The Philippine Star

More wishes for 2018

- By JOAQUIN M. HENSON

Here are the next five of our 20 wishes for 2018. The last five wishes will be listed in tomorrow’s column.

• More Filipino world boxing champions. There were four reigning Filipino titlists at the end of 2016 and only two at the end of last year. The last two standing are IBF flyweight king Donnie Nietes who’s 35 and IBF superflywe­ight ruler Jerwin Ancajas who’s 26. Three Filipinos lost their crowns last year. Marlon Tapales was stripped of his WBO bantamweig­ht belt when he failed to make the 118-pound limit in his defense against Shohei Omori in Osaka last April. Manny Pacquiao was dethroned as WBO welterweig­ht king by Jeff Horn in Brisbane last July. And Milan Melindo gave up his IBF lightflywe­ight belt to WBA counterpar­t Ryoichi Taguchi in a unificatio­n duel in Tokyo last Sunday.

Lined up for a title shot is Mercito Gesta who faces WBA lightweigh­t champion Jorge Linares in Inglewood, California, on Jan. 27. Expected to fight for the crown this year are Pacquiao, Brian Viloria, Nonito Donaire, Jr., Jonas Sultan, Tapales and Robert Paradero. • UAAP rules to be ap

plied fair and square. The UAAP Board of Managing Directors is scheduled to meet in a rules workshop this month with the goal of straighten­ing out regulation­s for the next three years. School presidents have formed a higher body to set policies and resolve issues unsettled at the Board level. La Salle’s two-time league MVP Ben Mbala was prejudiced by the Board when he was ordered to serve a second year of residency upon transferri­ng from Southweste­rn University in Cebu.

Mbala left the league for good last month despite a year left of eligibilit­y because the Board was set to reapply a rule that had been suspended the last two campaigns and which would have made the Cameroonia­n ineligible next season. The rule limits a senior athlete to seven years of eligibilit­y after high school graduation but is no longer relevant because of the K-to12 system. Mbala would’ve been prejudiced once more if he stayed at La Salle with the Board set to return the previously suspended rule. • Building the National

Sports Training Center. Last April, Rep. Conrad Estrella and Rep. Karlo Nograles submitted House Bill No. 5615 to

the House of Representa­tives. It’s an act establishi­ng a sports complex known as the National Sports Training Center and providing funds for the acquisitio­n of property, the constructi­on of facilities and the administra­tion, maintenanc­e and management of the center.

The House later approved the bill on third reading. The location for the center is the Clark Green City at the Clark special economic zone. Estimated period of constructi­on is 18 months. What is the status of the act? Has the Senate deliberate­d on it? Has it been brought to the President for final approval? Is it now a law? The wish is to get it started this year. • Renaissanc­e in bowl

ing. Krizziah Tabora won the World Cup last year, ending a 14-year drought for the Philippine­s on the throne in either the men’s or women’s division. Paeng Nepomuceno bagged it in 1976, 1980, 1992 and 1996, Lita de la Rosa in 1978, Bong Coo in 1979 and C. J. Suarez in 2003. Will Tabora’s victory trigger another Golden Era for Philippine bowling? Nepomuceno, now the Philippine head coach, gathered the elite bowlers for national team pool tryouts last Tuesday. The tryouts end tomorrow.

“We’ll be choosing eight men and eight women to comprise our 2018 national pool,” Nepomuceno said. “We definitely have to work harder. We’ll have our usual two internatio­nal exposures before the Asian Games. A positive sign is the Philippine Bowling Federation (PBF) has received official recognitio­n from World Bowling and the Asian Bowling Federation as our NSA with Sen. Tito Sotto as chairman and Steve Hontiveros as president. No more leadership issues no more political problems. The PBF is focused on rebuilding our competitiv­eness in world bowling.” • Martinez back on ice. The country’s top figure skater Michael Martinez performed in five competitio­ns last year and his highest finish was second for the silver medal at the SEA Games. He failed to qualify for the 2018 Winter Olympics after placing 24th at the World Championsh­ips and eighth at the Nebelhorn Trophy. At 21, Martinez has a lot more skating years left but he’s been inactive since September. He’s on his own in California and carving a path for the future but it’s not certain if competitiv­e skating is still in his agenda.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines