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NorthPort Batang Pier
2024–25 NorthPort Batang Pier season
NorthPort Batang Pier logo
Founded2012
HistoryGlobalPort Batang Pier (2012–2018)
NorthPort Batang Pier (2018–present)
Team colorsBright orange, black, light orange, white
       
CompanySultan 900 Capital, Inc.
Board governorEric Arejola
Team managerPido Jarencio
Waiyip Chong (assistant)
Head coachBonnie Tan
OwnershipMikee Romero
Affiliation(s)NorthPort Batang Pier (3x3 team)

The NorthPort Batang Pier is a Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) team that first played in the 2012–13 PBA season. The team took over the franchise of the Powerade Tigers in 2012 after it was sold to Sultan 900 Capital, Inc. Besides NorthPort, team owner Mikee Romero also co-owned the AirAsia Philippine Patriots of the ASEAN Basketball League.

History

[edit]

Harbour Centre Batang Pier

[edit]

The origins of the NorthPort Batang Pier can be traced to the 2004 Philippine Basketball League (PBL) franchise, the Harbour Centre Port Masters owned by Mikee Romero. In 2007, they changed its team name to Harbour Centre Batang Pier until 2009. The franchise have successfully won 7 straight PBL championships under coach Glenn Capacio from the 2005–06 up to the 2008–09 season, which they carry the team name Oracle Residences Titans on the season's last conference. They also earned the first place in 2007 SEABA Champions Cup.

Sale of the Powerade franchise

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On July 30, 2012, Coca-Cola Bottlers Philippines, Inc. announced that their PBA team, the Powerade Tigers, was sold to Sultan 900, Inc. which is owned and represented by its chairman and CEO Michael Romero.[1][2][3] The Board of Governors unanimously approved the purchase on a special board meeting on August 17.[4][5]

2012–2013 season

[edit]

Philippine Cup

[edit]
GlobalPort Batang Pier
Colors        
Uniforms
Light uniform jersey
Team colours
Light uniform
Dark uniform jersey
Team colours
Dark uniform

GlobalPort entered the league under the guidance of rookie head coach, Glenn Capacio, with the lineup led by Powerade carry-overs Gary David, Rabeh Al-Hussaini, Rudy Lingganay, Rey Guevarra, Jondan Salvador, Josh Vanlandingham, Will Antonio, Alex Crisano and Rommel Adducul, together with off-season trade in from Barangay Ginebra, Willie Miller (in exchange for JVee Casio), draft picks Vic Manuel, Jason Deutchman and AJ Mandani, and signed free agents Marvin Cruz, Mark Yee and Angelus Raymundo. The team finished with a disappointing 1–13 record in its maiden campaign, winning only on October 17, 2012 against Meralco.

Commissioner's Cup

[edit]

Former Barako Bull coach Junel Baculi was appointed as the new head coach, while Capacio stayed on the GlobalPort coaching staff as Baculi's lead assistant.[6] The team pulled off a major roster revamp, as the PBA approved two trades that landed previous conference's cellar dweller a major boost in the form of Sol Mercado and Japeth Aguilar, thus, forming the team's so-called MMDA (Miller, Mercado, David and Aguilar).[7] The team acquired Mercado from the Meralco along with Kelly Nabong, Jaypee Belencion and Yousif Aljamal, in exchange for Rey Guevarra, Vic Manuel, Josh Vanlandingham and their 2015 1st-round pick, while Rabeh Al-Hussaini was traded out to Talk 'N Text for Aguilar. The new Batang Pier looked promising after winning 2 of its first 3 games, but then the team lost all of its remaining games in the elimination, ending its campaign with a 2–12 record.

Governors' Cup

[edit]

On June 11, 2013, GlobalPort's MMDA was disbanded as Japeth Aguilar was traded to Barangay Ginebra for Yousef Taha and the 2013 1st round draft pick it received from Talk 'N Text. In a separate deal, the team acquired Jay Washington from Petron Blaze for Jason Deutchman and the Batang Pier's 2016 and 2017 second round draft picks.[8] The team ended the eliminations with a 4–5 record as Washington exploded for a career-high of 30 points and led the team in a win on their final elimination assignment against Ginebra. After two consecutive conferences finishing at the bottom of the standings, the team finally lands a spot in the play-offs as they finished fifth in the eliminations. Facing fourth seeded Rain or Shine having a twice-to-beat advantage, and as Baculi got ejected for a second technical foul late in the third quarter, the Batang Pier lost by a single basket and got eliminated in the first game of their quarterfinals series.

2013–2014 season

[edit]
GlobalPort Batang Pier
Colors      
Uniforms
Light uniform jersey
Team colours
Light uniform
Dark uniform jersey
Team colours
Dark uniform

Philippine Cup

[edit]

Before the start of the next season, GlobalPort underwent another major overhaul. They let coach Baculi go and appointed Richie Ticzon as new coach in an interim capacity.[9] They've also traded away David to Meralco.[10] He was packaged by the Batang Pier with rookie guard AJ Mandani and sent to Meralco for guard Chris Ross, Chris Timberlake and two future second-round draft picks. Ross was also traded away to Petron for Dennis Miranda, who was eventually traded to Barako Bull in exchange for the sixth overall draft pick[11] which they used to select RR Garcia. They also traded Miller to the Energy in exchange for veteran Enrico Villanueva on draft day.[12]

To infuse some young blood to the team, they drafted college standouts Terrence Romeo (in the expense of sending Yousef Taha to Petron), Garcia, Isaac Holstein, Nico Salva and LA Revilla, who are tasked to team up with established veterans Sol Mercado, Jay Washington, and former league MVP Eric Menk, who returned from playing in the ABL. Holstein was later traded to San Mig Super Coffee in exchange for fellow rookie Justin Chua and veteran Leo Najorda.[13] The team also acquired Jewel Ponferada from the Mixers for a future draft pick and signed up Marvin Hayes. They have even won their first ever winning streak since they joined the league.[14] However, things go down the drain as they lost five straight games, only to be snapped in a win against Alaska, to keep their playoff hopes alive.[15]

They ended their Philippine Cup elimination campaign with 5–9 win–loss record, taking the seventh place playoff spot, and were pitted against twice-to-beat Rain or Shine in the quarterfinal round. They were ousted by E-Painters in their lone playoff game.[16]

Commissioner's Cup

[edit]

Prior to the start of the next conference, they have made significant changes again. Pido Jarencio takes over as the new coach, in his first pro coaching career, Richie Ticzon.[17] They have also traded away Mercado for Alex Cabagnot.[18] They sent Najorda back to Barako Bull for point guard Jonas Villanueva, with Villanueva then getting conveyed to Air21 for guard Bonbon Custodio.[19] Menk was also appointed as the new captain of the team.[20] Mark Macapagal was signed in from free agency. In the middle of the conference, big man Enrico Villanueva, who only played one game for Batang Pier, was acquired by Air21 in exchange for Ronnie Matias and Carlo Sharma. After losing their first 8 games, the Batang Pier won their last assignment against Barako Bull to give Jarencio his first win in the PBA. The team finished last in this conference.

Governors' Cup

[edit]

Before the Commissioner's Cup officially ended, GlobalPort pushed through their bid to acquire Taha from San Miguel Beer in exchange of rookie big man, Justin Chua.[21] After playing for a few games for the Batang Pier, Taha was then shipped to San Mig Super Coffee camp along with Ronnie Matias for center Yancy De Ocampo and sniper Val Acuña. In a separate deal, GlobalPort traded Nico Salva and Bonbon Custodio to the Barako Bull Energy to acquire Ronjay Buenafe plus a future second-round pick of the Energy.[22] Rudy Lingganay was also reacquired after being released prior to the start of the previous conference. A repeat performance for the Batang Pier as they ended the season-ending conference with another 1–8 win–loss record.

2014–2015 Season: The rise of Terrence Romeo and the arrival of Stanley Pringle

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Philippine Cup

[edit]

With new season, new team logo, and a lot of fresh faces, GlobalPort continues to build its lineup. During the offseason, several trades were approved by the PBA. The team started by a one on one trade between incoming sophomore point guard RR Garcia for the services of Barako Bull forward Keith Jensen.[23] It was followed by the departure of ex-team captain Menk to join Alaska Milk in exchange for two second round picks. Jondan Salvador was then shipped back to Barako Bull for sweet-shooting forward Mark Isip.[24] And after being in and out of the trade bloc, GlobalPort management decided to trade Gilas forward Washington to Talk 'N Text for Nonoy Baclao and the Tropang Texters’ 2017 first round pick.[25] The team also had a big rookie harvest from the 2014 PBA draft selecting Stanley Pringle as the first overall pick, Anthony Semerad (7th), Prince Caperal (17th) and John Pinto (19th).[26] Jojo Duncil was then picked up by the Batang Pier, after being released by Barako Bull and signed the undrafted rookie Roider Cabrera, including the unsigned Kia Sorento pick, Paolo Taha.

Jarencio steered the team to a 4–4 start, including a huge upset victory against Talk 'N Text, which was also the franchise' first win against the Texters since joining the league in 2012. The average margin of their losses was only 4.25 points, until they were hammered by San Miguel with a 95–69 defeat, resulting to a sudden change within their coaching staff. Assistant coach Eric Gonzales was appointed as interim head coach, while Jarencio was named as the team's consultant. In this instance, the coaching change produced instant results for GlobalPort. The team gave Barangay Ginebra a tough beating with a 21-point victory. Gonzales became only man to claim a first game win as head coach of the Batang Pier, aside from helming the franchise to its biggest win since joining the league prior to the 2012–13 season.[27] The team then lost its chance for a twice-to-beat edge to Meralco on their final elimination game. They placed 8th with a 5–6 record. Before the start of the quarterfinals, Cabagnot was traded back to San Miguel in exchange for Mercado and the second round picks of 2018 and 2019.[28] The team ended the campaign with the loss to Barangay Ginebra in the play-offs. Before the tourney was over, Mercado was traded away after playing one game for the Batang Pier to Barako Bull in exchange for Denok Miranda and a 2016 second-rounder.[29]

Commissioner's Cup

[edit]

GlobalPort debuted with C. J. Leslie as their import and won the opening game of the Commissioner's Cup. Leslie's numbers were impressive and he led the Batang Pier to a 2–2 record, but a lack of inside threat was the main reason why he was replaced by Calvin Warner. On their game against Blackwater, Warner posted a new franchise record 30 rebounds, while the team notched a new franchise best mark of 74 total rebounds. It was the team's first back-to-back wins under Coach Gonzales as they also registered their biggest win margin at 23 points.[30] However, a personal reason caused Warner to leave the country, so the team opted to switch import once more to Derrick Caracter. They also traded Nonoy Baclao to Alaska, and received Gabby Espinas in return, while exchanging the teams' 2017 first rounders.[31] Unfortunately, the team lost all of its remaining games with Caracter as their import and failed to clinched a quarterfinal slot. Before the conference ended, GlobalPort parted ways with Espinas and Yancy De Ocampo, and welcomed Billy Mamaril and Doug Kramer in a 4-team trade.[32]

Governors' Cup

[edit]

Milestone after milestone, all PBA teams are given the option to have an Asian import this conference aside from the regular imports and the team signed in Omar Krayem. The team also got the chance to have an import with unlimited height after being ranked at the bottom four of the standings after the first two conferences and they signed in their first 7-footer import in Patrick O'Bryant. He was replaced by Steve Thomas after two games. The team had their best start ever at 3–0 after, including their first ever franchise win against Star since joining the league.[33] They parted ways with Kelly Nabong in a three-team trade that sent him to the Bolts while receiving a second-rounder from NLEX.[34] The Batang Pier also went on their first out of the country game in Dubai parading their first import choice in Jarrid Famous, but they lost to the Elasto Painters in a game where Romeo scored his career-high 40 points, which is, according to Fidel Mangonon III, the franchise record for most points scored in a game, which is also equals to the production of Markeith Cummings in 2013. Romeo also became the 13th among active players who've scored 40+ in a PBA game according to Mangonon. The team recorded its highest scoring output in a 123–120 win against the Tropang Texters, and its biggest winning margin by far at 28 points against NLEX while Famous notched a team record of 37 rebounds in a single game (3rd highest all time in the PBA). The team also registered their most wins in a conference with 7 wins. They ended the eliminations with a 7–4 record, good enough for their best-ever finish at 4th seed, which was rewarded with a twice-to-beat advantage against fifth seeded Star. However, the Hotshots managed to overcome their twice-to-win disadvantage, including the most lopsided win in playoffs history of the PBA with a 126–73 beating of the Batang Pier.

2015–2016 season

[edit]

Philippine Cup

[edit]

The Batang Pier squad is determined to top their fifth-place finish from the previous season and reach the semifinals for the first time. The team had a busy off-season which started with the acquisition of Joseph Yeo from Barako Bull in exchange for the 2016 first round pick and the 2018 2nd round pick (whichever is lower). The team then traded Jewel Ponferada and their 2015 second round pick for the services of Jervy Cruz, who was sent to Barako Bull for Rico Maierhofer. A one-on-one deal also took place as the Batang Pier sent Miranda for the return of Washington to the team. Many were also surprised to see Roi Sumang fell on the third round of the PBA Draft who was gladly selected by GlobalPort, having no first and second round picks. The team also signed free agents Jonathan Uyloan and Philip Paniamogan, who was undrafted from the 2014 PBA Draft. Finally, Prince Caperal became part of a four team trade that saw Dorian Peña land at GlobalPort.

The Batang Pier triumphed against Barako Bull with a twice-to-beat advantage in the first phase of the quarterfinals. They outlasted Barangay Ginebra in a controversial knockout match in the second phase. The team entered the semifinals to face top seeded Alaska in a best of 7 series. After winning Game One behind Romeo's 41 points, GlobalPort lost four straight games to bow out of the tournament. It was the best finish of the franchise for the last four years.

On the brighter side, the tandem of Romeo and Pringle was recognized by the PBA as the "Slash Brothers".

Commissioner's Cup

[edit]

The team failed to pick-up where they left-off in the Philippine Cup as the Slash Brothers were hampered with injuries in the majority of the conference. To fill the guard rotation, the Batang Pier acquired Jeric Fortuna from Phoenix Fuel Masters by sending the team's 2018 second round pick. Imports Brian Williams and Calvin Warner failed to deliver for the team's first few games as they were eventually replaced by Shawn Taggart by the end of the conference. However, the team still finished dead last with a 3–8 standing.

Governors' Cup

[edit]

Player movement was expected as Keith Jensen, Paola Taha, Jonathan Uyloan and Roi Sumang were involved in a three-team trade. In return, GlobalPort acquired Karl Dehesa, Ronald Pascual and Yousef Taha, who's on his third duty as a Batang Pier. The team also signed free agents Sunday Salvacion, Gab Banal and Papot Paredes. They also paraded Dominique Sutton as their import but was later replaced by Mike Glover as GlobalPort let Sutton pursue his NBA Dream. Ronald Pascual was also traded to Blackwater for Mike Cortez. The team did not find their groove in the Governors' Cup and they finished 10th with a 4–7 card.

2016–2017 season

[edit]

Philippine Cup

[edit]

GlobalPort announced Franz Pumaren to be the head coach for this season. Key players were added in the roster: KG Canaleta was signed from free agency; the team acquired J. R. Quinahan for Jay Washington, Mick Pennisi for Doug Kramer, and Aaron Aban for GP's 2019 second round pick; Von Pessumal was tapped from the Gilas Special Draft and Jessie Saitanan was given contract after being unsigned by Meralco from the regular draft. During the season, Josh Urbiztondo and Yutien Andrada was also picked up, however, the team relegated Karl Dehesa to become an unrestricted free agent.

Terrence Romeo once again led the league in scoring and was also one of the assist leaders during the conference. The team clinched the 5th seed and faced TNT KaKropa in the quarterfinals. TNT swept GlobalPort in their series. Coach Pumaren emphasized how shallow the bench of GlobalPort was and stated that in order to move forward, player changes are needed.

Commissioner's Cup

[edit]

The team's roster was intact as the conference started. The team's losses continue to pile up due to Terrence Romeo's health woes and some import changes from Sean Williams to Malcolm White. kg Canaleta was dealt to Blackwater for Dylan Ababou and James Forrester. The team seemed to miss the playoffs until GlobalPort made some moves near the end of the eliminations. JR Quinahan and Anthony Semerad were traded together with a 2017 1st rounder to get Sean Anthony and Gilas cadets, Jonathan Grey and Bradwyn Guinto. Justin Harper also replaced White and the fortunes of the Batang Pier turned around. They managed to reach the playoffs after ousting Alaska in a knockoff game for 8th seed. However, the team bowed to the 1st seeded Ginebra in a heated battle which saw the ejection of Terrence Romeo after an altercation with LA Tenorio.

Governors' Cup

[edit]

GlobalPort traded Von Pessumal for fellow cadet Arnold Van Opstal. The team also signed Ryan Araña, Mark Cardona, Paulo Hubalde and Robby Celiz from the free agent pool. Dylan Ababou was also shipped for Mac Baracael. Jabril Trawick was the team's import for the first game but was replaced by Murphy Holloway throughout the conference. The Batang Pier showed promise as they split their first 6 assignments before losing 5 straight games to end their campaign, mainly due to the absence of Romeo or Pringle for different reasons. They finished 10th in the standings after the elimination round.

2017–2018 season

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Philippine Cup

[edit]

During the off-season, the team drafted Fil-Am Robert Herndon, Andreas Cahilig, former Arellano Chief Zach Nicholls and Gian Abrigo. The draft rights of Herndon and Abrigo were then traded to the Magnolia Hotshots in exchange for the rights of co-rookies Julian Sargent, Lervin Flores and Joseph Gabayni. They also brought back Pido Jarencio as head coach. They played most of the conference without Romeo who was injured from the previous conference and only compiled a 5–6 win – loss record for the 7th seed and a quarterfinal match-up against the 2nd seeded Hotshots who have a twice-to-win advantage. Despite having the lead at halftime with a score of 45–34 and a decent 14 point, 5 rebound, 6 assist performance for the returning Romeo, they lost to the Hotshots 86–79.

Governors' Cup

[edit]

The GlobalPort Batang Pier announced on August 10, 2018 that they will compete as the NorthPort Batang Pier for the 2018 PBA Governors' Cup.[35]

Current roster

[edit]
Players Coaches
Pos. # POB Name Height Weight DOB (YYYY–MM–DD) From
G/F 0 Philippines Taha, Paolo 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 180 lb (82 kg) 1990–12–05 St. Benilde
F 1 Philippines Onwubere, Sidney 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 1993–08–01 Emilio Aguinaldo
C 2 Philippines Calma, JM Injured 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 193 lb (88 kg) 1997–12–02 San Sebastian
G 3 Philippines Yu, Fran 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) 154 lb (70 kg) 1998–06–16 Letran
G 4 Philippines Miranda, Agem (R) 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 1999–09–04 José Rizal
G 5 Philippines Bulanadi, Allyn 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 1997–04–28 San Sebastian
C 7 United States Jack, Kadeem (CI) 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 235 lb (107 kg) 1992–10–27 Rutgers
G 8 Philippines Zamar, Paul Injured 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) 179 lb (81 kg) 1987–10–20 UE
F/C 9 Philippines Tratter, Abu 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1993–01–09 De La Salle
F 10 Philippines Tolentino, Arvin 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 1995–11–05 Far Eastern
G 13 Philippines Amores, John (S) 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 178 lb (81 kg) 1999–06–13 José Rizal
G 20 Philippines Nelle, Evan (R) 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) 1998–06–08 De La Salle
F 22 Australia Flores, Cade 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 214 lb (97 kg) Arellano
F 23 Greece Navarro, William 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1997–02–03 Ateneo
G/F 24 United States Munzon, Joshua (C) 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 1995–01–15 Cal State LA
G 28 Philippines Jalalon, Jio 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) 150 lb (68 kg) 1992–08–02 Arellano
F/C 37 Philippines Cuntapay, Damie 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 1998–10–22 San Beda
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)
Team manager



Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (CI) Commissioner's Cup Import
  • (GI) Governors' Cup Import
  • (EI) EASL Import
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (IN) Inactive
  • (S) Suspended
  • (R) Rookie
  • Injured Injured

Roster



Season-by-season records

[edit]
Records from the 2024–25 PBA season:
Conf. Team name Elimination round Playoffs
Finish W L PCT Stage Results
GOV NorthPort Batang Pier 5th in Group A 3 7 .300 Did not qualify
COM TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD
PHI TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD
Total elimination round 3 7 .300 TBD
Total playoffs TBD TBD TBD
Total 2024–25 3 7 .300 TBD
Total franchise 134 234 .364 0 championships

*one-game playoffs
**team had the twice-to-beat advantage

Head coaches

[edit]
NorthPort Batang Pier head coaches
Name Start End Seasons Overall record Best finish
W L PCT G
Glenn Capacio 2012 2012 1 1 13 0.07 14 Eliminations
Junel Baculi 2013 2013 1 6 17 0.35 23 Quarterfinals (5th seed)
Richie Ticzon 2013 2014 1 5 9 0.36 14 Quarterfinals (7th seed)
Pido Jarencio[36] 2014 2014 1 6 21 0.22 27 Eliminations
Eric Gonzales 2014 2015 1 5 9 0.36 14 Quarterfinals (8th seed)
Pido Jarencio[37] 2015 2016 2 17 14 .548 31 Semifinals (5th seed)
Eric Gonzales 2016 2016 1 2 8 .200 10 Eliminations
Johnedel Cardel 2016 2016 1 5 7 .417 12 Eliminations
Franz Pumaren[38] 2016 2017 1 14 23 .378 37 Quarterfinals (5th seed)
Pido Jarencio[39] 2017 2023 5 56 92 .378 148 Semifinals (8th seed)
Bonnie Tan[40] 2021 present 3 17 19 .472 36 Quarterfinals (6th seed)

Player of Note

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Other Notable Players

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Imports

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Awards

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Individual awards

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PBA Best Player of the Conference PBA Rookie of the Year Award PBA All-Defensive Team
PBA Mythical First Team PBA Mythical Second Team PBA Most Improved Player
PBA Sportsmanship Award

PBA Press Corps Individual Awards

[edit]
Defensive Player of the Year Bogs Adornado Comeback Player of the Year All-Rookie Team

All-Star Weekend

[edit]
All-Star MVP Obstacle Challenge
Three-Point Shootout All-Star Selection

2013

  • Gary David

2015

  • Stanley Pringle
  • Terrence Romeo

2016

  • Stanley Pringle
  • Terrence Romeo

2017

  • Von Pessumal
  • Stanley Pringle
  • J.R. Quiñahan
  • Terrence Romeo

2018

  • Stanley Pringle

2023

  • Robert Bolick
  • Jeff Chan
  • Arwind Santos
  • Arvin Tolentino

2024

  • Arvin Tolentino

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ PBA: Powerade franchise sold to Mikee Romero-owned Sultan 900 Inc., GMA News Online, July 30, 2012
  2. ^ Goodbye Tigers: Coca-Cola sells Powerade PBA franchise to Mikee Romero Archived September 1, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, InterAKTV, July 30, 2012
  3. ^ Mikee takes over Powerade, Nelson Beltran, The Philippine Star, July 31, 2012
  4. ^ GlobalPort officially accepted as newest member of the PBA Archived August 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Rey Joble, InterAKTV, August 17, 2012
  5. ^ PBA: Sale of Powerade Tigers franchise to Romero group approved, GMA News Online, August 17, 2012
  6. ^ Junel Baculi to coach GlobalPort, Glenn Capacio stays as top assistant Archived September 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, InterAKTV, January 3, 2013
  7. ^ GlobalPort revamps roster, adds Sol Mercado, Japeth Aguilar, GMA News Online, January 31, 2013
  8. ^ BARANGAY GINEBRA FINALLY LANDS AGUILAR, pba.nquirer.net, June 11, 2013
  9. ^ Dy, Richard. "Big Globalport gamble as Ritchie Ticzon named head coach in interim capacity". Spin.ph.
  10. ^ Badua, Snow. "'El Granada' David sent by Globalport to Meralco in four-player trade". SPIN.ph.
  11. ^ Badua, Snow. "Teng the ultimate target as Ross to be traded to Barako for sixth pick in PBA draft". SPIN.ph.
  12. ^ Dy, Richard. "'Thriller' Miller looking for one final title run at Barako, eyes future coaching career". SPIN.ph.
  13. ^ "San Mig Coffee, GlobalPort trade rookies Justin Chua, Isaac Holstein; Leo Najorda also in deal | InterAksyon.com | Sports5". Archived from the original on February 18, 2014. Retrieved February 20, 2014.
  14. ^ Dy, Richard. "Globalport tries to get back on the winning track as it battles lowly Air21".
  15. ^ Dy, Richard. "GlobalPort finds an unlikely hero in Nabong to nip Alaska in overtime thriller". SPIN.ph.
  16. ^ Dy, Richard. "Belga comes to Rain or Shine's rescue as Painters oust Globalport to make semis". SPIN.ph.
  17. ^ Badua, Snow. "Pido Jarencio eyed for GlobalPort job as owner Romero hints at coaching change". SPIN.ph.
  18. ^ Dy, Richard (February 19, 2014). "GlobalPort new boy Alex Cabagnot admits he didn't see trade coming – SPIN.PH".
  19. ^ Petron/San Miguel Beer shakes up roster, brings aboard Sol Mercado and Rico Maierhofer, GMA News Online, February 18, 2014
  20. ^ Dy, Richard. "'Major Pain' now a captain as Eric Menk keen to lead by example at GlobalPort". SPIN.ph.
  21. ^ Petron/GlobalPort and San Miguel Beer push through with Taha for Chua trade, GMA News Online, April 29, 2014
  22. ^ Salva, Buenafe, Matias, Acuna, Custodio added to package as San Mig, GlobalPort, Barako seal seven-player deal, SPIN.ph, June 3, 2014
  23. ^ PBA: GlobalPort swaps Garcia for Barako Bull's Jensen, GMA News Online, June 24, 2014
  24. ^ ALASKA ACQUIRES ERIK MENK FROM GLOBALPORT FOR TWO PICKS, Solar Sports Desk, August 12, 2014
  25. ^ GlobalPort's Jay Washington returning to Talk 'N Text in trade for Noy Baclao, 2017 first-round pick, spin.ph, September 22, 2014
  26. ^ BIG ROOKIE HARVEST FOR GLOBALPORT, PBA (Inquirer), August 25, 2014
  27. ^ GLOBALPORT SURPRISES GINEBRA, PBA (Inquirer), November 30, 2014
  28. ^ Alex Cabagnot returns to San Miguel Beer, Sol Mercado back with GlobalPort in revised trade deal, spin.ph, December 10, 2014
  29. ^ Sol Mercado on the move again as GlobalPort ships him to Barako Bull for Denok Miranda, InterAksyon.com, January 8, 2015
  30. ^ BACK-TO-BACK FOR BATANG PIER, pba.inquirer.net, February 22, 2015
  31. ^ Alaska trades Gabby Espinas for Globalport big man Noy Baclao, Richard Dy, March 14, 2015
  32. ^ BIGS IN 4-TEAM RIGODON, pba.inquirer.net, April 6, 2015
  33. ^ GlobalPort stays unbeaten, slays Star Hotshots, GMA News Online, May 12, 2015
  34. ^ Three-team trade sending Kelly Nabong to Meralco, John Wilson to NLEX awaiting PBA approval Archived September 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, InterAksyon.com, May 20, 2015
  35. ^ "Batang Pier rebrands to NorthPort". Fox Sport. August 11, 2018. Retrieved August 13, 2018.
  36. ^ Terrado, Reuben. "True to character, Pido Jarencio keeps mood light as he bids UST Tigers farewell". SPIN.ph. Retrieved January 31, 2014.
  37. ^ none, none. "PBA: Pido Jarencio back as GlobalPort coach". gmanetwork.com. Retrieved March 31, 2015.
  38. ^ Ramos, Gerry. "Franz Pumaren to coach Globalport in official capacity in season debut vs Mahindra". spin.ph. Retrieved November 25, 2016.
  39. ^ Leongson, Randolph (October 30, 2017). "Pido Jarencio back as GlobalPort coach". sports.inquirer.net. Retrieved October 30, 2017.
  40. ^ Ramos, Gerry (April 23, 2023). "NorthPort drops interim tag, names Bonnie Tan full-time coach". spin.ph. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
[edit]
Preceded by PBA teams genealogies
2012–present
Incumbent