- Carlos Loyzaga
infobox NBA Player
name = Carlos Loyzaga
nickname = Caloy, The Big Difference, The Great Difference
position = Center
height_ft = 6 | height_in = 3
weight = unknown
nationality = Philippines
birth_date = Birth date and age|1930|8|29|mf=y
birth_place =Manila ,Philippines
college = San Beda College
draft =
draft_year =
draft_team =
career_start = 1951
career_end = 1964
former_teams = MICAA: YCO Painters
awards = **
FIBA World Championship All-Star Mythical Five member (1954)
*FIBA Asia Championship All-Star Mythical Five member (1960)Carlos Loyzaga (born
August 29 ,1930 ) is a former Filipinobasketball player. He is considered by many to be the greatest Filipino basketball player of all time and will go down in basketball history as the “Big/Great Difference” of Philippine basketball. He had the natural ability to turn what seemed to be an impending defeat to victory, thus earning for himself the moniker: "The Big Difference," a sobriquet made popular by the incomparable sportscaster Willie Hernandez, now deceased. He led the Philippine National team to a Bronze Medal finish in the1954 FIBA World Championship and was named to the Mythical Team of that tournament. As of the end of 2006, this third place finish remains the highest finish of any Asian team in the history of the tournament.Early life
Loyzaga, more popularly known as "Caloy", was born to a Basque family during world war two. After surviving the war with his mother, sister and two brothers, He attended
San Beda College , where he played for the Philippine NCAA Red Lions basketball team. At 1.91 m (6 ft 3 in), he towered over most other players in the league and came to be a dominating player at the center position. Because of his shooting and rebounding prowess he quickly became a superstar. He led the Red Lions to back to back NCAA championships during his stint.Then a gangling cager, Loyzaga launched his colorful cage career in 1942 as a virtual unknown, playing for the Sta. Mesa Aces whose roster included the Cuna brothers, Pablo and Vicente; Ramon Lopez, chair of the Letran Hall of Fame; Vicente Siyllon, who became president of Insular Life; and brothers Bobby and Al Tuazon. Their coach was Jose "Pepe" Lansang, who later made a name for himself as a referee.
After the Liberation of Manila, Loyzaga played for a team called Bulldogs which was coached by Joker Faustino. He studied at the P. Burgos Elementary School in Sta. Mesa and National University for his high school.
Loyzaga was about to enroll at UST for his college education but before he could wear the UST jersey, noted player and coach Felicisimo Fajardo, also a Hall of Famer, took him to San Beda where Fely polished his playing style. Loyzaga had wanted earlier to play for Letran but backed off when the coach gave him the cold treatment.
Loyzaga honed his skills at the Tervalac playground in Sta. Mesa before making waves in the NCAA, then the country's most colorful and glamorous league, as a member of the fabled San Beda Red Lions in the 1950s.
He also played for the multi-titled Pratra, then coached by Gabriel "Gabby" Fajardo, Fely's brother and a fellow Hall of Famer. Pratra won the MICAA crown in 1951.
Career
He played college basketball for the
San Beda Red Lions in the NCAA before leading the Yco Painters to 49 consecutive victories in the now-defunctManila Industrial and Commercial Athletic Association (MICAA) from 1954 to 1956.Loyzaga, a two-time Olympian, was a many time member of the
Philippine national basketball team in the 1950’s and early 1960’s. He steered the national team into becoming one of the best in the world, winning four consecutiveAsian Games gold medals and two consecutiveFIBA Asia Championship s.Loyzaga’s finest moment was the
1954 FIBA World Championship where he led the Philippines to a third place finish and captured the bronze medal in the process. It is the best finish by anAsia n country and the Philippines have remained the only Asian medalists in the said tournament to date. Loyzaga himself finished as the tournament’s third-best leading scorer with a 16.4 points-per-game average and was named in the tournament's All-Star Mythical Five selection.Loyzaga retired in 1964 following a distinguished 15-year career. He currently lives with his family in
Australia , where he is also a citizen. He comes home to the Philippines every once in a while but generally stays out of the local spotlight. [http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2006/aug/16/yehey/top_stories/20060816top8.html]Achievements
College
*1951 NCAA Basketball Champions
*1952 NCAA Basketball ChampionsMICAA
*1954 National Basketball Champions
*1955 National Basketball Champions
*1956 National Basketball Champions
*1957 National Basketball Champions
*1958 National Basketball Champions
*1959 National Basketball Champions
*1960 National Basketball Champions
*1964 MICAA ChampionsInternational career highlights
*
1951 Asian Games champions
*1952 Olympic Games, ninth place
*1954 Asian Games champions
*1954 FIBA World Championship bronze medalist
**FIBA World Championship All-Star Mythical Five member (1954)
*1956 Olympic Games, seventh place
*1958 Asian Games champions
*1959 FIBA World Championship, eighth place
*1960FIBA Asia Championship champions
**FIBA Asia Championship All-Star Mythical Five member (1960)
*1962 Asian Games champions
*1963 FIBA Asia Championship champions
*1967 FIBA Asia Championship champions, head coach
*1968 Olympic Games, 13th place, head coachOther Achievements
*Philippine National Basketball Hall of Fame (1999)
*Philippine Sportswriter Association Athletes of the 20th Century award (2000)References
*Bocobo, Christian and Celis, Beth, Legends and Heroes of Philippine Basketball, (Philippines, 2004)
*Dela Cruz, Juan, Book of Pinoy Facts and Records, (National Bookstore, Mandaluyong City, Philippines, 2004)
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.