NCAA Season 94 basketball tournaments
The NCAA Season 94 basketball tournaments are the 94th basketball season of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (Philippines) (NCAA). The University of Perpetual Help System DALTA are the season hosts. Separate seniors' and juniors' tournaments are held for male college and high school students, respectively.
Host school | ||||||||||||||||
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Duration | November 6–12, 2018 | |||||||||||||||
Arena(s) | Mall of Asia Arena | |||||||||||||||
Finals MVP | Javee Mocon | |||||||||||||||
Winning coach | Boyet Fernandez | |||||||||||||||
Semifinalists | ||||||||||||||||
TV network(s) | ABS-CBN Sports and Action (Channel 23 & ABS-CBN S+A HD Channel 166) Liga (Channel 86 & Liga HD Channel 186) | |||||||||||||||
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Duration | November 6–15, 2018 | |||||||||||||||
Arena(s) | Mall of Asia Arena | |||||||||||||||
Finals MVP | Paolo Hernandez | |||||||||||||||
Winning coach | Randy Alcantara | |||||||||||||||
Semifinalists | ||||||||||||||||
Format
- In the seniors and juniors' tournament, ten (10) teams will play in a double round-robin classification.
- Once teams are tied, tie-breaker games shall be held for the top four seeds, if necessary.
- The scenarios after the elimination round ends are the following below:
- If no team sweeps the elimination round, the regular playoffs (Final Four) shall be used.
- If a team successfully sweep the elimination round, that team will gain an automatic bye to the finals and the stepladder playoffs shall be used.
- In the semifinals, the first and second seed shall earn a twice-to-beat bonus against their respective opponents. These teams shall only need to win once to advance to the finals; while the third and fourth seed teams will need to win twice to advance to the finals.
- In the stepladder semifinals, the third and fourth seed will play to determine which among them will face the second seed, The winner of the game against the second seed will meet the first seed in the finals.
- The finals is a best-of-three championship series.
Tie-breaker classification rules |
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Teams
College | High school | Seniors' team | Seniors' coach | Juniors' team | Juniors' coach |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arellano University | Chiefs | Junjie Ablan | Braves | Tylon Darjuan | |
Colegio de San Juan de Letran | Knights | Jeff Napa | Squires | Raymund Valenzona | |
De La Salle-College of Saint Benilde | La Salle Green Hills | Blazers | Ty Tang | Greenies | Marvin Bienvenida |
Emilio Aguinaldo College | Immaculate Concepcion Academy | Generals | Ariel Sison | Brigadiers | Azlie Guro |
Jose Rizal University | Heavy Bombers | Vergel Meneses | Light Bombers | Vic Lazaro | |
Lyceum of the Philippines University | Lyceum of the Philippines University-Cavite | Pirates | Topex Robinson | Junior Pirates | LA Mumar |
Mapua University | Malayan High School of Science | Cardinals | Atoy Co | Red Robins | Randy Alcantara |
San Beda University | San Beda University Rizal | Red Lions | Boyet Fernandez | Red Cubs | JB Sison |
San Sebastian College-Recoletos | Golden Stags | Egay Macaraya | Staglets | Mel Banua | |
University of Perpetual Help System DALTA | Altas | Frankie Lim | Altalettes | Michael Saguiguit |
Coaching changes
Team | Outgoing coach | Manner of departure | Date | Replaced by | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Perpetual Altas | Nosa Omorogbe | On indefinite leave | September 2017[1] | Frankie Lim | January 17, 2018[2] |
Arellano Chiefs | Jerry Codiñera[3] | Resignation | September 20, 2018 | Junjie Ablan | September 20, 2018 |
Venues
Like most Metro Manila-centric leagues, most games are held in arenas rented by the league, with games serving as neutral venues. In an innovation dubbed as "NCAA on Tour", starting in the previous season, the NCAA will continue holding Thursday games hosted at the campus of one of the teams that are playing on that day.[4]
Main venues
Arena | City |
---|---|
Mall of Asia Arena | Pasay |
Filoil Flying V Centre | San Juan |
NCAA on Tour venues
Arena | Host team | City |
---|---|---|
Jose Rizal University Gym | JRU Heavy Bombers | Mandaluyong |
Arellano University Gym | Arellano Chiefs | Manila |
Emilio Aguinaldo College Gym | EAC Generals | Manila |
Colegio de San Juan de Letran Gym | Letran Knights | Manila |
University of Perpetual Help System DALTA Gym | Perpetual Altas | Las Piñas |
Squads
Each NCAA team can have up to 15 players on their roster. At least two is allowed to be a foreigner, but only one is allowed to be on court. A team is allowed to have three additional players in the reserve list. The opening day rosters were released on July 1.[5]
Imports
The following are the imports, or non-Filipinos included in the opening day rosters:[6]
Team | Import | Country |
---|---|---|
Elie Ongolo Ongolo | ||
Clement Leutcheu | ||
Hamadou Laminou | ||
Mike Harry Nzeusseu | ||
Donald Tankoua | ||
Eugene Toba | ||
Prince Eze |
Letran, JRU, Mapua and San Sebastian chose not to have imports for this season. Only two teams have won championships with no imports in its roster since 2006 (Letran 2015 and San Sebastian 2009). San Beda 2011 had an import in the lineup but did not play the entire season.
Seniors' tournament
Elimination round
Team standings
Pos | Team | W | L | PCT | GB | Qualification |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 17 | 1 | .944 | — | Twice-to-beat in the semifinals | |
2 | 15 | 3 | .833 | 2 | ||
3 | 13 | 5 | .722 | 4 | Twice-to-win in the semifinals | |
4 | 11 | 7 | .611 | 6 | ||
5 | 10 | 8 | .556 | 7 | ||
6 | 6 | 12 | .333[lower-alpha 2] | 11 | ||
7 | 6 | 12 | .333[lower-alpha 2] | 11 | ||
8 | 5 | 13 | .278 | 12 | ||
9 | 4 | 14 | .222 | 13 | ||
10 | 3 | 15 | .167 | 14 |
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) if tied for #2 or #4, one-game playoff; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head point differential; 5) overall point differential
(H) Host.
Notes:
- San Sebastian forfeited two wins due to an ineligible player, RK Ilagan, participating in those games. Ylagan was found to have found playing in a ligang labas game after the rosters were approved.[7]
- Head-to-head: San Sebastian 2–0 Mapua
Results
Results on top and to the right of the dashes are for first-round games; those to the bottom and to the left of it are second-round games.
Schedule
= Win; = OT win; = Win by forfeit; = Loss; = OT loss; = Loss by forfeit
Bracket
Semifinals #1 & #2 have twice-to-beat advantage |
Finals Best-of-three series | ||||||||||
1 | |
83 | |||||||||
4 | |
72 | |||||||||
1 | |
73 | 71 | ||||||||
2 | |
60 | 56 | ||||||||
2 | |
109 | |||||||||
3 | |
85 |
Semifinals
San Beda and Lyceum have the twice-to-beat advantage; they only need to win once, while their opponents twice, to advance to the finals. San Beda is in its 13th consecutive playoffs appearance (skipping the semifinals in 2010 after winning all elimination round games), Lyceum is in its first semifinals appearance (having advanced to the Finals outright last year). Letran is returning to the semifinals after a 2-year absence, while Perpetual returns after its last appearance in 2016.
San Beda vs. Perpetual
San Beda has the twice-to-beat advantage. San Beda has won all but one of its semifinals match-ups with Perpetual since the Final Four era, with Perpetual winning in 2004, but losing in 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2016.
Prior to the game, Perpetual's wins, and its playoffs appearance, were in danger of being forfeited as several of its players played in a ligang labas game while serving residency. The league sternly reprimanded the team as it found out that the players represented a school-based team, which is allowed by the league rules.[8]
October 26 4:00 p.m. |
San Beda Red Lions |
83–72 | |
Scoring by quarter: 13–11, 14–13, 26–24, 30–24 | ||
Pts: Robert Bolick 23 Rebs: Donald Tankoua 18 Asts: Robert Bolick 6 |
Pts: Razon, Peralta, 16 each Rebs: Prince Eze 13 Asts: Edgar Charcos 9 | |
San Beda wins series in one game |
San Beda pulled away late in the third quarter with four three-pointers by AC Soberano transformed a 1-point Altas lead to an 11-point lead for the Red Lions early in the fourth quarter. The Red Lions qualified to their 13th consecutive NCAA Finals.[9]
Lyceum vs. Letran
Lyceum has the twice-to-beat advantage. This is the first match-up between Lyceum and Letran in the playoffs.
October 26 1:30 p.m. |
Lyceum Pirates |
109–85 | |
Scoring by quarter: 29–16, 22–29, 30–19, 28–21 | ||
Pts: Mike Harry Nzeusseu 23 Rebs: Mike Harry Nzeusseu 17 Asts: CJ Perez 3 |
Pts: Larry Muyang 21 Rebs: Larry Muyang 12 Asts: Bong Quinto 7 | |
Lyceum wins series in one game |
Lyceum pulled away in the middle of the third quarter after Letran's JP Calvo injured his right ankle after contesting a loose ball with Mike Nzeusseu. Lyceum had a 15–0 run after Calvo's injury and led by as much 37 points.[10]
Finals
This will be the second consecutive meeting between San Beda and Lyceum in the Finals. The Red Lions defeated the Pirates in 2017, winning all 2 games in the championship series.
November 6 4:00 p.m. |
San Beda Red Lions |
73–60 | |
Scoring by quarter: 19–9, 24–13, 16–17, 14–21 | ||
Pts: Javee Mocon 14 Rebs: Donald Tankoua 16 Asts: Robert Bolick 9 |
Pts: Mike Harry Nzeusseu 16 Rebs: Mike Harry Nzeusseu 14 Asts: Mj Ayaay 4 |
November 12 4:00 p.m. |
San Beda Red Lions |
71–56 | |
Scoring by quarter: 23–15, 16–18, 10–11, 22–12 | ||
Pts: Javee Mocon 16 Rebs: Donald Tankoua 16 Asts: Robert Bolick 12 |
Pts: CJ Perez 19 Rebs: Mike Harry Nzeusseu 13 Asts: Perez, Jc. Marcelino, 4 each | |
San Beda wins series 2–0 |
- Finals MVP: Javee Mocon[11]
Prior to Game 1, Lyceum's CJ Perez, last year's Most Valuable Player, was suspended for a game after he applied to the 2018 PBA draft without notifying the Management Committee.[12] Perez is the first person to be suspended after San Beda's Yousif Aljamal in 2007, although the league rescinded the suspension after San Beda sued in court, and threatened to leave the NCAA.[13]
San Beda won Game 1 handily by 13 points. The Red Lions led by 31–11 in the first half and Lyceum only got to reduce the deficit by 10 points late in the fourth quarter.[14]
After the game, Lyceum coach Topex Robinson criticized the league on Perez's suspension. Benilde coaches Ty Tang and Charles Tiu also criticized the league on social media. The Management Committee decided to defer any punishment to the coaches until the Finals are over.[15]
San Beda defeated a full-strength Lyceum squad in Game 2. San Beda went on a 22–12 scoring run on top of a five-point lead before the fourth period to seal their 11th title in 13 seasons, and 22nd overall.[11]
San Beda qualifies to the 2018 PCCL National Collegiate Championship Final Four. Lyceum may participate in the NCR qualifiers as of one of the two NCAA teams.
All-Star Game
The 2018 NCAA All-Star Game is on August 31 at the Filoil Flying V Centre. The actual game was preceded by the side events patterned from the NBA All-Star Weekend.[16][17]
- All-Star Game MVP: Michael Calisaan (Team Saints)[18]
Team Heroes | Team Saints |
---|---|
Skills Challenge
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Three-point Shootout
|
Slam Dunk Contest
|
Shooting Stars
Team | Alumnus player | Seniors' player | Juniors' player |
---|---|---|---|
Jio Jalalon | Kraniel Villoria | Marlon Espiritu | |
Rey Nambatac | Jerrick Balanza | Stacey Tibayan | |
RJ Deles | Jimboy Pasturan | Francis Lopez | |
Bong Melacoton | Maui Cruz | CJ Boado | |
John Wilson | Agem Miranda | John Amores | |
Kevin Lacap | Kim Cinco | John Barba | |
Yong Garcia | Exi Biteng | Clint Escamis | |
Rome dela Rosa* | Calvin Oftana | Penny Estacio | |
Jepoy Quiamco | Ian Valdez | Milo Janao |
*Replaced Jake Pascual
Awards
The end-of-season awards were handed out before Game 2 of the seniors' finals, at the Mall of Asia Arena.[19]
- Most Valuable Player: Prince Eze (University of Perpetual Help System DALTA)
- Rookie of the Year: Larry Muyang (Colegio de San Juan de Letran)
- Mythical Five:
- Prince Eze (University of Perpetual Help System DALTA)
- Bong Quinto (Colegio de San Juan de Letran)
- Robert Bolick (San Beda University)
- Javee Mocon (San Beda University)
- Donald Tankoua (San Beda University)
- Defensive Player of the Year: Prince Eze (University of Perpetual Help System DALTA)
- All-Defensive Team:
- Prince Eze (University of Perpetual Help System DALTA)
- Donald Tankoua (San Beda University)
- Hamadou Laminou (Emilio Aguinaldo College)
- Michael Calisaan (San Sebastian College-Recoletos)
- Mike Nzeusseu (Lyceum of the Philippines University)
- Most Improved Player: Archie Concepcion (Arellano University)
Players of the Week
The NCAA Press Corps awards a player of the week sponsored by Chooks-to-Go.
Week ending | Player | Team |
---|---|---|
July 13[20] | Jaycee Marcelino | |
July 20[21] | JP Calvo | |
July 27[22] | CJ Perez | |
August 3[23] | JP Maguliano | |
August 10[24] | Prince Eze | |
August 17[25] | MJ Ayaay | |
August 24[26] | Robert Bolick Bong Quinto |
|
September 1[27] | Maui Sera Josef | |
September 8[28] | Jerrick Balanza | |
September 15[29] | Donald Tankoua | |
September 22[30] | Prince Eze | |
September 29[31] | Koy Gavelo | |
October 6[32] | Larry Muyang | |
October 13[33] | Javee Mocon | |
October 20[34] | James Canlas | |
October 23[35] | Michael Calisaan |
Statistics
Game player highs
Statistic | Player | Team | Total | Opponent | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Points | 50 | August 24, 2018 | |||
Rebounds | 25 | August 28, 2018 | |||
Assists | 12 | September 6, 2018 September 28, 2018 | |||
Steals | 6 | July 13, 2018 | |||
Blocks | 9 | July 28, 2018 |
Season player highs
Statistic | Player | Team | Average |
---|---|---|---|
Points | 18.7 | ||
Rebounds | 16.5 | ||
Assists | 6.5 | ||
Steals | 3.3 | ||
Blocks | 3.3 |
Game team highs
Statistic | Team | Total | Opponent | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Points | 113 | September 27, 2018 | ||
Rebounds | 67 | August 21, 2018 | ||
Assists | 27 | September 28, 2018 September 27, 2018 | ||
Steals | 17 | August 7, 2018 | ||
Blocks | 14 | July 13, 2018 |
Season team highs
Statistic | Team | Average |
---|---|---|
Points | 86.6 | |
Rebounds | 32.8 | |
Assists | 20.2 | |
Steals | 10.2 | |
Blocks | 5.2 |
Juniors' tournament
Elimination round
Team standings
Pos | Team | W | L | PCT | GB | Qualification |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 16 | 2 | .889 | — | Twice-to-beat in the semifinals | |
2 | 14 | 4 | .778 | 2 | ||
3 | 12 | 6 | .667 | 4 | Twice-to-win in the semifinals | |
4 | 11 | 7 | .611 | 5 | ||
5 | 9 | 9 | .500[lower-alpha 1] | 7 | ||
6 | 9 | 9 | .500[lower-alpha 1] | 7 | ||
7 | 7 | 11 | .389 | 9 | ||
8 | 5 | 13 | .278 | 11 | ||
9 | 4 | 14 | .222 | 12 | ||
10 | 3 | 15 | .167 | 13 |
Rules for classification: 1) winning percentage; 2) if tied for #2 or #4, one-game playoff; 3) head-to-head record; 4) head-to-head point differential; 5) overall point differential
(H) Host.
Notes:
- Head-to-head: Lyceum 1–1 Perpetual, 0 point differential; overall record point differential: Lyceum −8, Perpetual −14
Results
Results on top and to the right of the dashes are for first-round games; those to the bottom and to the left of it are second-round games.
Bracket
Semifinals #1 & #2 have twice-to-beat advantage |
Finals Best-of-three series | ||||||||||
1 | |
78 | 97 | ||||||||
4 | |
81 | 71 | ||||||||
1 | |
74 | 76 | 74 | |||||||
2 | |
69 | 85 | 77 | |||||||
2 | |
71 | 75 | ||||||||
3 | |
84 | 67 |
Semifinals
LSGH and Malayan have the twice-to-beat advantage; they only need to win once, while their opponents twice, to advance to the finals. LSGH is on its second consecutive semifinals appearance, Malayan is in its fourth and San Beda is in its eighth consecutive semifinals appearance. JRU returns to the semifinals after a 1-year absence.
LSGH vs. JRU
This is the first playoffs match-up between LSGH and JRU since the 2008 first round of the stepladder semifinals in which JRU won in overtime.
October 26 10:00 a.m. |
La Salle Greenies |
78–81 | |
Scoring by quarter: 23–26, 15–11, 23–18, 17–26 | ||
Pts: Joel Cagulangan 39 Rebs: 3 players, 8 each Asts: Joshua David 5 |
Pts: Thomas Vasquez 17 Rebs: Marwin Dionisio 17 Asts: 4 players, 3 each |
October 29 8:00 a.m. |
La Salle Greenies |
97–71 | |
Scoring by quarter: 27–21, 24–17, 24–15, 22–18 | ||
Pts: Inand Fornillos 22 Rebs: Inand Fornillos 11 Asts: Joel Cagulangan 12 |
Pts: Marwin Dionisio 22 Rebs: John Amores 10 Asts: John Delos Santos 10 | |
La Salle wins series in two games |
Malayan vs. San Beda
This is the first playoffs match-up between Malayan and San Beda since the 2016 Finals in which Malayan won its first championship under the Malayan name, in three games.
October 26 8:00 a.m. |
Malayan Red Robins |
71–84 | |
Scoring by quarter: 15–26, 19–18, 16–27, 21–13 | ||
Pts: Dan Arches 19 Rebs: Jonnel Policarpio 12 Asts: Dan Arches 7 |
Pts: Jade Talampas 26 Rebs: Sanchez, Lazaro, 13 each Asts: Estacio, Oliva, 5 each |
October 29 10:00 a.m. |
Malayan Red Robins |
75–67 | |
Scoring by quarter: 14–15, 23–17, 17–15, 21–20 | ||
Pts: Paolo Hernandez 27 Rebs: Jonnel Policarpio 13 Asts: Karl Mariano 6 |
Pts: Art Oliva 16 Rebs: Joshua Lazaro 12 Asts: Penny Estacio 5 | |
Malayan wins series in two games |
Finals
This is the second consecutive meeting between LSGH and Malayan in the Finals. In 2017, LSGH won its first-ever NCAA championship after defeating the erstwhile defending champions Malayan.
November 6 2:00 p.m. |
La Salle Greenies |
74–69 | |
Scoring by quarter: 17–18, 25–14, 11–10, 21–27 | ||
Pts: Joel Cagulangan 16 Rebs: Mark Sangco 15 Asts: Joel Cagulangan 4 |
Pts: Paolo Hernandez 20 Rebs: Paolo Hernandez 9 Asts: Karl Mariano 4 |
November 12 1:00 p.m. |
La Salle Greenies |
76–85 | |
Scoring by quarter: 25–20, 14–22, 17–17, 20–26 | ||
Pts: Joel Cagulangan 17 Rebs: Fornillos, Lepalam, 12 each Asts: Cagulangan, Sangco 4 each |
Pts: Dan Arches 22 Rebs: Jonnel Policarpio 14 Asts: Paolo Hernandez 4 |
November 15 2:00 p.m. |
La Salle Greenies |
74–77 | |
Scoring by quarter: 15–18, 19–24, 22–29, 18–6 | ||
Pts: Inand Fornillos 18 Rebs: Mark Sangco 16 Asts: Joshua David 5 |
Pts: Paolo Hernandez 33 Rebs: Paolo Hernandez 12 Asts: Karl Mariano 6 | |
Malayan wins series 2–1 |
- Finals MVP: Paolo Hernandez
Awards
The end-of-season awards were handed out after Game 2 of the juniors' finals at the Mall of Asia Arena.[19]
- Most Valuable Player: Joel Cagulangan (La Salle Green Hills)
- Rookie of the Year: Jonnel Policarpio (Malayan High School of Science)
- Mythical Five:
- Joel Cagulangan (La Salle Green Hills)
- Inand Fornilos (La Salle Green Hills)
- Joshua David (La Salle Green Hills)
- Clint Escamis (Malayan High School of Science)
- Aaron Fermin (Arellano University)
References
- Naredo, Camille B. (2017-11-07). "NCAA: Perpetual Help coach Omorogbe on indefinite leave". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved 2018-07-14.
- "NCAA: Frankie Lim named new Perpetual Help head coach". ABS-CBN News. 2018-01-17. Retrieved 2018-07-14.
- "Jerry Codinera resigns as coach of Arellano Chiefs". Spin.ph. Retrieved 2018-09-21.
- Giongco, Mark (2018-06-19). "San Beda opens NCAA 3-peat bid vs Perpetual Help, old coach". INQUIRER.net.
- "LOOK! Complete NCAA Season 94 men's basketball rosters". ABS-CBN SPORTS.
- "No more N.C.A.A. 'imports' in 2020". BusinessMirror (2018-07-03). Retrieved 21 October 2018.
- Isaga, JR (2018-08-16). "NCAA forfeits San Sebastian's wins". Rappler. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
- Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin (2018-10-26). "IT'S FINAL: No sanctions for Perpetual in 'ligang labas' issue". ABS-CBN SPORTS. Retrieved 2018-11-10.
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- Naredo, Camille B. (2018-10-26). "NCAA: Masterful Lyceum demolishes Letran to gain finals berth". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved 2018-11-07.
- Jacinto, Christian (2018-11-12). "What else is new: San Beda blows past Lyceum for NCAA three-peat". Spin.ph. Retrieved 2018-11-13.
- Giongco, Mark. "Lyceum ace CJ Perez suspended for Game 1 of NCAA Finals". INQUIRER.net. Retrieved 2018-11-07.
- San Beda withdraws case against NCAA Archived 2007-10-17 at the Wayback Machine by Frank Calapre, The Manila Times. 08/29/2007
- "San Beda outlasts Perez-less Lyceum in NCAA Finals G1". Rappler. 2018-11-06. Retrieved 2018-11-07.
- Lozada, Bong (2018-11-08). "NCAA: No Finals Game 2 suspension for Robinson for remarks on Perez ban". Inquirer.net. Retrieved 2018-11-10.
- Leongson, Randolph (2018-08-24). "San Beda stars expected to shine brightest in NCAA All-Star events". Spin.ph. Retrieved 24 August 2018.
- Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin (2018-08-24). "Robert Bolick banners Team Saints anew, but no CJ Perez in NCAA All-Star". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved 24 August 2018.
- Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin (2018-08-31). "Michael Calisaan hailed as NCAA Season 94 All Star MVP". ABS-CBN SPORTS. Retrieved 2018-08-31.
- Sevilla, Jeremiah M. (13 November 2018). "Red Robins stop Greenies to force decider | The Manila Times Online". The Manila Times Online. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
- "Jaycee Marcelino nabs first NCAA 94 Player of the Week honors". ABS-CBN SPORTS. 2018-07-14. Retrieved 2018-07-14.
- "Letran's JP Calvo named NCAA Press Corps Player of the Week". Spin.ph. Retrieved 25 July 2018.
- "CJ Perez NCAA player of the week | Philstar.com". philstar.com. 2018-07-30. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
- "EAC's Maguliano named Player of the Week after career performance". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved 2018-08-07.
- "Perpetual's Eze earns NCAA Player of the Week nod". ABS-CBN News.
- "LPU's Ayaay announces his presence with Player of the Week plum". ABS-CBN Sports. August 20, 2018. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
- "Week of unique NCAA performances ends with Bolick, Quinto sharing award". Spin.ph. Retrieved 2018-08-26.
- "Arellano's Sera Josef caps breakout with Player of the Week plum". ABS-CBN SPORTS. 2018-09-02. Retrieved 2018-10-09.
- "Balanza named NCAA Player of Week". Manila Standard. 2018-09-09. Retrieved 2018-10-09.
- "San Beda's Donald Tankoua picked NCAA Player of the Week". Spin.ph. 2018-09-16. Retrieved 2018-10-09.
- "Pirate-sinking Prince Eze is hands down Player of the Week". ABS-CBN SPORTS. 2018-09-23. Retrieved 2018-10-09.
- "Letran's Koy Galvelo cops NCAA POW honors". The Manila Times. 2018-10-01. Retrieved 2018-10-13.
- "Nobody can take away this Player of the Week plum from Letran's Muyang". ABS-CBN SPORTS. 2018-10-07. Retrieved 2018-10-09.
- "San Beda's Mocon cops NCAA Player of the Week award". ABS-CBN News. 2018-10-14. Retrieved 2018-10-14.
- "San Beda's future is now in Player of the Week James Canlas". ABS-CBN Sports. 2018-10-21. Retrieved 21 October 2018.
- "Michael Calisaan ends collegiate career as NCAA 94 Player of the Week". ABS-CBN Sports. 2018-10-25. Retrieved 2018-11-07.
- Riego, Norman Lee Benjamin (October 29, 2018). "Paolo Hernandez puts Red Robins on his back en route to NCAA 94 Finals". ABS-CBN Sports. Retrieved December 18, 2018.