Sunday, August 18, 2024

Why do I call myself Tommy Young?

My late grandfather’s favorite Filipino boxer was Young Tommy. He used to share stories about his boxing idol as I was growing up. That’s why I chose 'Tommy Young' as the handle for my Facebook (boxing) account—it’s a constant reminder of my mother’s father, whom I remember dearly.

It was my old man's birthday today, August 19. He could have been 122 years old now.

My Tatang was into boxing in his teens not atop the ring but in street brawls. He used to tell me, repeatedly at that, how he knocked down a village rascal with a single punch in the jaw. That was during the Philippine Commonwealth period. He followed Tommy’s fights from 1929 to 1931 before the Filipino pug of yore left the country to box abroad. He told me how Young Tommy defeated Little Moro at the Olympic Stadium in Manila for the Oriental Bantamweight strap in 1931. Moro then holds the belt but he kisses the canvas, and rises up but is met by punches in bunches from Young Tommy. 

In Tommy’s 86 fights, he won 61 (24 by knockout), lost 16, and drew 9.

On the evening of January 28, 1932, Fernando "Young Tommy" Opao accepts the California state bantamweight championship belt from ex-heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey who stood as the third man in the ring, as I have researched (told you, I am a self-proclaimed boxing historian!).

Filipino men came to the U.S. not only as farm laborers but as prize-winning boxers back in his days. These Pinoy heroes were symbols of pride and hope for equality on foreign soil where racial discrimination is rampant. Young Tommy was considered a protégé of Jack "The Galveston Giant" Johnson, the first black world heavyweight boxing champion. He also had the longest professional career of any world heavyweight boxing champion, having boxed for over 33 years from 1897 to 1931. He epitomized the hope of the African Americans and all colored working people in the US then.

Tatang used to idolize the fighter who originated from Silay City in Negros Occidental and stayed the rest of his life as a boxer in Los Angeles, California. Young Tommy was ranked the fifth-best bantamweight in the world in January 1932 by the National Boxing Association. Tatang truly idolized him and the rest of the Pinoy prizefighters in the US. Amidst hostile citizens in their host country, they, the boxers are a symbol of hope and freedom, he told me. Boxing then unites the Ilocano, the Cebuanos, and the Tagalogs in the diaspora. Tatang’s Ilocano relatives from Hawaii informed him of that tremendous feat of Filipino ring warriors. In Hawaii, most of the leading boxers are Filipinos. In almost every boxing card in the 1930s, ninety percent of the fans are Filipinos. They are saving their hard-earned money at work to support their punching compatriots. 

My grandfather always reminded me that no matter what we face, we must never defeat ourselves. “Your power and strength mean nothing if you let the image of defeat take root in your mind and soul,” he would tell me. Now, as a grandfather myself to little Minka, I hope she embraces the way of a boxer—embarking on a journey of self-discovery, cultivating virtues like discipline and respect, and gaining a deeper understanding of the human spirit when she grows up.

We exist because of those who came before us. Our grandparents connect us to our heritage, offering insights into our identity and origins. We are the culmination of past generations, and by remembering them, we can uncover shared traits and gain a deeper understanding of ourselves.

Tommy Young is another name I go by because I’m Tatang’s 'apo' in many ways, my friend.

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Historic photo of Johnson and Opao in training: Harry E. Winkler Photographic Collection, University Libraries of Notre Dame.

Sunday, July 21, 2024

When Dino Olivetti Got Nibbled

Former professional boxer and now the owner of the prestigious Olivetti Boxing Gym in Biñan City, Laguna, Dino Olivetti, confessed that his fight against Ramie Mancao was the most painful in his career. He said in his Facebook post last July 20, “Ang pinakamasakit na experience ko sa boxing ay ang makagat” (The most painful experience I had in boxing was being bitten), attaching a video clip of the incident. This happened two years before the most famous ear-biting incident in boxing history.

When Boxers Bite

The most bizarre biting incident in the history of the sport is when Mike Tyson bit Evander Holyfield’s ear clean off on June 28, 1997, during the WBA Heavyweight Championship at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Paradise, Nevada, in their second fight.

There are other infamous similar incidents in boxing history. For instance, in October 2014, during the Wadi Camacho-Craig Kennedy-I fight in Merthyr Tydfil, Wales, Camacho allegedly bit Kennedy’s neck. Camacho was disqualified by Referee Martin Williams in the second round of the 8-round cruiserweight match, which Kennedy won.

Heavyweight Derek Chisora was also fined and suspended for four months by the British Board of Boxing Control in June 2009 for biting Paul Butlin. Unlike in Camacho-Kennedy, Chisora won by the scorecards. It was their first fight.

Our very own John Riel Casimero was also bitten at least twice reportedly during his February 10, 2012, fight against Argentina’s Luis “Mosquito” Lazarte, ending in what is considered the craziest brawl in boxing history. Every Casimero fan and even his bashers know its details, so there is no need to elaborate.

Olivetti Remembers

Dino Olivetti held a record of 6 wins and 1 loss (3 KOs) when he laced his gloves against Ramie Mancao in his hometown on November 8, 1995. Mancao, more experienced, had fought twice in Thailand and was a contender for the Oriental and Pacific Flyweight crown, which he held until 1997.

Mancao’s most notable opponent in his entire career was Chokchai Chockvivat of Thailand, who later lost his title to Manny Pacquiao via KO in 1997, paving the way for Pacquiao’s rise to world titles and history. Mancao had downed 8 opponents before his encounter with Olivetti.

Fighting before his fellow Lagunense in his hometown Biñan and being a newcomer in boxing, Olivetti was determined to win convincingly, despite his legendary boxing pedigree. He felt that his more experienced opponent underestimated him. He said: “Halata sa galaw niya na alam niya na kayang-kaya niya ako kasi bata pa ako noon at baguhan pa lang noon.” (It was obvious from his movements that he knew he could handle me because I was still young and a beginner then.)

In the first two rounds, Olivetti was hardly wedged by his foe’s solid punches. In the second round, he caught Mancao with a lethal uppercut that resulted in a knockdown. Due to Olivetti’s elusiveness, Mancao was unable to retaliate. In the 5th round, irritated and upset, Mancao nibbled Olivetti near his nipple, causing a deduction for the foul act. Olivetti admitted that Mancao was a heavy puncher, but that night, he was a swift-moving target, making Mancao’s punches miss by kilometers. Olivetti won unanimously in the final tally of their 8-round fistfight.

Describing how it felt, he said, “Ang sakit! Dumugo at nilagnat ako kinabukasan.” (It hurt! I bled and had a fever the next day.)

In Tyson-Holyfield, after the fight, Tyson remarked that his bites were in retaliation for the headbutts from Holyfield. But everything ended well between the two. The two great heavyweights became bosom friends, and in 2015, Tyson even inducted Holyfield into the Nevada Boxing Hall of Fame. They even went into business together in 2022, creating an edible cannabis product in the shape of Holyfield's ear.

But that is not the case for Olivetti. He had never seen Mancao since then.

If Camacho did not leave a biting mark on Kennedy’s collar, Mancao left an ugly scar on Olivetti’s upper left chest. After some years, to conceal the horrid and most painful remembrance of his boxing years, Olivetti covered it with a tattoo of a boxer’s hands clasped in prayer with boxing gloves hanging from it.

Mancao lost his last two fights after losing to Olivetti. His swansong was on June 22, 1996, in Mandaue City, Cebu, via TKO to Noel Panescoro in the 4th round of their scheduled 8-round match. Mancao’s final ring record is 17 wins (10 KOs), 10 losses (6 KOs), and 1 draw.

Frustration, like reality, also bites.

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(Photos: Dino Olivetti)

Saturday, July 20, 2024

So long, Chino; Win, Asero


 Taking a cue from a Facebook post of Viva Promotions last July 14, 2024, the said boxing firm has it that the world title fight between Philippine’s Vincent “Asero” Astrolabio (19-4, 14 KOs) and Japan’s Junto Nakatani (27-0, 20 KOs) will be an appropriate tribute Chino Trinidad’s “legacy and contribution to the growth of Philippine boxing,” the post reiterates.

Skeptics

The Nakatani-Astrolabio fistfight will occur today, Saturday, July 20, 2024, at Ryōgoku Kokugikan in Tokyo, Japan. The game is promoted by Akihiko Honda, a globally recognized promoter.

Vincent Diazen Astrolabio is a huge, massive underdog coming to this fight and we cannot blame even Filipino boxing fans and pundits (including those who pretend to be an authority in the sport) for saying that the Asero will pass through the eye of the needle to get this one.

Nakatani, a former karateka, the current WBC bantamweight belt holder, a 3 division champion, and arguably next best to Naoya Inoue when it comes to popularity, power, and skills among other current Japanese champions. When Nakatani turned professional in 2015, he won his first 8 fights and 7 of them were via KO. Further, after his only 4 years as a pro, he already won straps in 3 different weight divisions.

Imagine that. Indeed, it was a @highlight of a tall order for Astrolabio.

This is Astrolabio's second attempt to get a world championship strap after bowing last May 2023, via a majority decision to Jason Moloney for the vacant WBO bantamweight title.

But in one of his recent outings before he died, the great Chino Trinidad positively declared, “Vincent Astrolabio is a world champion in the making,” and Viva Promotions also posted that “[Trinidad] has been an inspiration to us all, motivating us to work harder in promoting and supporting the local boxing talent in the Philippines”.

Farewell

The best and the most admirable thing about Chino Trinidad is that he was able to live and make a name outside the shadow of his equally great father Recah Trinidad. He made a very distinct journalistic style, at least from my perspective as a lowly boxing fan in a remote island province in the country. I was not into the circle of sports personas and had never been in big sporting events therefore I do not know Chino personally and have never seen him in person.

I love his style of reporting and presenting his views, there’s a wit and humor in it, has a good command of every language he utilizes. Though very casual in telling his stories, his passion is oozing in his eyes and lips whenever I see him on TV.

Manny Pacquiao said in his mini-tribute to the man, “Chino was more than a great journalist; he was a true patriot who loved Philippine sports with all his heart. His honesty and dedication inspired many,” says the world’s only 8-division champ.

Vincent Astrolabio is a protégé of Manny Pacquiao and Sean Gibbons, all friends of the late Chino Trinidad.

Upset

The beauty of boxing is that it is the most unpredictable of all sports. There is a litany of remarkable upsets in the history of the sport. Douglas-Tyson, Ruiz-Joshua, et al, name it. As long as it lingers in every boxing fan’s memory, the possibility is always there.

Astrolabio and his team are now in Japan after a rigid training at the MP Boxing Gym Davao under the tutelage of the distinguished coach Nonoy Neri.

Do not underestimate Astrolabio. Especially if it comes from our biases and assumptions or his association with those you do not like. Things that do not necessarily reflect the fighter’s true capacity and capabilities.

When a great person passes and a big underdog upsets an opponent, they often receive more appreciation albeit retrospectively.

Fight, Asero, fight and win in hostile soil today!

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(Postscript: Nakatani won via First Round body shot KO and retains his title)

Wednesday, July 3, 2024

Traffic Lights On in SJ

Occidental Mindoro’s prime municipality installed the first traffic lights in the province.

It was reported that there was a high percentage of increase in vehicles in the last few years but perhaps, I had first to ask the details from the San Jose Municipal Planning Officer Joey Salgado on such details on vehicles. The two busiest streets in downtown San Jose are the junction of Liboro and Rizal Streets where the lights were erected. The newly installed Traffic Signalization System is aimed primarily at addressing congestion woes on the said roads in town. At the moment, traffic officers are still assigned at the intersection as the lights are on their observation period.

But temporarily, the lights do not have a power source. Frederick Arroyo of the Municipal Engineer's Office says, "The power source of our traffic lights is from OMECO as of now. Since the traffic lights system requires minimum power, it can be upgraded to solar power in the future and can be connected to the standby power source of the municipality."

The first traffic light in the country was installed in Plaza Goiti (now Plaza Lacson) located at Santa Cruz, Manila in 1938.

The inaugural switching and dry run of the facility was initiated by Mayor Rey C. Ladaga on July 2, 2024, together with local government officials, the San Jose Municipal Police Station Chief PLTCOL Jeny P Magan among other key persons.

Ladaga expects that the device is expected to provide convenience and safety to the public at major crossings. 

It is no doubt one of the LCE's best legacies.

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(Photo: MIO San Jose)

 

 

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

The Silent Beast

New Breed

Another Filipino boxing super lightweight prospect to watch this 2024 and he is already in the Big Apple as of press time. Jino “The Silent Beast” Rodrigo (12-3-2) is going to meet Elvis Rodriguez (15-1) of the Dominican Republic in Miami, Florida, according to his compadre and benefactor Matt Dovin. This is the very first time for Rodrigo who hails from Antipolo and is a protegee under Jaro Boxing Stable in Binagonan, Rizal.

Dovin, a boxing fan and patron based in Chicago said that it’s The Silent Beast’s first time in the US and being trained by Aljoe Jaro who himself is also a pugilist. “Jino is very excited to fight in the States. That was his big dream. The people who put this together are very excited for his upcoming fight,” Dovin further says in our recent chat. Apparently according to Dovin, the two, Rodrigo and Rodriguez will lock horns this coming June 29, 2024.

Cyberfriends

Dovin and Rodrigo were not able to see each other in bones and flesh. They only see and converse through social media. Matt, a Catholic, stood as ninong (godfather) to Jino’s child, a son named John Lucas, with his wife Ynah Ferrer.   

The two do not only share things about the sweet science’s kind of stuffs. They also share their hands of faith for they belong to the same congregation or church. They are both Catholics. The compadres are into outreach activities for the kids in Antipolo including Biñan, in the nearby province of Laguna. They are giving away shoes, slippers, and boxing apparel for the budding, young boxers in those places. They even did a feeding activity for schoolchildren. They see this not as a dole out but to encourage budding young ring Pinoy warriors and hopefuls.

Jino treated Matt not only as friend. The boxer confirmed, “Parang pamilya na ang turing namin sa kanya (Matt). Magkaibigan na kami noong pang 2018 at nag-uusap na kami sa Messenger parati.” (We treat him [Matt] like family. We've been friends since 2018 and we've been talking on Messenger all the time).

Jino is as excited as climbing up the ring in a much bigger arena and seeing his long-time friend from Chicago.

“Silent Beast”

Rodrigo, 26, is a soft-spoken man and he lets his fist do the talking atop the ring. His most impressive fight was with the Indonesian journeyman Alvius Maufani held September 2023 where he downed his opponent four times, twice in Round 1, twice in Round 2, and once in Round 3, and won via TKO.

Rodrigo’s patented and most brutal punch is the left hook and on this particular night, the silent beast loudly proclaimed, “I’m improved!” It echoed like the roar of a lion, the jungle’s king of beasts.

A thing that every Filipino boxing fan and a silent donor has to see and expect when he meets Rodriguez next week in Miami. When asked what would he be carrying in facing the Dominican, Jino states, “My power and my determination”.


Sunday, May 26, 2024

Of Carlo J. Caparas and Juan Tornado

This is a tribute to a great novelist who wrote two most unforgettable stories of fictitious boxing characters during my days. Carlo J. Caparas, born March 12, 1944, may be gone but he and the characters he created like Juan Tornado and Totoy Bato will live in our memories forever.

The Komiks legend, film director, and producer wearing dark sunglasses, and a baseball cap with his long wavy hair passed away yesterday, May 25, 2024.

Caparas wrote around 800 novels serially published in various Komiks magazines in the land in the 70s and 80s. Other famous Caparas hits were The Hero, Angela Markado, Ang Panday, Ermitanyo, Kung Tawagin Siya’y Bathala, Ang Huling Lalaki sa Baluarte, Somewhere, Pieta, Kahit Ako’y Lupa, Mong, Agatona, Harimanok, and Andres de Saya, to name only a few.

Of his two novels about boxing, only Totoy Bato was made into a movie. It was popular since the King of Philippine Movies himself, Fernando Poe Jr., was in the title lead role. I will not dwell much on Totoy Bato because only in 2009 did GMA Network present Totoy Bato, a television drama sports series based on the graphic novel created by Carlo J. Caparas. This time, it stars, now senator, Robin Padilla in the title role. I will only share Caparas’s or earlier story on a clumsy homegrown boxer but tall and muscular Juan Tornado.

Juan Tornado the novel was penned by Caparas in the mid-70s when Muhammad Ali was considered by many as a demigod and at the peak of his boxing career. Juan Tornado, the fictional Filipino heavyweight boxer stirred our young imaginations then. It has funny subplots for Juan is a very sleepy boy and would only be attentive and focused if Tindeng, the girl of his life, is around or in danger. He was accidentally discovered by a boxing manager visiting their barrio fiesta where in a carabao race, the big animal went berserk chasing all the bystanders and causing havoc. The raging buffalo chased Tindeng and Juan, like a flash of lightning, appeared in front of the animal and gave it one straight punch in the head and its lights off for the carabao. Juan KO’ed the beast of burden.

To make the story short, Juan became the first Filipino heavyweight to defeat the Komiks counterpart (or was it a parody?) of Joe Frazier, Ken Norton, George Foreman, and finally, last Muhammad Ali (thank God, Tindeng was able to show up at the MGM Grand!).

With the ongoing rivalry between those heavyweights in real life those days, Carlo J. put the Filipino into the mix and, on the same lieu, the man with all his creativity and cleverness, planted seeds of hope in our people’s minds. Both Juan Tornado and Carlo Caparas fed the fantasies of our people during those days and still do.

We are hoping to see a Filipino boxing champ in the heavyweight division. Who knows? Maybe another Juan Tornado is already there in our rural areas waiting to be discovered.

Thank you for such a childhood fantasy, Carlo J., and rest in the Lord’s eternal clinch.

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(Photo: From Peach Caparas’s Facebook account)


Friday, March 22, 2024

Of Sebastian Fundora and other Boxing Goliaths

Sebastian Fundora, 6’5″, is not the tallest boxer in boxing history. Based on records, it was shared by Gogea Mitu and John Rankin who both stood at 7’4” according to internet site Spartacus.

Well, Fundora (20-1-1), will be facing the 5’9″ WBO junior middleweight champion Tim Tszyu (24-0-0) on March 30th (31st, Philippine time) at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The 8-inch advantage of the “Towering Inferno” reportedlyescalates worries for Tszyu’s camp.

The Giant of Marsani

Mitu, with a 2-0, W-L record and whose real name was Dumitru Stefanescu was born in Romania in 1914, and due to gigantism, he grew to that shocking height of 7 foot 4 inches. His story revolves around athletic talent, bodily abnormality, and a meteor-like boxing career: brief but memorable. Mitu, known as the “Giant of Marsani” started in showbiz but ended in the so-called lonely sport of boxing.

Utilizing his height advantage, Mitu, then 25 years old defeated Savero Grizzo on June 7, 1935, and Dumitru Pavalescu on October 27, 1935. In all of his two bouts, Mitu bombastically finished them both with first-round knockouts.

His wins are brief but very dominating like lightning. But the most important thing is Mitu proved as early as the 30s that even in boxing, height is might.

Ranking In

John Rankin, also 7’4”, fought just once. He plummeted Willie Lee (11-28-1) and won via UD in the November 13, 1967 bout in a match held at Municipal Auditorium in New Orleans.  Like Mitu, his persona is also considered a combination of significant height and reach advantage they had over their opponents.

Browsing BoxRec, we could only find one entry about Rankin’s fight and that is the fight against Lee. But his performance in that fight, according to experts, suggested that he was an experienced fighter who knew how to leverage his towering physique to his benefit.

John Rankin had previously been working as a doorman in New Orleans before becoming a heavyweight boxer.

Tall Order

With Sebastian Fundora’s height and reach advantage, the camp of Tim Tszyu has a reason to worry. It is indeed a tough assignment for them how to overcome those. This height advantage coupled with the punching power of Fundora (which was doubted by Tszyu) are essential elements in his fighting style, allowing him to control the pace and distance of his attacks effectively as he has shown in his previous fights with Jose Cardenas to Carlos Ocampo.

Reach and height play a significant role in a boxer’s defensive strategy. Fighters like Mitu and Rankin can keep opponents at bay, minimizing the risk of close-range strikes. They can use their reach to land punches while staying out of their opponent’s striking range, making it harder for the opponent to land effective hits.

In short, it’s an uphill battle for the team. But the Australian boxer declares with full confidence, “I am not afraid of anybody!” Brian Mendoza (22-3-0) who said that Fondura is a pillow puncher was KOed by Fundora but defeated by Tszyu via UD.

Not Just Spectacle?

The stories of Mitu, Rankin, Fundora, and the rest of the figurative giants in the world of boxing are a manifestation that such an attribute adds spice and color, drama, and narrative to the sport. It is a testament that such extraordinary physical feature is not just a spectacle but can be converted into greatness in the sport.

The Fundora-Tszyu fight with such glaring differences in height and other diversities in the narrative makes this historic clash truly seriously spectacular.

Thursday, March 14, 2024

A Basketball Imaginary Duel


Basketball can be a good metaphor for the current power situation in Occidental Mindoro. Take it from Engr. Omar Costibolo. He accurately utilized that analogy to describe how the dreaded Emergency Power Supply Agreement (EPSA) came into our existence with the alleged collusion between the National Electrification Administration (NEA), the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC), and the National Power Corporation (NPC).

Basketball, like any other game, is at times riddled with anomalies and scandals.

Sports as Simile

Basketball requires skill and determination but sometimes they are ruined by evil, vested, and suspicious interests. In every sports competition, history can attest that there can be anomalies and scandals that are too many to mention here that require another blog entry.

Together with my esteemed buddy, Rey San Jose, Costibolo posted a video on his Facebook Account last March 4, 2024, criticizing the EPSA telling their viewers that the Agreement has been dubious, questionable, and illegal since its inception. He compares it to a basketball match where Occidental Mindoro Electric Cooperative (OMECO) and the Occidental Mindoro Consolidated Power Corporation (OMCPC) as opponents and rivals. The game itself, according to them, is rigged with irregularities.

In such a fantasy game, the ERC instead of truthfully refereeing the match, changed the rules in midgame and was biased favoring OMCPC. OMECO’s coach, the NEA headed by its Administrator, instead of helping the team and guiding them to victory, according to Costibolo, made a treacherous move telling the team to withdraw and give the game on the silver platter to OMCPC and breaking all the rules,- hook, line and sinker. Therefore, the electric cooperative and its Consumers (MCOs) are sacrificed on the altar of capitalistic greed, and lies are fried in their own oil.

A Game fixed

Lest we forget that on July 13, 2023, Administrator Antonio Mariano "Nani" C. Almeda issued a directive to OMECO BOD to withdraw its Joint Application with the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) for the approval of the SAMARICA Power Supply Agreement (PSA) and instead enter into a negotiated Emergency Power Supply Agreement (EPSA) a pass-on scheme payment without subsidy from the government. This is how our coach fixed our game against the lone power provider in the province, so to speak.

And the leaders and their lapdogs along with the power provider hailed to high heavens this suspicious move of the coach. Those who insisted the illegal EPSA was praised like a messiah.

Under that illegal EPSA, the electricity coming from OMCPC's SAMARICA plant is presently paid by MCOs at its total cost or the unreasonably ridiculous True Cost Generation Rate (TCGR) reaching P16.67 to P20.70 per kilowatt hour (kWh) based on the P53.57 cost of crude oil. The EPSA squelched our hard-earned money as our coaching staff betrayed the whole team.

What followed was a metaphorically game-fixing galore!

Known Basketball Scandals

First is the scandal involving the NBA referee Tim Donaghy which was considered as the league’s most shameful tale on how the referee was involved in organized crime, just like the power regulator we have mentioned above. Donaghy swung games, including playoff series, where he bet on games that he officiated during his last two seasons and he made calls that affected the point spread in those games.

Donaghy alleged in a statement through his lawyers that several series in the NBA Playoffs had been improperly refereed according to the NBA's instructions. He alluded specifically to a playoff game where personal fouls were ignored even when they occurred in full view of the referees because it was in the NBA's interest to add another game to the series.

Hearing Costibolo and San Jose, this scandal came to mind. This is somewhat similar to how the ref errs in such EPSA and PSA handling.

What a shame!

Here's another:

In 1997, at a Golden State Warriors practice, Latrell Sprewell, known around the league for his volatile play and incidents off the court, got into it with his head coach PJ Carlesimo, and violently strangled him out.

If we are constantly sold out by our very coach to our opponents or rival team, isn’t it honorable to do a Latrell Sprewell? At least, in an analogical and subtle way.

A Cagefest?

So to this day, we are still in the quagmire of basic supply problems and high electrical rates. While other countries in Asia are already responding to the technological increase in the level and the increase in the quality of electrical service, here in the Philippines we are still trapped in the matter of price and uncertainty in our power industry.

Many of the team owners are even lambasting our team members and the team as a whole favoring the opposing squad by taking sides with the disloyal coach and even wanting to disband the team, calling each star player to walk out of the game or letting the other rival team win by default or for the MCOs to generally surrender. Such a call is idiotic and self-destructive. Unless of course one has a vested business interest and wants to capitalize on such a lasting chaos.

Again, we must launch discussions and public actions for the examination of the matter. Brownouts and unfair electric costs are both scandalous and evil putting the MCOs in hellish situations.

Until then we shall be caged in this allegorical basketball league? Until when will we believe the false hope that their lackeys are feeding us?

Eternal Ball Game

On February 27, 2024, the ERC issued an Order on Case No. 2023-045 RC. Cited in it is the Petition to Intervene with Comment filed by Costibolo.

The instruction brought temporary relief for it will lessen the cost of electricity from P16.67 to P20.70 per kilowatt hour (kWh) based on the P53.57 cost of crude oil, it will go down to 6.9520 Subsidized Approved Generation Rate (SAGR). Under the Order, the OMCPC will also get the Universal Charge for Missionary Electrification (UCME) subsidy billing. This is the move that the OMCPC has aimed for from the start. 

The SAGR will not be enjoyed immediately. The expensive charging under EPSA is until May 2024. The excess charges put on to MCOs cannot be refunded at once and it may take until next year.

The ERC is still dribbling the issue between the dubious and illegal EPSA and the SAMARICA-PSA which is more valid and legal. In this regard, there is no reason to celebrate.

ERC’s latest Order [Case No. 045-RC] gives us, MCOs no reason to rejoice. This is just a band-aid solution.

ERC should have declared EPSA illegal from the start and ordered a refund of all the amount unjustly collected from us.

The MCOs are still on the losing end. What about if OMCPC files a protest against the very low ERC-approved True Cost Generation Rate or TCGR which is very likely? The MCOs will again be threatened by brown-outs until the ERC reconsiders their Order for sure. It’s a case of history repeating itself. We already have seen this before.

Joe Cantada, the late PBA legendary sportscaster, classic line says it all: An eternity of basketball is [still]ahead of us.

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References:

https://www.ranker.com/list/biggest-nba-scandals-all-time/patrick-alexander

https://www.facebook.com/omar.costibolo/videos/1186095079466486/?_rdc=1&_rdr

Photo: IndyStar

Tuesday, March 5, 2024

Balik-Tanaw sa Balintataw (Sa Ika-33 Anibersaryo ng DZVT )

May isang kaibigan na nagpaalala sa akin na ika-33 anibersaryo raw ng DZVT sa Miyerkules, Marso 6, 2024, kaya sinubukan kong magnilay at magbalik-tanaw. Sa kanya ko lang nalaman na nag-eere na pala itong muli. Kamakailan ko lang ito nalaman.

Limitado ang sulating ito sa mga panahong naroroon lamang ako, ayon lamang sa aking naaalala at nais na isiwalat.

Ngayon ko lang napagtanto, and it’s the irony of all ironies, una palang napakinggan sa ere ang DZVT sa loob na observance ng Fire Prevention Month at ngayong taon ay nasa loob rin ng Kuwaresma.

Pero hindi maikakaila na malayo at masalimuot ang sinuong ng himpilan ng radyo. Mula sa kanyang mga abo, kumbaga, kagaya ng mito ng ibong phoenix, muling nabuhay at suma-himpapawid ang radyo totoo. Sa Lumang Tipan, ang abo ay isang panlabas na pagpapahayag ng ating pangangailangang magsisi at magsimulang muli.

Ang Salita ay Naging Tinig, Alingawngaw

Nang maitalaga bilang kauna-unahang Obispo ng Kanlurang Mindoro si Lubhang Kagalang-galang Vicente Credo-Manuel, SVD, DD na ipinanganak at lumaki sa nasabi ring lalawigan sa bagong likha ring Simbahang Lokal, layon na niyang magtatag ng isang himpilan ng radyo upang maisabuhay ang pananaw nito na maging, “Isang Pamayanang Kristiyano na Sama-samang Sumasamba, Naglilingkod at Nagpapatotoo kay Kristo.” Ang Pamayanang Kristiyano sa pinaikling katawagan ay PAKRIS.

Sa pamamagitan ni Papa Juan Pablo II, nilikha sa pagiging Bikaryato Apostoliko ng San Jose ang dating Parokya ni San Jose, ang Manggagawa, noong ika-27 ng Enero, 1983. Makalipas lamang ang pitong taon, isinilang ang kauna-unahang Katolikong himpilan ng radyo sa buong isla ng Mindoro at pangalawa lamang sa lalawigan. Ika-6 ng Marso, 1991 nang basbasan at pinasinayaan ng Arsobispo ng Cebu, Lkgg. Ricardo Cardinal Vidal, DD, at nagsimula itong mag-broadcast sa Labangan Poblacion, San Jose, Occidental Mindoro. Ang DZVT ay tinawag na “Tinig ng Pamayanang Kristiyano sa Occidental Mindoro.”

Ang mga letrang “VT” sa call sign ng DZVT ay mula sa motto ng Obispo na sa wikang Latin na “In Verbo Tuo” (Sa Iyong Salita). Nang lumaon, naging kasapi ng Catholic Media Network (CMN) ang himpilan.

Propetikong Misyon

Sa pangunguna ni Obispo Manuel at ng mga naunang namahala nito, sa panig ng pagpu-programa gayundin sa teknikal na aspeto, nagsa-himpapawid sila ng mga programang nagtatampok ng mga Programang Pastoral ng Bikaryato tulad ng sa mga katekista, mga katutubo, mga lay minister, human development, kilusang kabuhayan, mga Pamayanang Kristiyano (BEC) at iba pa.

Una sa lahat, direkta sa Katedral ni San Jose, nagsasahimpapawid din ito ng pagdiriwang ng Banal na Misa tuwing araw ng Linggo lalo na sa umaga, at mga live broadcasts sa mga espesyal na okasyong pan-Simbahan kabilang ang mga vicarial assemblies at iba pa, lalung-lalo na kung may mga bisitang puno ng Partikular na Simbahan.

Para sa akin, isinabuhay ng Obispo na ang panlipunang pakikisangkot ay isang propetikong misyon ng Simbahan.

Nagtampok din ito ng mga tugtugin at awiting sekular na ayon sa mga doktrinang Katoliko at hindi salungat pero ayon sa mga katuruan nito maging pagbabasa ng mga teksto mula sa bibliya at mga pagninilay. Kabilang na ang mga kalalabas ng Palibot-Liham ng mga nakatataas, lalung-lalo na mula sa Kapulungan ng mga Obispo sa Pilipinas (CBCP) at iba pang mga dokumento at sulatin mula sa Simbahan. Kinagiliwan ng mga tagapakinig ang patimpalak na tinawag na “Awitan sa Pamayanan”. Ito ay umabot na isinagawa maging sa kalapit na bayan ng Mansalay at Bulalacao sa Oriental Mindoro at maging sa Coron at Concepcion sa Palawan. Ngunit mayor na inilulunsad ito sa mga Pamayanang Kristiyano sa ibang mga barangay sa lalawigan na sila mismo ang nagtataguyod at mula sa kanila ang sumasaling kalahok at rekurso.

Sa mga unang taon ng Radio Ministry ng AVSJ, tunay na naging mouthpiece (o tinig) ng mga mananampalaya, lalung-lalo na ng mga batayang sektor ang DZVT. Naging daluyan ito ng mga impormasyon at kaalaman, katekismo, pa-anunsiyong pastoral ng mga BEC at ng mga Pastoral Offices mismo. Naging alingawngaw ang marubdob na pagtututol nito sa mga panlipunang isyu noong 1990’s kagaya nang pagtuligsa nito sa talamak na jueteng, illegal logging, korupsyon, mga paglabag sa karapatang tao kapwa ng mga sundalo at rebelde, at pagtataguyod ng pantribu at kultural na kagalingan ng mga Mangyan.

Sa panahon ni Bishop Manuel, nakita, nadama at naging saksi ang mga Pamayanang Kristiyano kung papaano ginampanan ng DZVT ang propetikong papel ng Simbahan.

Naging daluyan din ito, hindi lamang sa mga espiritwal na pangangailangan ng mga mananampalataya, kundi maging ng mga aktibo ngunit hindi marahas na kilos-bayan laban sa mga tinatawag na social evils na nabanggit sa itaas. Katulad ng kilos-masa laban sa pagtatayo ng Petron Bulk Plant sa Aroma Beach sa San Jose, na magdudulot ng pang-kalikasang kasiraan at peligro sa makasaysayan at pamosong baybayin ng bayan.

Mga naging tagapamahala ng himpilan ang mga layko na sina Perry Fernandez, Rudy Candelario, at Perlito Villador at mga diyosisang pari na sina Padre Ruben Villanueva, Ronilo Omanio at Giovanni Gatdula.

Ang mga naging anchor ng Pintig ng Bayan bago kami nina Daisy Del Valle Leano at Rey San Jose ay sina Rod Agas at Fr. Jun Villanueva.

Sa aking pagkakabatid, lahat ng mga istasyong kasapi ng Catholic Media Network (CMN) ay batid na sa bawat Katolikong brodkaster, and lahat ng mga pangayayari sa araw-araw, wika nga, ay God’s agenda for action. Hindi lamang sa salita nakikilala ang tunay propeta (basahin: saksi) kundi sa kanyang aksyon o pagkilos.

Sa pahina ng 307 ng kanyang aklat na “Communicating in Community: An Introduction to Social Communication” tumapakang isinulat na Fr.Franz-Josef Ailers, SVD : “Prophetic communication serves truth and challenge falsehood. Prophetic communication stimulates critical awareness of the reality constructed by the media and helps people to distinguish truth from falsehood, discern the subjectivity of the journalist, and disassociate that which is ephemeral and trivial from that which is lasting and valuable. Often it is necessary to develop alternative communication so that prophetic words and deeds can be realized.”

Hanggang Kalaliman

Taong 2000 nang bumaba sa katungkulan si Obispo Manuel. Hinalilihan siya bilang Apostolikong Tagapangasiwa ni Obispo Antonio Pepito-Palang, SVD, DD. Noong ika-26 ng Hunyo, 2000 hanggang sa tuluyan na siyang ordenan at italaga bilang ikalawang Punong Pastol ng Bikaryato noong Mayo 31, 2002.

Sinubaybayan at ibinalita ng DZVT ang kaso ng walang awang panggagahasa at pagpatay sa isang second year highschool student na si Elizabeth Albacino, 16, sa Sitio B-1, Barangay Central, San Jose, Occidental Mindoro. Ang mga suspek ay pinalalaya umanong mga bilanggo sa Magbay Provincial Jail. Naganap ang krimen noong Agosto 14, 2003.

Sa panahon ni Obispo Palang, tumuon at naging malalim ang panlipunang pakikisangkot ng DZVT lalo na sa mahipit na pakikipag-ugnayan nito sa Commission on Elections (COMELEC), PPCRV, NAMFREL at iba pa tuwing panahon ng halalan sa mga aktibidad gaya ng voters’ and political education, media quick-count at candidates’ fora.

Teka, naalala ko rin nga pala, sa pagtalakay namin ng walang humpay sa tungkol sa problema noon sa kuryente at gusot sa loob ng OMECO, ako kabilang ang dalawa kong co-hosts sa Pintig ng Bayan ay inireklamo sa Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster ng Pilipinas (KBP) noong November 7, 2008. Pero wala rin kinahinatnan ang reklamo dahil alam namin na hindi naman kami lumalampas etiketa ng pamamahayag sa pagbabalita namin ng katotohanan.

Naging tampok din ang mga diyalogo sa pagitan ng mga opisyal ng sundalo at Mangyan sa usapin ng kapayapaan at kaunlaran. Matapos ang karumal-dumal na pagpatay sa isang pamilyang Mangyan ng mga sundalo sa tinawag noong “Talayob Massacre” sa bayan ng Magsaysay, sa pakikipag-ugnayan sa Parokya ng Mabuting Pastol, Mangyan Mission ng AVSJ, at ng Pantribung Samahan sa Kanlurang Mindoro o PASAKAMI, naisa-madla ang pangyayari hanggang sa umabot ito sa mga kinauukulang tanggapan ng pambansang pamahalaan at nalagdaan at mapinalisa ng ng Kasunduan ng Kasundaluhan at mga Mangyan para sa kapayapaan.

Ang malagim na pangyayari ay naganap noong Hulyo 21, 2003 sa Sitio Talayob, sa Barangay Nicolas, Magsaysay, Occidental Mindoro. Pinapurihan ng Sulong Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law or Sulong (CARHRIHL) Network ang DZVT sa naging papel nito sa paglulunsad at pagpapatibay ng nasabing Peace Covenant.

Patuloy na naging tambuli ng pananampalataya ang DZVT sa mga pagkilos laban sa pagmimina. Mismong si Obispo Palang, kasama ang kanyang mga pari, mga madre at lider ng PARKIS ang nanguna sa halos 5,000 kalahok sa rally laban sa Mindoro Nickel Project noong Mayo 27, 2009 na lumundo sa pamamagitan ng mga edukasyong mulat-malay na ini-ere halos araw-araw noon sa DZVT na hindi ko na maalala.

Ang motto naman ni Obispo Palang ay “Duc in Altum” o “Ihulog sa Kalaliman.” Sa kanyang panunungkulan, ipinailalim sa Diocesan Human Development Commission/Social Action Center (DHDC-SAC) ang DZVT hanggang mula sa Seminary Compound ay inilipat sa AVSJLM Warehouse Compound sa Labangan ang broadcast studio nito mula sa Chancery Building sa Seminary Compound.

Maliban sa patok na Dial 1369 ni Vic Barrios, isang song and live dedication program, may mga family oriented din at magazine type programs na kinagisnan namin noon.

Ang dati nitong tagline na “Ang Tinig ng Pamayanang Kristiyano sa Occidental Mindoro” ay naging “Radyo Totoo sa Kanlurang Mindoro”. 

Misteryosong Apoy

Oktubre 26, 2011 nang ang pagsasa-himpapawid ng pahintuin ng isang misteryosong sunog. Maliban sa sunog sa himpilan at transmitter ng radyo, may sunog ding naganap sa Records Section sa Chancery Building sa Seminaryo, mga tatlong kilometro ang layo sa isa’t-isa.

Nunit bago ito, noong Oktubre 21 nang nasabi ring taon ay pinagtangkaan nang sunugin pero naapula ng mga kapit-bahayan ang apoy. Kaaagad na ipinaalam sa mga kinauukulan ang pagtatangka ngunit walang naging desisyon dito ang mga nabanggit.

Nilamon ng apoy ang radio transmitter na donasyon dati pa ng Archdiocese of San Francisco at ilan pa ng donor. Nasa labas nang lalawigan noon ang mga kaparian para sa iba’t-ibang mga aktibidad nang mangyari ang sunog.

Hanggang sa kasalukuyan ay misteryong maituturing ang naganap na sunog.

Naging mitsa din ito ng hidwaan at hindi pagkakaunawaan hindi lamang sa hanay ng mga pari kundi maging sa mga Pamayananang Kristiyano noon. Aminin man nila o hindi.

Sa aking pagninilay ay nasagi ito sa aking isipan: Ang ministeryo ng mga pari na pinasimulan ni Kristo mismo ay tunay na dinalisay ng apoy, apoy ng pananampalataya at hindi ang apoy ng pamiminsala. Ang una ay apoy ng pagka-dalisay habang ang huli ay apoy ng pagkawasak, apoy na misteryosong umahon mula sa Impyerno. Ang apoy na gumupo sa istasyon ay ang huli.

Naganap na

Ilang taon din ako noong naging co-anchor ng maka-Kristiyano at sumusunod sa diwa ng social communication principles na public affairs program na “Pintig ng Bayan”.

Iyan ang mukha ng apostoladong pang-radyo na aking natatandaan ngayon. Sa loob nang 25 taon na inilagi ko sa Bikaryato bilang Social Advocacy Program Coordinator ng DHDC/SAC, at sa pagiging personalidad ng radyo ang nagturo sa akin sa doktrinang panlipunan ng Simbahang Katolika lalo na ang malasakit sa buong sambayanan, lalo na para sa mahihina't mahihirap, at paggalang sa layà ng tao, kasama rito ang karapatan sa pribadong pag-aari.

Pinuna ang mga tiwali, tinutulan ang mga mali at hindi makatao, makabayan, maka-kalikasan at maka-Diyos na patakaran at kalalagayan. Marami ang natigatig, mga pulitiko at negosyante, kabilang na ang ilang pari.

Tunay na matatag ang Simbahan laban sa banta mula sa labas nang kanyang bakuran ngunit mahina ito laban sa banta mula mismo sa kanyang sinapupunan.Nang magisnan ko na lamang ang aking sarili na nasa ibang gawain sa labas ng programang pastoral nito ay saka ko napagtantong tama ako.

Naganap na ang dapat maganap, masakit sa loob kong iniwan ang aking nakagisnang gawain na itinuring kong bokasyon, hanggang sa mapadpad ako sa laot ng serbisyo publiko at patuloy na naglalayag bilang lingkod-bayan hanggang ngayon.

Muling Nabuhay

Nabigla na lang ako kamakailan sa isang kaibigan na nagsabing isang araw nang muling nabuhay sa talapihitan ng aming radyo ang DZVT. Hindi ko na matandaan marahil ay dahil iba na ito ngayon. O dahil wala na ako doon. Baka naman nalimutan (o kinalimutan) ko na lang.

Itinuro sa amin noon na ang tunay layon ng anomang istasyon ng radyo, maging ito ay sekular o hindi, ay upang ipamandila ang katotohanan.

Kapag tayo ay inaaliw lang at napapako sa mga tribyal na bagay at umiiwas sa mga panlipunang isyung kinasasangkutan ng pamayanan at mga mananampalataya. Hangga’t hindi tayo tumutugon sa mga panaghoy, hinaing at pitig ng bayan, wala pa tayong sapat na dahilan upang magdiwang sa ating pag-iral.

Ipanalangin natin na ang DZVT ay patuloy na sumulong at maging tagapagsalita ng Simbahan sa pagpapahayag at pagkilos para sa pagbabandilyo sa mga kagyat na problema tungo sa kalutasan nito, at mga isyung panlipunan at pampulitika na naka-ayon sa Kanyang Salita at kalaliman ng ating pananampalataya. At maging Tinig ng Pamayanang Kristiyano na kapanalig nila laban sa mga kasamaan sa lipunang nagpapahirap sa kanila.

Sa diwang ito ay magpapatuloy bilang mahalagang dimensyon ng ang DZVT ng Simbahang Naglalakbay.

Pagbati sa lahat at sa mga kasalukuyang namumuno nito!

Saturday, March 2, 2024

Killer Quotes from Three Female Boxers

The 2024 National Women’s Month Celebration in the country aims to get the most out of the recurring theme “WE for gender equality and inclusive society,” introduced in 2023 to last until 2028.

The capitalized word “WE” is short for “Women and Everyone”. Truly it is necessary to put men into the equation and the part they play in accomplishing what women have achieved in their lives and careers.

As a trying-hard boxing blogger-chronicler and a fan of the sport, and as we enter the second day of Women’s Month today, I am featuring later a glimpse of kayoing quotes from the two well-known boxing Filipinas of today, the Olympian Nesty Petecio and Rica Aquino-Uy from the professional rank to be concluded by that of boxers’ rights advocate Marian Trimiar, a pioneer in the field and fought between 1976 and 1985.

Before that, as known to boxing communities all over the globe, the first official female bout in the world happened as early as 1876 when Nel Saunders defeated Rose Harland at the Hill’s Theater in New York.

To borrow from David Diamante, “The fight starts now!"

The assigned female at birth Nesthy Alcayde Petecio, a native of Santa Cruz, Davao del Sur was born on April 11, 1992, and won a silver medal in the inaugural women's featherweight event at the 2020 Summer Olympics, becoming the first Filipino woman to win an Olympic medal in boxing.

“Sobrang proud po ako bilang member ng LGBTI+. Kahit anong gender po natin basta may pangarap po tayo, laban po!” (Eng. Trans. :”I am very proud as a member of LGBTI+. No matter what gender we are, as long as we have a dream, fight!’), says s/he on the interview over GMA’s Unang Hirit morning program on August 4, 2021.

Rica Aquino-Uy AKA Baby Dynamite is a boxing commentator, sportscaster analyst, and musician (violinist). She hailed from Besao and Sagada in the Mountain Province, a half-Igorot who was so proud of the warrior tradition of her indigenous people’s lineage and ethnic roots. She may not be as popular as Petecio but she is famous in her own right (Well, I follow her coverage of the events with Mr. Alvin S. Go, her godfather, over Elorde TV Sports).

“As a boxer, I strive to be the champion, but there is more to the profession than just fighting. People reach out to me on social media, and young kids exist in my community who want to learn boxing. I have a social responsibility to give back, says Baby Dynamite in a piece by George Buid and published at Orato World on August 17, 2022.

The story of these brave women warriors like the seasoned Fil-Am Sarah Rama-Goodson, and the rest of their kind is a continuing tale of perseverance and insistence that they belong or once belonged in the ring and, through their achievements, provide for the betterment of the sport as a whole no doubt.

But this is the undisputed killer quote of all time for me and it’s from Marian “Lady Tyger” Trimiar mentioned when she staged a month-long hunger strike in April 1987 advocating for better conditions, pay, and recognition for women boxers in the US and it reads, “It's my heart, it's my love. Unless women get more recognition, we will be fighting just as a novelty for the rest of our lives. There will be no future." (Source: Houston Chronicle News Services 04/27/1987)

Also, for the struggling women in the world, regardless of their ideology and political beliefs, love, passion, responsibility, and conviction have transformative powers.

Happy Women’s Month to all boxing Pinays, the empowered women of the ring in its true, literal sense.


Monday, February 26, 2024

Angeles Jimenez: Bukidnon’s Boxing Patriarch


The father, the son, and boxing

Angeles Jimenez, 86, and father of renowned boxing coach Joven Jimenez was hooked on boxing when he was still into teaching many years ago. He even went to far-flung barrios and walked for kilometers just to watch local boxing matches in Malaybalay, Bukidnon.

When asked how he would describe Joven, the boxing coach, he said, “He’s okay. I love him. A loving child but a bit hard-headed.” He said that he never doubted his son that he would be a coach for the great world champion in Jerwin Ancajas. Before Joven became a coach, he was an amateur boxer during his elementary years.

Habituated totally to the sport, Tatay Angeles, now a widower, was into boxing promotion and spearheaded boxing events way back then. He told his grandson Niño Jimenez during their recent little chit-chat that it was not hard to promote boxing events then, amateur or professional. The promoters are the ones who decide how many rounds a professional bout will take.

It runs in the blood

Tatay Angeles, a devout Catholic, recalled that even when Joven was studying in Cagayan de Oro, the latter fought in the amateur rank and was scouted in many competitions. Seeing his potentials, he was later invited to go to Manila to grind his axe, so to speak. From his memory he said, “Wa gyud nagsaba nga niadto siya’g Manila.” (There was no noise that he went to Manila.) He didn’t bother to bid goodbye to any of his family members.

Wanting his “prodigal” son to finish his studies, he went to the Philippine Sports Commission in the nation’s capital to fetch Joven back to CDO and continue his college. But Joven’s love for boxing prevailed as he dropped out of school and continued to chase his dream honed it in the gym and manifested in the actual arena. To cut the long story short, the former stubborn son is now a world-acclaimed boxing persona.

Aside from Joven, his other sons are also into the sport. Jonnel was a referee for professional matches and Vergil was an erstwhile boxing promoter.

The retired educator turned boxing promoter has six children, three sons, and three daughters namely, Annibeth (Libante), a teacher; Virgil, a retired lawman; Jonnel, a civil engineer; Evelyn (Pagaran) who works at DepEd; and Joven, of course. Their late uncle Cesar was a professionally licensed referee.

Boxing and Martial Law

In the late '60s and early '70s, boxing is already the life of the villages of Bukidnon. There is boxing during fiestas and all the local celebrations. It was considered the lifeline of the barrios and the pueblos. Boxing was not only a fad but a social anesthesia. Then, Martial Law spoils it all.

His old man told Niño that after former President Ferdinand E. Marcos Sr. signed Proclamation No. 1081 placing the Philippines under Martial Law, boxing in Bukidnon was greatly affected under the military rule because there was a curfew prohibiting the citizens from going out of their residences at night until the wee hours of the morning. Offenders were detained and punished with civic actions or community service ordered by either the police or the military officers.

Boxing promotion in Bukidnon hangs still like an abandoned punching bag. It was greatly hurt during those dark days in history. But like a phoenix, boxing in their place came back alive after that.

Papa Lolo

Niño Jimenez’s Papa Lolo exchanged marriage vows with the late Virgincita Hallasgo, also a teacher. He was an educator who took up an Agricultural Education degree at Central Mindanao University and his Elementary Education degree and Master of Art in Teaching at the Bukidnon State College, now Bukidnon State University.

“He is very smart, loving, and a heck of a human being,” says Tatay Angeles’s grandson telling this scribe that today’s birthday celebrator is deeply loved not only by his 6 children but 19 grandchildren.He is very close to me. We talked a lot about boxing, among other things,” Niño said in conclusion. As their pater familias, Tatay Angeles is a multi-division undisputed champion, figuratively. 

Niño and I are telling The Man’s story to the world to give him a rightful tribute as a little-known promoter but an ardent believer of the sport.

This is because of our common love for boxing that bonds us all.

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(Photo: Niño Jimenez)

 

Sunday, February 25, 2024

For Joven and Jerwin: Cheer up and Cheers!

Joven Jimenez’s boxing pedigree brought him this far in boxing. As a young boy of 10, he was greatly influenced by his parents Angeles and Virgincita Hallasgo Jimenez who are local promoters of Boxing in Bukidnon.

According to an article posted by Super Balita Cebu on February 3, 2018, after Jimenez got married in Manila, he kept looking for those who wanted to become boxers. He gathered a total of twenty young and aspiring pugilists. But as years went by, all of those twenty students gradually left him.

But even with that painful experience, there was only one person who remained among the aspiring boxers. That’s none other than Jerwin Ancajas who was the only one loyal and believed in Joven's ability as a mentor. They have been together through thick or thin, their hardships at the Survival Camp in Magallanes, in all of those grueling Ancajas defenses, the heartbreaking twin losses against Fernando Daniel Martinez, the ups and downs, and their roller-coaster ride of riding in tandem boxer and trainer.

Until Jerwin received that fatal liver blow from Takuma Inoue and failed to bring home the crown last night.

After each fight, there are three questions the boxer and his team shall consider: Did they do their very best to give honor to the flag? Did they play fair and fully abided by the Code of Sportsmanship? Did they entertain the fans? Have they been compensated accordingly? If the answer to each question was yes, then that’s enough reason for them to celebrate.

Besides, whether you win or lose you still get to go out and roam around in many places either as a participant or poster boy for the sport.

Judging from that video posted by journalist JM Siasat on Facebook hours ago, it emphasized that Joven is like a father figure to Jerwin. Despite that career-deciding loss last night, Joven assured Jerwin that he would just be around even if he’s no longer his coach.

Not unlike Joven’s biological father Angeles who always supports his trainer son throughout.

Speaking of Joven’s father, tomorrow, February 26 is Angeles’s 86th birth anniversary. The proud father of Joven was born in 1938.

Happy birthday to the old man and thanks for directing and honing his son as one of the most respected and steadfast disciples of the sport of boxing the Philippines ever produced.

Cheer up and cheers! 

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(Photo: Asian Boxing)