The Manila Times

Boxing: Traditiona­l medal source in PH’s Asiad campaigns

- JOSEF T. RAMOS BY EDDIE G. ALINEA

Warriors. with jump shoes on he is really almost seven-feet. - also made a joke that they would probably beat the Warriors without Durant on their line-up. he said. - - WITH a total of 395-medal haul in the past 17 editions of the Asian Games, the Philippine­s is currently ranked 10th at the all-time Asian Games medal tally.

Of the Filipino athletes total harvest, 64 were gold medals, 112 silver and 210 bronze medals. The boxers lead all gold medal winners with 15, followed by the runners, jumpers and throwers with 11 in second and swimmers 10 third.

Other first place finishers came in bowling (7), shooting (5), basketball (4), golf (4), cue sports (4), tens (3), cycling (1) and wushu (1).

Boxing was first played in the Asian Games’ second edition in 1954 right here in Manila where the host country’s simonpures dominating the nine-nation tournament by winning five of seven gold medals at stake.

Celedonio Espinosa, who later turned pro, led the Filipino winners by ruing the lightweigh­t division, beating Henry Wong off the Republic of China for the gold medal.

Flyweight Ernesto Sajo emerged champion in his division defeating South Korea’s Le Jang-Kyo in the finals in a victory matched by Alejandro Ortuoste, who crowned himself the bantamweig­ht kingpin at the expense of Cylonese Hempala Jayasuriya.

Also keeping the titles this shore were lightwelte­rweight Ernesto Porto, who annexed the light-welterweig­ht crown over Lee Sam-yong, also of South Korea, and light-middleweig­ht Vicente Tunacao, who punched his way to victory over Japan’s Yutaka Kobashi.

Mauro Dizon salvaged the silver medal in the featherwei­ght category, leaving welterweig­ht Pablo Marquez as the non-medal winner in that 1954 Asiad seven-man Philippine boxing team.

Four decades later in 1994 un Hiroshima, all three gold medals brought home by national delegation came from boxing with Mansueto “Onyok” Velasco, who was to win the country’s only second Olympic silver medal in 1996 in Atlanta, capturing the gold in the light-flyweight class.

Elias Recaido and Reynaldo Galido completed the Filipino fighters’ sweep of the 1994 national contingent’s three-gold medal production with the former taking the flyweight division and the latter topping the light-welterweig­ht division.

Twice more our ring warriors saved the country’s Asian Games participat­ion – in 1970 in Bangkok and in 1990 in Beijing. In those years, Ricardo Fortaleza and Roberto Jalnaiz won the lone gold medal the Philippine­s salvaged.

Both Fortaleza and Jalnaiz emerged the bantamweig­ht champions then.

Other Filipino gold medalists in boxing were flyweights Violito Payala in 2006 and Rey Saludar in 2010; bantamweig­ht Joan Tipon in 2006; lightweigh­t Rodolfo Arpon in 1966; welterweig­ht Manfredo Alipala in 1962.

Annie Albania won the flyweight silver medal in 2010 in Guangzou becoming the only Filipino woman fighter so far to bring home software in the Asian Games.

Boxing, records will show, has been a traditiona­l medal source for the country in any internatio­nal sporting meet and the on-going Asiad in Jakarta and Palembang Cities shouldn’t be an exception especially for reason that four years ago in Incheon Filipino fighters went zero gold in the ring.

The Associatio­n of Boxing Alliances in the Philippine­s has dispatched a team its leaders described as worthy of accomplish­ing were the 2014 failed – Rogen Ladon (52 kgs), Eumir Felix Marcial (75 kgs) and Mario Fernandez (56 kgs) along with Carlo Paalam (49 kgs), James Palicte (60 kgs), Joel Bacho (69 kgs) in the men’s play and Irish Magno (51 kgs) and Nesthy Petecio (57 kgs) in the women’s side.

Pairings for the opening round matches was supposed to take place on Friday and team officials were hoping the drawing of lots wljd urn ot tbe favorable to the team.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? Tim Hardaway.
AFP PHOTO Tim Hardaway.

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