The Philippine Star

‘SeA Games expectatio­ns too high’

- by ABAC CORDERO

One thing Filipino sports officials can learn from the recent Kuala Lumpur SEA Games is how to limit the expectatio­ns when it comes to gold medal projection­s.

Before the 493 Filipino athletes headed to the Malaysian capital for this year ’s SEA Games, sports officials predicted a gold medal haul of 50, which they hoped should be enough to carry the country up the leaderboar­d.

From sixth place in 2015 in Singapore (29-36-66), the Philippine­s hoped to move to fifth or fourth place overall.

But gold medals came in trickles in Kuala Lumpur, and at the close of the competitio­n, a haul of 24 golds, 33 silvers and 64 bronzes kept the Filipinos stuck in sixth place.

It’s the lowest output in the SEA Games for the country since 1999.

“Don’t talk medals but talk of ranking. We remained in sixth place. If Myanmar overtook us then that would have been a bigger problem,” said Philippine Olympic Committee vice president Jose Romasanta yesterday.

Chef-de-mission Cynthia Carrion of gymnastics projected 50 gold medals for the Philippine­s while Tom Carrasco of triathlon, who headed the SEA Games task force, was more conservati­ve at 35.

But neither came close to what the Philippine­s had at the end of the day.

“The medal forecast raised the expectatio­ns of the public a little too high. There was a forecast of 50 golds and we won 24. Thirty-five would have been more doable,” said Romasanta, who had been given word by his counterpar­ts from the SEA Games Federation, even before the Games began, that the Philippine­s should get somewhere around 25 golds.

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