The Philippine Star

Day of reckoning

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It’s down to the last day of competitio­ns at the Hanoi SEA Games and while Vietnam is safely at the top of the leader board with Thailand secure at No. 2, the battle for third remains unsettled. Singapore, Indonesia and the Philippine­s are in a tight race to finish within the magic circle of three.

The calendar shows 16 sports left to be played today before the closing ceremonies. Basketball, billiards, boxing, cycling, e-sports, aerobic gymnastics, judo, muay, shooting, tennis, weightlift­ing, vovinam, indoor volleyball (men and women), men’s football, fin swimming and badminton are scheduled to wind up. Of the 16 sports, the Philippine­s took gold medals in 10 in the previous SEA Games. Boxing has the most golds at stake with 13. The Philippine­s’ Rogen Ladon, Ian Clark Bautista, Eumir Marcial and Irish Magno are in the boxing finals.

As of last Friday, the Philippine­s claimed golds in 20 sports compared to 44 in 2019. Of the 44 sports, 15 were struck out in Hanoi. Delisted were arnis, baseball, lawn bowls, modern pentathlon, obstacle course, rugby 7s, sailing, sambo, skateboard­ing, soft tennis, softball, squash, surfing, wakeboardi­ng and windsurfin­g. The 15 sports accounted for 47 golds in 2019. Vietnamese organizers ignored six sports that were played in the Tokyo Olympics last year – baseball, modern pentathlon, rugby 7s, sailing, skateboard­ing and surfing. They also took out polo, ice and indoor hockey, ice skating, waterskiin­g, underwater hockey, floorball, BMX cycling, traditiona­l boat race, water polo and netball which were in the 2019 schedule. Instead, Hanoi brought in bodybuildi­ng, vovinam, futsal, fin swimming and xiangqi.

Of the 20 sports where the Philippine­s struck paydirt, artistic gymnastics was the gold topnotcher with seven, five from Caloy Yulo. Athletics contribute­d five or six less than the haul in 2019. Dancesport also delivered five, down from 10 in 2019. The sports that brought gold in 2019 but failed to mint in Hanoi were golf, karate, rowing, shooting, wrestling, canoe/kayak and cycling. Golds are expected from basketball and boxing today.

Two sports that went without a gold in 2019 but came through in Hanoi were bowling and duathlon. Bowling did it in the men’s team of four with Christian Dychangco, Ivan Malig, Patrick Nuqui and Merwin Tan and in men’s singles with Tan. Marion Mangrobang bagged the gold in the women’s individual duathlon. Wushu took a big drop from seven golds in 2019 to two, jiu jitsu from five to two and taekwondo from eight to two.

Lack of training and internatio­nal exposure due to pandemic restrictio­ns was a key factor that led to the drop in performanc­e. But other countries faced the same predicamen­t. Perhaps, some NSAs that overachiev­ed in 2019 didn’t prepare as hard, thinking the momentum would carry over. Perhaps, some NSAs delayed plans to develop fresh talent, relying on veterans to lead the charge. Surely, Hanoi’s reconfigur­ed calendar of sports had a major effect on the Philippine­s’ medal showing. Vietnam is the 10th host nation to win the overall championsh­ip in the last 14 SEA Games. Next year, Phnom Penh will host so the fight for first place should be wide open, considerin­g Cambodia has never won the overall title. In the last three SEA Games where the host nation failed to win the overall crown (Brunei in 1999, Laos in 2009, Singapore in 2015), Thailand finished No. 1.

 ?? By JOAQUIN M. HENSON ??
By JOAQUIN M. HENSON

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