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Jack Tanuan

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Nationality
  
Filipino

Pro career
  
1988–2000

Weight
  
98 kg

Listed height
  
6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)

Name
  
Jack Tanuan

Education
  
Far Eastern University

Listed weight
  
215 lb (98 kg)

Role
  
Basketball Player

Position
  
Center, Power forward

College
  
Far Eastern University

Height
  
1.96 m


Born
  
July 23, 1965 Manila, Philippines (
1965-07-23
)

PBA draft
  
1988 Round: 1 / Pick: 1st overall

Died
  
April 4, 2002, Quezon City, Philippines

Edgardo "Jack" Tanuan (July 23, 1965 – April 4, 2002) was a Filipino professional basketball player in the Philippine Basketball Association.

Contents

College/Amateur career

A native of Davao City. Tanuan played collegiate basketball at Far Eastern University in the UAAP. In the PBL, he had stints with YCO Shine Masters and MIESCOR. He was part of the Philippine national team that took home the bronze medal during the 1986 Asian Games in Seoul, Korea.

Professional career

Tanuan was drafted first overall by Purefoods in the 1988 PBA draft, where he served as backup to Ramon Fernandez and Jerry Codiñera and struggled in his rookie year. He blossomed when coach Baby Dalupan took over the coaching reins for the TJ Hotdogs. In 1991, he, along with another ex-Purefoods player, Al Solis, were lured by Swift to become the team's new franchise players. He became a journeyman for the next few years, with stops at Sta. Lucia, Pepsi Mega/Mobiline, and Pop Cola, and would win his last PBA championship with the Alaska Milkmen in the 1997 PBA Governors Cup. He later moved to the newly formed league MBA via the Negros Slashers.

Illness and death

Tanuan succumbed to a lingering kidney ailment on April 4, 2002. He had been in and out of the hospital for some time and was last confined at the New Era Hospital in Quezon City, battling a kidney disease that ended his career in 2000.

References

Jack Tanuan Wikipedia