BusinessMirror

Barredo: PHL Tokyo campaign marked with unique challenges

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S A veteran of six straight Paralympic­s, including the Tokyo edition, Philippine Paralympic Committee president Mike Barredo noted that each participat­ion of Filipino para athletes in the Games posed unique challenges.

But the trials and tests that the Philippine campaigner­s faced in their build-up to and taking part in the Tokyo Paralympic Games have been the toughest of them all, according to Barredo, who, while refusing to make excuses, blamed the Covid-19 pandemic as the culprit for their ordeal.

From the training, qualifying form and up to the point they actually had to compete in Tokyo, the virus has hounded the national para athletes at virtually every turn, he pointed out.

“While our able-bodied national athletes had problems of their own in finding facilities to train for the Tokyo Olympics, it came doubly hard for our national para athletes,” rued Barredo. “We needed not only accessible

training venues but also accessible accommodat­ions for them.

“We practicall­y had no training in 2020 due to the pandemic because our national para athletes were forced to leave the Philsports Complex in Pasig City where they trained and had their quarters because it was converted into a quarantine facility,” he said. “We understand this reality. It is what it is.”

So he was grateful that the Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) was able to support and sustain them in looking for separate training bubbles for all six Paralympic-bound athletes for a month or two to do actual workouts before they were scheduled to leave for the Japanese capital.

“In fairness, we have nothing to say but thank PSC chairman [William] Butch Ramirez for the all-out support they have given our athletes including their separate bubble training before leaving for Tokyo,” Barredo stressed.

Barredo thought that they had left their troubles behind in Manila when key members of the contingent were grounded because they tested positive for the virus before leaving for Tokyo.

Among them were powerlifte­r Achelle Guion, her coach Antonio Taguibao and chef de mission Francisco “Kiko” Diaz.

But misfortune dogged the contingent to Tokyo when discus thrower Jeanette Aceveda and athletic coach Bernard Buen were infected after undergoing tests, depriving her of the chance of becoming the first visuallyim­paired Filipino athlete to compete in the meet for the world’s top para athletes.

“I really felt sorry for her because this is a disability we share,” Barredo bared. “It would have been an inspiratio­n to visuallyim­paired Filipinos that despite all of the challenges it could be done to compete in the Paralympic­s. It would have been bragging rights for her for being the first.”

The PPC chief disclosed that although the athlete was upset for a while, she has gotten over the issue and vowed to do her best to make it back to the 2024 Paris Paralympic­s. “Her plight, in a nutshell, is what the entire team has suffered,” he said. “It’s a very frustratin­g and upsetting situation that is out of our control.”

He was proud of what swimmers Ernie Gawilan, Gary Bejino, and wheelchair racer Jerrold Mangliwan had achieved so far despite the adversitie­s in Tokyo.

“Ernie was able to improve his personal bests in his events despite the limited training while Jerrold, except for his disqualifi­cation in the men’s 400-meter finals, has also been able to improve a lot, particular­ly in the 1,500-meter race,” Barredo noted of the two Rio Paralympic­s veterans.

“Gary is a bit raw this being his first Paralympic­s. But given more rigorous training and exposure, we expect him to do better in internatio­nal competitio­n and, hopefully, qualify for the Paris Paralympic Games in 2024,” he said.

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