The Philippine Star

Pinays debut vs Japanese in AWCC

Hot-starting Carlos paces Masters

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Philippine representa­tive Rebisco-PSL Manila takes on Japan today as it kicks off its campaign in the Asian Women’s Club Championsh­ips at Boris Alexandrov Sports Palace in UstKamenog­orsk, Kazakhstan.

National team coach Francis Vicente said Japan, which normally has an import it hardly uses, would be a suitable opponent for the Filipinas who are here to tune up for the SEA Games in Kuala Lumpur in August.

“One of the models we are looking at is that of Japan because of its speed and discipline,” said Vicente of the squad backed up by Rebisco, Asics, Grand Sports and Turkish Airlines. “We will be out there fighting with all we’ve got.”

The team worked on foot and leg drills at the lobby of the Shiny River Hotel because it was drizzling all Wednesday morning, bringing temperatur­es down to 14-degrees from Tuesday’s high 30.

The Filipinas also had practice Tuesday night, hours after a tiring flight from Manila, although it hardly showed in the faces of the members of the team whose core will form the SEA Games squad.

Morale is high for the squad which will be led by 6-foot-5 Jaja Santiago who, despite being just 21 years old, is easily the most decorated player here with stints in last year’s FIVB World Clubs in Manila.

“We are ready,” said Santiago of Philippine Superliga’s Foton. “We know this is a tough competitio­n but we are excited to go out there and play against the best teams.”

Match will be at 10:30 a.m. (12:30 p.m. Manila time).

Thailand and Iran collide next at 1:30 p.m. local time, to be followed by Vietnam-China tussle at 3:30 p.m. Host Kazakhstan sees action against Chinese Taipei at 7 p.m. following the opening ceremony.

The Philippine­s will face Vietnam on Friday before rounding up its Group B games facing China on Saturday.

The team is led by skipper Rachel Anne Daquis, Mika Reyes, Aby Marano, Jovelyn Gonzaga, Denden Lazaro and Kim Fajardo. Also making up the team are Bia General, Lourdes Clemente, Maika Ortiz, Gen Casugod, Ces Molina, Aiza Pontillas and Rhea Dimaculang­an.

Jobim Carlos made a blazing start but wavered coming home, carding a four-under 68 for a one-stroke lead over American Nicolas Paez and Nathan Park of Australia in the rain-hit ICTSI Philippine Masters at the Villamor Golf Club yesterday.

Another local bet, Marvin Dumandan, produced six birdies but stumbled with two bogeys and a double-bogey to settle for 70 and a share of fourth with Fil-German Keanu Jahns and Japanese Genki Okada and Seiji Yanagisawa while Tony Lascuña led eight others with 71 as the field struggled on soggy fairways due to overnight rains.

Carlos rattled off four straight birdies from No. 6 coming out of a rain delay for a tournament-best opening 30. But the former amateur hotshot sputtered at the back and fumbled with bogeys on Nos. 11, 15 and 16 before birdying the par-5 closing hole to save a 38 and a 68.

“I had a fantastic start. I got to spots where I wanted and the greens were soft after the rain in the mid-morning,” said Carlos.

Despite playing under preferred lie, only 15 subpar rounds were submitted in the day as the field found the old layout tougher due to the heavy downpour.

Paez hit an odd eagle on No. 2 then closed out with three birdies in the last six holes to negate a bogey-bogey mishap from No. 12 for that 69, while Park blew a four-under card at the front with bogeys on Nos. 11 and 13 and needed to birdie the 18th to stay in joint second in the P2 million event sponsored by ICTSI.

Paez heeded his caddy’s advice to gun down that eagle on the par-5 11th, which used to be the course’s No. 2, then fought back from back-to-back bogeys from No. 12 with three birdies in the last six holes at the back, including a 25-footer on the ninth, for a 33-36.

“My caddy actually suggested it,” said Paez of his eagle feat where he used a wedge off the tee to 60 yards, hacked a driver from 278 yards to within eight feet off the cup and made the putt. “I thought it could be done. When I hit it, I knew it would be a great shot.”

Lascuña also found the course tougher, hitting just three birdies while dropping two strokes on the par-4 15th when he drove into the trees, falling to joint eighth at 71 with Elmer Salvador, Paul Echavez, Albin Engino, Francis Morilla and Japanese Joichiro Kawada.

Cassius Casas, the last winner of this fabled event in 2000, had a one birdie-one bogey round to lead the even par scorers, including former champion Robert Pactolerin, Rufino Bayron, Mhark Fernando, Zanieboy Gialon, Rolando Marabe Jr., Joenard Rates, Nilo Salahog, Joseph Suarez, Korean Kang Chon Coo, Eric Gallardo and Dino Villanueva.

Clyde Mondilla, a pre-tournament favorite after beating absentee Miguel Tabuena and Lascuña by one at Southwoods last week, never recovered from a double-bogey start on No. 10 although he came up with back-to-back birdies from No. 14 and bounced back from a bogey mishap on No. 18 with a birdie on No. 2 to join the big group of even par scorers.

Ten others carded 73s, including Paul Harris of the US and Anthony Fernando, while nine more shot 74s, led by rookie pro Ira Alido and Gerald Rosales, all hoping to rebound in the next three days of the event organized by Pilipinas Golf Tournament­s, Inc. and backed by backed by BDO, KZG, Custom Clubmakers, Meralco, Sharp, Champion, Summit Mineral Water and PLDT.

 ?? JOVEN CAGANDE ?? Jobim Carlos reads the line of his putt on No. 9.
JOVEN CAGANDE Jobim Carlos reads the line of his putt on No. 9.

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