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Glenn Capacio

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Nationality
  
Filipino

PBA draft
  
1988 / Direct hire

Height
  
1.85 m

Listed height
  
6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)

Pro career
  
1988–2001

Weight
  
84 kg


Listed weight
  
185 lb (84 kg)

Name
  
Glenn Capacio

College
  
FEU

Role
  
Basketball Player

Position
  
Coach

Glenn Capacio contentsspinphimagecapacio2jpg

Born
  
May 15, 1964 (age 59) (
1964-05-15
)

Similar People
  
Jerry Codinera, Ely Capacio, Jojo Lastimosa

Tough reverse by glenn capacio


Glenn Capacio (born May 15, 1964 in Palo, Leyte) is a Filipino retired professional basketball player in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) and the former head coach of PBA team GlobalPort Batang Pier and was also the former head coach of the FEU Tamaraws from 2007 to 2010.

Contents

Glenn Capacio sportsinquirernetfiles201111GlennCapaciojpeg

Uaap feu vs ust sept 13 2007 with glenn capacio


College and amateur career

Capacio was the FEU Tamaraws' skipper during the 1983 UAAP season and the most dependable performer for rookie coach Bong Chua. He started his basketball career at Far Eastern University under coach Arturo Valenzona for two years and a year under coach Chee Poblete. He studied at Leyte Institute of Technology during high school and later moved to Manila and joined the Trinity College team for a year until graduation before moving on to FEU. Glenn's commercial experience includes playing for Boogie/Jag Jeans, YCO Shine Masters and RFM-Swift Hotdogs in the PABL.

Capacio also saw action for the national team under coach Joe Lipa in the 1986 Asian Games and the 1987 Jones Cup, ABC championships and SEA Games.

PBA career

He entered the PBA in 1988 as part of the original Purefoods Hotdogs team alongside Jerry Codiñera, perennial All-Star and 1988 Rookie of the Year Jojo Lastimosa and later on by 4-time MVP Alvin Patrimonio. He was an eight-time member of the All-Defensive Team and a member of the 5,000 point club, its 43rd, when he achieved the milestone on November 27, 1998.

Coaching career

Capacio first started his coaching career after being hired by his college alma mater, the Far Eastern University, to coach its basketball team in 2007. He led the team to the Final Four in three of his four years with the team, (except in his debut season losing to a playoff game for the 4th-seed against the defending champions UST Growling Tigers in the step ladder semifinals with the UE Red Warriors sweeping the eliminations 14-0) the semifinals in his next two years(2008 & 2009) and losing to the Ateneo Blue Eagles in the 2010 finals.

Capacio left FEU to coach the AirAsia Philippine Patriots of the fledging ASEAN Basketball League (ABL) and leading the team to the title in the league's first season.

In 2012, the Patriots franchise folded after team owner Mikee Romero had his franchise application to the PBA accepted. Capacio took over as the interim head coach for the team. On January 2013, the team announced that it hired Junel Baculi as their permanent head coach. Capacio was relegated to being the first assistant coach of the team.

After the 2013–14 season, Capacio signed with expansion team Kia Sorento as one of their assistant coaches expected to fill the void whenever head coach Manny Pacquiao is unable to attend to the team. After players Alex Nuyles and Mike Burtscher voiced out to social media their frustration to the team, Capacio decided to follow suit. Capacio said that he was unduly terminated by the team because of his failure to attend team meetings. He also said that he was fired as early as January 2015, and with 18 months still left in his contact, the team offered to buy out only three months of his contact, to which he refused. He has since filed a case against the team.

After an uneventful stint with Kia, Capacio decided to go back to the college ranks, where he served as an assistant coach under Aldin Ayo for the Letran Knights of the NCAA Philippines that won the basketball title in 2015.

After Ayo was tapped to be the head coach of the De La Salle Green Archers of the UAAP, he, along with other members of the coaching staff, followed. He won another title there, his first in the UAAP as a coach.

Personal

He has three brothers who play basketball with the eldest, Ely Capacio, being a national team player and played for Tanduay in the PBA.

His son, Gwynne Matthew, played college basketball for the Ateneo Blue Eagles.

References

Glenn Capacio Wikipedia