Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Tiebreaker Times

Basketball

Mercado grateful for Cone’s trust

The Sol Train finally finds a stop

Before landing with Barangay Ginebra San Miguel two seasons ago, Sol Mercado had made three stops, as teams struggled to give him a niche he could grow in. But all Mercado wanted was to be trusted.

And once he landed in Ginebra, he quickly embraced the long history of the team and its Never Say Die culture. The 32-year-old showed it during their classic seven-game semifinals series with Star.

Even if they had been down 0-2 and 2-3, the Gin Kings did not give up as they overcame those deficits, capped by an 89-76 Game Seven win. In those two games, the nine-year league veteran averaged 22.0 points, 4.5 assists, and 1.5 steals while making the big shots that helped stave-off the Hotshots.

For Mercado, it’s just about fighting until he ‘can’t fight no more’.

“That’s kind of our culture, right? Never say die.

“We just lay it on the line when our backs are against the wall. We just try to stay focused on what we need to do and play our hearts out and lately the result has been a win,” the 32-year-old Filipino-American said.

The 6-foot-1 guard got Ginebra to a rousing start, scoring 7 of his 23 points during the opening frame. He finished the game with 23 points, four rebounds, and five assists. But more importantly, he helped shut down Paul Lee.

After helping limit the six-foot gunslinger to just eight points on 3-of-13 shooting and two turnovers in Game Six, Lee struggled in Game Seven, finishing the game with just four points on 2-of-8 shooting.

#ReadMore  Gilas need special clearance from JAO Group to train for FIBA Asia Cup

Even if he was the man assigned to lock down Lee, Mercado deflected the credit to his teammates.

“I’ve been saying it all series, it’s not me. I’m just the guy in the front and it’s a total team effort.

“We really focused on Paul because he’s the key to their team so it was definitely a group effort. Whenever I was in the front on him off a ball screen, we always had a guy eyeing him and everyone collapsing on him making him a passer,” he reflected.

And the Sacramento native is doing all of this just to repay the trust his mentor is giving to him.

“Coach Tim puts a lot of trust in me to be one of the leaders of this team and I’m just grateful for the opportunity he’s given me every game to be on the court and the confidence and the trust that he puts in me.

“It goes a long way. When you have the winning-est coach in the PBA puts a lot of trust in you, it gives you a lot of confidence to play,” the 6-foot-1 combo guard declared.

After all these years, the Sol Train finally finds a stop.

Written By

You May Also Like

Basketball

ANTIPOLO — Scottie Thompson left with an ice pack on his head after suffering a nasty bump on his head late in Ginebra’s eventual...

Basketball

ANTIPOLO — Rain or Shine needed to do a little bit of everything to gut out a 115-111 victory over Ginebra and take Game...

Basketball

The last four teams standing are all aiming for a head start as the PBA Season 50 Commissioner’s Cup semifinals get underway later in...

Basketball

ANTIPOLO — Justin Brownlee stays optimistic even after suffering a hamstring injury during Barangay Ginebra’s eventual victory over Phoenix to advance to the PBA...

Basketball

ANTIPOLO — Ginebra completed half of the PBA Season 50 Commissioner’s Cup semifinal picture after breezing past Phoenix, 112-81, in a game that hardly...

Basketball

Rain or Shine is hoping to silence the skeptics by maximizing its win-once incentive against San Miguel as the PBA Season 50 Commissioner’s Cup...

Basketball

In typical Japeth Aguilar fashion, the veteran big man tried to give Bol Bol a Kodak moment barely two minutes into Ginebra’s rivalry bout...

Basketball

RJ Abarrientos struck the dagger in the waning moments as Ginebra took down TNT in a thriller, 93-86, to clinch the no. 2 seed...

Advertisement