The Ateneo Blue Eagles are the collegiate varsity teams of the Ateneo de Manila University that play in the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP), the premiere collegiate league in the Philippines. The Ateneo collegiate men's varsity basketball team was not always called the Blue Eagles. It got the name Blue Eagles when Ateneo adopted the Eagle as its mascot in 1938. Prior to that, from 1914 it was known under different names.
Ateneo has fifteen collegiate men's varsity teams that participate in fifteen sporting events of the University Athletic Association of the Philippines, its mother league.
Team identity
Team monikers
When Ateneo started to participate in intercollegiate sports in 1914, its varsity basketball teams were simply referred to by the school community as the Ateneo Seniors and Ateneo Juniors. They were later dubbed the Blue and Whites by the sports press in the early 1920s when Ateneo joined sports leagues. When Ateneo adopted the Eagle as its mascot in 1938, the college team was given a new name: Blue Eagles. The Ateneo Blue Eagles are sometimes called the Hail Mary Quintet by the sports press. This moniker was given to the Blue Eagles in 1926 when sports press noticed that the team would pray the Hail Mary (as the school’s patroness is the Immaculate Conception) during game time-outs and would win by the skin of their teeth.[1][2]
Ateneo is one of the four UAAP member schools that participate in all of the fifteen sporting events of the University Athletic Association of the Philippines. Until 2020, The Guidon, the school's official student publication, gave specific names to differentiate the various varsity teams.[3] However, beginning with UAAP Season 84 in May 2022, Ateneo de Manila University officially decided to unify student athletes and varsity teams under the "Blue Eagles" moniker moving forward, regardless of sport, gender, or age group.[4][5][6][7]
Former sport–specific monikers
Sport
Men
Women
Basketball
Blue Eagles
Lady Eagles
Football
Blue Booters
Lady Booters
Volleyball
Blue Spikers
Lady Eagles
Beach Volleyball
Blue Beach Spikers
Lady Beach Spikers
Baseball
Blue Batters
No team
Softball
No team
Lady Batters
Badminton
Blue Shuttlers
Lady Shuttlers
Tennis
Blue Netters
Lady Netters
Table Tennis
Blue Paddlers
Lady Paddlers
Track & Field
Blue Tracksters
Lady Tracksters
Swimming
Blue Tankers
Lady Tankers
Fencing
Blue Fencers
Lady Fencers
Judo
Blue Judokas
Lady Judokas
Taekwondo
Blue Jins
Lady Jins
Chess
Blue Woodpushers
Lady Woodpushers
Mascot and colors
Ateneo has long been involved in intercollegiate sports dating back to 1914. It was a pioneer in Philippine collegiate sports. Ateneo was the first Philippine school to adopt a mascot, and was also the first school to field an organized cheering squad with cheerleaders which was later followed by another first when it introduced a Pep Band to augment the cheerleaders during games.[8][9][10][11]
The choice of an eagle as school mascot holds iconic significance. Conferred with the title "the King", the Blue Eagle is a reference to the "high-flying" Ateneo varsity teams which would "swoop down on the foe and sweep up the fields away" as a dominating force in the field of sports. Furthermore, there is some mythological significance to the eagle as a symbol of power.[10]
The school used to have live eagles as pets in the former Padre Faura campus and later on at the Grade School campus in Loyola Heights. A live eagle would lead the men's varsity basketball team at the start of a game in the NCAA as the team enters the basketball court for their warm-up with the school Band playing the fight song, "Blue Eagle – The King".[10]
Blue and White, being the colors of the school's patroness, the Blessed Virgin Mary, were chosen as the school's colors. Thus blue and white are the colors of the uniforms of the varsity teams. Most of the school songs, yells and cheers have the words blue and white.
Athletic associations
Collegiate leagues
The Ateneo de Manila University is a member of the University Athletic Association of the Philippines, the premiere sports league in the country. It fields teams in all fifteen sporting events of the league. Ateneo was a founding member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, which was established in 1924. It left the NCAA in 1978 due to the league-wide violence prevalent at the time, and then joined the UAAP in the same year.[12]
The Ateneo Volleyball Program enjoyed a modest success in the NCAA, having won a total of nine championships during a ten-year period from 1967 to 1976. The men's team had two titles and one from the women's, while the juniors team had won six titles. Ateneo dominated NCAA volleyball in the mid-1970s. In the UAAP, Ateneo has won five championships so far since transferring from the NCAA in 1978. These titles were won by the Lady Eagle Spikers in Season 76 (2013–14),[14] Season 77 (2014–15)[15] and Season 81 (2018–19)[16] and by the Blue Eagle Spikers in Season 77 (2014–15),[17] Season 78 (2015–16) and Season 79 (2016–17), finally ending a title drought of more than 30 years in UAAP volleyball.[18]
The Ateneo varsity football teams have won a total 19 championships, 9 in the NCAA and 10 in the UAAP. In the NCAA, the seniors have won 6 titles. The men's team were the first to win a football championship in the NCAA when they won the title on the maiden season of the NCAA in 1924. They also won their first back-to-back (1953 and 1954) championship in the NCAA. In the UAAP, the seniors (men) have won 8 titles. The men's team were three-peat champions after winning in Seasons 2003–04, 2004–05 and 2005–06, a record that still holds today. Football was introduced in the UAAP Juniors Division as a demonstration sport in season 70 (2007–08) and declared a regular sport in season 72 (2009–10). Dov Cariño went on to represent the Philippines national football team in the 2024 ASEAN Championship where he make his debut on 18 December 2024 against Vietnam becoming the first person to played for the national team while still in the team.
This is Ateneo's ranking in the team sports in the UAAP since 1986, the year the UAAP became an eight member-school league:
UAAP Season
Basketball
Football
Volleyball
Baseball
Softball
Men's
Women's
Men's
Women's
Men's
Women's
Men's
Women's
50 (1987–88)
1st
2nd
5th
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
5th
Unknown
51 (1988–89)
1st
Unknown
4th
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
5th
Unknown
52 (1989–90)
4th
Unknown
2nd
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
4th
Unknown
53 (1990–91)
3rd
Unknown
5th
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
5th
Unknown
54 (1991–92)
5th
Unknown
4th
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
5th
Unknown
55 (1992–93)
5th
Unknown
6th
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
6th
Unknown
56 (1993–94)
6th
Unknown
7th
Unknown
8th
6th
6th
Unknown
57 (1994–95)
6th
Unknown
6th
Unknown
6th
5th
6th
Unknown
58 (1995–96)
7th
Unknown
1st
Unknown
8th
5th
6th
Unknown
59 (1996–97)
5th
7th
2nd
2nd
Did not join
5th
6th
5th
60 (1997–98)
6th
Unknown
2nd
Unknown
8th
Did not join
6th
Unknown
61 (1998–99)
6th
7th
1st
4th
8th
8th
6th
6th
62 (1999–00)
3rd
Unknown
2nd
Unknown
8th
8th
6th
Unknown
63 (2000–01)
3rd
Unknown
2nd
Unknown
8th
8th
6th
Unknown
64 (2001–02)
2nd
Unknown
3rd
Unknown
8th
6th
6th
Unknown
65 (2002–03)
1st
Unknown
2nd
Unknown
8th
6th
5th
Unknown
66 (2003–04)
2nd
Unknown
1st
Unknown
8th
6th
6th
Unknown
67 (2004–05)
2nd
2nd
1st
Unknown
8th
7th
4th
Unknown
68 (2005–06)
2nd
1st
1st
5th
8th
6th
3rd
6th
69 (2006–07)
2nd
3rd
4th
4th
5th
5th
4th
5th
70 (2007–08)
3rd
1st
2nd
4th
7th
4th
5th
6th
71(2008–09)
1st
6th
6th
4th
4th
5th
3rd
5th
72 (2009–10)
1st
6th
4th
5th
3rd
3rd
6th
5th
73 (2010–11)
1st
7th
6th
4th
6th
4th
4th
5th
74 (2011–12)
1st
5th
5th
5th
7th
2nd
2nd
5th
75 (2012–13)
1st
4th
1st
4th
6th
2nd
1st
6th
76 (2013–14)
5th
8th
7th
3rd
2nd
1st
1st
7th
77 (2014–15)
4th
5th
4th
3rd
1st
1st
1st
7th
78 (2015–16)
3rd
2nd
2nd
3rd
1st
2nd
2nd
7th
79 (2016–17)
2nd
6th
1st
3rd
1st
2nd
1st
7th
80 (2017–18)
1st
6th
3rd
4th
2nd
3rd
3rd
7th
81 (2018–19)
1st
6th
1st
5th
3rd
1st
2nd
7th
82 (2019–20)
1st
6th
Championships
Overall/General Championships
Ateneo has not won a UAAP General Championship in the seniors division since joining the UAAP in 1978. Its best finish was a third place in Season 75 (2012–13) and Season 79 (2016–17).
Seniors:
NCAA (1) – 1968–69
3x3 Basketball Championships
Men's: (Tournaments from 2017–18 until 2018–19 were classified as a Demonstration Sport)
The Ateneo has several traditions related to sports. Most of these traditions have been introduced by the American Jesuits after they took over the administration of Ateneo in 1912.