Yeng Guiao has been a basketball coach for 33 years, starting with the defunct Philippine Amateur Basketball League. He has always been known as a firebrand, a maverick, a catalyst for change. Over the years, the seven-time PBA champion mentor has nurtured his values in doing things the long way, the right way, some would say the hard way. He’s outspoken, blunt, down to earth, transparent. What’s right is right; what’s wrong is wrong. Period.
‘It’s probably the way I was brought up by my parents,’ he told The STAR and Basketball Universe PHL. ‘My father (10-year Pampanga governor Bren Guiao) said that if you’re doing what is right, even if other people are doing things differently, you should stick to your beliefs.’
Entering the PBA’s 50th season, the Rain or Shine head coach picked eight players in the annual PBA Rookie Draft. The four who survived are still fulfilling their collegiate and MPBL commitments, and will only be able to join the Elasto Painters in January. It will take even more time for them to blend in with the team, and learn from their elders Gabe Norwood and Beau Belga. Still, the retired politician is confident that RoS will be able to surpass the semifinals this season.
‘We were in the semis four consecutive conferences,’ Guiao explains. ‘That’s enough experience. This team is ripe. We hope to break through the ceiling of the semifinals.’
The 66-year-old tactician also shared that he does not see himself retiring. He’s been a player, Philippine Basketball League commissioner, and coach in the PBL, PBA and at the national team level. He says that he still tries to learn something every day. The game has evolved so much from when he started, from the emergence of dominant big men and athletic one-on-one players to the era where everyone can shoot from the outside and spacing is everything. Yeng doesn’t see himself retiring himself ever.
‘You can’t retire from life,’ he declares. ‘This is what I do. Retiring means starting from scratch again, and finding something to do. I don’t think about that. There’s still so much to learn.’
So Guiao will do what he does best, developing players who would otherwise never achieve greatness, speak out against what he feels is unfair, and build champion teams the long way, the hard way, the right way. He savors the progress his players make, which he counts as wins that give him lasting fulfillment. No quick fixes. He knows that, sooner than later, he will bring Rain or Shine to their first championship since 2016. For him, that will be worth 10 championship trophies won the easy way.