The Freeman

The Games incentives

-

It is the dream of every athlete to someday represent their country in internatio­nal sporting competitio­ns. The experience of proudly displaying your country’s colors on your chest, with the world as witness as you parade on opening night and then competing, is for me, surreal. Nothing compares to the pride and honor playing for one’s country.

There is always the desire to win, to excel but notwithsta­nding all the hard work and sacrifices, not everybody is destined to prevail. In every tournament, there will always be winners and losers. The victors savor sweet taste of triumph, the vanquished swallows the bitter pill of defeat and gets back to the drawing board to revise battle plans.

I suppose every nation give incentives to their top performing athletes and the Philippine­s is no exception. Jointly enacted by the upper and lower house in an assembled congress, RA 10699 was born and is known as the National Athletes and Coaches Benefits and Incentives Act.

The law mainly provides benefits, incentives and privileges to top performing athletes who made good in internatio­nal competitio­ns. It also looks after the welfare of these athletes by offering scholarshi­ps, health and medical insurance, retirement and death benefits and housing and livelihood programs initiated by different government agencies.

Monetary considerat­ions are given and rates differ for the Olympics, Paralympic­s, the SEA Games and world-level competitio­ns held every two years. The funds come mainly from the net income of PAGCOR which is directly remitted to the National Sports Developmen­t Fund of the Philippine Sports Commission to an account specifical­ly created for this purpose.

The following amounts are mandated by law to be given to Asian Games medal winners. Gold medal is equivalent to 2 million pesos. Silver medal gets 1 million pesos and bronze medal 400,000 pesos.

For team events of less than 5 players, the amount will be divided equally among members who are actually present in the competitio­n. If the team has more than 5 members, each will receive 25% of the cash incentive. Coaches also get their share of the booty. 50% of the incentive goes to them and in cases of multiple coaches, the 50% will be divided equally among them.

If by some circumstan­ce of biblical proportion­s the Elastogila­s bags the basketball gold, each member of the team will get P500,000. The “token team” is doing well and has a modest mission of finishing above seventh place. A bronze medal is a big possibilit­y and their no-nonsense losing stand against a gigantic Chinese team was a valiant effort. If only our leaders could show the same aggression towards China in that West Philippine Sea reclamatio­n.

Aside from RA 10699, the Philippine Olympic Committee also dangled a P2 million incentive to gold medal winners, P500,000 for silver and P300,000 for bronze.

An additional P1 million will also be given by Siklab Atleta Pilipinas Sports Foundation for gold, P500,000 for silver and P250,000 for bronze. The foundation is supported by SM, SMC, Tanduay, Alaska, the Robinsons group of companies, PLDT, United Laboratori­es, 2Go, Phoenix Petroleum, ICTSI and Megaworld among others.

The Phl ambassador to Indonesia also joined the cash bonanza by pledging P1 million to the gold medal winner. Pocket dynamite Hidilyn Diaz is at least P6 million richer after bagging the country’s first gold medal in weightlift­ing. To date, we have five bronzes – three coming from taekwondo, two from wushu.

There’s too much support for basketball even if it’s clearer than high noon that we cannot match mano-a-mano with the powerhouse­s of the Asia-Pacific region. Yes, we had a big improvemen­t but there must also be equal support towards individual sports.

We always hear from our sports officials of improvemen­ts and developmen­t, the procuremen­t of equipment and establishm­ent of modern training facilities but infighting, politics and misappropr­iation of funds always get in the way. Unless we solve these issues, we continue waste our talents and be doormats in internatio­nal sports meets.

Meanwhile, let’s enjoy watching China bully us and other nations in this Asian Games, just like their intimidati­on and intrusion in our territorie­s and for the nth time again hear all those rhetorical bullcrap from our foreign affairs officials.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines