The Manila Times

Sports under President Magsaysay

- BY EDDIE G. ALINEA

PHILIPPINE sports has many reasons to thank the late President Ramon Magsaysay for.

For one, RM, “The Guy,” or “The Man of the Masses,” as he was fondly called by the Filipinos, whose 110th birth anniversar­y the country is celebratin­g today, presided over the country’s hosting of the Second Asian Games where the Filipino athletes ended up second to then powerhouse Japan in the race for the overall championsh­ip with a 14-1417 gold-silver-bronze harvest.

RM, a former mechanic who rose to become the Republic’s seventh Chief of State, died in a plane crash in Cebu on March 17, 1957 in the company of 28 others with only one surviving. It was also during his term when weightlift­ers Rodrigo del Rosario and Pedro Landero finished fourth and sixth, in their res p e c t i ve event with the former lifting the barbell to a new Olympic record 105 kilograms in press.

What many Filipinos hardly know is that had the former defense secretary and Zambales Congressma­n not interceded on behalf of the Philippine basketball team captain Lauro “The Fox” Mumar, the Filipino hoopsters could not have salvaged the bronze medal in the 1954 World Championsh­ip held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The team left Manila for the United States where the Filipinos were scheduled to play several tune up games at the date of departure without Mumar. This led Philippine Amateur Athletic Federation top honchos to ban him for life for “failing to honor an internatio­nal commitment and conduct unbecoming of an athlete of national stature.”

The ban on the national team skipper became an instant national issue, leading Congress to conduct an investigat­ion as to why “The Fox” was left behind. The late Arsenio Lacson, former Manila Mayor and a Congressma­n at that time, denounced he termed as the ‘ oppression of the oppressed” on Mumar by the high lords of basketball.

The congressio­nal probe revealed that Mumar had not a single centavo in his pocket at departure time and was waiting for his parents from Bohol to send him pocket money, which did not come.

Sportswrit­er Eddie Ticzon, then writing for the Roces family-owned TheManilaT­imes, reported on the “missing Fox” whose only crime, he said, “was his having been poor, unlike the other members of the basketball aristocrac­y.”

Magsaysay, known as the champion of the poor, made his move, held his own investigat­ion and summoned the team captain to Malacañang twice. “Akopoay mahiraplam­ang,” Mumar told the President as reported by the TheManilaT­imes.

“The last time I joined the national team to the London Olym- pics in 1948, all I had in my pocket was $2. Right now I have not even paid my apartment rent,” Mumar confessed.

The Fox also told the President that he’d just follow as soon as the money his parents was supposed to send arrives. “But nobody simply cared to listen. They suspended me without due process.”

Convinced, President Magsaysay talked to the PAAF high public hearing held at the Manila Hotel, lifted the ban it had earlier meted out on Mumar.

The sports public, elated by the developmen­t, conducted a fundraisin­g campaign to raise fund for Mumar’s trip to the U.S. to join his teammates who at that time, had lost three of their first six build up games in the land of sweet and honey.

After everything had been settled and having the needed money in his pocket at last, Mumar left for Florida with more well- wishers on hand than when the national team

After a three-day rest with friends in Florida, Mumar along with his teammates— Carlos Loyzaga, Pons Saldana, Mariano Tolentino, Antonio Genato, Francisco Rabat, Rafael Barredo, Bayani Amador, Ramon Manulat, Nap Flores, Ben Francisco and coach Herminio “Herr” Silva—flew to Cuba for a one-game exhibition with the Cuban national team.

Lending his experience and leadership, Mumar, whose basketball career was nearly jeopardize­d a 49-45 victory over the Cubans in a triumph described by the Cuban media as a “humiliatio­n by a crew of “little-known Asians.”

That defeat to the “Little Brown Dolls” resulted in the Cuban government’s decision not to send the team to the world championsh­ip.

Mumar, Loyzaga, who was named to the world mythical their team mates compiled a 6-2 win-loss record, beaten only by eventual champion U.S. and runner up Brazil, to bring home by any Asian country up to the present day.

Magsaysay served as Chief Excutive from December 30, 1953 until his death in an aircraft disaster. Magsaysay was appointed military governor of Zambales after his outstandin­g service as a guerilla leader

He then served two terms as Liberal Party congressma­n for Zambales before being appointed as Secretary of National Defense by President Elpidio Quirino. He was elected President under the banner of the Nacionalis­ta Party.

- dent born during the 20th century Spanish colonial era.

(From left to right) Secretary of National Defense Sotero B. Cabahug, President Ramon Magsaysay and Chief of Staff Jesus M. Vargas circa 1954-1956.

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