The Philippine Star

Eumir Marcial’s lookouts

- By BILL VELASCO

There may be only minor landmines in the way of Eumir Marcial should he ultimately decide to turn pro within the next couple of months. Late last week, Associatio­n of Boxing Alliances of the Philippine­s (ABAP) president Ricky Vargas issued a statement to quell the questions about the 2015, 2017 and 2019 SEA Games champion’s chances of turning pro before the postponed Tokyo Olympics. Vargas said that the 24-year-old welterweig­ht agreed to postpone any decisions until after the two of them have had a face-to-face discussion about his options. Sen. Manny Pacquiao is said to have prevailed upon his fellow Mindanao native to stay an amateur and prioritize his commitment to winning the country’s first-ever Olympic gold medal.

The Philippine­s has come close to winning an Olympic gold medal a handful of times, and save for Hidilyn Diaz’s silver in weightlift­ing at the last Olympic Games and two other occasions, they come from boxing. Arianne Cerdeña (bowling) and Willy Wang (wushu) have each won Olympic gold, but they did not count in the medal tally. Anthony Villanueva (1964) and Onyok Velasco (1996) lost controvers­ial gold medal matches, and had to settle for silvers. First of all, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee has banned AIBA for a whole laundry list of offenses which are worth an entirely separate column. If the scenario were business as usual, then there would be no problem. AIBA has been trying to co-opt profession­al boxing’s popularity to shore up its own flagging credibilit­y for the last few years.

Now that the IOC is directly running the boxing competitio­n, the question is if they will still follow all of AIBA’s policies or not. Since tennis and basketball started allowing their profession­als to compete in the Olympics in the late 1980’s, few sports have followed. The advantage of tennis is that there are no difference­s between profession­al and amateur rules. In basketball, pro rules are more challengin­g. There’s a shorter shot clock, longer playing minutes, a more distant three-point line. So going back to amateur play is essentiall­y simpler.

For boxing, the rules have been substantia­lly different. Pros intend to knock out opponents; amateurs win with style points. That’s why Mike

Tyson was rejected from the US Olympic team despite being the best heavyweigh­t available, because his style was deemed too profession­al, and he was knocking everyone out. AIBA has been trying to mitigate that gap by modifying amateur rules. They’ve taken away protective headgear (which obscured boxers’ identities) and the white point-scoring tips of the gloves. They’ve even allowed boxers with several pro bouts to still fight as amateurs. But the biggest difference is the one that cannot be reconciled: the weigh-in. Pros are only weighed once, the day before the fight. Amateurs are weighed every day of a tournament until they lose.

This means that pro boxers who decide to try for an Olympic berth will have to compete in a higher division simply to make weight, and even then, there’s a risk. In pro boxing, if a boxer is disqualifi­ed for being overweight, he is made to fight with thicker gloves because he is technicall­y bigger. Pro boxers gain substantia­l weight (often more than 10 pounds) when they binge eat after their lone weigh-in). In an amateur competitio­n, they may have to fight two divisions higher. So far, only three pros have tried their luck in the Olympics, and all suffered defeat early on. None made it past the round of 16. Luckily for Marcial, the IOC task force in charge of boxing the other day announced that it will maintain AIBA’s policy to let pros fight in the Games.

After Marcial already qualified for the Olympics in March, he was preparing for Tokyo. But since

COVID-19 forced the postponeme­nt of the Olympics to July 2021, he basically has nothing to do for 15 months. In fact, he is one of a few athletes still being fully supported by the Philippine Sports Commission, if looming budgetary constraint­s do not affect that, as well. Not actively competing takes away an athlete’s edge. Pro boxers normally take a tune-up or activity fight after a long layoff.

Furthermor­e, the World Boxing Council maintains a firm stand against its boxers competing in the Olympics. In January, WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman reiterated in a statement that “The World Boxing Council (WBC) has adamantly opposed this measure since 2013, when AIBA modified the regulation and took this step that is absolutely and totally rejected by the majority of the members of the boxing community worldwide.”

That means that if Marcial turns pro while still planning to compete in Tokyo, he will face a twoyear ban from the most profitable profession­al boxing body. Then again, if he ends up signing with Pacquiao’s MP Promotions, he may fight in the World Boxing Organizati­on (WBO) for the time being. Should he turn pro after quarantine, he will have fought at least twice by the time the Olympics come around. A lot of things can still happen. Ultimately, the Philippine boxing community hopes he stays an amateur, makes one final push for an Olympic gold and avoids any complicati­ons. But he will do what he feels is best for him.

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