Sun.Star Davao

KURASH NEWBIE

DAVAO’S ESCARPE PULLS OFF A GOLDEN SURPRISE

- BY MARIANNE S. ABALAYAN

BEGINNER’S luck?

Some may say so, but Davao’s kurash newbie Jack Escarpe leaned on his vast judo experience to escape with a 1-0 win over Boonrangse­e Apicha of Thailand in their 31st Southeast Asian (SEA) Games men’s -73kg gold medal match at the Hoài Đuc District Sporting Hall in Hanoi, Vietnam.

The 30-year-old Escarpe, a Seaman Second Class (SN2) of the Philippine Coastguard, said, “Wala ko nag-expect na mag-gold, Ma’am, pero kabalo ko nga maglisod gyud sa ako akong kalaban bago ko nila mapildi (I did not expect to win a gold but I knew my opponent would have a hard time before beating me).”

He first humbled the 2019 Philippine­s SEA Games champion from Vietnam before toppling a Thai opponent.

“Enjoy ug kulba (It was enjoyable but nerve-racking),” he said of his first biennial meet experience playing kurash, “Enjoy kay makadula ko sa laing nasod pero kulba kay kong mapildi ko sa first dula, muuli ko nga wala’y medal (I enjoyed playing in a different country but I was also nervous since if I lost the first match, I would be coming home without any medal).”

He only joined the national kurash team in January 2021 after his five-year stint on the national judo team in 2016. He helped produce a team judo bronze in the 2019 Philippine­s SEA Games.

Escarpe dedicated his gold to his family (his wife and baby girl are also in Davao City), to his teammates in judo and kurash, University of Mindanao (UM) judo team and the Davao Judo Associatio­n. “Dili tungod sa tabang nila tanan, dili nko ni makuha (For without their help, I cannot achieve this),” he added.

Humble beginning Escarpe, the third in the brood of four, was born in Governor Generoso in Davao Oriental but his family migrated to Toril, Davao City in 2008 where his father used to earn by driving passengers around with his payong-payong and his mother was then a domestic helper.

But for several years now, he and his siblings help their parents out with their day-today expenses.

He applied for a varsity scholarshi­p at UM as a judo player, which he attributed to his finishing his BS in Criminolog­y degree in 2015. He is also a licensed Criminolog­ist.

As a UM judoka, he won a gold medal for Davao Region in the National Prisaa Games 2014 in Tagum City.

He applied at the PCG through the regular procedure of queueing to take an exam.

The shift from judo to kurash was inevitable for him. “Mas dako ang chance na makadula ko sa kurash, Ma’am kay naa mi eliminatio­n. Sa judo man gud katong nga Fil-Jap lang makadula sa akong timbang (I’ve got a better chance to compete in kurash since we have an eliminatio­n. In judo, only Filipino-Japanese with the same weight as mine can usually play),” he said.

Under Republic Act 10699, Escarpe is set to receive a P300,000 cash incentive from the national government through the Philippine Sports Commission. When asked about his plan with his bonus, he said he has not thought of it yet.

The national kurash team returned to the country on May 14, 2022. Among them is Dabawenya Sydney Sy Tancontian who annexed a silver in women’s kurash.

 ?? PHOTO BY JACK ESCARPE ?? SIZZLING GOLD. With just over a year in the national kurash team, Davao’s veteran judoka Jack Escarpe pulls off a golden surprise by clinching the men’s kurash -73kg title of the ongoing 31st Southeast Asian (SEA) Games in Hanoi, Vietnam.
PHOTO BY JACK ESCARPE SIZZLING GOLD. With just over a year in the national kurash team, Davao’s veteran judoka Jack Escarpe pulls off a golden surprise by clinching the men’s kurash -73kg title of the ongoing 31st Southeast Asian (SEA) Games in Hanoi, Vietnam.

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