22nd PBA season
Sports season
The 1996 PBA season was the 22nd season of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).
Board of governors
Executive committee
Jun Bernardino (Commissioner)
Teodoro L. Dimayuga (Chairman, representing Purefoods TJ Hotdogs)
Nazario L. Avendaño (Vice-Chairman, representing San Miguel Beermen)
Dr. Antonio V. Concepcion (Treasurer, representing Ginebra San Miguel)
Teams
Season highlights
The league's broadcast partner, Vintage Sports , switched networks from People's Television to Intercontinental Broadcasting Corporation . They also changed their primary language from English to Tagalog .
Crowd-favorite Ginebra San Miguel return to their winning ways after years of being a doormat with the entry of top draft pick, 6-9 Marlou Aquino, the Ginebras advances in the semifinals for the first time in three years during the All-Filipino Cup, their season was highlighted by a finals trip in the third conference, losing to grandslam champions Alaska Milkmen.
The Pepsi Mega Bottlers sold their franchise to PILTEL and was renamed Mobiline Cellulars at the start of the Commissioner's Cup .
The Alaska Milkmen became the fourth team to win the PBA Grand slam by sweeping all three conferences of the season, joining the 1976 and 1983 Crispa Redmanizers and the 1989 San Miguel Beermen . [ 1]
Johnny Abarrientos became the first pure guard to win the Most Valuable Player (MVP) award since Ricardo Brown in 1985. [ 2]
Opening ceremonies
The muses for the participating teams are as follows:
Champions
All-Filipino Cup
Elimination round
Semifinal round
^ If a team outside the top two teams wins at least five semifinal round games, then it and the second-placed team will playoff for the last finals berth; otherwise, the top 2 teams qualify outright.
^ a b Head-to-head record: Ginebra 3–1 San Miguel
Semifinal round standings:
^ Purefoods qualified outright as #1 seeded team; finals berth playoff: Alaska 96–83 Ginebra
Third place playoff
Finals
Commissioner's Cup
Elimination round
^ a b Head-to-head record: Ginebra 1–0 Sta. Lucia
^ a b c Head-to-head quotient: Shell 1.170, Purefoods 1.050, Sunkist 0.861; semifinal round berth playoff: Purefoods 89–76 Sunkist
Semifinal round
^ If a team outside the top two teams wins at least five semifinal round games, then it and the second-placed team will playoff for the last finals berth; otherwise, the top 2 teams qualify outright.
Semifinal round standings:
^ Alaska advanced to the finals outright as #1 seeded team, Ginebra guaranteed finals berth playoff as #2 seeded team; finals berth playoff: Shell 89–86 Ginebra
Third-place playoff
Finals
Governors' Cup
Elimination round
^ a b Head-to-head record: San Miguel 1–0 Shell
^ a b c Head-to-head quotient: Sunkist 1.066, Purefoods 0.986, Sta. Lucia 0.951; 6th-seed playoff: Purefoods 81–76 Sta. Lucia
Playoffs
Quarterfinals (Higher seeds twice-to-beat)
Semifinals (best-of-5 series)
Finals (best-of-7 series)
1
Alaska
3
4
Shell
100
104
4
Shell
0
5
Sunkist
107
101
1
Alaska
4
2
Ginebra
1
2
Ginebra
3
3
San Miguel
91*
89
3
San Miguel
1
6
Purefoods
97
86
Third place
4
Shell
103
3
San Miguel
99
Finals
Awards
Awards given by the PBA Press Corps
Coach of the Year: Tim Cone (Alaska)
Mr. Quality Minutes: Gilbert "Jun" Reyes, Jr. (Alaska)
Executive of the Year: Jun Bernardino (PBA Commissioner)
Comeback Player of the Year: Richie Ticzon (Shell)
Referee of the Year: Ogie Bernarte
Cumulative standings
References