Ateneo Sports 100 Sports

The Flight of Champions

By and
Published November 11, 2024 at 6:58 pm
Graphic by Bryce Tamayo

100 YEARS since its inception in the nation’s amateur ranks, the Ateneo sports program has indisputably etched itself among the finest names not only in the collegiate realm but all of Philippine sports. Many can attribute several elements to Ateneo’s rise into juggernaut status—though none can be more defining than the Blue and White’s culture of capturing era-defining championships.

Notable milestones have been chronicled throughout time to celebrate Ateneo sports’ excellence, such as a previous special issue celebrating the program’s 50th anniversary in 1974. As the centennial year of the Blue Eagles winds down, The GUIDON Sports pays homage to some of the most iconic Ateneo championship teams and players that helped set a precedent for blue-blooded greatness.

Pioneers of collegiate excellence

The Blue Eagles’ stint in the Grand Old League marked the birth of its championship pedigree. From co-founding the country’s first collegiate league in 1924 to its departure in 1978, Ateneo has produced a plethora of champions in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), including three football crowns in four seasons from 1951 to 1954 and its track and field six-peat during the 1960s.

However, the cornerstone of early 20th-century collegiate sports was undoubtedly men’s basketball, with Ateneo at its forefront. With legends Francis Arnaiz (1969), Baby Dalupan (1947–49), Moro Lorenzo (1947–51), and Ed Ocampo (1957–59) leading the way, the Blue Eagles established themselves as the premier powerhouse. At the time of their withdrawal, Ateneo’s record of 14 titles stood as the most in the NCAA and remains the third-most in league history to this day.

From the NCAA to the UAAP

After its eventual transfer to the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP), Ateneo experienced a nine-year title drought across all its collegiate sports teams.

However, the Blue Eagles finally struck gold in 1987 in the one sport they have always dominated. After going 13-1 in Season 50, the Blue Eagles stunned the University of the East—the league’s winningest team at the time—to bag their first-ever UAAP men’s basketball crown. Ateneo then repeated as kings against age-old rivals La Salle in 1988.

The Blue Eagles would then experience another back-to-back in the following decade. The Men’s Badminton Team copped two straight titles in Seasons 58 and 59, making them the only Ateneo team to complete a repeat bid in the 1990s.

New millennium dynasties

Having struggled in the previous decade, the tides finally turned in 2002 as the stars aligned for Ateneo Men’s Basketball. Overcoming adversity as the third seed, the Blue Eagles ended La Salle’s four-year reign in a hard-fought Game 3 Finals victory.

For Blue Eagle great LA Tenorio, the Blue and White’s Season 65 title was the turning point that lit the flame of a rekindled winning culture. “I would say it sparked a change of culture in Ateneo sports. The community finally had something to [rally behind],” he said.

Following their first title in 14 years, Ateneo forged a dynasty that included the Norman Black-led five-peat from 2008 to 2012, and the Tab Baldwin-led four titles in five seasons from 2017 to 2022. In both the NCAA and UAAP combined, Ateneo’s total of 26 titles stands as the most in Philippine collegiate basketball.

Notably, men’s football also birthed their culture of excellence in the same decade. From Seasons 66 to 68, the Blue Booters sat atop the UAAP, going unbeaten on the way to their final crown. Now coaches of the current squad, JP Merida and keeper Jerwin Belina, who conceded only one goal in Season 68, were part of the record-setting squad. These legends paved the way for today’s perennial contenders, including the Jarvey Gayoso-led side that clinched two titles at the end of the 2010s.

Meanwhile, the Men’s Judo Team bannered Ateneo as the final dynasty born in the 2000s, bagging a three-peat in Seasons 71 to 73 and winning three more in the succeeding decade.

Changing Philippine sports

The belief that all things in the field of sports must be earned, and not given, is a truth that 2010s Ateneo Women’s Volleyball is all too familiar with. After falling short despite deploying an all-time cast known as the Fabulous Five early in the decade, Ateneo persisted and eventually climbed to the apex in Seasons 76, 77, and 81.

In particular, the Lady Eagles’ back-to-back title run had one of the finest Filipino sportspersons of the 21st century at the helm—Alyssa Valdez. The phenom not only captured prestigious awards en route to slaying UAAP giants but also catalyzed the meteoric rise of volleyball in the country. The generational talent proved to be the crutch that supplemented the sport’s ever-increasing reach, leading to record attendance and viewership numbers to this day.

With its groundbreaking 2010s landscape that also featured teams like the Marck Espejo-led three-peat Blue Eagles, volleyball has quickly turned into one of the most beloved sports in the country. How foundational Ateneo and its athletes were in helping pilot such an evolution serves as a testament to the program’s vision of not just growing certain sports within inner circles, but also for the wider community.

A century and beyond

Fast forward to recent years, Ateneo sports has shifted into a new era headlining its own share of remarkable victors.

Currently, the Men’s Swimming Team holds the rarified feat of ruling the UAAP for eight consecutive seasons. The one-of-a-kind unit has scaled such heights needing far more than just raw skill or talent, setting a philosophy that views unshaken consistency, unmatched drive, and precise discipline as dire needs.

The hunger for perennial glory is also an unrelenting goal chased by another dynastic faction—the Women’s Badminton Team. The queens of the court established their supremacy with a four-peat from 2019 to 2023 under the tutelage of Kennie Asuncion-Robles.

With both programs developing talents like Mika De Guzman, Chanelle Lunod, and Olympian Jessie Lacuna, the Blue and White prides itself in raising champions through pillars of profound guidance and steadfast support.

Ateneo’s century-long legacy stands as a symbolic reminder that reaping the most illustrious of honors never happens overnight. Aside from Blue Eagle teams and athletes having to tirelessly persevere to make a name for themselves, a well-nurturing village—such as the Ateneo community—is essential to cultivating such champions.


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