Philippine Daily Inquirer

Back in the saddle

Veteran equestrien­ne Toni Leviste reemerges with a winning attitude after courageous­ly riding out a family tragedy

- @junavINQ By June Navarro

REPRESENTI­NG THE COUNTRY IN INTERNATIO­NAL COMPETITIO­NS IS ALWAYS A SOURCE OF IMMENSE PRIDE AND HONOR FOR ME

Most athletes retire when they hit middle age. Some take the plunge into coaching while others turn their backs completely on their sport. Not Marie Antoinette “Toni” Leviste. For the country’s top equestrien­ne, the years have become an ally in her pursuit of perfection.

“The beauty of being an equestrien­ne is that the older you get, the better you become,” says the anchor of the Philippine team for nearly three decades and still a force to reckon with internatio­nally.

The 2000 Sydney Olympian competed in her first dressage competitio­n at age 10 and has been carrying the Philippine tri-colors in various internatio­nal meets since 1990.

Proving her sport’s axiom on age, Toni won the recent Ariat Equitation in Wellington, Florida, reputedly the world’s winter capital of equestrian. A couple of weeks ago, she also represente­d the country in the 2017 Longines Global Champions Tour, one of the world’s most prestigiou­s show jumping events, in Miami Beach, Florida.

Aboard her new mount Loribri, an eight-year-old grey mare, Toni vied in Miami alongside the world’s best riders, placing seventh in a field of 38 finalists and no doubt boosting her confidence ahead of the 29th Southeast Asian Games in Kuala Lumpur in late August.

“Representi­ng the country in internatio­nal competitio­ns is always a source of immense pride and honor for me,” says the slim and vivacious equestrien­ne, who monopolize­d the Rider of the Year award of the Philippine Sportswrit­ers Associatio­n from 1992 to 2005.

Toni’s verve and ebullience seem astounding for one who, for several lonely summers, wrestled with grief as she tried to weather a tragedy that struck the family. She finally rode it out when her father, the former Batangas governor Antonio Leviste, regained his freedom three years ago after serv- ing his prison term in connection with the death of his aide, Rafael de las Alas.

“When my dad was convicted, of course it was a sad day for the family,” Toni said at that time. “But, ironically, believe it or not, it was from them (the family of De las Alas) that I found my strength. They showed us compassion, kindness and spiritual generosity.”

Toni first burst into the limelight in 1999, when she finished third in the prestigiou­s Sunshine Tour Grand Prix held in Jerez dela Frontera, Spain. A year later she made it to the Olympics and, two years hence, qualified for the 2002 World Equestrian Championsh­ips, also in Spain.

The only Filipino and Southeast Asian to compete in show jumping’s three major events—the Olympics, world championsh­ips and the World Cup Finals—Toni has vied in over 30 internatio­nal competitio­ns with varying degrees of success.

With the help of her father, Toni built a five-hectare equestrian park—a “horse spa,” she calls it—in the outskirts of Lipa City, Batangas, to keep horses in top shape. The facility has a European-inspired barn and grass paddocks that allow horses to graze freely.

A compassion­ate woman, she gives full scholarshi­ps to the the children of employees in the family’s Leviste Equestrian Eco Park and helps care for orphaned children and the abandoned elderly in the neighborin­g convent, the Missionary Sisters of the Cathechism.

“We may have different religions, but we’re all Filipinos and we all believe in one God,” says Toni, a practicing Muslim since 2004. “I find fulfillmen­t in helping other people. It makes me feel as good as winning medals abroad.”

Perhaps one of her greater virtues is her love for country. Several years ago, Toni politely turned down an invi- tation to compete for the Qatar national team, one of the world’s most opulent equestrian squads, as its first female rider, naturalize­d or not.

“If I ride for another country, I may not have the same passion as when I ride for the Philippine flag,” she says in hindsight.

Though she admits that retirement crosses her mind at times, Toni takes so- lace in the fact that equestrian riders generally peak at around 40 to 50 years old. She notes that at the 2012 London Olympics, the oldest athlete was a 73year-old Japanese dressage rider.

“I still have many more years in my sport,” she laughs. “It has been my biggest dream to try and win an Olympic medal for my country and I will die trying.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Toni Leviste, aboard Loribri, competes in the Longines Global Champions Tour event in Florida. Above left, Toni receives a prize for her lofty finish.
Toni Leviste, aboard Loribri, competes in the Longines Global Champions Tour event in Florida. Above left, Toni receives a prize for her lofty finish.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines