cup
Governors Cup
1999 All-Filipino Cup Tanduay Rhum Masters 29 21 .580 Shell 4, Tanduay 2
Commissioner's Cup
Governors Cup
2000 All-Filipino Cup 15 5 .750
Commissioner's Cup 7 8 .467
Governors Cup 6 5 .545
2001 All-Filipino Cup 5 9 .357
Commissioner's Cup 4 7 .364
Governors Cup 5 8 .385
Overall record 336 396 .459 3 championships

Awards

Individual awards

PBA Most Valuable Player Finals MVP PBA Best Player of the Conference
PBA Rookie of the Year Award PBA All-Defensive Team PBA Mythical First Team
  • Jimmy Taguines - 1977
  • Jimmy Manansala - 1978
PBA Mythical Second Team PBA Most Improved Player PBA Sportsmanship Award
PBA Best Import

PBA Press Corps Individual Awards

PBA Scoring Leader

Notable players

In alphabetical order. Members of PBA Hall of Fame and PBA 25 Greatest Players are in boldface.

First Tanduay team (Elizalde era, 1975-1987)

  • Ramon Fernandez - #19
  • Abet Guidaben - #5
  • Freddie Hubalde - #10
  • Allan Abelgas - #34
  • Dennis Abbatuan - #18
  • Ronnie Albor - #16
  • Zito "Chito" Bacon - #5
  • Raymundo "Chuck" Barreiro - #4
  • Miguel “Mike” Bilbao - #4, #6, #20, #40
  • Rene Canent - #18
  • Eleazar "Ely" Capacio - #15
  • David "Boy" Cezar - #17
  • Benjamin “Benjie” Cleofas - #15
  • Ricardo "Joy" Cleofas - #16
  • Ramon "Onchie" dela Cruz - #9
  • Roberto "Bert" dela Rosa - #7
  • Valerio "Botchok" delos Santos - #10
  • Joselito "Lito" Eguia - #12
  • Angelito "Itoy" Esguerra - #16
  • Wilfredo “Willie” Generalao - #42
  • Alberto "Abet" Gutierrez - #9 & #13
  • Cesar "Boy" Ijares - #36
  • Federico “Padim” Israel #17
  • Rudolfo "Rudy" Lalota - #9
  • Zaldy Latoza - #10
  • Reynaldo "Rey" Lazaro - #12
  • Frankie Lim - #4, #14
  • Jaime "Jimmy" Manansala - #11 1978 Rookie of the Year
  • Alexander "Alex" Marquez #44 - "The Kamikaze Kid"
  • Abelardo "Abe" Monzon #2, #22 & #44
  • Horacio "Ace" Moreno - #88 & #8
  • Jerry Pingoy - #14
  • Marte Samson - #11
  • Quirino "Rino" Salazar - #7
  • Victor "Vic" Sanchez - #14, #12 – "Rambo"
  • David "Dave" Supnet #66 & #6
  • Jaime "Jimmy" Taguines - #44 - 1977 Rookie of the Year
  • Alex Tan -#40
  • Antonio "Tony" Torrente - #7
  • Reynaldo "Rey" Vallejo -#1
  • Luis "Tito" Varela -#32 - "Kojak"
  • Freddie Webb - #14 – "Fastbreak Freddie"
  • Jose Bernardo "JB" Yango - #24 - "The Cuyapo Kid"

Imports

Second Tanduay team (Tan era, 1999-2001)

  • Rene Alforque #18
  • Sonny Alvarado #15 - "The Punisher"
  • Chris Cantonjos #33
  • Jeffrey Cariaso #28 – "The Jet"
  • Jayvee Gayoso #22 – "Mr. Adrenaline"
  • Dondon Hontiveros #7 - "Cebuano Hotshot"
  • Rudy Hatfield – "The H-Bomb" #34
  • Pido Jarencio #25 – "The Fireman"
  • Bobby Jose #11 – "The Firecracker"
  • Noli Locsin #6 – "The Tank"
  • Eric Menk #30 - "Major Pain"
  • Dindo Pumaren #10 – "The Bullet"
  • Mark Telan #13
  • Jomar Rubi #7
  • Jason Webb #1

Imports

See also

References

  1. ^ "Tanduay clinches BAA cage series".
  2. ^ "Tanduay: Sure of another big year". Manila Standard.
Preceded by
(start)
PBA teams genealogies
1975–1987
Succeeded by
Preceded by
(elevated from the Philippine Basketball League)
PBA teams genealogies
1999–2001
Succeeded by

tanduay, rhum, masters, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, apr. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Tanduay Rhum Masters news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is about the Tanduay teams 1975 1987 1999 2001 in the PBA For the PBA D League team see Tanduay Light Rhum Masters For the MPBL and Filbasket team see Batangas City Embassy Chill The Tanduay Rhum Makers 1975 1987 and Tanduay Rhum Masters 1999 2001 were two basketball franchises associated with the same liquor brand that played in the Philippine Basketball Association PBA Tanduay Rhum MastersFounded1975Dissolved2001 withdrew in 1987 and readmitted in 1999 HistoryTanduay Distillery 1975 1977 Tanduay Esquires 1978 1981 YCO Tanduay 1981 1983 Tanduay Rhum Makers 1983 1987 Tanduay Gold Rhum Masters 1999 Tanduay Rhum Masters 2000 2001 Team colorsTanduay Distillery EsquiresRed gold and white Red black and white YCO TanduayRed green and white Red black and white Tanduay Rhum Masters Red and gold CompanyElizalde and Co Inc 1975 1987 Tanduay Distillers Inc 1999 2001 Head coachTanduay Distillery Tanduay ESQ YCO Tanduay Tanduay Rhum Makers 1975 1987 Loreto Carbonell Roberto LittauaCarlos LoyzagaValentin EduqueFreddie WebbSonny ReyesOrly CasteloArturo ValenzonaEly CapacioTanduay Rhum Masters 1999 2001 Alfrancis ChuaDerrick PumarenOwnershipManuel Manolo Elizalde 1975 1986 Lucio C Tan Sr 1999 2001 Championships3 championships 1986 Reinforced 1986 All Filipino 1987 Open 5 Finals AppearancesLight uniformDark uniformThe original franchise owned by Elizalde amp Co Inc was a founding member of the PBA From 1975 1980 the team played under the name Tanduay Distillery Tanduay ESQ and Tanduay Esquires then as YCO Tanduay in 1981 1983 The final name used by the original franchise was the Tanduay Rhum Makers 1983 1987 The original franchise won a total of three PBA championships In 1988 its PBA franchise was acquired by Pure Foods Corporation and played as Purefoods The second franchise played under the name Tanduay Rhum Masters and was owned by Tanduay Distillers Inc the present owners of the Tanduay liquor business It first played in the Philippine Basketball League 1997 1999 and joined the PBA 1999 2001 The PBA records of the original Tanduay PBA franchise 1975 1987 were maintained for the second incarnation Its PBA franchise was sold to FedEx Express in 2002 Contents 1 The original Tanduay franchise Elizalde era 1975 1987 1 1 1977 1980 1 2 1979 1984 1 3 1985 1987 1 4 Disbandment 2 Second Tanduay franchise Tan era 1997 2001 2 1 In the Philippine Basketball League 1997 1999 2 2 Return to the PBA 1999 2001 2 3 Disbandment 3 Season by season records 4 Awards 4 1 Individual awards 4 2 PBA Press Corps Individual Awards 5 Notable players 5 1 First Tanduay team Elizalde era 1975 1987 5 1 1 Imports 5 2 Second Tanduay team Tan era 1999 2001 5 2 1 Imports 6 See also 7 ReferencesThe original Tanduay franchise Elizalde era 1975 1987 EditBusinessman Manuel Manolo Elizalde formed the Philippines first basketball dynasty the YCO Painters during the post war era Players who have donned the famous YCO red and white jersey included Carlos Loyzaga Carlos Badion Loreto Carbonell Ed Ocampo Mariano Tolentino and Kurt Bachmann Its rivalry with the Ysmael Steel Admirals preceded that of Crispa and Toyota in the PBA The first Tanduay basketball team was organized by Elizalde during the early 1960s to compete in a minor league called Businessmen s Athletic Association BAA This farm team of the YCO Painters had a brief existence 1 In 1975 Elizalde became actively involved in the formation of the Philippine Basketball Association as he joined forces with several MICAA team owners to break away from the Basketball Association of the Philippines stranglehold The YCO Painters maintained their ballclub in the MICAA and their newly formed professional team was named Tanduay 1977 1980 Edit With Carlos Loyzaga handling the coaching chores by 1977 replacing Bobby Littaua Tanduay entered the semifinals for the first time in the 1977 All Filipino Conference and almost made it to the finals but lost to Mariwasa Honda Panthers on their last assignment as the Panthers went on to play the Crispa Redmanizers for the championship The season had a Tanduay player Jaime Taguines becoming the second recipient of the Rookie of the Year honors In 1978 Tanduay had their first breakthrough year After a third and fourth place finishes in the first two conferences of the season the third conference Invitational Championship allows the Esquires to simultaneously field their two imports Gene Moore and David Payne led the team to score upset victories and enter the finals series against the Toyota Tamaraws The Esquires lost to defending champion Toyota in four games Tanduay again produced another Rookie of the Year awardee for the second straight season in Jaime Manansala 1979 1984 Edit The next six seasons would remain unfruitful and title less campaign for the Tanduay ballclub despite being competitive and a darkhorse team in the early 1980s signing some top amateur stars like Rey Lazaro former San Beda Red Lions Frankie Lim and JB Yango The team had a revamp of their lineup in 1984 giving up four of its veteran players Roberto dela Rosa Victor Sanchez Alberto Gutierrez and Mike Bilbao to newcomer Beer Hausen 1985 1987 Edit Following the disbandment of the famed Crispa Redmanizers the Tanduay Rhum Makers had a massive rebuilding acquiring Crispa stars Abet Guidaben Freddie Hubalde and Padim Israel along with Willie Generalao from Gilbey s Gin However three weeks after the start of the 1985 PBA Reinforced Conference Guidaben was traded in favor of Ramon Fernandez from Manila Beer Tanduay s coach at that time Orly Castelo was also replaced by former Gilbey s Gin coach Arturo Valenzona Tanduay finally won the first of three PBA championships beginning in the 1986 First Conference behind imports Rob Williams and Andre Mckoy 2 After winning its first title the team brought the championship trophy to the grave of their late owner Manolo Elizalde who died a year before Tanduay won their second straight championship in the 1986 PBA All Filipino Conference and their third title in the 1987 PBA Open Conference with best import David Thirdkill Disbandment Edit A business blackeye occurred in late 1987 when a couple of Tanduay drinkers died allegedly owing to the liquor This caused a major backlash in terms of sales as revenues collapsed and put parent company Elizalde amp Company Inc near bankruptcy Pure Foods Corporation then a subsidiary of Ayala Corporation acquired Tanduay s PBA franchise The franchise would play under the name Purefoods beginning the 1988 PBA season The Tanduay business enterprise was acquired by the Lucio Tan group of companies Second Tanduay franchise Tan era 1997 2001 EditIn the Philippine Basketball League 1997 1999 Edit See also Stag Pale Pilseners In 1997 the Tanduay name resurfaced in the Philippine basketball scene at the Philippine Basketball League under the ownership of Lucio Tan group of companies and managed by son Lucio Bong K Tan Jr Prior to using the name Tanduay Gold Rhum Masters this team was originally known as Stag Pale Pilseners from 1995 1996 with Marlou Aquino Bal David and Jason Webb in the lineup The Rhum Masters won several PBL crowns under coach Alfrancis Chua and players Eric Menk Jomer Rubi Chris Cantonjos and Mark Telan It also held a PBL record 18 straight wins in the 1998 1999 Yakult PBL Centennial Cup but lost in five games to Doctor J Rubbing Alcohol when the Centennial Rhum Masters blew a 2 0 lead in the best of five affair After the team moved to the PBA Asia Brewery retained the PBL franchise and was renamed Colt 45 with Renren Ritualo leading the squad Colt 45 placed fourth in the 1999 PBL Challenge Cup before disbanding Return to the PBA 1999 2001 Edit In 1999 Tanduay made its return to the PBA As part of the agreement the league allowed six players from Tanduay s PBL lineup to be elevated Tanduay also acquired Fil American Earl Sonny Alvarado as the top pick The records from the original Tanduay franchise 1975 1987 were retained for this franchise In its first season Tanduay placed second to Shell in the 1999 PBA All Filipino Conference but their second stint in the PBA were marred by several controversies such as the deportation of alleged Fil sham bogus Filipino Alvarado which led to a forfeiture of several Tanduay games during the 2000 season In the 2001 offseason Tanduay made soundwaves in the PBA when they signed Danny Ildefonso of corporate rival San Miguel Beermen a whopping 16 year 98 million peso offersheet The league though nullified the said deal since it was believed that the offersheet violated the team s salary cap Bong Tan also made a controversial comment calling the PBA a San Miguel league a reference to a speculation that the PBA is favoring the then San Miguel Corporation teams San Miguel and Barangay Ginebra It was also said that Tanduay violated the PBA s salary cap many times by having their players sign a separate contract apart from the required PBA Uniform Player s Contract that made the players richer than any PBA team s bench players by a few hundred thousand pesos This was already denied by the management Disbandment Edit Realizing its failure to win a championship despite a stellar line up of Fil American players and established veterans Tanduay disbanded after the 2001 season selling its PBA franchise to FedEx Express for a reported sum of PHP 60 75 million A firesale ensued as the Rhum Masters traded their key players Eric Menk to Barangay Ginebra Kings Dondon Hontiveros to the San Miguel Beermen and Jeffrey Cariaso to the Coca Cola Tigers Season by season records EditLegend Champion Runner up Third placeSeason Conference Team name Overall record FinalsW L 1975 First Conference Tanduay Rhum 6 18 250Second ConferenceAll Philippine1976 First Conference 11 21 344Second ConferenceAll Philippine1977 All Filipino Conference 29 28 509Open ConferenceInvitational Conference1978 All Filipino Conference 24 31 436Open ConferenceInvitational Conference Toyota 3 Tanduay 11979 All Filipino Conference 24 23 511Open ConferenceInvitational Conference1980 Open Conference 16 23 410Invitational ConferenceAll Filipino Conference1981 Open Conference YCO Tanduay Rhum 13 29 310Reinforced Filipino Conference1982 Reinforced Filipino Conference 21 20 512Invitational ConferenceOpen Conference1983 All Filipino Conference Tanduay Rhum Makers 24 29 453Reinforced Filipino ConferenceOpen Conference1984 First All Filipino Conference 14 26 350Second All Filipino ConferenceInvitational Conference1985 Open Conference 24 35 407All Filipino ConferenceReinforced Conference1986 Reinforced Conference 37 27 578 Tanduay 4 Great Taste 2All Filipino Conference Tanduay 3 Ginebra 1Open Conference1987 Open Conference 22 23 489 Tanduay 4 Great Taste 1All Filipino ConferenceReinforced Conference1988 Open Conference Tanduay disbanded from the PBA All Filipino ConferenceReinforced Conference1989 Open ConferenceAll Filipino ConferenceReinforced Conference1990 First ConferenceAll Filipino ConferenceThird Conference1991 First ConferenceAll Filipino ConferenceThird Conference1992 First ConferenceAll Filipino ConferenceThird Conference1993 All Filipino CupCommissioner s CupGovernors Cup1994 All Filipino CupCommissioner s CupGovernors Cup1995 All Filipino CupCommissioner s CupGovernors Cup1996 All Filipino CupCommissioner s CupGovernors Cup1997 All Filipino CupCommissioner s CupGovernors Cup1998 All Filipino CupCommissioner s CupCentennial CupGovernors Cup1999 All Filipino Cup Tanduay Rhum Masters 29 21 580 Shell 4 Tanduay 2Commissioner s CupGovernors Cup2000 All Filipino Cup 15 5 750Commissioner s Cup 7 8 467Governors Cup 6 5 5452001 All Filipino Cup 5 9 357Commissioner s Cup 4 7 364Governors Cup 5 8 385Overall record 336 396 459 3 championshipsAwards EditIndividual awards Edit PBA Most Valuable Player Finals MVP PBA Best Player of the ConferenceRamon Fernandez 1986 Eric Menk 1999 All FilipinoPBA Rookie of the Year Award PBA All Defensive Team PBA Mythical First TeamJimmy Taguines 1977 Jimmy Manansala 1978 Padim Israel 1986 Eric Menk 1999 Jeffrey Cariaso 2000 Ramon Fernandez 1986 Freddie Hubalde 1986 Sonny Alvarado 1999PBA Mythical Second Team PBA Most Improved Player PBA Sportsmanship AwardRamon Fernandez 1985 1987 Willie Generalao 1985 Padim Israel 1986 JB Yango 1986 Eric Menk 1999 Jeffrey Cariaso 2000 Rudy Hatfield 2000 Padim Israel 1985PBA Best ImportRussell Murray 1981 Reinforced Filipino Rob Williams 1986 Reinforced David Thirdkill 1987 OpenPBA Press Corps Individual Awards Edit PBA Scoring LeaderEric Menk 1999 2001Notable players EditIn alphabetical order Members of PBA Hall of Fame and PBA 25 Greatest Players are in boldface First Tanduay team Elizalde era 1975 1987 Edit Ramon Fernandez 19 Abet Guidaben 5 Freddie Hubalde 10 Allan Abelgas 34 Dennis Abbatuan 18 Ronnie Albor 16 Zito Chito Bacon 5 Raymundo Chuck Barreiro 4 Miguel Mike Bilbao 4 6 20 40 Rene Canent 18 Eleazar Ely Capacio 15 David Boy Cezar 17 Benjamin Benjie Cleofas 15 Ricardo Joy Cleofas 16 Ramon Onchie dela Cruz 9 Roberto Bert dela Rosa 7 Valerio Botchok delos Santos 10 Joselito Lito Eguia 12 Angelito Itoy Esguerra 16 Wilfredo Willie Generalao 42 Alberto Abet Gutierrez 9 amp 13 Cesar Boy Ijares 36 Federico Padim Israel 17 Rudolfo Rudy Lalota 9 Zaldy Latoza 10 Reynaldo Rey Lazaro 12 Frankie Lim 4 14 Jaime Jimmy Manansala 11 1978 Rookie of the Year Alexander Alex Marquez 44 The Kamikaze Kid Abelardo Abe Monzon 2 22 amp 44 Horacio Ace Moreno 88 amp 8 Jerry Pingoy 14 Marte Samson 11 Quirino Rino Salazar 7 Victor Vic Sanchez 14 12 Rambo David Dave Supnet 66 amp 6 Jaime Jimmy Taguines 44 1977 Rookie of the Year Alex Tan 40 Antonio Tony Torrente 7 Reynaldo Rey Vallejo 1 Luis Tito Varela 32 Kojak Freddie Webb 14 Fastbreak Freddie Jose Bernardo JB Yango 24 The Cuyapo Kid Imports Edit Benny The Outlaw Anders 0 1986 Odell Ball 41 1980 Curtis Berry 00 1982 Bill Bozeat 12 1976 Kevin Cluess 35 1980 Bernie Harris 35 1977 Mark Haymore 32 1981 Jerome Henderson 31 1982 Tim Hirten 20 1976 Andre McKoy 33 1986 George Melton 33 1983 Gene Moore 1978 1981 Russell Murray 33 1981 1982 David Payne 36 1978 David Pope 66 1985 Lawyer Butch Taylor 44 1980 John Terry 24 1975 David Thirdkill 22 1987 Andy Thompson 22 1986 John Q Trapp 34 1975 Ronnie Valentine 44 1985 Freeman Williams 20 1987 Rob Williams 21 1986 Merlin Wilson 44 1979 1985 Francois Wise 3 1983 Second Tanduay team Tan era 1999 2001 Edit Rene Alforque 18 Sonny Alvarado 15 The Punisher Chris Cantonjos 33 Jeffrey Cariaso 28 The Jet Jayvee Gayoso 22 Mr Adrenaline Dondon Hontiveros 7 Cebuano Hotshot Rudy Hatfield The H Bomb 34 Pido Jarencio 25 The Fireman Bobby Jose 11 The Firecracker Noli Locsin 6 The Tank Eric Menk 30 Major Pain Dindo Pumaren 10 The Bullet Mark Telan 13 Jomar Rubi 7 Jason Webb 1 Imports Edit Maurice Bell 3 4 2000 2001 Joe Ira Clark 24 1999 2000 Ronnie Fields 20 1999 Kevin Freeman 33 2001 Billy Thomas 12 2001 See also EditYCO Painters precursor of the first Tanduay team Stag Pale Pilseners precursor of the second Tanduay team Tanduay Light Rhum Masters PBA D League team 2011 present Cossack Blue Spirits PBL team of Tanduay Distillers Inc References Edit Tanduay clinches BAA cage series Tanduay Sure of another big year Manila Standard Preceded by start PBA teams genealogies1975 1987 Succeeded byStar HotshotsPreceded by elevated from the Philippine Basketball League PBA teams genealogies1999 2001 Succeeded byFedEx Express Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tanduay Rhum Masters amp oldid 1130500371, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.