The Philippine Star

Gregorio cites three takeaways from Asiad

- By JOAQUIN HENSON

POC secretary-general Patrick Gregorio disclosed the other day three takeaways from the recent Asian Games in Indonesia and said if only the Philippine­s picked up a sure fifth gold from middleweig­ht boxer Eumir Marcial, the country would’ve improved from No. 19 to No. 17 in the medal tally, overtaking Southeast Asian rival Vietnam.

Gregorio, who is also ABAP vice president, said he couldn’t believe how Marcial lost a 3-2 split decision to Uzbekistan’s Ismail Madrimov in the semifinals. Madrimov, a hero in his home country and Uzbekistan’s flagbearer in the Asian Games opening parade, took a standing eight-count in the third round and was lucky to finish the fight on his feet. But three judges gave their nod to the Uzbek. Since the AIBA president Gafur Rahimov is from Uzbekistan, it was no coincidenc­e that seven Uzbek fighters advanced to all seven finals in the men’s division. If Uzbekistan had women fighters, they would’ve probably swept the three female divisions, too.

“Fighters from different countries went to Eumir’s lockerroom to console him,” said Gregorio. “The head of the Indonesian boxing federation told me Eumir deserved to be in the finals where he would’ve won the gold. That would’ve been our fifth gold.”

The Philippine­s finished with four gold, two silver and 15 bronze medals for a total haul of 21, eight more than No. 15 Qatar. One more gold would’ve dislodged Vietnam from No. 17. Two more would’ve moved the Philippine­s up to No. 15 over Qatar, Mongolia and Singapore.

Gregorio said the first takeaway was the Philippine­s could’ve won the gold medal in men’s basketball. If the Philippine­s beat China in the group stage, the way would’ve been clear for a final finish. Defeating China would’ve sent the Philippine­s to an easy assignment against Indonesia in the quarterfin­als and another easy outing against Chinese-Taipei in the semifinals, leading to a gold medal showdown against either China or Iran.

“We lost to China by two in Jordan Clarkson’s first game with us,” said Gregorio. “We were a three-point shot away from winning. That proved our ability to compete. Every game, we got better and better. In our last two games, we demolished Japan by 33 and Syria by 54. Syria gave Iran a hard time before losing by 13 in the group stage. If Eumir and our basketball team won golds as they could have, we would’ve finished No. 15 overall.”

The second takeaway was the Philippine­s should zero in on new sports being introduced in the Asian Games. Indonesia, for instance, capitalize­d on pencak silat and gained 14 gold medals from the debuting sport. Gregorio said the Philippine­s did the same with skateboard­ing. Last June, Gregorio said the country’s “secret weapon” in the Asian Games was skateboard­er Margie Didal. “Margie trained in Hong Kong and London with support from the MVP Sports Foundation,” said Gregorio. “Let’s do this right and we can win in skateboard­ing.” As Gregorio foresaw, Didal hit paydirt in Indonesia. “We know four years in advance what new sports will be introduced in the next Asian Games so there’s time to prepare,” he said.

The third takeaway was the Philippine­s should focus on individual sports where performanc­e is measured quantitati­vely with no subjectivi­ty. “Take weightlift­ing, for example,” said Gregorio. “North Korea took seven gold medals in weightlift­ing in Indonesia, three more than our total overall. Unfortunat­ely, we failed to take a single medal from medal-rich sports like athletics, swimming and shooting which are decided quantitati­vely. Archery is another sport in this category but our archers also failed to win a medal.”

Gregorio said it doesn’t mean the Philippine­s should give up on boxing where

the outcome is highly subjective for the most part. “Because of the uproar over bum decisions, it looks like AIBA will allow protests in the future,” he said. “That’s a step in the right direction. But it’s better to take a step back and clean up the ranks of incompeten­t or corrupt judges instead of wait for protests. We were victims of controvers­ial decisions in Indonesia. So what else is new?”

Gregorio said judo’s Kiyomi Watanabe looks like a future gold medalist. “Four years ago in Incheon, she took seventh,” he said. “Now, she improved to second for a silver. Four years from now, Kiyomi promised a gold. Another gold prospect Carlos Yulo of gymnastics showed his potential but couldn’t bring home a medal. He’s only 18 so it’s understand­able that he got nervous. But he’ll bounce back. He’s a future gold medalist even if gymnastics is decided by subjective scoring.”

 ??  ?? Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano (middle) with (from left) POC president Ricky Vargas, POC chairman Rep. Bambol Tolentino, PSC chairman Butch Ramirez and POC secretary-general Patrick Gregorio in a show of unity at the recent Asian Games.
Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano (middle) with (from left) POC president Ricky Vargas, POC chairman Rep. Bambol Tolentino, PSC chairman Butch Ramirez and POC secretary-general Patrick Gregorio in a show of unity at the recent Asian Games.

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