Battle of the East
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2023) |
FEU–UE Rivalry | ||
---|---|---|
Last Meeting | November 5, 2023 (87-86 (OT), UE) | |
Next Meeting | TBA | |
Current Streak | 2 (UE) | |
History | ||
Pennant Era | tied 2-2 | |
1960 UAAP Finals | UE won, 87-86 | |
1961 UAAP Finals | FEU won, 105-84 | |
1975 UAAP Finals | UE won, 85-80 | |
1976 UAAP Finals | FEU won, 91-82 | |
UAAP Final Four | 4-1 (FEU) | |
1998 UAAP Basketball Semifinals | FEU won, 68-81, 83-61 | |
2003 UAAP Basketball Semifinals | FEU won, 67-63 | |
2004 UAAP Basketball Semifinals | FEU won, 71-64 | |
2005 UAAP Basketball Semifinals | FEU won, 78-57 | |
2009 UAAP Basketball Semifinals | UE won, 84-74, 72-78 | |
Philippine Collegiate Championship | Series tied 1-1 | |
2002 PCC Championship | UE won, 2-0 | |
2004 PCC Championship | FEU won, 1-0 | |
Men's Basketball Records | ||
UAAP Final Four Appearances
UAAP Championships
Final Four format first introduced in 1993 |
The "Battle of the East" is a college basketball rivalry between the University of the East Red Warriors and Far Eastern University Tamaraws. Others would refer to it as the Battle of Morayta, because of the street that runs between these universities. They have a combined 38 UAAP Basketball titles.
History
[edit]FEU left the National Collegiate Athletic Association in 1936 and later on to form the University Athletic Association of the Philippines along with University of Santo Tomas, National University and the University of the Philippines in 1938. UE was part of the first UAAP expansion with Adamson University in 1952. It did not take long for the Warriors to dominate since joining the league as it holds the longest finals appearance with 16 from 1957 to 1972, including a seven straight title run from 1965 to 1971(1967 title to be shared with UST),[1] with FEU winning the title in 1961 and 1972.[2]
Notable Games
[edit]1960 UAAP Finals
[edit]UE stormed back from 81-75 with three minutes left to play at the half to complete an upset, 87-86 taking the El Oro trophy home in front of a crowded Rizal Memorial Coliseum. A run started with Norman de Vera's two free throws after being fouled by Rohimust Santos to cut the lead, while sophomore Rizaldo Pabillore came up with two interceptions all within the last three minutes of the second half to earn their third title.
1961 UAAP Second Round Eliminations
[edit]UE subdued FEU, 78-74 in the second round of the UAAP basketball series at the Rizal Memorial Coliseum. But the jam-packed crowd of 9,000 (over maximum capacity of the coliseum) got an unexpected show after the final buzzer when cagers from both teams engaged in an impromptu brawl on the floor. The fight was triggered off by a last-second scuffle for the ball between Tamaraw Romy Diaz and Warrior Carlos Quitzon. Quitzon had the ball and was being harassed by Diaz when the buzzer sounded and hell broke loose. Searing blast by lanky Jimmy Mariano and clutch baskets by Jose Sison and Wenceslao Olaguera at the homestretch saved the Warriors after they were behind by six points. Mariano scored twice on a twisting shot to regain the lead for UE, 63-60, with five minutes left in the game. The two schools met again in the finals with FEU winning the championship.
1981 UAAP Finals
[edit]With the game on the line, University of the East rookie Allan Caidic, with the chance of beating the rival FEU to win the championship, missed both free throws and let the Tamaraws led by Glenn Capacio steal the 1981 title. Caidic, with the rest of UE squad, won the championship the following year after beating the University of the Philippines.
2009 UAAP Semifinals
[edit]Holding a twice to beat advantage, the second-seeded Tamaraws fell short during the Game 1 of the series, 74-84, without their sophomore guard Mark Barroca, who was accused of game-fixing prior to his performance on the team's last stretch of the elimination. Going on to the second game of the series, a much favored FEU, despite a 49-39 lead at the half, once again took the beating as Paul Lee and the Warriors pulled an upset and entered the finals with the score of 72-78 to face Ateneo.
Game Results
[edit]Final Four Era
[edit]FEU victories | UE victories |
- Notes
- ^ 2nd seed-playoff.
- ^ Semifinals. FEU won in the finals vs. Ateneo.
- ^ Semifinals. FEU lost in the finals vs. La Salle, however, all of La Salle's games were forfeited from Seasons 66 to 68. The UAAP Board subsequently awarded the trophy to FEU in 2006.
- ^ Semifinals. FEU won in the finals vs. La Salle.
- ^ Semifinals. UE forced a rubber match.
- ^ Semifinals. UE lost in the finals vs. Ateneo.
Offseason meetings
[edit]FEU victories | UE victories |
|
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "UE Red Warriors".
- ^ "FEU Tamaraws".
- ^ Anzures, Rom (September 18, 2024). "UAAP: Ethan Galang catches fire in the clutch as UE gets first win at FEU's expense". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved September 19, 2024.
- ^ Agcaoli, Lance (September 18, 2024). "UAAP: UE rallies past FEU behind Ethan Galang's heroics". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved September 19, 2024.
- ^ Isaga, JR (November 3, 2024). "UE woes continue with slow start as all-heart FEU keeps Final Four hopes alive". Rappler. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
- ^ "NU pulls off upset against UP; FEU remains in Final Four hunt with win vs UE". GMA Integrated News. November 3, 2024. Retrieved November 5, 2024.