List of defunct Philippine Basketball Association teams
This is a list of defunct Philippine Basketball Association teams, both regular and guest.
Defunct franchises
* | Denotes team that won a championship |
Team | Company | Principal owner | Years active | Seasons played | Overall win-loss record | Win % | Championships | Acquired by |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
7-Up (Syjuco group) | Seven-Up Bottling Company of the Philippines | 1975-1977 | 2 | 25–74 | .252 | 0 | Filmanbank | |
Shopinas.com/Air21 | Airfreight 2100, Inc. | Alberto Lina | 2011-2014 | 3 | 0 | NLEX* | ||
Fedex/Air21/Burger King/Barako Bull Energy | Linaheim Group of Companies | Alberto Lina | 2002-2015 | 14 | 0 | Phoenix Petroleum* | ||
Red Bull/Barako Bull | Photokina Marketing Corporation | Tony Chua | 2000-2011 | 10 | 3 | Shopinas.com/Air21 | ||
Carrier/Quasar/Fiberlite | Concepcion Industries, Inc. | José N. Concepcion Sr. | 1975-1976 | 2 | 26–44 | .371 | 0 | none |
Galleon Shipping/CDCP | Galleon Shipping Corporation/ Construction and Development Corporation of the Philippines | Rodolfo Cuenca | 1980-1981 | 2 | 0 | none | ||
Crispa | P. Floro and Sons, Inc. | Pablo B. Floro | 1975-1984 | 10 | 403–186 | .684 | 13 | Shell |
Presto/N-Rich/Great Taste/Tivoli | CFC Corporation | John Gokongwei Jr. Ignacio Gotao | 1975-1992 | 18 | 6 | Sta. Lucia | ||
Filmanbank | Filipinas Manufacturers Bank | Ricardo C. Silverio Sr. | 1978-1979 | 2 | 32–57 | .359 | 0 | Galleon Shipping/CDCP |
Manhattan/Sunkist/Winston/Country Fair | Sanyu Group of Companies | 1983-1984 | 2 | 15–48 | .238 | 0 | none | |
Beer Hausen/Manila Beer | Asia Brewery | Lucio Tan | 1984-1986 | 3 | 0 | none | ||
Mariwasa Noritake/Mariwasa Honda/Finance Inc./Galerie Dominique | Mariwasa/ Galerie Dominique | Emerson CoSeteng/ Nikki CoSeteng | 1975-1983 | 9 | 117–217 | .350 | 0 | none |
Pop Cola/Sarsi/Swift/Sunkist | RFM Corporation | José Ma. A. Concepcion III | 1990-2001 | 12 | 4 | Coca-Cola/Powerade | ||
Coca-Cola/Powerade | Coca-Cola Bottlers Philippines, Inc. | 2002-2012 | 11 | 2 | GlobalPort* | |||
Shell | Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation | 1985-2005 | 21 | 4 | Welcoat/Rain or Shine* | |||
Sta. Lucia | Sta. Lucia Realty & Development Corporation | Exequiel Robles | 1993-2011 | 19 | 2 | Meralco* | ||
Tanduay/Yco-Tanduay (Elizalde group) | Elizalde and Company, Inc. | Manolo Elizalde | 1975-1987 | 13 | 3 | Purefoods* | ||
Tanduay (Tan group) | Tanduay Distillers, Inc. | Lucio Tan | 1999-2001 | 3 | 0 | FedEx/Air21/Burger King/Barako Bull Energy | ||
Tefilin | Filipinas Synthetic Fiber Corporation | Patricio L. Lim | 1980-1981 | 2 | 32–28 | .533 | 0 | none |
Toyota | Delta Motor Corporation | Ricardo C. Silverio Sr. | 1975-1983 | 9 | 338–178 | .655 | 9 | Beer Hausen/Manila Beer |
U/Tex | Universal Textile Mills, Inc. | Patricio L. Lim Walter Euyang Sr. | 1975-1982 | 8 | 210–187 | .529 | 2 | Manhattan/Sunkist/Winston/Country Fair |
*Acquiring team still active
Genealogies
These are the franchise lineage of present PBA teams (present to oldest):
- Hills Bros./Alaska
- Blackwater
- Kia/Mahindra/Columbian
- Gilbey's Gin/St. George Whisky/Añejo Rhum/Gordon's Gin/Ginebra San Miguel
- Purefoods/B-Meg/San Mig Coffee/Star/Magnolia Chicken → Tanduay (1987)
- Meralco → Sta. Lucia → Great Taste/Presto
- NLEX → Shopinas.com/Air21 → Red Bull/Barako Bull (2000)
- GlobalPort/NorthPort → Coca-Cola/Powerade → Pop Cola/Diet Sarsi/Swift/Sunkist
- Rain or Shine → Shell → Crispa
- Phoenix Pulse → FedEx/Air21/Burger King/Barako Bull Energy → Tanduay (1999)
- Royal Tru-Orange/Gold Eagle Beer/Magnolia/Petron Blaze/San Miguel Beer
- Pepsi/7-Up/Mobiline/Talk 'N Text/TNT
These are the franchise lineage of defunct PBA teams (oldest to latest):
- Carrier/Quasar/Fiberlite
- 7-Up (1975) → Filmanbank → Galleon/CDCP
- Mariwasa Noritake/Mariwasa Honda/Finance Inc./Galerie Dominique
- U/Tex → Manhattan/Sunkist/Winston/Country Fair
- Toyota → Manila Beer/Beer Hausen
- Tefilin
All records of a franchise ceases after it is acquired by a new company, except for:
- The Pepsi/7-Up/Mobiline/Talk 'N Text/TNT franchise: Before the start of the 1996 season, Frederick Dael took over as the new president of Pepsi Cola Products Philippines, Inc. (PCPPI). As such, a change in marketing priority took effect and PCPPI was considering to disband its PBA team. To prevent the disbandment, Luis Lorenzo Sr., chairman of PCPPI, intended to sell the franchise to Duty Free Philippines for one peso (P1) to retain its franchise. Should Duty Free disband the PBA franchise, it would be returned to PCPPI.[1] The sale was rejected by the Board of Governors on a special meeting on January 5, 1996, since Duty Free was not majority-owned by Lorenzo.[2] After the All-Filipino Cup, PBA Board of Governors approved the transfer of the franchise from PCPPI to Lapanday Holdings Corporation, a holding company of Lorenzo. This would enable Lorenzo to use a different brand for his PBA team. In May 1996, Pagemark Philippines, Inc., a company under Lapanday Holdings, and Pilipino Telephone Corporation (Piltel) were tasked to find a new name for the team. After negotiations, the team was rechristened as the Mobiline Cellulars.[3] Since Lorenzo still owned the team, the records of the Pepsi team were retained.
- The Tanduay franchise: Originally owned by Elizalde & Company Inc., Tanduay was one of the founding teams of the league. In 1988, the Elizalde group sold the Tanduay business assets to Lucio Tan and its PBA franchise to Pure Foods Corporation (Purefoods) as an expansion team. When Tanduay rejoined the PBA in 1999, the records of the original Tanduay team (1975-1987) were carried over.
Air21 Express and Barako Bull Energy records
A unique situation regarding the Air21 Express' team records occurred before the start of the 2011–12 season when the Lina Group of Companies acquired the Red Bull/Barako Bull PBA franchise from Photokina Marketing Corporation (along with the "Barako Bull" brand). This team was renamed as the Shopinas.com Clickers. At the same time, the Fedex/Air21/Burger King franchise was renamed "Barako Bull Energy". After the dismal performance of Shopinas.com during the Philippine Cup, the Lina Group decided to rename the team as Air21 Express.
After the two franchises switched names in 2012, the Shopinas.com/Air21 team was now considered as a new team. The team records and transaction history of its predecessor, FedEx/Air21/Burger King, were transferred to the new Barako Bull team. The lineage, team records and championships of the Red Bull/Barako Bull team were not carried over to either of the two franchises, except for the transaction history involving trades which were carried over to the Shopinas.com/Air21 team, following several precedents (the franchise acquisitions between Shell-Welcoat, Sta. Lucia-Meralco and Powerade-GlobalPort).
To create a distinction between the two Air21 franchises, the original is abbreviated as "AIR21" and the second one as "AIR21X" in the official PBA annual, Hardcourt. In some instances, the team records of the original Air21 franchise is "shared" with the second Air21 franchise. An example would be during the jersey retirement of Vergel Meneses - although he played for the original Air21 franchise, his jersey was retired by the second Air21 franchise.
Guest teams
UBC Thunderbirds (2004 PBA Fiesta Conference) U.S. Mail and More Pro-Am Selection (2004 PBA Fiesta Conference) Yonsei University (2003 Invitational) Magnolia-Jilin Tigers (2003 Invitational) Novi Sad Amateur Selection (2003 Invitational) Northern Consolidated Cement (1985 PBA Reinforced Conference champions) Philippine national basketball team (on various occasions from 1984 to 2003) Emtex (1977) Ramrod (1977) Nicholas Stoodley (1980 PBA Invitational champions) Adidas (1980) South Korea (1982) Smart Gilas national basketball team (2009-10 and 2010-11)
Graphical timeline
Key: Red = founding franchises; Yellow = 1970s; Blue = 1980s; Orange = 1990s; Green = 2000s; Purple = 2010s
References
- Asensi, Francis (January 5, 1996). "Mega Bottlers for sale". Sports Weekly Magazine.
- Asensi, Francis (January 19, 1996). "Change of heart by the Bottlers". Sports Weekly Magazine.
- "Pepsi signs off". Sports Weekly Magazine. May 10, 1996.