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Nel Parado

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Reonel Parado
Parado in 2004
Personal information
NationalityFilipino
Listed height5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)
Career information
High schoolSan Beda (Manila)
CollegeSan Beda
PositionPoint Guard
Career history
As player:
1994Burger Machine
As coach:
1996Philippines (assistant)
1996Philippines women
1998Pangasinan Waves (assistant)
1999Cagayan de Oro Amigos (assistant)
1999Cagayan de Oro Amigos (interim)
2000Cagayan de Oro Amigos (assistant)
2000–2002Cagayan de Oro Amigos
2000–2003Benilde (assistant)
2003–2006UST
Career highlights and awards
As assistant coach

Reonel "Nel" Parado is a Filipino coach.

Career

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Playing

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A San Beda Red Lion, Parado played for Burger Machine in the PBL.[1]

Coaching

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With Dong Vergeire

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Parado started his coaching gig with Dong Vergeire, his former teammate at San Beda High School. They started their partnership at Philippine team, as Vergeire as head coach while Parado as assistant, who is concurrently coaching its women's counterpart.[1]

MBA

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Parado also worked with Vergeire at Pangasinan Waves as assistant. Parado later became an assistant for Cagayan de Oro Amigos. But became an interim head coach in late 1999 MBA season. He was later returned to his post after Arlene Rodriguez' appointment in early 2000, but later resigned in late part of that year and made Parado its permanent coach.[1]

Benilde

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He later reunited with Vergeire, this time at Benilde Blazers, and won the 2000 championship.[1]

UST

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He became the interim coach of UST Growling Tigers after the resignation of Aric del Rosario. Vergeire, a former del Rosario's assistant was originally hired, but due to Cebuana Lhuillier commitment, Vergeire recommended Parado as the new head coach.[1]

Parado begin coaching in the postseason when UST participated in the 2003 PBL Platinum Cup. Their respectable showing in the tournament earned Parado a nod and a permanent tenure from the school's Institute of the Physical Education and Athletics. The Growling Tigers were off to a fair start in their 2004 UAAP campaign as they ended the first round tied at third place with La Salle and UE with a 4–3 record. UST, however failed to win a single game in the second round to finish the season at seventh place with a 4–10 record.[1][2][3]

The Growling Tigers broke their 1989 record for their worst start when they went 0–5 to open the 2005 season. Their 12-game losing streak which began at the start of the second round of the previous season ended with their 107–100 overtime win over the winless NU Bulldogs. NU got back at UST with a 74–73 second round win for their first and only victory of the season. The Tigers ended the elimination rounds with the same 4–10 record from 2004, but on a higher rank at sixth place above Adamson and NU. The lone highlight of their campaign was when they stopped Ateneo's seven-game win streak in the second round by winning, 77–73. It was a turnaround for the team after placing third in the Father Martin Cup and winning the PRISAA tournament in the offseason. Jervy Cruz, who was a member of their training pool won the PRISAA MVP award. He was set to play his first year in the UAAP, but was pulled out of the roster due to academic deficiencies.[4][5][6][7][8]

When Parado's contract expired in February 2006, he was replaced by alumni and former Ginebra player Pido Jarencio.[9][10]

Outside basketball

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Onel called by some people, he was featured in the March 15, 2004 pilot episode of GMA's TV newscast 24 Oras, on its segment Imbestigador ng Bayan narrated by Mike Enriquez which discuss the popularity of Mane 'N Tail horse shampoo for human usage and the fake products of the brand. Parado tells that when he used the shampoo product, he feels that his hair heating, and discovered that he is using fake product of the brand.[11]

Coaching record

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Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
UST Growling Tigers (University Athletic Association of the Philippines) (2004–2005)
2004 UST 4–10 4–10 7th Eliminated
2005 UST 4–10 4–10 7th Eliminated
UST: 8–20 (.286) 8–20 (.286)
Total: 8–20 (.286)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f "Parado replaces Aric". The Varsitarian. 3 Jun 2004. Retrieved 16 Nov 2008.
  2. ^ Payo, Jasmine (8 Aug 2004). "Warriors surprise Archers; Tigers up". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  3. ^ Payo, Jasmine (12 Sep 2004). "Tams No. 1; playoff for 2nd". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  4. ^ Payo, Jasmine (29 Jul 2005). "Streaking Tams, Archers rip foes". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  5. ^ Orellana, Joel (1 Aug 2005). "Tamaraws trip Green Archers". The Manila Times.
  6. ^ Payo, Jasmine (11 Sep 2005). "Warriors oust Maroons; NU shades UST". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  7. ^ "Tigers register back-to-back wins". The Varsitarian. 9 Sep 2005. Retrieved 17 Nov 2008.
  8. ^ Magno, Karla Tricia (23 Mar 2006). "UST's finest athletes in Season 68". The Varsitarian. Retrieved 17 Nov 2008.
  9. ^ Iñigo, Manolo (6 Oct 2006). "Clean Living: What keeps Jarencio on winning track?". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  10. ^ Villar, Joey (2006-02-22). "Jarencio officially in as Tigers coach". Philstar.com. Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  11. ^ Dann Garcia (2024-03-15). 24 Oras Pilot Episode (March 15, 2004). Retrieved 2024-08-13 – via YouTube. Stamp: 17:15