Jether Palomo aims for Philippines’ back-to-back win at Mister Global 2025

The Mister Global 2025 final competition is set for tonight in Bangkok, Thailand. The Philippines’ representative, Jether Palomo, is in a very unique, pressure-filled position. He aims to achieve a back-to-back victory for the country, as the reigning king is Daumier Corilla.

Jether also follows the stellar performances of his fellow Mister Pilipinas Worldwide kings. Kenneth Cabangcal placed fifth at Mister Supranational in Poland on June 28, Kenneth Marcelino finished first runner-up at Mister Cosmopolitan in Thailand on September 7, and Kirk Bondad is the new Mister International who won the title in Bangkok on September 26.

Like Kirk, Jether is also a Century Tuna Superbods winner. He won in 2024.

At Mister Global, he and the Mister Pilipinas Worldwide Organization were awarded the Best in Country Presentation Video.

During the preliminary round on October 4, Jether wowed the crowd in his refreshing national costume created by Patrick Isorena.

Called ‘SSS,’ it means ‘Solihiya, Sampaguita, and Salakot,’ three iconic elements deeply rooted in Philippine culture and identity.

Isorena explained the ensemble: ‘The solihiya weave, reimagined in the fabric and patterns of the suit, represents Filipino artistry and craftsmanship, a timeless design found in our ancestral homes and heritage furniture. It symbolizes strength, tradition, and the enduring beauty of Filipino ingenuity.

‘The sampaguita, our national flower, cascades in abundance across the costume. Its delicate white blossoms embody purity, humility, and devotion. The floral wings adorned with oversized roses and sampaguita chains serve as a tribute to the grace and resilience of the Filipino spirit.

‘Finally, the salakot, delicately embellished with pearls and beadwork, crowns the ensemble as a proud emblem of our farmers and rural roots. It is a reminder of the hardworking Filipinos whose hands nurture the land and sustain the nation.’

Mister Global is about being a ‘Gentlemen with Essence.’

Jether describes this quality in his own words:

‘A Gentleman with Essence is not defined by titles or appearances, but by the values he lives each day. His essence is authenticity staying true to who he is, even when it is difficult. It is integrity choosing what is right over what is easy. It is compassion treating every person with dignity and respect. He is strong enough to lead, yet humble enough to listen; ambitious enough to dream, yet grounded enough to serve. A Gentleman with Essence builds a legacy not through accolades, but through the lives he touches and the hope he inspires.’

CEPCA president, ASEP colleagues lend a hand to quake-hit areas

Longtime Cebu Executives and Professionals Chess Association (CEPCA) President Engr. Jerry B. Maratas and his colleagues from the Association of Structural Engineers of the Philippines (ASEP)-Disaster Mitigation Preparedness and Response (DMPR) team extended assistance through their line of work to the earthquake-hit areas in northern Cebu.

Maratas, who heads the oldest existing chess organization outside of Manila for 12 years now, made up the first wave of volunteer civil and structural engineers who responded to the appeal of Cebu City Mayor Nestor Archival for safety inspection and rapid assessments of buildings and public facilities across the City of Bogo and its neighboring towns that were rattled by the powerful tremor last September 30.

Maratas, a recognized specialist in structural engineering by the Philippine Institute of Civil Engineers (PICE) and a Life Member of ASEP, was joined by engineers Edzel Abastar, Joseph Abellar, Don Acaylar, John Agrabio, Rodolfo Chua, Pedro Adonis Compendio, Ariel de la Cruz, Ramon Gitamondoc, Randy Gopaoco, Wallace Lestano, Mike Manlangit, Joel Paragatos, James Quidilla, Godfrey Ruiz, Leonor Salazar, and Charlon Sollano in lending their expertise to the affected communities.

The founding CEO of Jemar Engineering Services and Celjem Construction and Development Corporation and his colleagues documented the damaged structures and conducted rapid visual screening, initial safety tagging, and referrals for detailed evaluation, prioritizing hospitals, schools, bridges, churches, government offices, and other high-occupancy sites in the service of those in need at this challenging time.-

Organizing ICI proving to be a challenge

The Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI) has admitted that organizing the fact-finding body at a breakneck speed is a formidable task.

The executive order establishing the ICI has given its executive director 30 days from its effectivity date to determine the committee’s organizational structure, staffing pattern and corresponding qualification standards.

President Marcos signed the order on Sept. 11, leaving the ICI with less than a week to meet its requirements.

Brian Keith Hosaka, ICI executive director, appointed by the President on Sept. 24, confirmed to The STAR that the fact-finding body met with the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) on Thursday to hash out operational details.

Hosaka said the organizational structure and staffing pattern will be submitted early next week.

‘I plan to show it to the members of the commission also before submitting,’ he said in a message.

Staffing is an important component for the nearly one-month-old commission, given the huge mandate – and public expectations – bestowed on the ICI. All eyes are on the three members and the special adviser to get to the root of the multibillion-peso corruption hounding infrastructure projects.

‘The commission is busy organizing itself,’ Hosaka told reporters on Thursday, adding, ‘Things are happening too fast.’

He underscored the need to get its recruitment right because, ‘in any organization, what really is important are the people running it.’

‘We need the proper expertise because what we’re dealing with is not a simple matter,’ Hosaka said in Filipino. ‘We have to get lawyers, engineers and accountants because they assess the evidence received by the commission.’

In the end, he assured the public that while setting up operations is challenging, ‘we will manage.’

Veterans switch to new teams

While 31 players were cut from last season’s PBA Philippine Cup rosters with no room to relocate, 27 veterans found new teams as the 50th anniversary season reels off tonight.

Among the players struck out from season-opening lineups were Jvee Casio, Mark Borboran, Terrence Romeo, Justin Chua, Jackson Corpuz and Allyn Bulanadi. The list includes Arvin Tolentino, William Navarro and Jamie Malonzo who’ve gone abroad. Some moved to MPBL while others are still waiting for a call or retired.

Veterans who’ve switched teams are Ginebra’s Norbert Torres, Blackwater’s David Murrell, Paul Zamar and Jed Mendoza, Converge’s Rafi Reavis, Magnolia’s Paolo Taha, Javi Gomez de Liaño, Raffy Verano and LA Tenorio (as playing coach), Phoenix’ James Kwekuteye, Francis Escandor, Evan Nelle, Prince Caperal, Bryan Santos and Yousef Taha, Rain or Shine’s Stanley Pringle, Terrafirma’s Jerrick Ahanmisi, Paul Garcia and Prince Rivero, Titan’s Ato Ular, Aljun Melecio, Jeo Ambohot, Von Pessumal and James Martinez and TNT’s Kevin Ferrer and Tyrus Hill.

So far, 14 rookies are on lineups with more expected to join when the MPBL season ends. The signed rookies are Ginebra’s Sonny Estil, Blackwater’s Dalph Panopio and Jack Dumont, Converge’s Juan Gomez de Liaño, Kobe Monje and Mark Omega, Magnolia’s Gab Gomez, Phoenix’ Dave Ando, San Miguel Beer’s Chris Miller and Royce Mantua, Terrafirma’s Ira Bataller and JM Bravo and Titan’s Chris Koon and Mario Barasi. Coming from MPBL include Terrafirma’s Geo Chiu, NLEX’ LJay Gonzales, Meralco’s Jason Brickman, Phoenix’ Will Gozum and Rain or Shine’s Christian Manaytay.

Besties, after ‘I do’

I’m happy to have a spouse who continues to stand by me through all kinds of ups and downs, but my girl besties give me so much joy, as well. They gamely spend hours with me combing countless store racks, dress up a dreary-looking hospital room with the cutest pink bathroom and table accessories, regularly send recommendations for the latest K-dramas to binge on and even babysat me at home during a cancer bout, so my husband could work with less worry.

I truly believe that even the happiest of wives need their besties and I’m no exception. Liza, Rose Anne, Eliza, Nina, Kara, Chona, Janine, Lizette and Kara – to name a few. Life wouldn’t be the same without these girlfriends of 44 years and counting.

Marriage blesses us with a cherished partner to grow old with – but friendship gifts you with soul sisters for the journey. As the years pass, my female besties are more than just lunch dates and shopping companions. They are also anchors and cheerleaders in hard times, and the tears and laughter shared bind us securely, no matter how far or long since the last get-together. Being with my husband keeps me safe and loved, while being with my besties keeps me sane and young.

Husbands don’t do girl talk

Let’s face it: even the most loving husband has his limits. He’ll listen when you complain or vent, and nod along when sharing a story about work or home drama. But like most men, he’s not going to dissect every sarcastic statement uttered to you. Besties however, will dwell on this. They’ll replay the scene, suggest motives and even provide witty should-have-said comeback lines.

Besties keep us young

As women age, responsibilities pile up – kids, aging parents, a career, endless errands and more – so it’s easy to get caught up in routines. But time with girlfriends snaps us out of autopilot. Whether it’s giggling over the shenanigans of household help, taking short trips together, or sending each other silly memes, besties bring out our playful side.

They understand without speaking

It’s great to have people in your life who know you so well. A friend who instantly gets what you mean by your tone, remembers your family dynamics, or can read your mind even before you speak. With besties, you don’t have to give a lengthy backstory to be seen or understood – they already know, which is a big relief.

They are our emotional rechargers

Life always throws curveballs. Even in a stable marriage, it’s natural to face moments of stress, loss or self-doubt so besties are our cushions. They’ll cry, pray with and distract you with laughter until you’re ready to stand tall again. Having women in your corner doesn’t weaken a marriage – they enrich it because after bonding time with them, you go back to your spouse happier, lighter and more whole.

Our other forever

We all yearn for a ‘forever love’ but friendship is another kind of forever. Who doesn’t like celebrating romantic love but the quiet, steady love of a best friend deserves just as much credit. Aside from my husband, I know my besties will walk beside me through the gray hairs, midlife shifts and all other unwritten chapters of my life.

My husband is my forever plus-one but my besties are my forever plus-fun. So don’t feel guilty about spending time with girlfriends. Marriage and women friendships aren’t rivals – they’re teammates and when both are strong, life shines brighter. After all, while husbands and diamonds may be forever, besties sparkle even brighter.

Ex-Blue Eagle Ballungay high on unbeaten Ateneo’s Season 88 bid

Their undefeated start will be a huge boost for the Ateneo as it takes on rival La Salle this Sunday in the UAAP Season 88 men’s basketball tourney, former Blue Eagles star Kai Ballungay said.

Ballungay, who played two seasons for the Katipunan-based squad and was part of the Blue Eagles squad that won the Season 85 championship, said he believes the unscathed start of the Blue Eagles thus far will help them against their bitter rivals.

‘I’m excited, man. I mean, we’ve been looking forward to this [Ateneo-La Salle matchup] since last year,’ he told Philstar.com during the release of the new Nike LeBron XXIII at the Titan Fort earlier this week.

‘You know, this is a brand new team. We started off 3-0 so far, so I think we’re going to do this one with a lot of confidence. I just want to see them come out with a win for sure,’ he added.

Ateneo, which managed to win just four games last season, has now won its first three contests. The squad has defeated Far Eastern University in overtime, University of the East by two points, and Adamson by a blowout.

Now, the real test begins for the Blue Eagles, as they take on the 2-1 La Salle squad that will now feature former Ateneo big man Mason Amos.

Ballungay also voiced confidence that the current Blue Eagle team has what it takes to go all the way.

‘Yeah, for sure. I mean, they have all the pieces. From the player standpoint, from a coaching standpoint, they’ve always been set. Coach Tab’s guided them always in the right direction,’ he said.

‘I think it’s going to take adjusting while other teams are making adjustments to them. So I think as long as they overcome every challenge throughout the way, I think they’ll be fine.’

Through three games thus far, the Blue Eagles are led by one-and-done forward Kymani Ladi, who, like Ballungay, is a tall wing – at 6-foot-7 – and has 3-point range.

Ladi is leading the team in scoring with 19.3 points per game. He is also norming 8.0 rebounds and 1.7 assists per contest.

Ballungay said he sees the similarities between him and the Vallejo, California native.

‘Yeah man. I’ve been hearing that a lot lately. You know, I definitely see the similarities for sure. And you know, I feel like Ateneo has always produced great stretch fours,’ he said.

‘From Will Navarro, you know, I fit that same role in Kymani. I feel like, like I said, Coach Tab has always been able to develop those type of players and it’s good to see it continue,’ he added.

‘He has everything that it takes. You know, he’s a great player just from the outside looking in and with the guidance of Coach Tab and the Ateneo system around him, I think he’s going to do well.’

Ballungay was among the athletes that was present during the Forever King event at the Titan Fort, where, aside from the release of the new LeBron sneakers, his “Legacy Wall” was also unveiled.

The LeBron XXIII “Uncharted” colorway was released during the event, which “salutes his stand-alone status as the greatest scorer of all time, because when you step into uncharted territory, it’s best to show up prepared.”

The Ateneo-La Salle matchup will be held this Sunday at 5 p.m. at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay City.

South Korea gives air monitoring units to DENR

The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) has received two air quality monitoring units from the Republic of Korea as part of the Clean Air for Sustainable ASEAN (CASA) Project.

The turnover coincided with the signing of a memorandum of understanding between the DENR’s Environmental Management Bureau (EMB) and Seoul National University (SNU), formalizing South Korea’s technical assistance to the country.

The ASEAN funds the CASA Project and will run from 2025 to 2026.

The two air quality monitoring units will be deployed in Pasay City and Quezon City to measure key pollutants such as PM2.5 and ozone.

These stations will expand the EMB’s air quality monitoring network and provide real-time data to support national and regional environmental programs.

According to the DENR, the upgraded monitoring capacity will help formulate targeted interventions to address air pollution sources, particularly in densely populated urban centers.

The agreement was signed by DENR Assistant Secretary Jacqueline Caancan and SNU Graduate School of Public Health Professor Kiyoung Lee.

‘By bringing together scientific research and international teamwork, the CASA Project will create better data and monitoring systems, laying the groundwork for smarter, evidence-based policies,’ Caancan said.

Leading with clarity

Armed with a tourism degree from UP Diliman in 1990, Marie Antonette de Ocampo wasted no time in pursuing her first career opportunity.

De Ocampo, more commonly known as Anette, applied as a ground flight attendant for an airline company, hoping to get a job aligned with her degree in tourism. However, the economic conditions in the 1990s had different plans for her. The airline company was affected by the financial crisis, which put any hiring processes on hold.

Her path eventually led her to the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (PAGCOR), where she began doing administrative work for an assistant branch manager at Manila Pavilion. She quickly rose through the ranks, later becoming executive assistant to the senior branch manager when a position opened due to internal transfers.

It was 1991 – a year that, more than three decades later, remains a distant memory for this top executive of Maynilad Water Services Inc., one of the country’s largest water utility firms.

‘I do not publicly share it, because my stint was short-lived at PAGCOR,’ De Ocampo tells The STAR. ‘But that is where everything started for me.’

Indeed, her tenure at PAGCOR was quite a short stint. De Ocampo knew back then that the political nature and structure of the state-run gaming firm might hinder her career growth. Plus, it was clear to her that she dislikes shifting duties, most especially an 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. work schedule.

The long drives from her residence in Pasig to Manila Pavilion – a 13-kilometer ride – made it untenable for her. She scoured the job market before encountering an opening at the soon-to-be constructed Edsa Shangri-La, Manila.

The job? Guest relations. The concern? It was on a shift duty. De Ocampo immediately turned down the offer and stayed a little bit longer at PAGCOR. Until one day, she said: enough was enough.

‘I went back to (Edsa) Shangri-La and to the human relations director and asked him: ‘Do you remember me?’ ‘ De Ocampo shared.

‘No, I do not,’ the human relations director told her.

‘Well, I applied a few weeks ago and you offered me a position at the restaurant,’ De Ocampo responded.

‘We have an opening now for the front desk,’ the director answered. De Ocampo took the job.

She took it as quickly as she could without realizing that it was an eight-to-five job. She eventually left the job. However, a few weeks later, she received a phone call from the hotel, informing her that a vacancy had opened up in the reservations unit. Learning that it was not a job on a regular shift, De Ocampo returned to Edsa Shangri-La, from which she rose through the ranks.

She progressed from supervisor to manager, events director, front office manager, and ultimately director of sales during her 11-year tenure at the posh hotel. She left the company as a full-time employee in 2003. However, for the next eight years, until 2011, she worked on projects for the hotel, but on a larger scale, involving the related properties.

And then she got a call from Patrick ‘Pato’ Gregorio, a known personality in the hotel industry. The call was a job offer. Gregorio wanted De Ocampo to join him at Maynilad.

‘Is it an eight-to-five job?’ De Ocampo asked Gregorio.

‘Yes,’ Gregorio responded.

‘I do not like an eight-to-five work,’ she said.

‘Why don’t you give it a try? It is just near your house.’ That was music to De Ocampo’s ears. And she gave it a try.

De Ocampo started her career at the water utility firm as the head of key accounts management, overseeing the firm’s Top 200 clients, before spearheading a new department known then as Business Solutions and Sales (BSS).

At BSS, she began promoting not only Maynilad’s primary operations but also other services, such as pipe repair and leak detection.

In 2017, Maynilad established a government relations department, and De Ocampo was tasked with overseeing it.

In 2021, she assumed the position of vice president for corporate affairs and communications, which was left vacant by Gregorio in 2018. Today, she oversees Maynilad’s corporate communication affairs, government and community partnerships and corporate marketing.

‘I do not work for ambitions but for passion. If you have a passion for what you do, it will truly shine through in your work. It will come naturally,’ De Ocampo says.

De Ocampo admits that the training and experience she got at Edsa Shangri-La helped her transition to the corporate world of Maynilad. She may no longer handle hotel clients, but government and private stakeholders of the water utility firm are no different at all. After all, they are humans at the end of the day, just holding titles and ranks.

‘I do not treat people relations as a business or a transactional deal. I treat them as friends. Because if I do not treat them as humans, then it will show in my work and interactions with them,’ she says.

In fact, De Ocampo has always been fond of interacting with people.

If De Ocampo met her past ‘Iska’ self, she would tell her one thing: go out and mingle.

‘I realized that there are UP graduates, now in various positions in government or private practice, who were my batchmates, but I did not get to know a lot of them on a personal level while in school,’ she shares.

If there is one thing that makes Anette, Anette, then it is the fact that ‘she cannot lie,’ according to her husband. De Ocampo says that it is perhaps because of her upbringing. She grew up in a Catholic family residing very near the church. She attended Catholic schools for her education. She observed Catholic traditions and attended church regularly with her mother.

Today, De Ocampo is one of the four women in Maynilad’s top management – and is one of the few who is not related to the firm’s water operations. For her, having a seat at the table in an industry traditionally dominated by men is both a privilege and a source of pride.

‘This does not mean that we get less to say in the boardroom,’ she says. ‘In fact, my presence gives not only a different, but a fresh perspective during discussions,’ she adds.

And her presence convinced other top management officials to see the corporate affairs and communication division in a different light. It is a valuable unit in Maynilad’s line of business.

‘You cannot be in my position if you are not humble enough. Humility is key. At the same time, you need to have some confidence – that fine balance between showing authority and being humble,’ De Ocampo explains.

De Ocampo describes herself as an incurable optimist. ‘I always see things in a positive light.’

‘If there is any task given to me, I always think that I can do it,’ she explains.

Maynilad’s upcoming initial public offering also opens a new chapter and milestone not only for the utility firm but also for De Ocampo’s storied corporate career.

De Ocampo currently oversees efforts to ensure that Maynilad’s story is communicated clearly and consistently to stakeholders, building confidence in the firm while highlighting its achievements and future growth.

‘It’s a story of who we are as a company, our purpose and the value we bring to the market,’ she said.

De Ocampo also hopes for the day when the Maynilad Foundation will be established, allowing the water utility firm to expand and scale up its philanthropic activities.

As De Ocampo looks back on the story of her career so far, she may stumble upon two things – two phone calls, to be exact – one with the human relations director of Edsa Shangri-La and that call from Mr. Gregorio.

‘Somebody wrote in our yearbook that I am going to make it in life and in my career – that I will become successful,’ she recalls.

One day at a time

I’m putting the finishing touches on my updated four-volume book, One Day at a Time. This time it will be offered as a set of four books and will not be sold individually.

Each volume follows a season: Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall.

However, our country has a different kind of four seasons. What we have is: Hot. Hotter. Hottest. Flood.

While our weather is basically a sweat-and-splash festival, our lives still pass through all four classic seasons. We don’t live in a permanent spring and summer. We also have our fall and winter phases.

It’s a full calendar on rotation. Some days you’re blossoms and birdsong; other days you’re a windchill with opinions. That’s not a bug – it’s the operating system.

We forget this because spring is such a persuasive salesperson: Hope! Buds! Fresh starts! Spring is the motivational poster of seasons. But trying to keep life in permanent spring is like trying to keep a balloon perfectly helium-ed forever: adorable for six minutes, wilted by afternoon.

The philosopher George Santayana nailed the mindset: ‘To be interested in the changing seasons is a happier state of mind than to be hopelessly in love with spring.’

There’s your fork in the road. One lane is attachment and nostalgia. The other is curiosity and growth.

There is no such thing as ‘forever spring.’

When we replay ‘the good old days,’ the struggle gets cropped out. There’s a Russian quip that ‘the past is more unpredictable than the future’ because memory is a sneaky editor – it knows how the story ends. As writer Morgan Housel puts it, ‘It’s hard to remember how you felt when you know how the story ends.’ We survived, so the brain slaps on a warm filter and calls it vintage.

New seasons ask for faith, experiments, and occasionally, some reading of the instructions along the way.

Life is a river. Whether you splash, float, or attempt the heroic backstroke to yesterday, and either way, the current moves on. Refusing to move with it is how we miss the prime-time moments of later seasons:

The quiet flex of growing old with your favorite person and discovering attraction has more chapters than you thought.

Dancing at your children’s weddings.

Discovering new muscles: patience, perspective, the ability to order soup without checking your phone.

Feeling grief – and with it the reminder that love was here, real and luminous.

These aren’t consolation prizes. They’re headline acts – if you’re willing to show up.

A greenhouse environment with constant spring weather sounds appealing at first, but it becomes a humid, controlled space that leads to mental exhaustion. The absence of contrast makes joy lose its vibrant colors and become dull and uninteresting. The hot summer weather helps people understand the value of finding cool spots to rest. The cool temperatures of autumn help people become more alert. The cold winter weather forces people to engage in meaningful conversations because they cannot escape or hide from the chill.

I learned from business philosopher Jim Rohn many years ago how to live through the different seasons of our lives.

Label your season. Are you planting (spring), compounding (summer), harvesting/ curating (autumn), or recovering/ retooling (winter)? Naming it kills the panic that comes with trying to do everything at once.

Match the metric to the season. Spring isn’t for perfect outcomes – it’s for reps. Summer celebrates momentum. Autumn measures quality over quantity. Winter tracks rest, repair, and relationships=wrong metric, wrong misery.

Update your identity like software. Versions are allowed. ‘Who I was at 25’ doesn’t have to run your 45-year-old hardware. Retire features. Keep the essentials.

Curate your companions. Spring needs cheerleaders. Summer needs collaborators. Autumn needs editors. Winter needs friends who bring soup and unhurried questions.

Schedule nostalgia; don’t live in it. I refuse to join the group chat of old friends from high school days that post nothing but songs from the ’60s and ’70s, harping on the ‘Good old days’ and how bad the world has become today. Be excited about today and the possibilities tomorrow brings. Letting go of past seasons doesn’t mean they weren’t beautiful. Keep the lessons; retire the costume. Mourn (briefly) what won’t return and still be thrilled about what’s next.

So, let’s meet whatever knocks next – with gratitude for what was, courage for what is, and curiosity for what’s coming.

Pack light: keep the lessons, ditch the costumes. Dress for the weather – umbrella and boots for rain and flood, sunscreen for the heat, a sweater for the soul.

Step into the day you’ve been given, one day at a time.

Choose interest over nostalgia, growth over comfort, faith over fear.

Open the door, smile at the season waiting there, and make it beautiful.

PBA golden season unfolds

A special matchup for a special kickoff.

The PBA raises the curtains on its golden season tonight with fireworks from Manila Clasico, the fabled rivalry born during the late ’80s era of old-school hoops, short shorts, barreling drives and kalawit rebounds that stays burning in the hearts of the current generation.

Barangay Ginebra and Magnolia, archrivals with a large, passionate fan base, re-engage tonight to fire the opening salvo for the Season 50 Philippine Cup wars at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.

And what makes the 7:30 p.m. tiff at the Big Dome – where the first PBA game was played back on April 9, 1975 – even more interesting are the men at the helm. It’s the Gin Kings’ multi-titled coach Tim Cone against his long-time player and coaching pupil LA Tenorio, who has jumped over to the Hotshots as mentor and reserve player after their Season 49 collaboration.

‘He’ll be a great coach because he is a great communicator and great with relationships,’ said Cone of Tenorio, with whom he has won seven PBA championships.

Amid all the hoopla, the debuting Tenorio is keeping his focus.

‘Yes, it’s the Manila Clasico. But at the end of the day, it’s just an ordinary game. It’s the same game we’re going to play the next day. It’s just a game. We just have to play it the right way,’ he told One Sports.

Both master and student are leading teams on a redemption tour.

Cone and the Gin Kings had their chance to win the Governors’ Cup and Commissioner’s Cup trophies last season, but were foiled by TNT each time.

Tenorio’s new charges, meanwhile, failed to get past the quarterfinals of the last four conferences to see their title drought extended to a seventh year or since the 2018 Governors’ Cup.

‘We were right there. We’re not too upset where we are as a team at this point. We know we can contend, we know we can compete,’ said Cone. ‘I think those things that happened to us last season will make our team stronger this season.’

Apart from clutch player Tenorio, Ginebra also lost wingman Jamie Malonzo (now in Korea) in the off-season.