Filoil EcoOil Preseason Cup

Collegiate basketball tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Filoil EcoOil Preseason Cup (formerly known as the Homegrown Cup, the Filoil Flying V Preseason Cup, and also known as the Filoil EcoOil ECJ Preseason Cup in 2024) is a pre-season inter-collegiate basketball tournament in the Philippines. It is contested by teams mainly from the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) and the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), there have also been some invited teams such as the RP Youth under-18 team and teams from other associations.

Founded2006; 20 years ago (2006)
First season2006
Quick facts Sport, Founded ...
Filoil EcoOil Preseason Cup
Most recent season or competition:
2025 Filoil EcoOil Preseason Cup
SportBasketball
Founded2006; 20 years ago (2006)
First season2006
CountryPhilippines
Most recent
champions
UP school colors UP Fighting Maroons
(3rd title)
Most titlesLa Salle school colors De La Salle Green Archers
(4 titles)
Close

The UP Fighting Maroons are the current defending champions, and the first-ever to win three straight titles in tournament history. The De La Salle Green Archers are the most successful team with four titles.

History

The Filoil EcoOil Preseason Cup is held annually at the Playtime Filoil Centre (pictured as the Filoil EcoOil Centre).

The entire tournament is organized by Filoil EcoOil Sports, formerly Filoil Flyving V Sports, of the Villavicencio Group of Companies.[1] It was first held as a post-season tournament in 2006 where it was known as the Homegrown Cup. Starting in 2007, Filoil Flying V Sports decided to hold it every summer and it was subsequently renamed as the Filoil Flying V Preseason Cup.

The De La Salle Green Archers won the first two editions of the tournament, making them, to this day, the only back-to-back tournament champions.[2][3] The UE Red Warriors won the third edition of the tournament in 2008, followed by the FEU Tamaraws in 2009, the San Sebastian Stags in 2010,[4] the Ateneo Blue Eagles in 2011, and the NU Bulldogs in 2012. UE would reclaim the title in 2013 before starting a period from 2014 through 2019 where five of the six tournaments held were won by either De La Salle or the San Beda Red Lions. De La Salle claimed their fourth in 2016, the most out of any school, while San Beda won three in five years. The only outlier during this period was Ateneo in 2018.

The 2020 and 2021 editions of the tournament were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic,[5][6] before resuming with its 15th edition in 2022, where it was also rebranded as the Filoil EcoOil Preseason Cup, in which NU would win.[7][8] In 2024, it was announced that the 17th edition of the tournament would be named after Eduardo Cojuangco Jr., renaming it as the ECJ Preseason Cup. The UP Fighting Maroons would win three straight titles in the 2023, 2024, and 2025 editions, making them the first school to do so and, consequently, bagging the ECJ Perpetual Trophy.[9][10]

Tournament format

All participating teams are divided into two groups. Since 2023, teams are grouped based on association. The single round-robin tournament is used for each group.

The top four teams from each group advance to the single-elimination playoffs. The first round, the crossover quarterfinals, have the first-seeded teams matched against the fourth-seeded teams from the opposing group. The same is also applied for the second-seeded and third-seeded teams. The winner of each game advances to the next round until one team remains to become the Preseason Cup champion.[11]

Results

By tournament

More information Season, Finals ...
Season Finals Third-place game
ChampionScoreFinal opponentThird placeScoreFourth place
1 (2006) La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
79–67 JRU school colors
JRU
(NCAA)
FEU school colors
FEU
(UAAP)
72–63 UE school colors
UE
(UAAP)
2 (2007) La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
89–81 San Beda school colors
San Beda
(NCAA)
UE school colors
UE
(UAAP)
95–77 NU school colors
NU
(UAAP)
3 (2008) UE school colors
UE
(UAAP)
81–65 San Beda school colors
San Beda
(NCAA)
La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
79–60 Adamson school colors
Adamson
(UAAP)
4 (2009) FEU school colors
FEU
(UAAP)
84–78 UE school colors
UE
(UAAP)
SSC-R school colors
San Sebastian
(NCAA)
87–78 San Beda school colors
San Beda
(NCAA)
5 (2010) SSC-R school colors
San Sebastian
(NCAA)
79–78 FEU school colors
FEU
(UAAP)
Adamson school colors
Adamson
(UAAP)
57–55 JRU school colors
JRU
(NCAA)
6 (2011)[12] Ateneo school colors
Ateneo
(UAAP)
75–56 San Beda school colors
San Beda
(NCAA)
FEU school colors
FEU
(UAAP)
65–57 Adamson school colors
Adamson
(UAAP)
7 (2012)[13] NU school colors
NU
(UAAP)
64–54 La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
Ateneo school colors
Ateneo
(UAAP)
66–55 San Beda school colors
San Beda
(NCAA)
8 (2013)[14] UE school colors
UE
(UAAP)
81–68 NU school colors
NU
(UAAP)
San Beda school colors
San Beda
(NCAA)
74–70 UST school colors
UST
(UAAP)
9 (2014)[15] La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
71–66 San Beda school colors
San Beda
(NCAA)
CEU school colors
CEU
(NAASCU)
73–58 SWU school colors
SWU
(CESAFI)
10 (2015)[16] San Beda school colors
San Beda
(NCAA)
79–53 La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
JRU school colors
JRU
(NCAA)
71–69 FEU school colors
FEU
(UAAP)
11 (2016)[17] La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
86–74 Arellano school colors
Arellano
(NCAA)
Ateneo school colors
Ateneo
(UAAP)
66–54 NU school colors
NU
(UAAP)
12 (2017)[18] San Beda school colors
San Beda
(NCAA)
75–72 La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
Lyceum school colors
Lyceum
(NCAA)
82–75 JRU school colors
JRU
(NCAA)
13 (2018)[19] Ateneo school colors
Ateneo
(UAAP)
76–62 San Beda school colors
San Beda
(NCAA)
FEU school colors
FEU
(UAAP)
78–58 CSB school colors
Benilde
(NCAA)
14 (2019)[20] San Beda school colors
San Beda
(NCAA)
74–57 La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
Adamson school colors
Adamson
(UAAP)
96–63 Lyceum school colors
Lyceum
(NCAA)
15 (2022)[21] NU school colors
NU
(UAAP)
56–46 FEU school colors
FEU
(UAAP)
La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
N/A[22] Adamson school colors
Adamson
(UAAP)
16 (2023)[23] UP school colors
UP
(UAAP)
87–76 La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
NU school colors
NU
(UAAP)
85–77 UPHD school colors
Perpetual
(NCAA)
17 (2024)[24] UP school colors
UP
(UAAP)
69–66 La Salle school colors
La Salle
(UAAP)
FEU school colors
FEU
(UAAP)
80–78 Letran school colors
Letran
(NCAA)
18 (2025)[25] UP school colors
UP
(UAAP)
79–65 NU school colors
NU
(UAAP)
La Salle school colors La Salle
(UAAP)
N/A[26] UST school colors
UST
(UAAP)
19 (2026)
Close

By school

By league

More information School, Total ...
School1st place, gold medalist(s)2nd place, silver medalist(s)3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Total
UAAP131014 37
NCAA474 15
NAASCU001 1
Close

Media coverage

The tournament has had multiple media coverage partners over the years, beginning with ABS-CBN, whose now-defunct sports division was a broadcast partner from 2006 until 2016. The tournament was left without a broadcast partner in 2017, before signing a deal with ESPN5 for 2018 and 2019.[27] The 2023 edition was then broadcast by Solar Sports.

See also

References

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