Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH POOMSAE JINS BAG 2 BRONZE MEDALS

Male, female poomsae trios deliver bronze medals for Team PH in Asian Games

- By Musong R. Castillo @musongINQ

JAKARTA— The men’s and women’s poomsae teams lost in the semifinals on Sunday afternoon and settled for bronze medals that put the Philippine­s on the medal tally of the Asian Games that got off in earnest after jaw-dropping opening ceremonies the night before for its 18th edition.

A long production number featuring the athletes and artists that have put host Indonesia on the sporting and entertainm­ent maps highlighte­d the two-hour show.

After being part of the glitz of the proceeding­s, Filipino athletes buckled down to work.

Dustin Jacob Mella, Jeordan Dominguez and Rodolfo Reyes Jr. bowed to a Chinese trio in the men’s event, 8.180-7.830, to head to the door after the semifinals, before the female trio of Janna Oliva, Rinna Babanto and Juvenile Faye Crisostomo suffered the same fate at the hands of Korea, 8.020-7.110.

Still, it was a good start for the Philippine contingent, which missed some athletes in the opening ceremonies after they opted to rest to prepare for crucial games the following day.

The women’s volleyball team was among those who skipped the ceremonies, but still couldn’t stop a dominating performanc­e by world-rated Thailand, bowing, 25-22, 25-12, 25-15, in its first game back at this level since 1982.

Team Philippine­s couldn’t sustain a 9-2 start and lost after over 70 minutes, winning just 27 points in the last two sets with faulty reception, several service errors and its failure to solve the unrelentin­g Thai defense.

Next up for the volleybell­es are the Japanese, another regional force, on Tuesday.

“Hopefully our performanc­e improves against Japan,” coach Shaq delos Santos said.

Gilas Pilipinas joined the opening parade and its foremost star, Jordan Clarkson, carried the flag for the delegation.

The cagers were back in their elements and had a twohour practice at Plaza Festival gym as they prepare for a mammoth clash with gold medal favorite China, also on Tuesday.

And while all these were happening, the Philippine Olympic Committee (POC) issued a statement blasting the University of the East College of Dentistry for supposedly not giving cyclist Marella Salamat permission to compete despite being a bright medal prospect.

“The decision of UE is deplorable,” POC president Ricky Vargas said in the statement, although there were reports later in the day that claimed it was Salamat’s decision

not to join the Games to avoid falling too far behind in her academics.

In Palembang, shooter Hagen Tolentino hit all 25 targets in each of his last two rounds and finished with 71 points, tying for third with six foreigners in the trap event at Jakabaring Sport City.

The 28-year-old Tolentino, sharp in the final two rounds, will have a good momentum heading into the final two rounds of classifica­tion Monday as he tries to erase a onepoint gap with joint leaders Sandhu Singh of India and Pakistan’s Aamer Iqbal.

Jeson Patrombon took two victories in tennis on a swel- tering afternoon, winning his opening singles match against Timor Leste’s Nazario Guzmao, 6-1, 6-0, before teaming up with Francis Casey Alcantara for a 6-4, 6-2 doubles victory over Qatar’s Jabar AlMatuwa and Mubarak Zayid.

Patrombon will clash with 12th-ranked Wu Yibing of China, while his partnershi­p with Alcantara will battle No. 4 Chen-Ti and Peng Shin-Yin of Chinese Taipei.

The top-ranked mixed doubles pair of Khamran Kaur Thandy and Divij Sharan of India, meanwhile, sent Alberto Lim Jr.-Jade Capadocia pair to the showers after a 6-4, 6-4 win.

 ?? —REUTERS ?? GOODSTART Team PH’s men’s poomsae trio composed of Dustin Jacob Mella, Jeordan Dominguez and Rodolfo Reyes Jr. bow to their Chinese rivals in the semifinals.
—REUTERS GOODSTART Team PH’s men’s poomsae trio composed of Dustin Jacob Mella, Jeordan Dominguez and Rodolfo Reyes Jr. bow to their Chinese rivals in the semifinals.
 ?? —REUTERS ?? Team PH’s Juvenile Faye Crisostomo, Rinna Babanto and Janna Dominique Oliva display their bronze-medal performanc­e during the 18th Asian Games at Jakarta Convention Center Plenary Hall.
—REUTERS Team PH’s Juvenile Faye Crisostomo, Rinna Babanto and Janna Dominique Oliva display their bronze-medal performanc­e during the 18th Asian Games at Jakarta Convention Center Plenary Hall.
 ??  ??
 ?? —AP ?? Roxanne Yu clocks 2:19:12 in the 200m backstroke’s first of three heats to finish second behind China’s Yaxim Liu, who submitted the fastest qualifying time of 2:09.52.
—AP Roxanne Yu clocks 2:19:12 in the 200m backstroke’s first of three heats to finish second behind China’s Yaxim Liu, who submitted the fastest qualifying time of 2:09.52.

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