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All SEAG medalists form elite group; 10 ‘priorities’ bared

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Long jumper Marestella Torres is one of the top athletes in the last Southeast Asian Games.

MANILA, Philippines—All 162 individual medalists of the Philippine contingent that fell to a record low sixth place overall in the Southeast Asian Games in Indonesia last November were elevated by the Philippine Sports Commission Thursday to the elite group of athletes who will be trained extensively for the 2012 SEAG in Myanmar.

At the same time, the PSC announced the list of 10 sports, led by boxing and taekwondo, that will be given priority funding under a directive from President Aquino to channel limited funding to events where the country is considered strong.

Completing the select list which will avail of a total budget of P108 million were athletics, swimming, wushu, archery, wrestling, bowling, weightlifting and billiards.

PSC chair Richie Garcia announced that the 29 individual winners plus the 65 silver and 68 bronze medalists will receive specialized training, foreign exposure and huge monthly allowances beginning next month until next year’s SEA Games.

Garcia said the PSC will spend P4.8 million per month just for the allowances of the 162 priority athletes or P57.6 million a year aside from the cost of billeting and accommodation, foreign training and exposure and nutrition.

“We’re prepared to spend that amount for this program. If they don’t win in the next SEA Games, they will be removed from the list,” said Garcia. “If you don’t get a medal (in Myanmar), your allowance will be discontinued unless your sport is a priority.”

The select sports were ranked based on their medal potential with boxing and taekwondo to get P35 million each, athletics, swimming and wushu P12 million each, archery, wrestling, bowling and weightlifting P10 million each and bowling P8 million.

Shooting, an Olympic sport with a lot of medals at stake like athletics and swimming, failed to make it to the priority roster, but it was included as “a rebuilding sports” with a P10 million budget.

The top athletes in the last SEA Games were Iris Rañola of billiards, Frederick Ong of bowling, long jumper Marestella Torres, GM Wesley So, boxers Charly Suarez and Dennis Galvan, cyclists John Renee Mier and Alfie Catalan and wrestlers Jason Balabal and Margarito Angana, among others.

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Tags: PSC , SEA Games , Southeast Asian Games , wrestling

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  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_XYPFIGTBA5LXMX2UBLCQVG5AQE Martin

    Insignificant funding!   108 Million pesos is just way to little to compete.   The Indonesian  taekwondo team had 12 million dollars just for training.  Thats over 500 million pesos just for Taekwondo alone.   China spent 95 million dollars in 2011 on their swimming team for training.  The Philippines got many medals for the little money you put in.   But 108 million pesos…please get serious???

  • Anonymous

    PSC should mandate that this money will not be used for sports officials to recruit foreigners for the PH Team.  It’s depriving the public of grass-roots level for sports development and providing a stop-gap solution to a deteriorating system.

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_XYPFIGTBA5LXMX2UBLCQVG5AQE Martin

      Those “foreigners” you refer to are Philippine citizens living overseas….what a racist statement you make. You wont accept your kabayans living overseas on your sports teams??   Also many of these “foreigners” are training overseas because the Philippines sports system has let them down…poor funding, poor coaches and very bad sports fans who think like you!!

      • Anonymous

        You don’t know the meaning of racism because it doesn’t apply here.  And you don’t understand the meaning of sports development because you probably never represented your country in international sports competition and trained abroad just as I have.  But let me explain it to you…

        Foreign athletes with a Filipina mother are recruited by PH sports officials. PH athletes who choose to immigrate to a foreign country can choose to represent their mother country in international competition.  Either way, if both merely choose to live, train and compete abroad, this does little to improve sports development in the country.

        Sports devt depends on grass-roots devt, local competition, technology transfer, financial support  from both govt and the private sector, media support and advertising, sports infrastructure, sports medicine support, etc.

        If foreign-born PH athletes cannot contribute in the areas of sports development as I have mentioned, the limited resources our govt and private sector spends on them will be wasted in developing a PH team that can truly compete in the world stage.

        Take note another phenomenon in sports devt…Pacquiao and Donaire both hail from General Santos.  I read a US Table Tennis champion saying the best players came from the same street.   Many other top athletes come from the same neighborhood or town or province.  This is usually in that area of the world they come from, there is a lot of opportunity to train and compete freely with each other, where facilities are free and plenty and they are given lots of support.  This is the meaning of focused-area grass-roots devt.  China practices this form of devt by scientifically choosing children from rural, mostly impoverished, areas who are the best candidates to be world-class athletes.

  • Anonymous

    We should also support our athletes by attending their events besides just basketball and watching movies and tv. Especially movies and tv.

    • Anonymous

      40 years ago there were regular national championships in Rizal Memorial and other stadiums that the public could watch.  No more today cuz of corruption and mismanagement.

      • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_XYPFIGTBA5LXMX2UBLCQVG5AQE Martin

        Rizal stadium is over 40 years old….these old facilities are worn out.  Terrible locker rooms…bad seating.  Like NAIA it needed renovation 20 years ago.   Its no wonder few quality sporting events are held there.  What Corruption?? so little money is allocated for sports in the Philippines that every peso appears to be spent very carefully.  At the last SeaGames…nearly every Filipino athlete i know was paying for his own meals out of his own pocket.   The given meal allowance was just so small.  This was never covered in the Philippine media was it??

      • Anonymous

        Actually the Rizal Memorial stadium was built by my grandfather in the 1930′s and gave the PH the first modern sports facilities in Asia. Back then our swimmers, basketball players and other athletes could compete with the best of the world.  But due to corruption and gradual deterioration of national sports devt in the 1980′s, the PH has fallen out in Olympic sports.

        No corruption? What planet are you on?  PH Swimming has over P100M in unliquidated expenses.  Over P50M spent on modern swimming facilities in Makati and Laguna and not a single gold medal in the last SEA Games. And PH swimming has been managed by the same people since the 1980′s.  Other PH sports are in similar disrepair. The PSC is full of unused sports equipment it should have implemented in sports development. 

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_XYPFIGTBA5LXMX2UBLCQVG5AQE Martin

       I agree…please support the Philippine athletes….they really work so hard for very little recognition.



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