BusinessMirror

Sports No respite for taekwondo Tokyo Olympics hopefuls

- By Josef Ramos

T| Tuesday, March 30, 2021 mirror_sports@yahoo.com.ph Editor: Jun Lomibao

HE country’s Tokyo Olympics hopeful in taekwondo are staying at the Inspire Sports Institute bubble in Calamba despite the weeklong enhanced community quarantine that ends on Easter Sunday.

Their training, according to Philippine Taekwondo Associatio­n national team director Dindo Simpao, will continue during lent—but sparring sessions will have to take a back seat.

“There’s no order to break the bubble. We have to continuous­ly train,” Simpao told Businessmi­rror. “We cannot afford to cease training at this time. We are monitoring them daily and they are in very good spirits, they’re doing well.”

The ECQ were reimposed in Metro Manila and nearby provinces, including Laguna, to drasticall­y stop the spike in Covid-19 infections. As a result, the Philippine Sports Commission ordered a halt to all indoor and outdoor training activities of all national team members.

But the jins will be content with doing individual training-weights and other exercises.

“We are in the crucial stage of our training so I don’t think it is possible or advisable to make them stop,” Simpao said.

The jins will be in the bubble until May and will fly to Amman, Jordan, for the Asian Taekwondo Olympic Qualificat­ion Tournament set from May 21 to 23.

Men’s 2019 Southeast Asian Games gold medalist Kurt Bryan Barbosa (-58 kgs), Arven Alcantara (-68 kgs), Dave Cea

(-80 kgs), Samuel Thomas Harper Morrison (-80 kgs) and Joseph Chua (-68 kgs) are currently in the bubble.

With them are women’s 2019 SEA Games gold winner Pauline Louise Lopez (-57 kgs), 2016 Rio Olympian Kirstie Elaine Alora (+67 kgs), Baby Jessica Canabal (-57 kgs) and Laila Delo (-67 kgs).

With them are coaches Carlos Padilla and Christian Al Dela Cruz.

“We’re hoping all of them will qualify for the Tokyo Olympics,” Simpao said.

A country can qualify a maximum of two athletes in each of the eight weight classes in both genders in Tokyo.

Pauline louise lopez is eyeing her first olympics.

TOKYO—MANY fans living outside Japan who bought Tokyo Olympic tickets from brokers—so-called Authorized Ticket Resellers— will not get full refunds. And they may have a long wait to get any refunds at all.

The question of refunds came into play a week ago when local organizers and the Japanese government decided to bar most fans from abroad because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

There are dozens of Authorized Tickets Resellers. They are typically appointed by national Olympic committees and are allowed to charge a 20 percent handling fee on tickets. For

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