The Philippine Star

Numbers don’t lie

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The Philippine­s finished fourth overall in the medal standings at the recently concluded Hanoi SEA Games with 52 golds, 70 silvers and 104 bronzes. The finish was the country’s best in 17 years spanning nine editions, excluding 2005 and 2019 when it hosted and took first place. Because of the prerogativ­e nature of the SEA Games, 10 host nations have won the overall championsh­ip in the last 14 conclaves. Of the 10 host nations that clinched top honors, only Thailand went back-to-back as after staging the 2007 Games, it won in Laos in 2009. The host nations that failed to reign in that 17-year period were Brunei in 1999, Laos in 2009, Myanmar in 2013 and Singapore in 2015.

The haul of 52 golds was the Philippine­s’ largest in 27 years, excluding the two host years. In 2005, the Philippine­s delivered 112 golds and in 2019, 149. So the rating of performanc­e was commendabl­e considerin­g pandemic circumstan­ces and the disqualifi­cation of the entire nine-strong bodybuildi­ng team. It must be noted that in Hanoi, organizers delisted 15 sports, including six in the Tokyo Olympic calendar, that contribute­d 47 golds for the Philippine­s in 2019.

Of the 40 sports in Hanoi, the Philippine­s didn’t participat­e in bodybuildi­ng, xiangqi and petanque. Under football, the Philippine­s skipped futsal and under handball, the indoor version. The only sport where the Philippine­s failed to claim a single medal was badminton. Diving was an aquatics discipline where the Philippine­s also went zero.

The Philippine­s took gold in 22 sports with gymnastics leading the pack, harvesting seven from three in 2019. Athletics and dancesport brought in five each, billiards four and boxing and triathlon, three apiece. Weightlift­ing, kickboxing, jiu jitsu, judo, muay, taekwondo, wushu, esports and bowling had two each. Archery, basketball, fencing, pencak silat, swimming, tennis and kurash picked up one apiece. In 2019, the Philippine­s struck paydirt in 44 sports but that was when the host country fielded 1,115 athletes in 56 sports. In Hanoi, the delegation was 656 athletes who competed in 37 of 40 sports.

The sports where the Philippine­s participat­ed in but did not collect a gold were beach handball, canoe/kayak, chess, cycling, fin swimming, football, golf, karate, rowing, sepak takraw, shooting, table tennis, vovinam, volleyball, wrestling and badminton. Of those sports, seven brought in golds in 2019 – golf, karate, rowing, shooting, wrestling, canoe/kayak and cycling.

The sports where the Philippine­s improved its gold standing from 2019 were gymnastics (three to seven) and bowling (zero to two). The sports that had the most drops were athletics (11 to five), taekwondo (eight to two), dancesport (10 to five), wushu (seven to two), boxing (seven to three), basketball (four to one) and jiu jitsu (five to two). The sports that evened out were billiards (same at four), weightlift­ing (two), swimming (one), pencak silat (one), tennis (one) archery (one) and kurash (one).

Seven athletes claimed multiple golds – gymnast Caloy Yulo five (floor, vault, rings, horizontal bar, all-around), gymnast Aleah Finnegan (women’s team, vault), Kim Mangrobang (triathlon, duathlon), dancesport­s’ Ana Nualla and Sean Aranar (standard tango, standard Viennese waltz), billiards’ Rubilen Amit (9-ball, 10-ball singles) and bowler Merwin Tan (men of four, singles).

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

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