Ramos holds sway and breaks through


Sean Ramos celebrates maiden pro triumph. —CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

Using another hot front nine to open his round, Sean Ramos on Friday fired a five-under-par 67 to rule the ICTSI Lakewood Championship for his first win on the Philippine Golf Tour carved out against some of the circuit’s best and seasoned players.

Protecting a one-shot lead to start the final round, Ramos drained four of his five birdies in a six-hole span starting on No. 3, before picking up a clutch shot on No. 16 that snuffed out the challenge put up by Reymon Jaraulla for an eventual 270 tally and a two-shot win.

“I can’t put into words how I feel right now,” the 20-year-old Ramos, who had several flings with a win in this young season, said. “This victory means so much to me after coming close several times before.”

Jaraulla also had a 67, but will look back at a bogey on the 16th as his downfall, even as Antonio Lascuña closed out with a 69 to finish third three strokes behind.

Ramos’ week was made in the first nine holes of the well-manicured layout, where he shot a total of 16 total birdies without a single bogey on all four days. He was also bogey-less in the final two rounds, the only player to do so.

“I handled the pressure well and enjoyed every moment of the competition,” added Ramos, also a contender at Palos Verdes and the Philippine Masters at Villamor. “I played strategically.”

Japan’s Ozeki Kakeru fired a 68 to finish a stroke behind Lascuña, with Art Arbole returning a day-best 66 to salvage fifth, seven strokes off the champion.

Meralco quickly moves on from Game 2 heartbreak

Meralco Bolts' Cliff Hodge in Game 2 of the PBA Philippine Cup Finals against San Miguel Beermen PBA Finals

Meralco Bolts’ Cliff Hodge in Game 2 of the PBA Philippine Cup Finals against San Miguel Beermen. –MARLO CUETO/INQUIRER.net

MANILA, Philippines—It’s just one game. At least that’s how Meralco wants to look at the Game 2 heartbreak to San Miguel in the PBA Philippine Cup Finals.

The Bolts fumbled their chance for a momentous 2-0 lead after a last-second shot by Marcio Lassiter, absorbing a stinging 95-94 loss to San Miguel on Wednesday.

But despite the heartbreaking loss, Cliff Hodge kept a positive mentality as they get a chance to rebound not 48 hours later for Game 3.

READ: PBA Finals: San Miguel survives Meralco in thriller to tie series at 1-1

“Honestly, it’s just one game. We should’ve won that but that’s a championship team. They came out and made the big plays when they needed to. I’m pretty confident with the way that we’re playing right now,” said Hodge, who had his 25-point, nine-rebound stat line wasted.

“It’s going to be a long series. We’ll forget about this loss and now that we all came out and played hard, we’ll be ready for Sunday.”

Even coach Luigi Trillo doubled down on the “it’s just one game” mindset.

After all, Trillo never thought they would sweep a juggernaut team like the Beermen’s despite drawing first blood in the best-of-seven series.

Instead, the one-time PBA champion coach focused on how Meralco has been making San Miguel look like a beatable team.

“I look at it as we’re not going to sweep San Miguel, right? So every game you want to bring your A game, you want to fight and have fewer breakdowns,” said Trillo.

READ: PBA Finals: Meralco still ‘absolutely’ has not cracked San Miguel code

“I thought we played good enough but we could’ve won this game and go up 2-0 but there’re really things like that. It’s really going to hurt,” he added.

Trillo also emphasized that the Bolts will heavily prepare for another war come Sunday.

“We’ll respond, we’ll do it on Sunday, we’ll watch the film and we’ll be clinical rather than be critical at this point to clean up our mistakes.”

Game 3 rolls on this Sunday at 6 pm, still at Smart Araneta Coliseum.