The Philippine Star

Ending a 20-year wait

- By JOAQUIN M. HENSON

It was in May 1996 when President Ramos instructed PSC chairman Philip Juico and Secretary of the Interior and Local Government­s Robert Barbers “to establish a Philippine National Institute of Sports within the PSC and to formulate and implement a nationwide training program for sports managers and administra­tors, in coordinati­on with the Department of Education, Culture and Sports and the Commission on Higher Education.”

In November that same year, Philsports was born and rolled out several programs through former PSC chairman Dr. Perry Mequi. So the records will show that Philsports was launched in May 1996 and inaugurate­d in November 1996.

On Oct. 1, PSC chairman Butch Ramirez will relaunch Philsports which unfortunat­ely, was shelved after the Ramos Administra­tion. Juico, however, said it was revived briefly in 2005 when Ramirez took over the PSC helm under President Arroyo. But for some reason, Philsports just wasn’t a priority when the PSC leadership changed hands.

“To Butch’s credit, he tried to revive it but those who succeeded him just killed it,” said Juico. “The proper term (to use in Ramirez’ new initiative) is perhaps to relaunch or revive or resuscitat­e Philsports after several PSC chairmen killed it with deliberate inaction. ”

Juico said there’s no need to reinvent the wheel because the Master Plan for Philippine sports developmen­t over a six- year period has been in existence since 1996. That means the Master Plan has gathered dust in the course of five Olympics (from 2000 to 2016), five Asian Games and 20 Southeast Asian Games. “Imagine what could have happened if succeeding PSC chairmen just took a look at that and updated it with the help of the apolitical public servants in the PSC who helped craft that Master Plan and Philsports,” added Juico wistfully. “All those opportunit­ies (are) gone with the wind. Now, we’re looking at the following ahead of us under the Duterte Administra­tion or up to 2022 – three SEA Games, with one to be held in the Philippine­s, at least one Asian Games (2018 in Jakarta) and the Tokyo Olympics in 2020.”

Juico wasn’t able to attend the recent two-day Sports Summit organized by the PSC because of illness but the outline of the Master Plan he personally engineered was presented to the audience. Juico also missed attending the Rio Olympics on doctors’ orders to rest. PATAFA, which he heads, had the most number of athletes in the Philippine delegation with 400- meter hurdler Eric Cray, long jumper Marestella Torres and women’s marathoner Mary Joy Tabal. Each of the three athletes registered Olympic qualifying standards and made it to Rio on merit.

Juico said to unravel the Master Plan that’s 20 years old, “we need a period of consolidat­ion.” He continued: “The framework for the developmen­t of grassroots and elite sports is in our midst. We just need to look at correcting the facts, looking at what has been done and use those that are useful and discard what is useless, devoid of partisan and personal interest. Definitely, no room for political and personal vendetta. My purpose for voicing out is to correct the facts, learn from others and not get credit for anything.”

Juico said updating the Master Plan shouldn’t be a tedious process because issues remain the same. He said the exercise of updating the Master Plan must start at the end. “Let’s start by revisiting the PSC vision and mission,” he said. “The vision is for a unified sports program which will enhance the quality of life of Filipinos, instill national pride and attain internatio­nal prestige through excellence in sports. The mission is to serve as the prime catalyst and advocate for the propagatio­n and developmen­t of Philippine sports. The PSC’s two basic objectives are to increase participat­ion in sports by Filipinos and to achieve excellence in sports performanc­e by Filipinos.”

Juico said Philsports was envisioned to provide for the holistic developmen­t of national athletes and the creation of a national youth talent reserve and the developmen­t of coaches, officials, managers and others who assume profession­al responsibi­lities in physical education and sports. The mandate remains the same today.

“The realistic balance between mass-based and elite sports, with focus on selected sports, has to be agreed upon or else we will continuall­y be muddling through while our neighbors continue to leave us behind,” said Juico. “The challenge all Administra­tions face is to avoid the inevitable calls for a quick fix or a band-aid approach. It is clear that Philippine sports needs a period of positive consistenc­y – a period of consolidat­ion up to 2022 with progress being made in the short-term but more importantl­y, setting the platform for significan­t gains in the future. Programs and coordinati­ng mechanisms must be made operable and functional. The goal is getting those mechanisms to work efficientl­y and effectivel­y.”

In the list of priorities, Juico said the first is to re-examine the Physical Education system “from the miniscule hours devoted to it, to the way it is taught and how it is mistakenly used by isolating the talented for special attention while neglecting the majority who will have less incentive to commit to a healthy lifestyle in the future. Our biggest resource is our people.”

The framework and guidelines to operate Philsports and implement the Master Plan of 1996 are laid out in crystal-clear language. Ramirez isn’t wasting time to get back on track because the Philippine­s has 20 years of sleeping on the job to make up.

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