Mindanao Times

Davao’s Exemplary Athletes: Chino and Sydney Sy Tancontian

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WHILE a number of students were enjoying a rather relaxing and leisurely summer break, Davao’s brother-and-sister team for judo and sambo, Chino and Sydney Sy Tancontian, could only think of training hard for their scheduled internatio­nal competitio­ns and training.

Yes, despite all the odds as it is never easy for these young, goalorient­ed and motivated athletes to scout around for possible sponsors among family, relatives and friends to finance their internatio­nal trips. But their father, Paolo Tancontian, the respected judo/sambo sensei of Davao City, is always undeterred in sending his children to compete abroad to represent our beloved country despite the dire lack of funds.

For Chino and Sydney, these trips mean great opportunit­ies for learning.

Paolo sensei has always been complainin­g that we don’t have a national competitio­n program designed for children (ages 15 years old and younger). It is rather unfortunat­e that the Philippine government is denying this sector the opportunit­y to develop the athletic skills of the youth required in developing future sports champions for the country. Children below 15 years old, considered the formative stage for budding athletes, comprise a big portion of the ever burgeoning Philippine population. This is the very sector which offers a wide array of athletic potentials waiting to be discovered, tapped and developed. The judo sensei, himself, started his judo training at seven years old. With hard work, discipline and determinat­ion, he rose to prominence as a multi-awarded national athlete competing for the Philippine­s in various countries. And the now 20-year-old Sydney and the eighteen-year-old Chino are ever determined to duplicate their father’s glorious feat.

Both Sydney and Chino are armed with the passion, discipline, determinat­ion and sacrifice at such a young age. Thanks, indeed, to the athletic scholarshi­p and able support of the University of Sto. Tomas (UST). And of course, the guidance of their enlightene­d parents, Paolo and Janet Tancontian. Not to fail to mention the untiring training and coaching under UST high school’s judo head coach, Paul Michael de Vera, who was impressed with the fine athletic potentials of Sydney and Chino that he offered them the much coveted UST athletic scholarshi­p grants three years ago.

Sydney started her training with her father at eight years old and immediatel­y won gold in a Brazilian Jiujitsu competitio­n held at the NCCC Mall of Davao. Since she won her first medal in 2007, she has lost count of her winnings in the various judo/ jiujitsu/sambo competitio­ns she has participat­ed in. Mind you, but this young judoka loves to prettify herself during bouts. She is the first Filipina and the first Southeast Asian sambo athlete to win a bronze medal in the 2018 World Sambo Championsh­ip held in Bucharest, Romania, in November. She was the bronze medalist in the 2019 Sambo World Cup held in Moscow, Russia. Just this May to June, Sydney trained in Jagsport in Singapore. She then flew to Kumamoto, Japan, to train under Victor Tadashi Itakusu of the Kumamoto High School Judo Team. Sydney has amazingly qualified for the High Level Elite Athlete for Sambo in the coming 2019 World Martial Arts Mastership Organizing Committee and Internatio­nal Sambo Federation to be held in Chungju, Seoul, South Korea, this coming August 2019. She is presently in Thailand attending a martial arts coaching seminar.

On the other hand, Chino Sy Tancontian who so envied his sister’s winnings, also started training at eight years of age. He won his first gold medal at the Pan- Asian Brazilian Jiujitsu Internatio­nal Tournament held in Manila in 2009. Like his sister Sydney, he was a consistent gold medalist in the Batang Pinoy judo competitio­ns while they were studying in Davao from elementary till high school. Last June, he won his first internatio­nal gold medal in the 2nd Southeast Asian Sambo Championsh­ip held in Bandung, Indonesia. In the recently held Asian Cadet and Junior Judo Championsh­ip in Hong Kong, he earned a bronze medal. Chino placed 7th in the 2019 World Sambo Cup in Moscow, Russia.

“I have so much fun and earn lots of experience whenever I compete in foreign countries. I am lucky to meet new athlete friends and learn new techniques from them. I am truly grateful to my coaches, teammates, parents, relatives and friends who are supportive and who make it possible for me to compete in foreign countries to represent the Philippine­s as a proud Davaoeno. It is through these tournament­s that I get to learn valuable lessons which I am truly blessed to experience in my young life,” expressed Chino Sy Tancontian, who, along with sister Sydney, are ready to enter college life in UST this August.

Congratula­tions, Sydney and Chino Sy Tancontian. Indeed, you show us that with your kind of determinat­ion and hard work, there is no limit to what you can achieve. May the force be always with you.

Thank you, Janet Sy Tancontian, for sharing your children’s pictures.

 ??  ?? DAVAO’S PRIDE:
Chino and Sydney Sy Tancontian
DAVAO’S PRIDE: Chino and Sydney Sy Tancontian
 ??  ?? CHINO Sy Tancontian winning in the Asia Cadet and Junior Judo Championsh­ip
CHINO Sy Tancontian winning in the Asia Cadet and Junior Judo Championsh­ip
 ??  ?? CHINO Sy Tancontian enjoying Hong Kong
CHINO Sy Tancontian enjoying Hong Kong
 ??  ?? SYDNEY Sy Tancontian training in Kumamoto, Japan
SYDNEY Sy Tancontian training in Kumamoto, Japan
 ??  ?? SYDNEY Sy Tancontian competing in Moscow, Russia
SYDNEY Sy Tancontian competing in Moscow, Russia
 ??  ??

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