Ranidel de Ocampo

Ranidel Rozal de Ocampo (born December 8, 1981) is a Filipino former professional basketball player. He is the younger brother of Yancy de Ocampo. Both played together with FedEx and Talk 'N Text. He is also a five-time National Team member.

Ranidel de Ocampo
Ranidel de Ocampo with the Air21 Express
Personal information
Born (1981-12-08) December 8, 1981
Tanza, Cavite, Philippines
NationalityFilipino
Listed height6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
Listed weight225 lb (102 kg)
Career information
CollegeSaint Francis of Assisi College System
PBA draft2004 Round: 1 / Pick: 4th overall
Selected by the FedEx Express
Playing career2004–2019
PositionPower forward / Small forward
Career history
2004–2008FedEx Express / Air21 Express
2008–2017Talk 'N Text Tropang Texters / TNT Tropang Texters / Tropang TNT / TNT KaTropa
2017–2019Meralco Bolts
Career highlights and awards

College career

De Ocampo started playing organized basketball at the Saint Francis of Assisi College System Doves together with his brother, Yancy. The De Ocampo brothers led the varsity squad to several NCRAA titles. Upon the exit of the older De Ocampo, the Doves was still dominating the league with him alongside Ervin Sotto and Al Vergara. Thus, he led the squad into several statistical categories such as scoring and rebounding. He won four NCRAA MVP plums making him arguably the finest player in the history of the NCRAA.

Professional career

In 2004, after a celebrated collegiate career at St. Francis, De Ocampo decided to turn pro and enter the PBA draft. He was selected by the FedEx Express as the fourth overall pick, having selected ahead of higher profile players such as classy UE point guard Paul Artadi, multi-titled PBL veteran Gary David and former Ateneo Blue Eagles star Wesley Gonzales.

During his rookie year, he played alongside his brother Yancy. He played in a total of 59 games and averaged decent rookie numbers of 7.5 points and 4.6 rebounds while playing a little over 21 minutes of action per game.

After a so-so performance in his first year, he made an impact in the 2005–06 season by improving his rookie numbers of 7.5 points per game to 13.3 in his sophomore year in 37 of 51 games played. He also registered 6.7 rebounds and 2.4 assists in that year.

In 2008, de Ocampo was again included in the RP Training Pool, his second stint, assembled by the PBA under Coach Yeng Guiao.

In the middle of the 2008–09 PBA Philippine Cup, he was traded to the Talk 'N Text Tropang Texters for veteran Don Allado.[1] His all-around play helped them beat the Alaska Aces in that conference's finals series, 4-3, earning him his first PBA title.

De Ocampo (#9) at the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup

In 2015, de Ocampo led the Texters to the 2015 PBA Commissioner's Cup championship, winning a seven-game series against Rain or Shine Elasto Painters. On April 29, 2015, de Ocampo was named as the Finals MVP. During the series, he averaged 24.3 points and 6.6 rebounds and as well as shooting at an impressive 40% from the three-point area over the course of seven games.[2]

On September 11, 2017, de Ocampo was dealt to the Meralco Bolts along with KaTropa's 2019 second round pick for Justin Chua and Norbert Torres in a three-team trade with Phoenix and Meralco.[3]

On April 13, 2020, de Ocampo announced his retirement from professional basketball.[4]

International career

He was included in the Gilas Pilipinas roster that placed second in the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship held in Manila and earned a ticket to compete in the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup. De Ocampo also buried a crucial three point field goal late in the fourth quarter which secured Gilas a slot in the 2014 World Cup.[5] In July 2016, de Ocampo announced his retirement from international basketball following the Gilas' loss to the New Zealand men's national basketball team that ended their bid to qualify for the 2016 Summer Olympics.[6]

PBA career statistics

Legend
  GP Games played   GS Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field-goal percentage  3P%  3-point field-goal percentage  FT%  Free-throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game  Bold  Career high

Correct as of October 3, 2016[7]

Season-by-season averages

Year Team GP MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
2004–05 FedEx 5921.3.585.313.7024.61.2.5.37.5
2005–06 Air21 5130.4.483.377.7636.72.4.8.313.3
2006–07 Air21 2233.7.510.370.7509.23.1.6.515.3
2007–08 Air21 5134.0.419.290.6807.22.5.7.312.4
2008–09 Air21 / Talk 'N Text 4531.0.447.342.7508.02.8.8.412.0
2009–10 Talk 'N Text 4726.8.504.333.7836.41.8.5.312.5
2010–11 Talk 'N Text 4923.4.441.400.6894.91.9.6.211.9
2011–12 Talk 'N Text 5424.0.408.364.8114.51.4.4.311.8
2012–13 Talk 'N Text 5327.2.439.359.7486.31.6.3.312.7
2013–14 Talk 'N Text 4631.1.424.409.8206.61.5.6.715.2
2014–15 Talk 'N Text 4829.1.470.402.6935.82.2.7.515.1
2015–16 TNT 3028.2.471.348.7666.22.6.7.312.6
Career 55527.9.458.362.7476.22.0.6.412.4

Career achievements

gollark: Nope!
gollark: Well, the NUMERATE POLYMERS team may launch a countercoup if you do, so don't get any ideas.
gollark: Idea: apiostandardization.
gollark: Including logging, random metadata, the uninstall thing, keyboard shortcuts, superglobals, the code safety checker, chuck norris jokes, compression, the automatic space clearer, some lorem ipsum variants, a UUID generator, the automatic data mining system, settings, screen control, the native raw peripheral API, PotatoNET™, potato_tool, `print_hi`, privileged execution, the random bytestring generator, the registry, PIR, and rot13.
gollark: PotatOS actually has its own PotatOS API which has zero backward compatibility guarantees whatsoever.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.