Originally Posted by
Jumperman
If you go through the entire thread and the smorgasbord of posts from all parties, you can really say that Cebuano support is on a whole different plane. With the kind of rabid, foaming-in-the-mouth sense of support we Bisdaks have for our kababayans you'd think we are all fruits of the same loin!
It's totally understandable how people feel that Mark Jayven is throwing away such a big opportunity by quitting the team. As if getting the chance to attend one of the finest institutions in the country for college (and for free) isn't enough, he also had a slot on a 3-peat champion team that could also very well be the Beatles (or ______ insert name of modern-day in-vogue rockstar/group) of Philippine collegiate hoops. People would kill for either of those options and yet here was Mark Jayven who had both given to him but who has now decided that he doesn't want any part of it. What an outrage, right?
While a lot of very solid points have been made by the pro-Ateneo side of the metaphorical fence, given all that we know and all that has been released to us basketball junkies, I have to say that you have to respect the decision made by the Tallos. Perhaps it was not the best one, but it's still a good choice because it was made with Mark Jayven's basketball future in mind. Yes, he shouldn't have left Loyola the way he did. He shouldn't have burned the bridge. We don't know if there were any ulterior motives involved in this saga, but what it ultimately boils down to is that Mark Jayven skipped town MAINLY because he did not get the playing time he WANTED (we don't know for sure if he was PROMISED PT but the point is, he wanted to play). That reason should be good enough. He's a baller, he was born to shoot hoops. To be denied that chance after committing to a school he thought shared his vision of playing on the brightest stage should be frustrating. It may have been a rash decision, but Ateneo should've seen it coming. Knowing it wouldn't be able to accomodate Mark Jayven's talent, the team brass shouldn't have pursued him in the first place.
Ateneo is to today's UAAP what UV used to be in the CESAFI/CAAA in that they would hoard all the best crop of talent year in and year out even if they knew they couldn't possibly give all of them the same exposure and shine. They're practically an All-Star team of Juniors phenoms, most of the guys on the team were highly-touted recruits coming out of HS. Ateneo can afford to reel in all those big fish because today's kids and their parents are smart, they know what an Ateneo degree (and more importantly, an Ateneo connection or network) can do for their boys once they hang their sneakers. That's not to mention all the perks that come with being a Blue Eagle: instant fame on that campus on a hill in Katipunan, training in the US, allowances, the budget for Nike/adidas apparel, the girls! (Jobe Nkemakolam should know) etc.
What Mark Jayven's decision has done (aside from inspiring the wrath of Ateneans among other things) is that it has set a precedent to future prospects that Loyola isn't the only choice out there. If you insist on going to Katipunan for fine education, go a little further to Diliman and play for State U. And ultimately, what it will do is level the playing field. Talent won't stockpile in one place only to rot, and the UAAP will be more competitive than ever. Everybody wins.
If he waited until Norman Black decides that he's ready, it might already be too late. I for one don't totally buy Coach Norman's excuse of "not being ready". I am close friends with Oping Sumalinog from way back in elementary. He made the team as a freshman as well, just like Mark Jayven. We had a conversation back in 2008, his sophomore year, when Ryan Buenafe and Nico Salva first came into the program. Oping said that in practice, he would outplay both freshmen and yet those two guys still got the coach's nod over him. Yes, Buenafe and Salva are great players but I have full faith in Oping's skills too and I believe that he was telling the truth about outplaying them. He said he even thought of moving back to Team Glory B so he wouldn't waste his playing years. He has been a soldier, and yet up to now he still hasn't gotten the heavy minutes. Of course, Oping also likes it in Loyola and perhaps that's why he never thought of bolting out of the school but you can't say that Mark Jayven should share Oping's mentality. They're different players in different circumstances. Oping isn't the only one too, I think someone mentioned somewhere along this thread about Estoesta and Nin Ramz where Nino went home to USC while Estoesta got to "play" only one year in Team A, nailed to the end of the bench in what was considered a "dark age" for Ateneo basketball.
Sure, laugh at Mark Jayven, call him crazy for refusing an Ateneo education. But you have to give him props for showing he has balls and that he isn't intimidated by the glamour of playing for Ateneo. All he wants is to play ball, don't hate him for that.
I agree that it seems the Tallos have a basketball career as an important step. In that case they should have looked at the precedents in the Ateneo program. No rookie except LA Tenorio was given the green light from the get-go.
The Tallos should have enrolled in a school with a lousy record and program so that they could get their suprstar exposure and playing time. However they chose to make use/take advantage of Ateneo's resources for a substantial period, then bail-out on them without giving the actual Season a chance to start. Yes he would have lost a year after if he transferred but that is a risk similar to just bailing on the program that could have given him the exposure and pipeline he needs.
The Ateneo UAAP games rate higher than regular season PBA games and the major Ateneo benefactor will own 3 teams in the PBA. 90% of Ateneans that have applied for the PBA draft in the past 4-5 years have been drafted.
The Tallos are gambling the long-term for the short-term. I hope it pays off.