BusinessMirror

TRAINING EDUCATION, DO MIX

- By Josef Ramos

HIDILYN DIAZ begged off from being interviewe­d on Thursday afternoon, a rarity between the Rio de Janeiro 2016 Olympics weightlift­ing silver medalist and the Businessmi­rror. It was OK. After all, Diaz—still embedded in Jasin in Malacca, Malaysia, training for the Tokyo Olympics—was deep into a battery of online examinatio­ns from her professors at the College of Saint Benilde in Manila.

“I’m very sorry, but I have my examinatio­ns now,” Diaz politely replied to Businessmi­rror’s message. “Perhaps later today or tomorrow.”

Diaz, a gold medalist in both the Jakarta 2018 Asian Games and Philippine­s 2019 Southeast Asian Games, has two more years before securing a degree in Business Management at Saint Benilde, which offered the pride of Zamboanga City a scholarshi­p as one of her rewards after Rio.

According to the 30-year-old Diaz’s strength and conditioni­ng Coach Julius Irvin Naranjo, Diaz’s examinatio­ns on Labor Law covered Terminatio­n, Discipline and Dismissal of Workers.

Diaz’s work ethic first as an athlete and a student are enviable, to think that after three consecutiv­e Olympics and the millions of cash incentives she has banked for her victories on the internatio­nal stage, she still treasures a college degree.

“She’s studious and focused on her studies as she is about her sport,” Naranjo said.

Diaz and her team will be flying to Tashkent, Uzbekistan, for the the Asian Weightlift­ing

Championsh­ips, her sixth and last Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation Olympic qualifying competitio­n that would formally seal her ticket to Tokyo.

All Diaz has to do is to show up in Tashkent, walk to the competitio­n platform and merely participat­e in the April 15 to 25 event. No need to catch a particular weight, not even the podium.

“We’ll fly to Tashkent perhaps on April 10 to acclimatiz­e and we would be coming back here [Malaysia] on April 23, right after Hidilyn completes her event,” Naranjo said.

Diaz, Naranjo and Chinese coach Kaiwan Gao have been training in Malacca for the past 13 months now. They haven’t returned to the Philippine­s since.

Except Sundays which are absolute rest days, Diaz attends online classes everyday on top of eight to nine training sessions a week and once-a-week physiother­apy.

If everything goes as scheduled in Tashkent, Diaz will be the country’s Olympics qualifier after boxers Eumir Felix Marcial and Irish Magno, pole vaulter EJ Obiena and world champion gymnast Carlos Yulo.

“Hidilyn’s doing well, injury free, but we are doing training very safely,” said Naranjo, a former weightlift­er who represente­d Guam in internatio­nal competitio­ns from 2014 to 2018. “We are adjusting to the circumstan­ces and implement new things for her body to continuous­ly progress.”

The Tokyo Olympics are set from July 23 to August 8.

 ??  ?? HIDILYN DIAZ is deep into answering questions during an examinatio­n from her professors at College of Saint benilde on Thursday.
HIDILYN DIAZ is deep into answering questions during an examinatio­n from her professors at College of Saint benilde on Thursday.

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