Final team standings for men's basketball since 1999.

In the context of basketball in the Philippines, the NCAA Final Four is the playoffs of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (Philippines) (NCAA) seniors' basketball tournament.

The term "final four" came from the United States National Collegiate Athletic Association's men's Division I basketball tournament which was colloquially called the "final four" ("Final Four" is now the American NCAA's registered trademark).

History

The NCAA instituted the final four format in 1997, discarding the split season format that they have used for the previous 73 years. The change was done due to the TV coverage of Vintage Sports, mimicking the change done by the UAAP four years earlier when Silverstar Sports started covering their tournaments, and to allow more teams to win the championship. The old format reportedly discouraged teams that had experienced early losses to improve their form as the season progresses.

Format

  • If no team sweeps the group stage: Seeds No. 1 and No. 2 teams possess the twice to beat advantage Team No. 1 meets No. 4 while No. 2 meets No. 3 in the semifinals. The semifinal winners advance to the finals. The team that wins 2 games in the finals wins the championship.
  • If a team sweeps the group stage: Seed No. 1 advance to the finals. Prior to 2008, the No. 1 seed had the twice-to-beat advantage in the finals. From 2008 to 2009, the finals was a best-of-three series. Seed No. 2 advance to the semifinals. Teams No. 3 and No. 4 face off to meet No. 2 in the semifinals in a one-game playoff. In the finals, either the No. 1 seed or the other opponent has to win twice. From 2008 to 2016, seed No. 1 earned a thrice-to-beat advantage (or a 1−0 incentive lead in a virtual best-of-five Finals series).
  • In case of two teams being tied, an extra game will be played to determine which seed they will possess.
  • In case of three or more teams being tied, a quotient system will decide which team possesses the best seeding, while the other teams will play an extra game to determine the second-best seeding. The winner will face the holder of the best seeding for a playoff slot.

Results

Statistics

Seniors tournament

Appearances

TeamSemifinal appearancesLast semis appearanceFirst semis appearanceFinals appearancesHighest seed
Arellano22016201422nd
Letran1820221997111st
Benilde62024200041st
JRU132017199931st
Lyceum62024201821st
Mapúa132024199731st
PCU*42006200232nd
San Beda2120241997161st
San Sebastian152019199791st
Perpetual102021199811st

Notes:

  • Number of appearances excludes 4th seed elimination games.
  • PCU left the league

Season-by-season performances

  • Number denotes playoff seeding.
  • Shade denotes final position.
SchoolNCAA Season
737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101
AUF--10--
Arellano--567872526810X67107
Letran314766131323453326265331296
Benilde--?73426868768789958108555142
EAC--791075910879971075
JRU672114378732334583453108109610
Lyceum--61067991229324
Mapúa4?6535453444645610103310762611
PCU7?885382227--
San Beda24568754711111111111211X3433
San Sebastian121421264655222238774648589
Perpetual533278715568989444649474858

Notes

Win–loss statistics

TeamPldWLPCT
Semifinals and knockout games Team Pld W L PCT San Beda 31 24 7 0.774 PCU 7 5 2 0.714 Letran 30 19 11 0.633 Benilde 12 7 5 0.583 San Sebastian 26 13 13 0.500 Mapúa 22 9 13 0.409 JRU 22 8 14 0.363 Perpetual 20 6 14 0.300 Arellano 8 2 6 0.250 Lyceum 6 1 5 0.167Finals Team Pld W L PCT San Beda 34 24 10 0.706 Letran 29 18 11 0.620 PCU 8 4 4 0.500 Mapúa 7 3 4 0.429 San Sebastian 19 8 11 0.421 Benilde 9 3 6 0.333 JRU 8 2 6 0.250 Arellano 4 0 4 0.000 Lyceum 4 0 4 0.000 Perpetual 2 0 2 0.000Entire playoffs Team Pld W L PCT San Beda 65 48 17 0.738 Letran 59 37 22 0.627 PCU 15 9 6 0.600 Benilde 21 10 11 0.476 San Sebastian 45 21 24 0.467 Mapúa 29 12 17 0.414 JRU 30 10 20 0.333 Perpetual 22 6 16 0.273 Arellano 12 2 10 0.167 Lyceum 9 1 9 0.111
San Beda312470.774
PCU7520.714
Letran3019110.633
Benilde12750.583
San Sebastian2613130.500
Mapúa229130.409
JRU228140.363
Perpetual206140.300
Arellano8260.250
Lyceum6150.167
TeamPldWLPCT
San Beda3424100.706
Letran2918110.620
PCU8440.500
Mapúa7340.429
San Sebastian198110.421
Benilde9360.333
JRU8260.250
Arellano4040.000
Lyceum4040.000
Perpetual2020.000
TeamPldWLPCT
San Beda6548170.738
Letran5937220.627
PCU15960.600
Benilde2110110.476
San Sebastian4521240.467
Mapúa2912170.414
JRU3010200.333
Perpetual226160.273
Arellano122100.167
Lyceum9190.111

Finals statistics

  • Most lopsided game: San Sebastian 95-62 JRC, 2001 Game 3 (33 points)
  • Closest game: Several games, all one-point leads: Letran 75-74 JRC, 1999 Game 1 San Sebastian 79-78 Benilde, 2002 Game 1 San Beda 68-67 PCU, 2006 Game 3 Letran 65-64 San Beda, 2019 Game 1
  • Finals appearances: San Beda, 15; Letran 11; and San Sebastian, 9
  • Consecutive finals appearances: San Beda, 14 (2006–19); San Sebastian, 4 (2000–03)
  • Championships: San Beda (2006–08, 2010–14, 2016–18), 11; Letran(1998–99, 2003, 2005, 2015, 2019, 2021, 2022), 8; San Sebastian (1997, 2001–02, 2009), 4
  • Consecutive championships: San Beda (2006–08, 2016–18), Letran (2019–22) 3; San Beda (2010–14), 5

Semifinals

  • Most lopsided game: Letran 93-60 SSC-R, 2005 (33 points)
  • Closest game: Several games, all one point leads Letran 65-64 PCU, 2004 (1 point) Letran 91-90 Mapua, 2015 (1 point) Benilde 62-61 San Beda, 2022 (1 point)
  • Semifinal appearances: San Beda 19, Letran 18, San Sebastian 15, JRU 13
  • Consecutive semifinal appearances: San Beda 17 (2006–19,2021–23), Letran 7 (2003–2009), San Sebastian 7 (1997–2003), JRU 5 (1999–2003, 2007–2011)

Most frequent matchups

The most frequently played matchups are:

MatchupSemifinalsFinalsTotal
San Beda vs. Letran358
San Sebastian vs. Letran628
San Sebastian vs. JRU617
San Beda vs. Perpetual606
San Beda vs. San Sebastian145
Mapúa vs. San Beda415
Letran vs. Mapúa314
San Beda vs. Lyceum123
Letran vs. JRU213
Letran vs. PCU213
San Beda vs. JRU213
Letran vs. Lyceum303
Mapúa vs. Benilde112
Benilde vs. San Beda202
San Beda vs. Arellano022
San Sebastian vs. Benilde022

Seeds

In the 26 tournaments the final four format has been applied, the higher seed has beaten the lower seeds in the semifinals due to their twice to beat advantage, for the most part:

  1. The No. 1 seed has beaten the No. 4 seed 20 out of 23 times (87%) The No. 1 seed has beaten the No. 4 seed 16 times on the first game (80%). The No. 1 seed has beaten the No. 4 seed 4 times on the second game (20%) The only times the No. 1 seed was beaten by the No. 4 seed were during the San Sebastian-Letran matchup in 1999 (Letran won), and the JRC-San Sebastian matchup in 2000 (San Sebastian won).
  2. The No. 2 seed has beaten the No. 3 seed 22 out of 25 times (88%). The No. 2 seed has beaten the No. 3 seed 13 times on the first game (62%). The No. 2 seed has beaten the No. 3 seed 6 times on the second game (29%). The No. 2 seed has beaten the No. 3 seed 2 times in a knockout game due to the stepladder format (9%). The only times the No. 2 seed doesn't have a twice to beat advantage against the No. 3 seed were during the San Beda-Letran matchup in 1997 (San Beda won), the San Sebastian-JRU matchup in 2010 (San Sebastian won), and the Lyceum-Letran matchup in 2019 (Letran won) due to the stepladder format. The only times the No. 2 seed was beaten by the No. 3 seed were during the Perpetual Help-CSB matchup in 2000 (CSB won), the San Sebastian-Letran matchup in 2012 (Letran won), the Lyceum-Letran matchup in 2019 (Letran won) due to the stepladder format and the Lyceum-San Beda matchup in 2023 (San Beda won).
  3. The No. 2 seed has beaten the No. 4 seed once (100%) The only time the No. 2 seed has beaten the No. 4 seed was during the San Beda-San Sebastian matchup in 2017 (San Beda won) due to the stepladder format.
  4. The No. 3 seed has beaten the No. 4 seed 3 out of 4 times (75%) With San Sebastian sweeping the group stage, there were two semifinal rounds for 1997. With San Beda sweeping the group stage, there were two semifinal rounds for 2010 and 2019. With Lyceum sweeping the group stage, there were two semifinal rounds for 2017.
  5. The No. 1 seed skipped the semifinals four times (15%; in 1997, when San Sebastian swept the group stage, in 2010 and 2019, when San Beda swept the group stage, and in 2017, when Lyceum swept the group stage)

A victory of the No. 3 and No. 4 seeds in a series are considered big upsets considering that the No. 3 and No. 4 seed have to win twice, not to mention the perceived superiority of the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds when compared to the No. 3 and No. 4 seeds.

In the finals, the advantage of the No. 1 seed isn't as pronounced since the competing teams have to win the same number of games:

  1. The No. 1 seed has beaten the No. 2 seed 15 of 21 times (71%)
  2. The No. 2 seed has beaten the No. 1 seed 6 of 21 times (29%)
  3. The No. 1 seed has beaten the No. 3 seed 1 of 2 times (50%)
  4. The No. 3 seed has beaten the No. 1 seed 1 of 2 times (50%)
  5. The No. 3 seed has beaten the No. 4 seed once (100%) This occurred in 2000 in which both lower seeded teams upset the teams with the twice to beat advantage. This was the only time were both teams possessing the twice to beat advantage failed to qualify for the finals in both the NCAA and the UAAP.
  6. The No. 4 seed has beaten the No. 2 seed once (100%)
  7. The No. 1 seed has won the championship 16 of 25 times (64%)

Individual single-game records

Stats since the 2001 season.

StatisticNameTotalSchoolOpponentStage
Most pointsKevin Alas43LetranSan Sebastian2012 Semifinals
Most reboundsAllwell Oraeme24MapúaArellano2016 Semifinals
Most assistsRoldan Sara11San BedaArellano2016 Finals
Most stealsRoldan Sara11San BedaArellano2016 Finals
Most blocksRaymond Almazan Mark Andaya9LetranSan Sebastian2013 Semifinals 2005 Semifinals

Juniors tournament

Appearances

TeamSemifinal appearancesLast semis appearanceFirst semis appearanceFinals appearancesHighest seed
AU0--0-
CSJL0--0-
LSGH0--0-
EAC–ICA0--0-
JRU0--0-
MIT/MHSS0--0-
PCU0--0-
SBU–R0--0-
SSC–R0--0-
UPHSD0--0-

Notes:

  • Number of appearances excludes 4th seed elimination games.

Season-by-season performances performances

  • Number denotes playoff seeding.
  • Shade denotes final position.
SchoolNCAA Season
7475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100
AUF--10--
Arellano--89769734675CC7107
Letran34?1652772224246376397122
EAC–ICA--9849810691010101065
JRU???????444346875498946989
LSGH--?????4555465333543414373
Lyceum–Cavite--1010108558528910
Mapúa/Malayan?11????777554122229446
PCU??????331--
San Beda–Rizal1232111233511111211131CC254
San Sebastian???????1211326226810583538
Perpetual???????6666539879107768611

Notes

Television and radio

The final four is the culmination of the NCAA basketball season and is heavily covered by the media. With the NCAA as one of the leading collegiate leagues in the country, the final four games are broadcast live throughout the country.

Beginning in 2015, the NCAA, and the final four games, are broadcast by ABS-CBN's UHF channel ABS-CBN Sports+Action nationwide, being produced by ABS-CBN Sports. Previously, Studio 23 covered the NCAA from 2002 until 2011. Prior to Studio 23, the games were broadcast irregularly by different broadcast partners. From 2009 to 2011 and since 2015, the games are also aired in high definition, through Balls subsidiary Balls HD.

Previous nationwide providers of the NCAA were Vintage Television on People's Television Network and later IBC from 1995 until 1999 and PTV Channel 4 from 2000 until 2001 season. PTV's coverage was produced by MCI Group and later Silvestar Sports.

In 2012, the NCAA, and the final four games were broadcast by TV5's VHF channel IBC's AKTV, being produced by Sports5. From 2013 to 2014 TV5 took over the seniors' games coverage after AKTV was dissolved.

See also