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Philippine Collegiate Championship

Philippine Collegiate Champions League
SportBasketball
Founded2002
No. of teams8 (Finals)
~250 (Qualifying)
Country Philippines
Most recent
champion(s)
Ateneo Blue Eagles (5)
Most titlesAteneo (5)
TV partner(s)none (via livestreaming through PCCL's Facebook and YouTube accounts)
Related
competitions
CESAFI, ISAA, ISSA, NAASCU, NCAA, NCAA South, NCRAA, NOPSSCEA, PRISAA, SCUAA, UAAP, UCAA, UCLAA, BBEAL, BBL, COSAA, DPSAA, DCIBL, LUSCAA, QPSBA
Official websiteCollegiateChampionsLeague.net

The Philippine Collegiate Champions League (PCCL) is a national collegiate basketball championship league in the Philippines. Its tournament, known as the "National Collegiate Championship" (NCC) is sanctioned by the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas, the country's national basketball federation. The league's format varies every season with 250 teams coming from nine different regional areas nationwide.[1]

History

It was originally established in 2002 as the Collegiate Champions League (CCL). Reynaldo Gamboa, former Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) chairman and team governor for the Shell Turbo Chargers was named as the chairman of the tournament, while former national coach Joe Lipa served as the tournament director and commissioner. In 2008, the national governing body of basketball in the Philippines, the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas (SBP) sanctioned the CCL and was renamed into the Philippine Collegiate Champions League in which the organizers of the old CCL were retained.

Teams from the UAAP had dominated the tournament, winning ten (10) out of the twelve (12) championships contested, with the remainder being won by teams from the NCAA. UAAP and NCAA teams are given four, and the CESAFI one, outright slots in the round of 16 berths. No UAAP champion vs. NCAA champion meeting took place in the finals, although a finals between the UAAP champion and the NCAA runner-up was contested in 2003 (FEU vs. San Sebastian), 2011 (Ateneo vs. San Sebastian)and 2019 (Ateneo vs. San Beda), UAAP and CESAFI champions contested the finals in 2018, and both finalists in the UAAP contested the 2008 and 2012 championship while NCAA finalists would later contested in 2018.

In 2002, 2003, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013 and 2014, the Finals were played in a best-of-3 series; the others were one-off games (2004-2008); no third-place game was held on the first two tournaments. The contest was not held in 2005. In 2011, the single round robin Final Four match-up was introduced with the team with the most wins will have a twice-to-beat incentive in the Finals. However, in 2012, it was changed to whichever team to first get two (2) wins will automatically advanced to the Finals with the Finals without any incentives and with the Finals being played in a best-of-three series.

Due to time constraints, the championship of the 2015 tournament was cancelled. Instead, the winners of the semifinal round were declared as co-champions.

There was no tournament held in 2016 due to the changes adopted in the UAAP calendar.

The national championship returned in 2017 and adopted an elite-eight tournament format. The top two teams from UAAP and NCAA, together with the CESAFI champion were seeded automatically. The three remaining slots were given to the champions of the Luzon, NCR and Mindanao regional tournaments.

In 2018, changes in the tournament format were made to give provincial teams a fair chance to be in the championship round. The champions of UAAP and NCAA were placed in a separate group while the rest of the qualified teams, including the CESAFI champion will be placed in a separate tournament group that will first determine the champions for North Luzon, South Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. The eventual winner of this group will face-off with the winner of the UAAP/NCAA group to determine the national champion.

From 2017 to 2018, the PCCL held its 3x3 basketball tournament, in parallel to its regular national championship. The PCCL's version of its 3x3 tournament has similar rules with the BIG3 tournament. Regional 3x3 tournaments were held in North and South Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. In 2018, the official FIBA 3x3 rules were followed.

Tournament results

5-on-5

Per tournament

Season Finals Third-place game Most Valuable Player
Champion Scores Runners-up Third place Scores Fourth place
2003 UE Red Warriors (UAAP) 82–58
57–55
FEU Tamaraws (UAAP) UST Growling Tigers (UAAP) No third place game Not awarded
2004 FEU Tamaraws (UAAP) 81–77
89–81
San Sebastian Stags (NCAA) Ateneo Blue Eagles (UAAP)
St. Francis Doves (NCRAA/UCAA)
2005 FEU Tamaraws (UAAP) 69–49 UE Red Warriors (UAAP) UV Green Lancers (CESAFI) 65–64 PCU Dolphins (NCAA)
2006 UE Red Warriors (UAAP) 66–59 San Beda Red Lions (NCAA) JRU Heavy Bombers (NCAA) 76–72[2] Mapúa Cardinals (NCAA)
2007 Ateneo Blue Eagles (UAAP) 71–54 UV Green Lancers (CESAFI) STI Olympians (NAASCU) 87–81 (OT) UST Growling Tigers (UAAP)
2008 De La Salle Green Archers (UAAP) 71–62 Ateneo Blue Eagles (UAAP) Letran Knights (NCAA) 75–67 San Beda Red Lions (NCAA) JVee Casio (La Salle)
2009 Ateneo Blue Eagles (UAAP) 70–75
90–63
74–70
FEU Tamaraws (UAAP) San Beda Red Lions (NCAA) 91–85 San Sebastian Stags (NCAA) Jai Reyes (Ateneo)
2010 Ateneo Blue Eagles (UAAP) 78–80
70–59
73–67
Adamson Soaring Falcons (UAAP) De La Salle Green Archers (UAAP) 82–71 UC Webmasters (CESAFI) Nico Salva (Ateneo)
2011 San Sebastian Stags (NCAA) 51–56
73–67
Ateneo Blue Eagles (UAAP) San Beda Red Lions (NCAA) 82–69 UC Webmasters (CESAFI) Ian Sangalang (San Sebastian)
2012 UST Growling Tigers (UAAP) 82–76
69–70
81–76
Ateneo Blue Eagles (UAAP) San Beda Red Lions (NCAA) 64–56 SWU Cobras (CESAFI) Jeric Teng (UST)
2013 De La Salle Green Archers (UAAP) 64–54
70–61
SWU Cobras (CESAFI) FEU Tamaraws (UAAP) [a] San Beda Red Lions (NCAA) Jeron Teng (La Salle)
2014 San Beda Red Lions (NCAA) 88–81
73–66
De La Salle Green Archers (UAAP) UV Green Lancers (CESAFI) 63–60 USC Warriors (CESAFI) Ola Adeogun (San Beda)
2015 San Beda Red Lions (NCAA)
FEU Tamaraws (UAAP)
Co-champions[b] Letran Knights (NCAA)
USC Warriors (CESAFI)
Joint runners-up[b] Ken Holmqvist (FEU)
2016 No tournament held No tournament held No tournament held
2017 Lyceum Pirates (NCAA) 70–66 San Beda Red Lions (NCAA) No third placer Jaycee Marcelino (Lyceum)
2018 Ateneo Blue Eagles (UAAP) 95–71 UV Green Lancers (CESAFI) Isaac Go (Ateneo)
2019 Ateneo Blue Eagles (UAAP) 57–46 San Beda Red Lions (NCAA) UV Green Lancers (CESAFI) 93–63 UP Fighting Maroons (UAAP) SJ Belangel (Ateneo)
2020 Canceled Canceled none
2021 No tournament held No tournament held No tournament held
2022 No tournament held No tournament held No tournament held
Notes
  1. ^ No third place game in 2013. FEU was declared as the second runner-up over SBC due to the win-over-the-other rule.
  2. ^ a b In 2015, it was announced that two winners of the semifinals matches will be the co-champions of the tournament. The supposed finals title match was cancelled due to Typhoon Nona. Both FEU and San Beda are co-champions for this tournament.[3][4][5]

Medal table

RankTeamGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1Ateneo school colors Ateneo Blue Eagles5319
2FEU school colors FEU Tamaraws3216
3San Beda school colors San Beda Red Lions2338
4La Salle school colors De La Salle Green Archers2114
5UE school colors UE Red Warriors2103
6SSC-R school colors San Sebastian Stags1102
7UST school colors UST Growling Tigers1012
8Lyceum school colors Lyceum Pirates1001
9UV school colors UV Green Lancers0235
10Adamson school colors Adamson Soaring Falcons0101
SWU school colors SWU Cobras0101
12Letran school colors Letran Knights0022
13JRU school colors JRU Heavy Bombers0011
STI school colors STI Olympians0011
Saint Francis school colors Saint Francis Doves0011
USC school colors USC Warriors0011
Totals (16 entries)17151648

Per league

Regional champions

Year Luzon VisMin/Southern Islands
2010 Letran Knights

Lyceum Pirates

NU Bulldogs

UE Red Warriors

USC Warriors

UI Wildcats

2011 San Sebastian Stags UC Webmasters
2013 FEU Tamaraws SWU Cobras
2014 De La Salle Green Archers UV Green Lancers
Year North/Central Luzon NCR South Luzon/Bicol Visayas Mindanao
2011 U-Pang Flames De La Salle Green Archers

NU Bulldogs

UB Brahmans AMA Ormoc Titans STI-CDO Olympians
2017 LNU Dukes San Sebastian Stags NCF Tigers n/a HTC GenSan Wildcats
2018 DHVTSU Wildcats Letran Knights NCF Tigers CSAV Titans HTC GenSan Wildcats
2019 DHVTSU Wildcats Diliman Blue Dragons Annunciation Panthers AC Lightnings HTC GenSan Wildcats

3x3

Year Champion Score Runner-up Third place
2017 Arellano
(NCAA)
42–24 Fatima (NAASCU) UV (CESAFI)
2018 Holy Child College of Davao 2–0
(best-of-three)
La Finns Scholastica UNC

Results from 2004 to 2007

2004–05 CCL

The third season of the CCL began on February 11, 2005, with Philippine Basketball League's Chino Trinidad as the Commissioner.

Participating teams

Seeded at Team League Notes Eliminated at
Semifinals Philippine Christian University Dolphins NCAA NCAA champion Semifinals (Eliminated by UE)
Quarterfinals Far Eastern University Tamaraws UAAP UAAP champion [6] Champions (Finals vs. UE)
Quarterfinals University of the Visayas Green Lancers CESAFI CESAFI champion Semifinals (Eliminated by FEU)
Quarterfinals University of Perpetual Help Rizal Altas NCAA NCAA runner-up Quarterfinals (Eliminated by UE)
Third Round Ateneo de Manila University Blue Eagles UAAP UAAP 3rd place Third Round (Eliminated by UP)
Second Round Colegio de San Juan de Letran Knights NCAA NCAA 3rd place Second Round (Eliminated by UP)
Second Round University of the East Red Warriors UAAP UAAP 4th place Finals (Defeated by FEU)
Second Round University of San Jose - Recoletos Jaguars CESAFI CESAFI runner-up Second Round (Eliminated by UC)
Unseeded University of the Philippines Fighting Maroons[7] UAAP UAAP 5th place Quarterfinals (Eliminated by FEU)
Unseeded University of Southern Philippines Panthers CESAFI CESAFI 3rd place First Round (Eliminated by UMindanao)
Unseeded West Negros College Mustangs NOPSSCEA NOPSSCEA champion First Round (Eliminated by UC)
Unseeded San Beda College Red Lions NCAA NCAA 4th place Second Round (Eliminated by UE) Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Philippine_Collegiate_Championship
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Zdroj: Wikipedia.org - čítajte viac o Philippine Collegiate Championship





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