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The final verdict: Well done

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VICTORIOUS: Hidilyn Diaz and fellow weightlifter Vanessa Sarno, bowler Merwin Tan, boxers Eumir Marcial, Ian Clark Bautista, and Rogen Ladon, and cue star Rubilyn Amit are among the faces of the Philippine campaign in Vietnam.

FEW really knew what the country’s athletes went through as they prepared for the 31st Southeast Asian Games in Vietnam, originally set in November 2021. They gained a five-month reprieve after the biennial games was reset to May 2022 due to the spike in coronavirus cases in Hanoi and neighboring areas.

But even that was not enough to prepare them for the coming battle ahead.

Sports scribes who traveled with majority of the athletes to Hanoi sensed the uneasy calm among delegation members. Sure, there were smiles all around, high-fives, the usual jig.

But as soon as they returned to their seats in the waiting lounge of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport, majority stared at nothing, most likely contemplating what lies ahead: Will their insufficient training and lack of foreign exposure enable them to crash the podium?

Sports officials gave them every encouragement known to man — that their rivals in Vietnam also lacked training and stints in foreign tournaments, their fellow Filipinos expect them to give their best, that incentives are awaiting them, so on and so forth.

What the officials did not say is best said in the vernacular: “Pagalingan na lang.”

It did not help that Vietnamese organizers, no newbies as hosts, having initially held the 2003 games, were far from prepared. Identification cards were sorted out at the last-minute, transportation was inadequate, the sort that gives you warning signs.

To the horror of the working press, with a day to go before the curtains rose on the games, workers were still putting up finishing touches at the My Din National Stadium, seats were dusty, there were no electronic timers, there was no media center; and to top it all, the games website still was not working.

The Philippine delegation, however, took it all in stride. Have they seen the worst, perhaps?

Nobody could say.

The Philippine campaign got off to an auspicious start barely 24 hours before the games were declared open, with Mary Francine Padios, 18, a proud product of Kalibo, Aklan scoring an emotional victory in the artistic form of pencak silat. Inspired by the misfortune that struck her father before Christmas last year, she improved on her silver medal finish in the 2019 Philippine Games.

“My dad has become my inspiration after he figured in a terrible car accident on her way home in Aklan just before Christmas,” said Padios, whose dad went into coma. “He was so exhausted and drowsy from work that he slept at the wheel and met with an accident.”
Pinoy sports officials expressed hope that Padio’s surprise but welcome victory would set the tone for the next 12 days of action.

They were wrong.

After failing to win a gold on opening day, the Philippine campaign perked up slightly on Friday the 13th, courtesy of world gymnastics champion Carlos Yulo, 22, who bucked a slip in the pommel horse to prevail and lead a modest three gold haul.

Ernest John Obiena, like Yulo a Tokyo Olympian and one of several world-class athletes in the delegation, smashed the SEA Games record in pole vault the next day as the Philippines bagged seven gold medals and started jostling for third place, what officials said was a reachable target, even as Vietnam pulled away from the pack.

On the fourth day of action, Yulo led an eight-gold haul as the Philippines, to the elation of everybody, gave Thailand a good fight for second overall. Artistic gymnastics proved to be a gold mine for the Philippines as Yulo and Fil-Am Aleah Finnegan won a combined three golds while Kim Mangrobang added the duathlon gold to her earlier triumph in women’s triathlon.

The eight-gold haul, which matched the team’s output a day before, jacked up the country’s total to 20, just one behind Thailand. Host Vietnam moved out of reach with a haul of 64-42-41, with Thailand having 21-22-41, the Philippines 20-25-36, Indonesia 17-26-16, and Malaysia completing the top five with 16-11-29.

The next day, Yulo completed a five-gold romp while dancesport scored four rousing victories as the Philippines came up with its best performance yet, going on a 10-gold medal rush to stay on the coattails of Thailand in their heated battle for second overall.

Yulo, 22, expectedly triumphed in the apparatus where he is the reigning world champion, dominating the vault finals and adding a surprise gold in the horizontal bars as he ended his second SEA Games stint with a shot at becoming the best male athlete.

Before Tokyo Olympics gold medal winner Hidilyn Diaz climbed the stage, Fil-Am Kayla Richardson regained the 100m dash crown she won in 2015 as a teenager as the Philippines barely held off a spirited challenge by Indonesia for third overall. But Richardson’s gold was just one of three won by the country on the seventh day.

But the Pinoy medal rush stalled the next day, being limited to just two, leaving the delegation hoping that Diaz could give the team the needed spark.

Indonesia dislodged the Philippines at third and left the Filipinos battling for fourth against the Singaporeans.

Diaz mustered the strength to raise the bar in her first attempt in the clean and jerk to prevail in an entertaining duel with Thai Tanasan Sanikun and keep her weightlifting crown.

“My journey to Paris starts here, so this SEA Games gold is very important for me,” said Diaz, who also triumphed in the 2019 Games.

“Napaka-meaningful nito (SEAG). After winning the gold medal (in Tokyo), bumalik pa din ako, nakapag-deliver ng gold medal for the Philippines. Masaya ako na nandito ako ulit ako sa SEA Games, na i-represent ang Pilipinas,” she added after delivering the country’s 42nd gold.

Proving her worth as Asian champion, Vanessa Sarno handily ruled in record-breaking fashion the women’s 71 kg class of weightlifting as she made a triumphant debut in the Games.

Sarno, 18, crushed the competition, lifting 104kg in the snatch and 135kg in the clean and jerk for a 239kg total, all new SEA Games and Philippine records.

“I am so happy that I am one of the gold medalists here in the Southeast Asian Games. I never thought I would win the gold because this is my first time here,” said Sarno, whose victory installed her as the heir apparent of Diaz.

By this time, Vietnam had steamed full ahead to the overall title while Thailand, once jostling with the Philippines for second, moved up to solo second, followed by Indonesia.

The Filipinos were locked in a tight battle for fourth with Singapore, leaving Philippine Olympic Committee President Rep. Abraham “Bambol” Tolentino counting the gold medal prospects going into the last day of action.

The boxers, led by Tokyo bronze medal winner Eumir Marcial, led a five-day gold haul on the last day of action, enabling the Philippines to finally snatch fourth from the Singaporeans. But even the final day haul lost luster after Gilas Pilipinas failed to win the gold cherished most by Filipinos, losing 81-85 to the Indonesians. Basketball was limited to just one gold, courtesy of the Gilas women’s squad, which failed to score a sweep and bagged the title only via the winner-over-the-other rule over Indonesia.

The 52nd and last gold for the country was delivered by Muay athlete Philip Delarmino, who was originally named the silver medal winner. A protest lodged by the Philippines was upheld and he was awarded the gold.

There were other multiple gold medal winners, among them billiards stars Carlo Biado and Rubilyn Amit, and bowler Merwin Tan, who ended the country’s long search for a gold medal. Legend Efren “Bata” Reyes was limited to a bronze but he proved that, at 67, he’s still one of the most revered athletes in the region.

The 52 gold medals, on top of 70 silver and 104 bronze medals was miles better than the measly 23 gold, 33 silver and 64 bronze medals that Pinoy athletes won in the 2017 Malaysia Games, the last time a national contingent competed overseas, for a woeful sixth place finish.

“We congratulate our athletes. They showed resiliency when the going got rough. Despite the adversity they faced in preparing for the games, they rose to the challenge,” said Tolentino.

“We could have done better but we’ll take it. We had high hopes going to Hanoi but we encountered a buzz-saw that was the Vietnamese juggernaut. We won a lot of silver medals, the ones that got away,” he said, ruing anew the fate met by lots of Filipino athletes in various disciplines who fell prey to subjective judging.

After showering praises on the athletes, Tolentino shifted his focus to next year’s games in Cambodia, where Pinoy athletes, he said, will compete in all disciplines.

Focus shifts to Cambodia Games

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EYEING PAYBACK: Gilas Pilipinas center June Mar Fajardo, here trying to score off an Indon defender, and the rest of the nationals try to redeem themselves in next year’s Cambodia SEA Games.

A DAY after the Philippine team finished fourth overall in the 31st Southeast Asian Games in Vietnam, Philippine Olympic Committee President and Rep. Abraham “Bambol” Tolentino focused his sights on next year’s biennial battle that will be hosted for the first time by Cambodia.

“All-in tayo sa Cambodia,” Tolentino said of his plan to field athletes in all events in the 32nd edition of the games set May 5-17, 2023. “But we have to start preparing right away.”

Tolentino spoke after the majority of national athletes, despite being hampered by the pandemic, returned home Monday with 52 gold medals after their gallant and inspiring stand in Hanoi, Vietnam.

Muay athlete Philip Delarmino accounted for the country’s fifth and last gold as action ended last Sunday, before chaos reigned in the Vietnamese capital as football-crazy fans celebrated their team’s title-clinching 1-0 win over Thailand that put an exclamation point on their dominance of the 12-day meet.

The 52 gold medals, on top of 70 silver and 104 bronze medals were miles better than the measly 23 gold, 33 silver and 64 bronze medals that Pinoy athletes won in the 2017 Malaysia Games, the last time a national contingent competed overseas, for a woeful sixth place finish.

“We congratulate our athletes. They showed resiliency when the going got rough. Despite the adversity they faced in preparing for the games, they rose to the challenge,” said Tolentino.

“We could have done better but we’ll take it. We had high hopes going to Hanoi, but we encountered a buzz-saw that was the Vietnamese juggernaut. We won a lot of silver medals, the ones that got away,” he said, ruing anew the fate met by lots of Filipino athletes in various disciplines who fell prey to subjective judging.

“We finished fourth place among 11 brother-countries in the region. This is our best finish since 1983 (in the Singapore SEA Games when we placed second to Indonesia) in a SEA Games event outside the Philippines,” PSC Commissioner Ramon Fernandez, the chief of mission of the national team, said.

“As Chef de Mission, I am truly very proud of this feat! Just as I thank my Philippine Sports Commission family headed by Chairman William Ramirez for their all-out support,” he added.

Tokyo Olympics bronze medalist Eumir Marcial and fellow boxers Rogen Ladon and Ian Clark Bautista delivered three of the final-day gold medals for the Filipinos, with the fourth gold coming from the Gilas Pilipinas women’s squad that lost its final-day match to Malaysia 93-96 but nevertheless took the title for the country’s 51st mint.

Just when everybody thought that was the country’s last mint for the day, Delarmino struck with a muay gold, with Tolentino there to award the last gold for a winning Pinoy athlete.
Gilas Pilipinas’ failure to retain the gold medal in men’s basketball was still the talk of the town a day after the curtains fell on the games but the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas still had to issue a response to the call of fans to get rid of coach Chot Reyes, who called the shots for the nationals whose stint ended with an embarrassing and deflating 81-85 defeat to Indonesia in the gold medal game.

Reyes: ‘I take full responsibility’

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HANOI. – Gilas Pilipinas fell in a stunning upset to Indonesia on Sunday, suffering an 81-85 defeat and settled for the silver in the most cherished discipline back home as the curtains fell on the 31st Southeast Asian Games here.

Playing at the Thanh Tri Gymnasium for the sixth time, the Filipinos failed to neutralize Indonesia’s three-point shooting and finished with a 5-1 card. Indonesia won the gold by going unscathed in six games.

The Indons banked on the collective efforts of naturalized player Marques Bolden, Derrick Michael Xzavierro, and Damar Abraham Gratiwa to end the Philippines’ 33-year reign in men’s basketball.

The loss was the third time the Philippines failed in its quest for the cage gold, the first in 1979 and again in 1989, both in Malaysia.

“Our players played their best,” coach Chot Reyes said after emerging from the dugout.

“Indonesia came up with a very good game plan. They shot well from the three-point line. In the end, we just couldn’t match it.

“Obviously that’s on me. I take full accountability and responsibility for the result. Like I said, they tried their best and that’s sports. That’s life. Sometimes, things don’t work out the way we played,” he added.

Bolden, formerly of the Cleveland Cavaliers who played only his second game here, scored on a putback to give Indonesia an 81-76 lead with 40.8 seconds left.

Matthew Wright made a triple to cut the deficit to three. But after Gilas forced a turnover, Wright missed a contested shot, allowing Grahita to complete the victory by sinking two free throws with 6.1 seconds left.

Partly thanks to Vietnam, the Gilas Pilipinas women’s squad still emerged the winner and contributed to the country’s gold medal hunt here despite dropping a 93-96 decision to Malaysia earlier.

The host team stunned the Malaysians 69-65 last Saturday, a win that assured the Filipina cagers the gold, which counted as the 48th for the national delegation.

With the loss, the Gilas women finished with a 4-1 card. Even if the Indonesian team beats Singapore in the other game Sunday to match the Filipinas’ card, Gilas women will still win the gold due to the winner-over-the-other rule, having beaten the Indons 93-77 Monday last week.

The team successfully retained the crown it won three years ago in the country, ending the stranglehold of Thailand in the event, although not the way everybody in the Philippine delegation expected.

Malaysia closed the game with seven straight points capped by a three-pointer by Chong Yin Yin with 17.2 second left.

Gilas tried but failed to come up with a decent shot in its last possession, to the consternation of the small Pinoy gallery in the stands.

Family woes keep Sarno motivated

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SARNO: Gold medal win in Hanoi did not come easy.

HANOI. — Newly-crowned SEA Games weightlifting champion Vanessa Sarno poured her heart out on Sunday, a day after whipping the competition to emerge as the heir apparent to Tokyo Olympics gold winner Hidilyn Diaz in the 31st Southeast Asian Games here.

Sarno, 18, baffled many when she disclosed last Saturday, shortly after her smashing triumph in the women’s 71kg class at the Hanoi Sports and Training Competition Center, that she endured sleepless nights, crying, and doubting herself, as the clocked ticked for the games.

“Ilang gabi po akong umiiyak, sobrang dami ko pong pinagdaanan. Maraming beses po akong nag-doubt sa sarili ko na baka hindi ako ‘yung maglalaro sa SEA Games,” she said.

Now, it can be told.

The proud product of Bohol, who won two gold medals in April last year during the Asian Weightlifting Championships that served as an Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, revealed her father left their family recently, prompting her to promise to mother, Emelita, 48, that she would work hard to help sustain her three siblings.

“I was inspired and motivated to work hard to help my mother, brothers and sisters because my father left us recently,” Sarno said.

“My mother didn’t give up on us despite what happened. That’s why I promised her that I will take care of them. I told my mother not to work anymore because I need her on my side,” Sarno, the second eldest of the four, said.

“There was a time that I wanted to give up because of what happened, but I didn’t because of the people who inspired me,” she added.

When she was just nine years old, Sarno said she stumbled upon a makeshift weightlifting gym on the shores of Tagbilaran, Bohol, more than 20 minutes away from their home in Barangay Poblacion, Dauis.

Nine years later, she is now being hailed as the next lifter to carry the weight of the Philippine Team, alongside Diaz, 31, her inspiration.

She is aiming high, with a gold medal in the 2024 Paris Olympics her goal so she could also reap the windfall that came Diaz’s way after her breakthrough gold medal win in last year’s Tokyo Games.

7 medals not enough to make Yulo the ‘Favorite Athlete’ in Vietnam

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HANOI. – One would think that because he won five gold and two silver medals, world champion gymnast Carlos Edriel Yulo would be the hands-down choice as the best male athlete in the 31st Southeast Asian Games here.

Nothing of that sort.

Instead, the hosts have come up with something else: The Most Favorite Athlete Award — done through online voting.

Expectedly, a Vietnamese athlete — football star Hung Dung Do — is leading the race primarily because football is the most popular sport here.

And Yulo? Well, he’s in the list — at 10th, way behind Felisberto de Jesus of Timor Leste, who won two silver medals in athletics and is running fourth with 326 votes.

Yulo? He’s got 101 votes.

Hung shows the way with 3,782 votes, followed by Indonesian badminton star Pramudya Riyanto (1,399) and Vietnamese women’s cager Truong Thao (957).

Voting, which is done online via the official 31st SEA Games website, has not worked to the expectations of thousands of journalists covering the biennial multi-sport competitions that were postponed from last November because of the pandemic.

“It’s a popularity race and not exactly on how many gold medals an athlete won in the SEA Games,” said Malyn Bamba, head of the Public Communications Office of the Philippine Sports Commission that funded the preparation and participation of Team Philippines here.

“Of course, Vietnamese athletes have the edge because they’re playing on their home court,” Bamba said. “Besides, the awards as most popular athletes haven’t been really disseminated.”

Another race for the most popular football player of the games was put up by the hosts and, as expected, Hung also led the pack.

Yulo, who triumphed in the men’s individual all-around, floor exercise, rings, vault and high bar, and finished second in men’s team and parallel bars, left for Japan last Tuesday and probably couldn’t care less that he’s not the most popular athlete here.

Agony in Hanoi as Gilas fails in golden quest

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HANOI. – Tokyo Olympics bronze winner Eumir Marcial mauled his unheralded Timor Leste opponent to lead a final-day, four-gold medal haul that somehow lost luster after Gilas Pilipinas failed in its mission on Sunday in the 31st Southeast Asian Games here.

Showing superior skills, Marcial made quick work of Delio Anzageci Mouzinho, forcing a referee-stopped contest (RSC) victory in the first round of the middleweight finals, following through on big victories scored earlier by Ian Clark Bautista and Rogen Ladon at the Bac Ninh Stadium.

But the story of the day, the saddest in Team Philippines’ participation here, was the stunning 81-85 defeat suffered by Gilas Pilipinas to a gritty Indon squad backstopped by former NBA player Marques Bolden and coached by former Gilas mentor Raiko Toroman.

The defeat came after the Gilas Pilipinas women’s team absorbed a similarly surprising 93-96 setback at the hands of the upstart Malaysian squad at the Thanh Tri Gymnasium earlier, although the loss was somehow softened by the fact the distaff team still won the gold medal via the winner-over-the-other rule.

The Gilas women’s cause was helped along by Vietnam, which beat Malaysia 69-65 late Saturday night, the Malaysians’ second defeat in five games.

With a 4-1 card, the Gilas women bagged the gold. Indonesia can match that record with a win over Singapore later Sunday but Gilas will still prevail, having beaten the Indons 93-77 Monday last week.

With a 5-1 mark, the men’s squad coached by Chot Reyes, who took over when Tab Baldwin gave up the post last January, became only the third Philippine team in SEA Games history to fail in its golden quest after similar silver medal finishes by the country in the 1979 and 1989 games, both in Malaysia, against 18 title conquests.

This immediately prompted calls on social media for Reyes to resign, with his detractors pointing out that the biennial competition is the lowest form of competition in Asia.

The last time Reyes coached Gilas was in the 2014 Asian Games in Incheon, South Korea, with the team winning just three of seven games to finish seventh overall.

“Our players played their best,” Reyes said after emerging from the dugout. “Indonesia came up with a very good game plan. They shot well from the three-point line. In the end, we just couldn’t match it.

“Obviously that’s on me. I take full accountability and responsibility for the result. Like I said, they tried their best and that’s sports. That’s life. Sometimes, things don’t work out the way we played,” he added.

Lost in the horror and agony of that loss were the victories posted by Ladon, who edged Thao Tran Van of Vietnam 3-2 in the men’s 52kg division, and Bautista, who humbled Naing Latt of Myanmar 5-0 in the men’s 57kg class.

The other Pinoy boxer in the finals, Tokyo Olympian Irish Magno, lost to Vietnamese Nguyen Thi Tam in the women’s flyweight championship and bagged the silver, the same fate suffered by the esports team in its League of Legends finals showdown against Vietnam 0-3.

The Philippine contingent, backed by the Philippine Sports Commission and the Philippine Olympic Committee, finished the 12-day biennial games with 51 gold medals on top of 67 silver and 92 bronze medals for fourth overall, a big comedown from its overpowering performance three years ago when it bagged the country’s second overall crown with a harvest of 149-117-121.

Host Vietnam put the finishing touches to its dominant run to the overall crown with a 193-115-109 haul, followed by Thailand (84-96-126) and Indonesia (63-83-74).

Singapore, which seized fourth from the Philippines last Friday, remained stuck at 47 golds with 45 silver and 67 bronze medals for fifth.

Of the 11 participating countries here, only Timor Leste failed to win a gold.

Bolden, who played for the Cleveland Cavaliers, served as the lynchpin for the Indon squad that finished with a 6-0 card, with Abraham Grahita also lending support.

With his teammates watching from the sidelines, Marcial, 26, who has already won two pro fights, went to work as soon as the bell sounded, delivering solid punches to his foe.

“I shouted to him to extend the fight, but it didn’t reach the last two-minute mark, I guess. The referee just stopped the fight,” women’s featherweight bronze medalist Nesthy Petecio said after cheering Marcial.

The Philippines ended the boxing competition with three gold medals, one silver and five bronze medals, a far cry from the seven golds, three silver medals and two bronze medals won by the country in the 2019 SEA Games.

“I congratulate Malaysia. They still had that heart to play the game. Even though they were down, we really had a hard time. They were making shots,” said Gilas Women coach Pat Aquino.

The Gilas women had an average winning margin of 23 points in their past four games in winning their second straight SEA Games title.

“I still tip my hat off for the girls. They played their hearts out. It’s just not as sweet as we want it to be. But we are still gold medalist. I’m so proud of them having that feat,” said Aquino.

Men’s keglers deliver 2nd gold

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HANOI. – With singles gold medalist Merwin Tan leading the way, the men’s bowling team sparkled Thursday, adding a second victory to the Philippine campaign in the 31st Southeast Asian Games here by ruling the team-of-4 event.

Three days after Tan ended the country’s golden drought in bowling in the biennial games, the Philippine flag was raised and national anthem heard anew at the Royal City Hanoi Bowling Lanes as the Pinoy keglers dominated action, finishing with 5275 pinfalls, 113 pins ahead of runner-up Malaysia.

The gold was the Philippines’ 39th overall, counting the mint delivered by the women’s squad in the Wild Rift event of esports late Wednesday.

Tan, a 22-year-old left-hander, rolled 1411 pinfalls for a six-game average of 235.17, the best among all the 24 competitors in the six-team field, while Christian Dychangco backed him up with 1377 pinfalls for an average of 229.50, including a tournament-high 278 in the sixth and final game.

Ivan Malig carded 1285 pinfalls for an average of 214.17 while the fourth member of the winning team, Patrick Neil Nuqui, shot 1202 for an average of 200.33.

Tan, Nuqui, and Dychangco were members of the national team that won a bronze medal in the World Championship last December in Dubai.

“Masayang-masaya po sa second gold. Hindi namin inaasang mananalo, basta inin-joy lang namin ang game,” said Tan, a former junior bowler competing in his third SEA Games.

Tan’s singles win ended the country’s long gold medal drought in SEA Games bowling, with Frederick Ong last doing the trick in the 2011 Indonesia Games.

Tan and Dychango bounced back from a seventh-place finish in men’s doubles last Wednesday, two rungs lower than the tandem of Malig and Nuqui.

“Between team and individual gold medal, mas gusto ko ‘yung team kasi kami lahat mag-uuwi ng medalya,” added Tan, who rolled a total of 1292 last Monday, propped up by a six-bagger in the sixth game where he scored 249.

Coach Biboy Rivera echoed Tan’s sentiments, saying: “Talagang ito ‘yung event na gusto naming mapanalunan, more than the individual. Kasi sa bowling, ‘yung team event ang pinaka-prestigious. Mas mahirap panalunin.

“Kailangan lahat ng players mag-sabay-sabay, mag-unite, tapos magkaroon ng teamwork.

Kasi hindi lahat ng games ay maganda ang laro ng lahat. May sasalo dun sa nahihirapan.

Dito ninyo makikita ‘yung gelling nun team, ‘yung camaraderie, ‘yung unity nung team.”

Malaysia, the leader after the first three-game block last Wednesday, finished second with 5161 pinfalls, while Singapore bagged the bronze with 4963. Indonesia finished fourth (4890), followed by Thailand (4691), and Vietnam (4570).

All eyes on Diaz as Pinoys struggle

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HANOI. – Tokyo Olympics gold medalist Hidilyn Diaz takes center stage Friday, heavily-favored to rule the 55kg division of weightlifting and lift the sagging spirits of Filipino athletes who were limited to just two gold medals Thursday in the 31st Southeast Asian Games here.

Diaz plunges into action at 1 p.m. (Manila time) at the Hanoi Sports Training Center against six pretenders, one of them Vietnamese Nguyen Thu Hien.

“I will give it my best,” said Diaz, 31, who stayed a few days in Ho Chi Minh City prepping up for battle with coach and trainer Julius Naranjo before flying to the Vietnamese capital.

“Let’s support all Filipino weightlifters,” she said.

Also hoping to pull the rug from under Diaz are Indonesia’s Natasya Beteyob, Thailand’s Tanasan Sanikun, Malaysia’s Cassendra Engelbert Elly and Cambodia’s Tan Poch.

Philippine Olympic Committee President and Rep. Abraham “Bambol” Tolentino said he expects Diaz to retain her gold medal.

“I’m looking forward to Hidilyn retaining her title, she’s an elite athlete and an Olympic champion,” Tolentino said.

The men’s bowling team of Merwin Tan, Christian Dychangco, Ivan Malig and Patrick Nuqui started the day on an auspicious note, adding the team-of-4 gold to the singles triumph of Tan last Monday.

As the day wore on, however, Pinoy athletes stayed unusually silent, until judoka Rena Furukawa Lanoy edged Chu Myat Noe Wai of Myanmar 1-0 in the finals of the women’s minus 57kg class at the Hoai Duc Gymnasium.

The twin gold raised the haul of Team Philippines, backed by the Philippine Sports Commission and the Philippine Olympic Committee, to 40, counting the victory of the women’s Wild Rift squad late Wednesday, the first esports gold for the country here.

But it was not enough to prevent Indonesia from dislodging the Philippines at third and left the Filipinos, who were limited to four golds last Tuesday and three last Wednesday, battling for fourth against the Singaporeans.

As Vietnam steamed full ahead to the overall title with a harvest of 149-88-80 at press time, Thailand, once jostling with the Philippines for second, improved to 58-65-92, with Indonesia moving up to third with a 41-59-55 harvest.

The Filipinos, aside from 40 gold medals, also had 55 silver and 76 bronze medals, their silver medal production spelling the difference in the fight for fourth. Singapore had a 40-41-52 tally for fifth.

In all, eight silver medals were won by Pinoy athletes for the day, the ones that got away, including the runner-up finish of marathoner Christine Hallasgo, who gamely battled cramps but still lost her crown to Indonesian Odekta Naibaho Elvina, who ruled the lung-busting race in 2:55.280.

Hallasgo, who triumphed back home in 2019, clocked 2:56.07 for second, with Vietnam’s Ngoc Hoa Hoang Thi third in 2:57.350.

While the anticipation is on Diaz, Rosegie Ramos settled for a bronze medal in women’s 49kg class with a 179 kgs total lift built around 81kgs in snatch and 98 kgs in clean and jerk. Thailand’s Surodchana Khambao (195) and hometown bet Dihn Thi Pham (183) bagged the gold and silver medals, respectively.

Diaz’s cousin, Mary Flor Diaz finished fourth in the women’s 45kg class ruled by a Thai, Vietnamese and Indonesian, and so did Fernando Agad Jr. in men’s 55kg that saw weightlifters from Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia occupy the podium.

Also competing on Friday are Rowel Garcia in men’s 61kg, 2016 Rio De Janeiro Olympian Nestor Colonia in men’s 67kg and Margaret Colonia in women’s 59kg.

Seeing action on Saturday are Denmark Tarro (men’s 73kg), Elreen Ann Ando (women’s 64kg) and Vanessa Sarno (women’s 71kg).

On Sunday, it will be the turn of John Kevin Padullo (men’s 89kg), Kristel Macrohon (women’s 71kg and John Dexter Tabique (men’s 89kg).

Aside from Hallasgo, also winning silver medals were Grandmaster Darwin Laylo and International Master Paulo Bersamina in rapid chess; archer Jennifer Chan and Paul Marton dela Cruz in the mixed team competition; judokas Keisei Nakano and John Viron Ferrer, and wrestlers Roni Tubog, Alvin Lobreguito, and Jhonny Morte.

Another judoka, Megui Kurayoshi, settled for the bronze, along with Janella Mae Frayna and Antoinette San Diego in chess, the team of Paul dela Cruz, Flor Matan and Johan Olano in archery’s men’s team competition, taekwondo’s Israel Cesar Cantos, karatedos Ivan Agustin, the kata team of Nicole Dantes, Rebecca Torres, and Sarah Pangilinan, and Ramon Misu.

Chua new SEA Games 9-ball king

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HANOI. – Johann Chua pounced on two stunning miscues by reigning US Open champion Carlo Biado en route to a 9-6 victory and crowned himself the new 9-ball billiards champion Wednesday in the 31st Southeast Asian Games here.

TRIUMPHANT: Silver medal winner Carlo Biado raises the hand of new 9-ball billiards
king and compatriot Johann Chua in the presence of POC President and Rep.
Abraham “Bambol” Tolentino.

The 9-ball gold was the second for Pinoy cue artists here, with Rubilen Amit winning the women’s side of the event last Tuesday, beating Jessica Chan of Singapore 7-2, for her ninth gold medal in the biennial event.

Biado was favored to rule the all-Filipino finals but uncharacteristically missed easy shots in the 12th and 15th racks, to the horror of the big crowd at the Ha Dong District Sporting Hall.

Trailing 5-6 in the 12th, Biado, 39, failed to pocket the 9-ball, smiling after his miscue. He also failed to sink the 8-ball three racks later, with Chua gamely taking over both times to win his first SEA Games gold.

Biado, who failed in his bid to reclaim the title he won in the 2017 Games, raised the hand of Chua after the match, gamely accepting his defeat for the silver medal.

“Sobra anG kaba ko. First time ko lumaban sa finals dito sa SEA Games. Hindi ako maka-get over. Iba talaga pag flag and country,” said Chua, 29, who fell on his knees after the winning shot and gave Biado, his roommate here, a big bear hug. He then waved to the crowd.

“Nung sumablay si Carlo, sabi ko sa sarili ko, akin na ito. Sobra ang nginig ng kamay ko.

Pero gustong-gusto ko makuha ‘yung gold. The best ka, God,” said the new SEA Games champion.

“Nag-bibiruan nga kami kagabi sa kwarto ni Carlo, sabi ko babalian na kita at pag humilik ka gigilitan na kita sa leeg. Sobra close kami niyan. Masaya na kasi kami kasi sure gold nga para sa Pilipinas,” he said.

Biado seemed to have the 15th rack all wrapped up until he missed a shot on the 9-ball that any other player of his caliber could sink a million times.

“Sumablay talaga. Pero parang alam ko na si Johann ang mananalo kasi bago pa mag-SEA Games napaginipan ko na siya ang nag-champion,” said Biado, who won a 9-ball men’s bronze medal in tandem with Chua in the 2019 games in Manila.

Biado had earlier entertained the crowd with some world-class pool, hitting a magical shot on the 7-ball, a jump from across the table, in the 12th race. Then he missed what looked like an easy shot on No. 8, drawing an agonizing response from the crowd.

The billiards team headed by team manager Roy Malinao and head coach Django Bustamante was ecstatic with the 1-2 finish and are counting on medals in the men’s and women’s 10-ball.

Efren “Bata” Reyes absorbed a 100-55 defeat to Vietnam’s Tran Thanh Tan Nguyen and salvaged a bronze medal in men’s 1-cushion carom.

Jefrey Roda bagged the silver in men’s snooker 6-red singles Tuesday night after losing to Keen Hoo Moh of Malaysia in the final match.

Francisco dela Cruz bowed to Quoc Tuan Pham of Vietnam in the semis of the same event 100-20 and will go home with a bronze medal.

“May chances pa tayo sa 10-ball men’s and women’s,” said Malinao, not ruling out another Chua-Biado finale in the event.

Richardson fastest woman in Vietnam

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HANOI. — Fil-American Kayla Richardson regained the 100m dash crown she won in 2015 as a teenager as the Philippines held off a spirited challenge by Indonesia for third overall Wednesday in the 31st Southeast Asian Games here.

Richardson’s victory in the 100-meter dash at dusk came after the women’s archery team of Abby Bidaure and sister Pia, along with

Phoebe Amistoso, bagged the team recurve title at the Hanio National Training Center and Johann Chua emerged as the new singles 9-ball billiards king at the Ha Dong District Sporting Hall.

As a consolation, the lean three-gold haul enabled the Philippine contingent backed by the Philippine Olympic Committee and the Philippine Sports Commission, whose chairman, William Ramirez celebrated his 72nd birthday Wednesday, to remain in third place — but barely.

Overall, the Philippines raised its gold tally to 36 with 48 silver and 63 bronze medals. Indonesia matched the Filipinos’ gold haul with a harvest of 36-48-47 at press time, with Singapore having 35 golds on top of 36 silver and 42 bronze medals for fifth.

Host Vietnam was unreachable with a haul of 120-74-71, its grip on the overall title won by the Philippines back in 2019 so solid with just six days left in the biennial competition.

A slow starter, Richardson picked up the pace halfway through the 100-meter race and held steady to the finish, clocking 11.6 seconds to master an 8-runner field that included 200-m queen Shanti Pereira of Singapore, who clocked 11.62 seconds to finish second. Thailand’s Supanich Poolkerd placed third in 11.66 seconds.

With the win, Kayla, a bronze medalist in the 200 meters three days ago, proved a worthy successor to injured Tokyo Olympian Knott, who failed to join the games here because of plantar fasciitis on her foot.

“I can’t complain. I’m so grateful. It took me a lot to get here. I thank God for getting me here,” a teary-eyed Richardson said after sharing a sweet embrace with sister and fellow national athlete Kyla and father Jeff.

The 26-year-old Richardson only placed second in the heats with a 12.02 time, but it was a ploy to reserve strength for the race that mattered most.

“I was just chillin,” Richardson said with a laugh. “I was just trying to get to the finals.”
Abby Bidaure, 20, competing in her second SEA Games, emerged as the heroine for Team Philippines, hitting the bullseye in the final arrow of a shoot-off for a 10 with just 10

seconds left on the clock, leading the team to a clinching 26-25 win over the host squad.
The hawkeyes battled back with a 57-49 win in the fourth frame after trailing 1-2 in the first three, forcing a shoot-off that came down to Abby’s winning shot.

Chua, 29, pounced on two stunning miscues by reigning US Open champion Carlo Biado en route to a 9-6 victory and crowned himself the new 9-ball billiards champion here.

The 9-ball gold was the second for Pinoy cue artists here, with Rubilen Amit winning the women’s side of the event last Tuesday, beating Jessica Chan of Singapore 7-2, for her ninth gold medal in the biennial event.

Biado was favored to rule the all-Filipino finals but uncharacteristically missed easy shots on the 12th and 15th racks, to the horror of the big crowd at the Ha Dong District Sporting Hall.

Trailing 5-6 in the 12th, Biado, 39, failed to pocket the 9-ball, smiling after his miscue. He also failed to sink the 8-ball three racks later, with Chua gamely taking over both times to win his first SEA Games gold.

Biado, who failed in his bid to reclaim the title he won in the 2017 Games, raised the hand of Chua after the match, gamely accepting his defeat for the silver medal.

Gilas Pilipinas expectedly whipped Singapore 88-37 at the Than Tri Gymnasium for its third straight win while the Gilas women trounced rival Thailand 97-81 for its second straight triumph.

Teen tennis sensation beat Alex Eala beat Malaysian Jo Leen Saw in straight sets at the Hanata Tu Son courts in Bac Ninh and also advanced to the semifinals of the mixed doubles in tandem with Treat Huey.

“Won my very first ever SEA Games mixed doubles match. Thanks partner, Treat Huey! Also won my singles match today and moved to the semifinals. Laban PH!” the 16-year-old Eala exclaimed in her Facebook post.

But Pinoy taekwondo fighters got shut out for the day, with Vietnam winning five of the gold medals disputed and Myanmar and Indonesia taking one each.

Karateka Jamie Lim, one of the darlings of the national team that won the overall crown in 2019, failed to defend her crown.

The women’s football team failed in its bid to reach the gold medal play, losing 0-3 to Thailand, and will face the loser of the Vietnam-Myanmar battle for the bronze.