The Philippine Star

Sports ties with Germany

- By JOAQUIN M. HENSON

The other day, I spoke about the Philippine­s’ journey to the 2020+1 Tokyo Olympics and the future of sports in the country before the German-Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry in a zoom webinar. The Chamber’s executive director Dr. Martin Henkelmann invited me to share my thoughts after listening to a similar talk I delivered for the Rotary Club of Manila a month ago.

I mentioned that in 21 Olympic appearance­s since 1924, the Philippine­s has brought home a total of three silver and seven bronze medals without a single gold. That means the Philippine­s has landed a podium finish in only 38 percent of its Olympic outings, a stark contrast to Thailand’s experience. Thailand has bagged at least a medal in 10 of its 16 Olympic forays since 1952 with a total haul of nine gold, eight silver and 16 bronze. Thailand’s nine gold medals came from only two sports – women’s weightlift­ing with five and boxing with four. The results indicate that Thailand has zeroed in on weight-classified sports where Thais are able to excel.

The Philippine government budget for the Olympics is P250 million, including the P20 million used in bubble training for boxing, karate and taekwondo athletes at the Inspire Sports Academy in Calamba early this year. So far, the Philippine­s has qualified seven athletes to Tokyo, four from boxing, one from athletics, one from women’s weightlift­ing and one from gymnastics with more coming from athletics, golf, swimming, taekwondo, skateboard­ing, judo and karate. The target is to send 15 to 20 athletes to the Olympics. The PSC is funding qualifiers and aspirants training in Thailand, Malaysia, Japan, Turkey and Italy and hopefuls competing in Olympic qualifiers all over the world.

In the open forum, Dr. Henkelmann asked if there could be a way to connect Filipino and German athletes in cooperativ­e programs. Germany brought in 425 athletes to the 2016 Rio Olympics and collected 17 gold, 10 silver and 15 bronze medals for fifth place overall behind the US, UK, China and Russia. In Olympic history, Germany has bagged 190 gold medals with at least 10 coming from canoeing, equestrian, rowing, athletics, cycling, gymnastics, swimming and shooting. I mentioned the perfect German ambassador of sports would be basketball legend Dirk Nowitzki. If a visit by Nowitzki to Manila could be arranged, he would be the catalyst in organizing a sports collaborat­ive program between Germany and the Philippine­s.

A question was asked how the delay in staging the Tokyo Olympics may impact the performanc­e of Filipino qualifiers. I said if the Olympics were held as scheduled last year, the Philippine­s would’ve probably qualified about 10 athletes. But the postponeme­nt has given more Filipino athletes the chance to prepare, train and compete in qualifiers so that there could be 15 to 20 representi­ng the country in Tokyo. I was asked to make a bold prediction on how the Philippine­s will fare and I said my fearless forecast is a harvest of one gold, one silver and one bronze with gymnastics, boxing, golf and weightlift­ing the sports that could deliver.

Someone asked if the expectatio­n is Olympic results may not be record-shattering because there will be no audience to pump up the athletes. I said that could be but I’m hopeful that athletes will do their best to overachiev­e not only to bring honor to their countries but also to make a statement that sports can unify mankind in peace, fellowship and camaraderi­e to defy this pandemic, to score a triumph of the human spirit in the face of global adversity created by an unseen enemy. I also spoke about the importance of Filipino athletes attaining consistenc­y to excel beyond the record achievemen­ts at the 2019 SEA Games and how the PSC and POC leaders are on track in steering Philippine sports towards the right direction with programs such as Batang Pinoy, Palarong Pambansa and the Philippine National Games, laws creating the National Sports Training Center and Philippine High School for Sports and initiative­s to promote school sports, grassroots developmen­t, early talent identifica­tion and internatio­nal exposure for elite performers with an emphasis on scientific and technologi­cal support in strength, conditioni­ng, nutrition and psychology.

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