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词条 Luigi Trillo
释义

  1. Coaching career

  2. Personal life

  3. References

{{Infobox basketball biography
| image =
| name = Luigi Trillo
| alias =
| number =
| position = Assistant Coach
| league = PBA
| team = Meralco Bolts
| nationality = Filipino
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1975|7|13|mf=y}}
| birth_place = Manila, Philippines
| height_ft =
| weight_lbs =
| high school =
| college = De La Salle University
| draft_year_pba =
| draft_team_pba =
| career_start =
| career_end =
| cyears1 = 1999–2004
| cteam1 = Adamson Falcons (UAAP)
| cyears2 = 2006–2012
| cteam2 = Cebuana Lhuillier Gems (PBL)/(PBA D-League)
| cyears3 = 2007
| cteam3 = Philippines (men's 3x3)
| cyears4 = 2011–2014
| cteam4 = Alaska Aces
| cyears5 = 2014–present
| cteam5 = Meralco Bolts
| highlights =
  • 2012-13 PBA Coach of the Year

}}

Luis Antonio Trillo, (born July 13, 1975) better known as Luigi Trillo is the former head coach of the Alaska Aces in the Philippine Basketball Association.[1][2] He is also the former head coach of the Cebuana Lhuillier Gems in the PBA D-League. Currently, he is the assistant coach of the Meralco Bolts.

Coaching career

Unlike most coaches, Trillo did not play professionally at first. He was out of the bird’s nest quite early when he first got the offer to coach for a private school for boys called Southridge in 1997.

After Southridge, he became a co-coach with George Gallent in the junior Philippine Basketball League. He then got an offer as an assistant coach for the Cebu Gems in the now-defunct Metropolitan Basketball Association, where he went straight to the finals in his first year.

In 1999, he joined the Adamson Falcons and, at 23 years old, became the youngest head coach in the UAAP at the time. His inexperience showed as the Soaring Falcons did not win a game in his first two seasons with the team at 0-28.[3]Those first two years were really trying times for me because, remember, you're inheriting a team that's in last place and then we had to recruit,", he said as he explained the early parts of his 4 and a half years with Adamson.[4]

His hard work resulted in a UniGames title for Adamson. Although his time with Adamson wasn’t the brightest of years, it still remains just as significant to him because it made him “realize how tough coaching was.”

While at Adamson, he was also offered by coach Tim Cone, who was then his neighbor, to be his assistant coach At Alaska, which he accepted. He juggled learning about coaching through the UAAP and with the Alaska franchise.

After his stint with Adamson, he became head coach of the Cebuana Lhuillier Gems of the PBL in 2006,[5] and of the PBA D-League in 2011.

In 2012, he left Cebuana and took over the coaching duties of Alaska, replacing Joel Banal.[6] The Elasto Painters spoiled his debut in a score of 107-100 but the Aces recovered and won 104-84 on their game vs. Barako Bull Energy.[7][8]

During the PBA 2012-13 season (Trillo's first full season), he quite made an impression around the league by battling the eventual champions Talk N' Text Tropang Texters to seven games during the 2012-13 PBA Philippine Cup semis. In the 2013 PBA Commissioner's Cup, he helped the Aces win its 14th championship in franchise history, the first in the post-Tim Cone era. His team also came within a game of ousting the eventual champion San Mig Coffee Mixers in the quarterfinals of the 2013 PBA Governors Cup. Because of his achievements, he was awarded as the 2012-13 PBA Coach of the Year by the PBA Press Corps.[9]

Two games into the 2014 PBA Governors' Cup, he stepped down as head coach of Alaska. After taking a sabbatical, he took the job as an in-game analyst for Sports5, and eventually returned to coaching, this time as assistant to Norman Black at Meralco.[10]

Personal life

Trillo is the son of former Alaska team manager/governor Joaqui Trillo. He is married to TV host and former courtside reporter, Ria Tanjuatco-Trillo. They have four children.[11]

References

1. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.philstar.com/sportsarticle.aspx?publicationsubcategoryid=69&articleid=833527&keyword=sp_pba|title=Trillo stays as Alaska coach |last=Beltran|first=Nelson|date=August 1, 2012|work=The Philippine Star|accessdate=2 August 2012}}
2. ^{{cite news|url=http://manilastandardtoday.com/www2/2012/08/01/trillo-stays-on-as-coach-of-alaska/|title=Trillo stays on as coach of Alaska|last=Lopez|first=Jeric|date=August 1, 2012|work=Manila Standard Today|accessdate=2 August 2012}}
3. ^http://www.interaksyon.com/interaktv/remembering-0-28-winless-seasons-in-adamson-motivate-trillo-at-alaska
4. ^http://www.rappler.com/sports/by-sport/basketball/44357-luigi-trillo-comes-full-circle
5. ^http://www.cebuanamoneymen.com/about.asp
6. ^http://www.interaksyon.com/interaktv/luigi-trillo-replaces-joel-banal-as-head-coach-of-alaska
7. ^CORNLEY IN IMPRESSIVE DEBUT AS RAIN OR SHINE THWARTS ALASKA, PBA.ph
8. ^ALASKA BEATS BARAKO BULL TO HAND TRILLO FIRST PBA WIN AS INTERIM HEAD COACH, PBA.ph
9. ^http://www.alaskaaces.com.ph/v3/coach-trillo-named-pba-coach-of-the-year
10. ^https://ph.sports.yahoo.com/news/luigi-trillo-joins-meralco-bolts-as-norman-black-s-assistant-coach-142135849-nba.html
11. ^http://bcmedia.ph/?p=1444
{{Meralco Bolts current roster}}{{Alaska Aces}}{{Alaska Aces 2013 PBA Commissioner's Cup Champions}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Trillo, Luigi}}

7 : 1975 births|Living people|University Athletic Association of the Philippines basketball players|Filipino men's basketball coaches|Sportspeople from Manila|Philippine Basketball Association coaches|De La Salle University alumni

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