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Toxic Bertiz

Public outrage filled all social media platforms last week as footage of party-list Congressman, John Bertiz, went viral showing him belligerently refusing to follow airport security protocols and berating a member of the security staff in the process.
Bertiz’ arrogant behavior was more than it appears at face value — it was, in fact, a lethal blow to the reputations of both the legislature and the Duterte administration. For the former, it was an acerbic reminder of how lawmakers carry themselves with a sense of entitlement. For the latter, it suggests that cronyism is slowly finding its way back in Malacañang.
Let’s talk about our lawmakers first. Bertiz is not the only congressman or senator guilty of demanding special treatment. He is, however, the only one silly enough to be caught on CCTV in the act of indiscretion.
Let’s be honest, many of us have personally witnessed lawmakers demanding special privileges and/or acting as if they are the preferred children of the land. We quietly resent them for their gall and thick faces, yet are unable to do anything about it. Unfortunately, the very institutions meant to guard against abuse are headed by the same cabal of lawmakers who are wont to protect their own. In one fell swoop, Bertiz unearthed our repressed feelings of resentment and scraped the wounds wide open.
Juan de la Cruz is a helpless victim of lawmakers’ abuses every day. On our roads, for example, congressmen and senators have highway patrols pave the way for their passage, demanding that everyone move aside, as if their journeys are more important than ours. They assume that traffic rules do not apply to them and berate traffic enforcers when they are accosted. They refuse to line up in government offices and insist that their needs be attended to first. They demand that airlines wait for them if they are late. In our embassies abroad, they demand to be entertained by our diplomatic staff and help themselves to the cars and facilities of our embassies. They don’t line up at immigration counters and demand exception from customs for their contraband. They expect law enforcers to look the other way for crimes under the radar of media scrutiny. I can go on and on as the litany of abuses are as long as this newspaper.
While I do not suggest that all lawmakers are the same, I dare say that most are of Bertiz’ likeness, perhaps only more discreet. No surprise, the public view lawmakers not as men of esteem, but with disdain and distrust.
Bertiz is the personification of everything we hate about lawmakers. His latest caper only worsened their already tarnished image. Adding insult to injury was his backhanded apology, done while blaming airport officials for being rude. What kind of apology lays blame on others? It was clearly one laced with hubris.
Given the blowback on the reputation of the legislature, it is incumbent on the congressional ethics committee to slap maximum sanctions against Bertiz. The public expects nothing less. To let him get away with a mere slap on the hand will only confirm what most think of lawmakers — that they protect their own. A strong signal must be sent that such behavior will no longer be tolerated, especially under the watch of newly installed Speaker Gloria Arroyo.
Power is intoxicating and Bertiz is inebriated with it. His ilk forget, as elected officials, they are under the payroll of the people. Our taxes pay for their salaries and whatever pork funds they receive. They are at the public’s disposal, not above it. Hence, they are duty and morally bound to uphold the law, however inconvenient it may be.
A DISSERVICE TO THE PRESIDENT
Bertiz is clearly emboldened by his closeness to Bong Go and the President himself.
This begs the question, is it commonplace for friends of Bong Go and the President to enjoy special privileges? If not, why does Bertiz demand it in the most brazen of ways? Is cronyism on the rise in this administration?
The way Bertiz struts around town goes against the very grain of why President Duterte was elected in the first place. It will be recalled that the people voted for the Chief Executive principally because he promised to enforce the law without fear or favor. He committed to stamp out abuse among those in power and restore law and order in the land.
The actions of Bertiz undermined the President’s campaign promise. Unless the President cracks the whip on him, our people can rightfully conclude that cronyism is alive and well in this administration and that the campaign promise was a fluke.
As far as public opinion is concerned, the Bertiz incident could not have come at a worse time. Just as the administration faces criticisms for its inability to tame inflation, control the drop in the peso and arrest the decelerating economy — this incident only added another layer of discontent with the administration.
As for the senatorial bid of Bong Go, his association with Bertiz will make the public think twice before voting for him. He will probably be ruled out altogether. Thus, the further Mr. Go distances himself from Bertiz, the better.
Nearly everything that comes out of Bertiz’ mouth is wrought with political incorrectness — from threatening not to release the licenses of agricultural engineers unless they knew Bong Go, to accusing OFW, Eman Villanueva of being undocumented, to his slur against women’s menstrual cycles. The man is toxic.
RAMIFICATIONS
In a recent press briefing, Manila International Airport Authority (MIAA) General Manager Ed Monreal said that based on the footage alone, it was clear that Bertiz violated security protocol by not removing his shoes at the checkpoint. This was confirmed by Office of Transportation Security (OTS) Administrator Art Evangelista, who said Bertiz not only violated security protocols, he also breached security procedures by forcibly confiscating the ID card of an airport security staff member.
By law, only the President is exempt from security checks, but even he subjects himself to the entire security process.
Aviation safety protocols are governed by international treaties and the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). Failure to adhere to them could give other member countries the right not to accept flights from the Philippines and/or disallow flights from the Philippines from entering their airspace. As one could imagine, this could have serious ramifications to our OFWs, the very people Bertiz represents. It will also cause serious damage to tourism and the economy in general.
The blatant disrespect for security protocols could cause us to fail the next ICAO security audit which will bring about stiffer sanctions.
The stakes are high and to brush this off as some misdemeanor of an entitled lawmaker will be doing the entire nation a disservice. We must show the international community that we are committed to enforce aviation security protocols, no matter who is involved.
In conclusion, Bertiz has shown us how abusive and shameless our lawmakers have become. On civil society’s part, our vile reaction is indicative of how fed up we are.
But the issue now has transcended Bertiz himself. It is now about the reputation of the legislature and the executive branch. We ask ourselves — are they worthy of our respect? Do they have the moral high ground to dictate our laws and tell us what is right or wrong? Should we begin making our displeasure towards them obvious? Has the time come for us to demand a new cast of leaders?
Moving forward, it all depends on how they handle Bertiz. If they treat him with cushioned gloves, then we know they are just as broken as this entitled congressman.
 
Andrew J. Masigan is an economist.

Scare tactics on the young

Never Again! It has been branded in the hearts of those who experienced martial law that never again should Filipinos have to bear the killings, torture, plunder and other transgressions of human rights by a dictator and his politicized military. And the younger generations must know about these, and know all in truth — not in the revisionist telling of inveterate liars, who have benefitted from martial law, changed loyalties to succeeding democratic leaders, and are now changing coats again, back to dictator-type governance.
Revising history by denying the atrocities of past martial law and yet using the very same invented claims of “destabilization” that justified the Marcos dictatorship: that is manifestly the intensified concerted drive of the present leadership. And the targets are the young — those still in university — who are perhaps grandchildren of those in the generation who lived through Marcos’s martial law in the seventies.
Armed Forces Chief of Staff Carlito Galvez, Jr. declared last week that the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) was “infiltrating” schools for the “Red October” plot, the “broad coalition” of communists and opposition groups that President Rodrigo Duterte himself had earlier accused of scheming to oust him from office. “Actually, si [CPP founder] Joma (Jose Maria) Sison has conducted a lot of conferences with the University of the Philippines (UP),” he added, saying he was ready to reveal documents related to the ouster plot in an executive session of the Senate (ABS-CBN News, Oct. 3, 2018).
Students were in an uproar. “Those are all are lies, propaganda to trick Filipinos,” University of the Philippines (UP) students protested. Gen. Galvez’ identified ten universities grew to a list of 18 universities as his deputy Chief of Staff, Brigadier General Antonio Parlade, Jr., embellished details, “May ongoing film showing sila about dark years of (Marcos) martial law sa mga class to incite students to rebel against the government,” he told ABS-CBN News (Ibid.).
De La Salle Philippines President Bro. Armin Luistro, Secretary of Education in the term of former President Benigno Simeon Aquino III, was first to speak out. “Sept. 21 (the 46th anniversary of Marcos’s martial law proclamation) was just around the corner. Universities, obviously, because of all the historical revisionism happening, are showing films on the martial law to explain the facts, the past realities that happened to us. There is nothing wrong in a university setting where many ideologies are discussed. Connecting that with an actual plot to overthrow government is an entirely different matter” (ANC Alerts, Oct. 3, 2018).
Bro. Armin said the military should have first talked to university officials before releasing a list to the media. He wondered why an “intelligence report” which should be the highly-classified basis for intelligence operations should be shared with all even before such “secret” operations commenced. UP-Diliman Chancellor Michael Tan said the military must provide evidence for their allegations. “We will not allow this to be a witch hunt. We are still a democracy, although it is a democracy under assault,” he said (ABS-CBN News, Oct. 4 2018).
Fr. Jose Ramon Villarin, S.J., president of the Ateneo de Manila University, said “there is no present evidence to even suggest” that the school is exposed to any grave risk. He reiterated the Ateneo’s support for democratic institutions and said the university “will not shirk from its mission to holistically educate our youth in proper history and ethics, particularly on the matter of Martial Law and its impact on Philippine society” (Ibid.).
For University of Santo Tomas Secretary General Fr. Jesus Miranda, O.P., the burden of proof lies with the military. Lyceum of the Philippines University, University of Makati, Far Eastern University, Emilio Aguinaldo College, among the 18 universities tagged by the military in the alleged CPP recruitment effort, denied knowing of and promoting efforts to destabilize the government (Ibid.).
But the angriest were the students, the real victims in all this: “The UP Diliman University Student Council strongly condemns this blatant act of red-tagging students of these universities. It is a clear threat to the students who bravely criticize the government and the president himself,” the young voices protested (Ibid.).
Note that when Gen. Parlade came out with his “intelligence list” of 18 universities, the Philippine National Police (PNP) candidly declared, “In our intelligence community, we have no information yet of recruitment in schools and universities. But that’s not surprising. They’ve been doing that since its creation, almost 50 years ago,” he said (ABS-CBN News, Oct. 3, 2018). “The CPP (is) having a hard time recruiting students because they (students) cannot be easily manipulated and swayed into committing actions that would be considered rebellious to the established government,” PNP spokesperson Benigno Durana, Jr. said (Ibid.).
Perhaps that was meant to be a paean to the Duterte myth of invulnerable and accepted autocracy. But the PNP spokesman unwittingly acknowledged the invulnerability of the students within themselves — not to blindly embrace the radical ideology of communism as they would not blindly accept and live with the abuses of a democratically elected, yet dictatorial leader. If one is against the establishment, one is not necessarily a communist.
Bro. Armin describes it as “a created fear. They’re creating a scenario that’s not even there by talking about the supposed ‘Red October’ plot. And to me, that’s the scary part. If your official intelligence group talks about that scenario, I think they have a modus that’s out of the usual” (ANC Alerts, Oct. 3, 2018). The educator knows too well the delicate balance between the positive guidance by a parent to a child and the fearsome consequences of scaring the child to self-discerned action that may be good or bad. Will the reaction of the students be that since they are identified with the communists out to depose Duterte, perhaps communism is good since they have coinciding ideals of truth and righteousness with the Reds?
Perceived coinciding objectives with the CPP in the Marcos dictatorship was what brought young students to be the most pitiful statistics in Amnesty International “conservative” estimates in the 1972-1986 Martial Law years: 70,000 were imprisoned, 34,000 were tortured, 3,240 were killed (Tiongson, Lito. Batas Militar: 1997).
Imagine the fear of parents who must now caution their young adults — stop getting involved with national politics, stick to your school work; it is so dangerous for you to be identified as “communist” — we know what happened to student activists in Marcos’s time.
And we know the fear and frustration of educators who have kept to their fundamental vows of teaching truth and integrity in scientific theory and in moral and ethical practice. Echoing statements of tagged educational institutions, Lyceum of the Philippines University President Roberto Laurel said, “As an advocate of nation-building, our institution upholds the principles of democracy and abides by the supreme law of the land — the Constitution” (ABS-CBN News, Oct. 4, 2018).
Scaring and threatening the students is probably the most grievous sin of Duterte in his war for continued autocracy.
 
Amelia H. C. Ylagan is a Doctor of Business Administration from the University of the Philippines.
ahcylagan@yahoo.com

TRABAHO: Setting free an urgent reform

The House of Representatives passed the Tax Reform for Attracting Better and High-Quality Opportunities or TRABAHO Bill in early September. The first major component of TRABAHO is the reduction of the corporate income tax (CIT) rate to 20% over a period of nine years, starting 2021.
The Philippines imposes the highest CIT rate in ASEAN at 30%, compared to an average of 21.5% in the nine other ASEAN countries. The reality of tax competition makes the country less attractive, and the rate reduction under TRABAHO is a welcome move.
Our experience in the past fifteen years shows increasing tax effort in times of increasing rates, e.g. 2005-2008 when CIT was increased from 32% to 35%; and a long lag before tax effort could recover after a rate cut, e.g. four years after CIT was brought down to 32% in 2009. A cut of one percent now means P26 billion in revenue loss.
To cushion the expected revenue loss, the start of the CIT reduction is delayed and its implementation is made on a staggered basis. A further tweak that can be introduced is the requirement of a review of the overall fiscal position before further cuts beyond 25% can be made. This is to check whether tax effort is improving and to ensure that we have the fiscal space to pursue further cuts.
The second major component of TRABAHO is to rationalize and modernize the fiscal incentives granted by government. It expands the menu of incentives, enhances tax administration, and makes the award of incentives contingent on performance and inclusion in a set of strategic priority sectors.
As with the CIT rate reduction, there is wide support for the improved list of incentives, which now includes expanded tax deductibility for research and development, training, incremental labor expenses, and reinvestment allowance for manufacturing, among others.
However, groups representing exporters, foreign chambers, and the IT-BPO (information technology and business process outsourcing) sector and economic zone locators would rather have the fiscal incentive rationalization (FIR) not apply to them. They raise the specter of job losses and investor flight resulting from FIR.
Specifically, they oppose the sunset provision of FIR. With the sunset provision, incentives only the IT-BPO sector and economic zone locators currently enjoy in perpetuity will now have an expiry. They will lose the special tax rate of 5% on gross income earned (GIE) granted to locators in the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) and other special economic zones. Together with this comes the fear of PEZA losing its “one-stop shop” authority, which will lengthen transaction time and expose investors to the whims of local government units (LGUs). A related concern is the higher 90% threshold required for exporters to automatically be given value-added tax (VAT) exemption on imports and zero-rating on domestic purchases.
It is possible to address these concerns. There can be a longer transition period for those enjoying the GIE privileges before they graduate to the regular CIT rates, and even a longer maximum period for the enjoyment of the new incentives. If these investors keep on innovating and qualifying in the strategic investments priorities program, it is possible for them to keep on enjoying these new incentives.
As per the current Bill, PEZA does not lose its authority, except for the final approval of the award of incentives. This is in line with harmonizing all incentives laws and centralizing their administration. PEZA may, and in fact should, continue to shield investors by covering and processing all LGU requirements.
The VAT treatment of investors falling below the 90% threshold causes worry because of the tedious and lengthy refund process. Improving the refund process will go a long way, as will cooperation to arrest anomalies in the issuance of tax credit certificates.
With respect to the issue of job losses and investor jitters, the point is that FIR does away with redundant incentives. In other words, firms that are already profitable can perform well without incentives. Further, the reform mandates the appropriation of P45 billion for a five-year Structural Adjustment Fund to cover targeted cash grants and trainings for displaced workers of affected firms, skills upgrading of IT-BPO industry workers, and the development of infrastructure and economic activities in and around special economic zones.
Thus, there are ways to address the most pressing concerns. It is just a matter of stakeholders coming together and finding the sweet spot. At no other time in history have the Department of Finance and the Department of Trade and Industry worked closely together, which should give comfort to industry and fiscal reformers alike.
The TRABAHO Bill is now in the Senate for deliberation, and as expected, the same issues brought up in the House of Representatives are again being raised. Must a needed reform be held hostage on account of a few contentious provisions?
The sooner an agreement is reached on how best to resolve conflicting concerns in the TRABAHO Bill, the better it is for everyone. Aside from setting free a much-needed reform, it will end the creeping uncertainty affecting investment decisions. Investors need to know when and how the reform will take place, so they are able to make proper calculations.
Reform should not be a zero-sum game. It is most stable when supported by a broad consensus. The challenge is striking an acceptable balance among the concerns raised by various stakeholders. If indeed, as everyone claims, the objective is to enhance the country’s competitiveness and promote its development, it should be possible to work out this balance.
 
Jenina Joy Chavez is a trustee of Action for Economic Reforms (www.aer.ph), and heads its industrial policy program.

Blackwater improves to 6-1 with win over ROS

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter
THE Blackwater Elite sustained their solid form in the Philippine Basketball Association Governors’ Cup, adding the Rain or Shine Elasto Painters to their list of victims, 99-93, at the Sta. Rosa Multi-Purpose Complex in Laguna on Sunday.
Had it strong in the middle quarters, the Elite were challenged late in the game but were able to extricate themselves to book the win that had them moving up to 6-1 while leaving the Elasto Painters still winless (0-4).
The contest got to a competitive start with the two teams fighting to a 12-all count in the opening four minutes of the first quarter before Rain or Shine went on a 15-5 run to build a 27-17 lead by the 4:47 mark.
Blackwater though would finish strong to narrow the gap, 30-27, at the end of the first 12 minutes.
The Elite picked up from their late run in the first period to begin the second quarter, seizing the lead, 33-32, after five minutes.
Allein Maliksi then waxed hot for Blackwater to help his team build a 44-34 advantage with 1:40 to go.
The Elasto Painters tried to make up for lost ground for the remainder of the half but could only come within eight points, 47-39, by the halftime break.
Rain or Shine began the third canto strong behind import Terrence Watson, coming to within two points, 47-45, after two minutes only to see Blackwater create distance anew, 58-49, in the next three minutes.
Mike DiGregorio exploded for the Elite after, helping his team extend its lead to 16 points, 71-55, with 2:37 left in the quarter.
The count stood at 73-64, and Blackwater on top, three-fourths into the contest.
Rain or Shine began the fourth quarter firing, narrowing the gap to four points, 77-73, at the 9:08 mark.
Paul Zamar, Mac Belo and import Henry Walker though steady things for Blackwater, conspiring to rack up seven straight points to stretch their lead once again to double digits, 84-73, in the next minute and a half.
Blackwater held an 89-79 advantage with four minutes remaining before Rain or Shine made a last-ditch effort to salvage the game.
The Elasto Painters cut the Elite’s lead to three, 90-87, with 2:37 remaining on the clock but four straight points from guard Nards Pinto gave Blackwater more breathing space, 94-87, with 1:14 to go.
A triple by Gabe Norwood and a breakaway basket by Maverick Ahanmisi pushed Rain or Shine to just four points behind, 94-92, with 43 ticks left.
Mr. Pinto though drained a triple with 17 seconds remaining to give Blackwater a fresh five-point lead, 97-92, from which Rain or Shine could not recover from.
Mr. DiGregorio led Blackwater with 17 points with Mr. Pinto adding 16.
Mr. Walker had a triple-double of 14 points, 14 rebounds and 12 assists while Mr. Maliksi had 13 points.
Rain or Shine, meanwhile, was paced by Mr. Ahanmisi with 25 points followed by Mr. Watson with 17 points and 14 boards and Ed Daquioag with 15 points.
“We just moved the ball around. We’re like a wolf pack, strong if we play as a pack,” said Mr. Walker, named co-player of the game with Mr. Pinto, after their win.

UP survives NU in thriller

THE University of the Philippines Fighting Maroons compounded on the woes of the National University Bulldogs in UAAP Season 81, surviving, 89-88, in league action on Sunday at the Smart Araneta Coliseum.
Fresh from a big win over De La Salle University last time around, UP came out with much spring on its thrust against NU before being tested in the end and holding on for the win for its second straight win to improve to 3-3 in the ongoing University Athletic Association of the Philippines season while sending the Bulldogs (1-5) to their fifth defeat in a row.
The Maroons had control of the opening half, banking on a total attack, to take the first quarter, 26-20, before continuing to hold sway, 47-40, by the halftime break.
In the third period, UP sustained its steady form, outscoring NU, 10-4, led by Jun Manzo, in the first four minutes and a half to stretch its lead to 13 points, 57-44.
The Bulldogs tried to rally back after, behind JV Gallego and Shaun Ildefonso, but the Maroons would maintain control, 70-62, heading into the final frame.
The two teams jockeyed hard to start the fourth canto.
Ildefonso and Issa Gaye helped NU to a 7-3 blast to narrow the gap at 73-69 with 7:50 to go.
Juan Gomez de Liano, Paul Desiderio, and Bright Akhuetie though kept UP’s head afloat with the team holding an 85-75 lead halfway into the frame.
The count stood at 85-79 entering the last two minutes before Akhuetie made it an eight-point cushion, 87-79, with a putback with 1:39 left.
A basket by Troy Rike and two free throws by Ildefonso in the next 40 seconds pulled the Bulldogs to within four points, 87-83.
Akhuetie gave UP another six-point lead, 89-86, with two freebies only to be answered by Dave Ildefonso with a triple with 23 ticks to go to make it, 89-86.
A basket by Shaun Ildefonso with seven seconds to go pushed NU to one point, 89-88, after which it fouled Javi Gomez de Liano, who missed his two free throws, opening the window for the Bulldogs.
Off the rebound the Bulldogs had a chance to win the game but Gallego passed up at the last moment on a potential game-winning layup to preserve the win for the Maroons.
Akhuetie led UP with 21 points followed by Juan Gomez de Liano with 20.
Shaun Ildefonso paced NU with 20 points.
“A positive way at looking at this is we learned while winning, which is better than learning and losing. We still have a lot to learn obviously but we take this,” said UP coach Bo Perasol after their win. — MAS Murillo

Filipino athletes begin campaign at 2018 Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo
Senior Reporter
SEVEN Filipino athletes, led by double Asian Games gold winner Yuka Saso, begin their campaign in the 2018 Youth Olympic Games in Buenos Aires, Argentina, with hopes of improving on the country’s performance last time around and bring further sporting pride.
Golfer Saso, who struck gold in the individual and team events in the recently held Asian Games in Indonesia, was the designated flag-bearer of the contingent in the opening ceremonies on Sunday held at the Obelisco de Buenos Aires for the sporting event for athletes 18 years old and younger happening from Oct. 7 to 19 (Manila time).
Joining Saso in the team are Jann Mari Nayre (table tennis), Christian Tio (kite boarding), Nicole Marie Tagle (archery), Lawrence Everett Tan (fencing), Carl Jano Corpus (golf) and Nicole Justine Marie Oliva (swimming).
All seven are angling to bring home a gold medal for the Philippines and follow in the footsteps of archer Gab Moreno, who gave the Philippines its first-ever gold medal in the Youth Games in 2014.
Nayre, the first to qualify for the 2018 Youth Olympic Games, will kick-start the Philippines’ campaign today followed on Tuesday by Tio, who will compete for six days straight in his bid for a podium spot.

Christian Tio
Kite boarder Christian Tio is part of the Philippine Team. — (RED BULL PHILIPPINES)

Over 4,000 athletes from 206 countries will vie for 241 gold medals from 32 sports in this year’s edition of the Youth Games.
Considering the expected tough competition, local sports officials acknowledge that it is going to be an uphill battle for Team Philippines but were quick to say that it would not stop the athletes from giving their best and trying to get medals.
“It certainly won’t be easy considering the high level of competition. But one thing is for sure, our athletes will show up with their best performance to get a medal,” said chef de mission Jonne Go of the Philippine Canoe Kayak Dragonboat Federation.
Apart from Ms. Go, also accompanying the Philippine athletes in Argentina is Philippine Sports Commission secretary-general Patrick Gregorio.
Catch the Filipino athletes’ campaign in the 2018 Youth Olympic Games over at ESPN5 and live stream on ESPN5.com.

Khabib stops McGregor in wild fight, retains title

ULTIMATE Fighting Championship world lightweight champion Khabib “The Eagle” Nurmagomedov retained his title after stopping challenger and former champ Conor “The Notorious” McGregor by rear-naked choke in the fourth round of their headlining fight at “UFC 229” on Sunday in Las Vegas which was marred by a brawl after the fight.
Banking on his superior grappling and ground game, Mr. Nurmagomedov (27-0) proved too much to UFC-comebacking McGregor (21-4), sending the latter to tap out late in the fourth round to make it a first successful title defense.
Earlier in the day, former interim lightweight champion Tony “El Cucuy” Ferguson made a successful UFC return albeit in an anti-climactic manner, besting ex-lightweight champion Anthony “Showtime” Pettis in UFC 229’s co-main event by technical knockout after the latter’s corner ruled him unable to continue after breaking his right hand.
Mr. McGregor opened things with some early hits before Mr. Nurmagomedov got things on the ground and the advantage all the way to the end of the first round.
In the second round, the Russian champion’s dominance continued, clipping the Irishman midway and then going for a barrage of ground and pound that had Mr. McGregor defending hard on his back the rest of the way.
Mr. McGregor showed some life in the third round and early fourth with strikes that rocked Mr. Nurmagomedov.
The champion though got his bearing back and went for the takedown which he would not relinquish, locking Mr. McGregor and finishing things with a rear-naked choke before referee Herb Dean called a stop to the fight at the 3:02 mark of the fourth round.
But just when everybody thought it was over, Mr. Khabib went out of the Octagon and engaged with some of Mr. McGregor’s supporters while some from the Russian’s group went inside the cage and attacked the Irishman.

UFC 229 2
Tony Ferguson throws a right jab on Anthony Pettis’ face during the UFC 229 at T-Mobile Arena. — STEPHEN R. SYLVANIE-USA TODAY SPORTS

Control was restored and Mr. Khabib was declared as winner. No awarding of the belt happened though to ease the tension.
FERGUSON IS BACK
Meanwhile, former interim lightweight champion Ferguson returned from knee surgery with a win after stopping Mr. Pettis in the second round.
It was an explosive fight right from the opening bell as both fighters tried to establish early control.
The second round had the fighters giving their all no end.
Mr. Pettis had Mr. Ferguson in trouble after connecting with a solid right to the chin but eventually the latter recovered and inflicted his own damage on the former, who by the time the second round ended was all bloodied up from a huge cut on his head.
Moments later, Mr. Pettis’ corner confirmed that its fighter broke his right hand in the hard exchanges and decided not to continue, handing the win to Mr. Ferguson.
“No concern at all that I rushed my return [from knee surgery}. Nobody was going to take this away from me, I’m [expletive] back!” said Mr. Ferguson post-fight even as he called out Mr. McGregor for a showdown.
In other fights in the main card of UFC 229, light heavyweight Dominick Reyes topped Ovince Saint Preux by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27 and 30-27), heavyweight Derrick Lewis came from behind to knock out Alexander Volkov in the third round, and women’s strawweight Michelle Waterson beat Felice Herrig by UD (30-26, 29-28 and 30-27).
In the Philippines, Cignal TV, the country’s foremost direct-to-home (DTH) company, is the home of the UFC after the two groups agreed to an extensive deal that will see the UFC beamed on various platforms. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

New York Yankees even series with Boston Red Sox

BOSTON — Aaron Judge and Gary Sanchez hit early solo home runs off David Price, and the New York Yankees evened the American League Division Series with a 6-2 victory over the host Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on Saturday night.
The series shifts to New York for Game 3 on Monday, followed by Game 4 on Tuesday.
Judge gave the Yankees a 1-0 lead 10 pitches into the game when he drove Price’s 2-1 cutter into the Green Monster seats above left field. Judge’s 445-foot drive was his third straight homer in the postseason and seventh of his career.
Sanchez made it 2-0 by homering into the same seats as Judge with a 399-foot drive that landed closer to the left field foul pole. It was Sanchez’s sixth career homer off Price, and the catcher added a three-run homer in the seventh.
“You know he’s capable of that. We all know he’s capable of that,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said of Sanchez. “That’s kind of what we’ve been waiting for to some degree, where he can take over a game on offense. He was huge, obviously, tonight.”
Price fell to 0-9 as a postseason starter and was lifted after allowing Andrew McCutchen’s RBI single off the Green Monster with two outs in the second.
“It’s tough. You know, just after we won Game 1 to go out there and have that opportunity to go up 2-0,” Price said. “And to throw the baseball the way that I did, it was definitely tough.”
Price (0-1) allowed three runs on three hits in 1 2/3 innings. He dropped to 2-9 overall in the playoffs after throwing 42 pitches.
Price also fell to 2-7 in any start against the Yankees with the Red Sox and produced his fourth career start (postseason or regular season) of two innings or less. Despite the struggles, Red Sox manager Alex Cora said postgame he won’t move Price to the bullpen.
“He’s one of our starters,” Cora said. “Just a bad outing today. It just so happened it wasn’t his day. He didn’t make pitches. We trust him. He’s bounced back before. We’ll talk to him to make a few adjustments. And we’ll go from there.”
Despite various opportunities against Boston’s bullpen, the Yankees did not add on until putting two on with one out in the seventh off Eduardo Rodriguez.
Judge opened the inning with a single to first baseman Mitch Moreland when Rodriguez did not cover first base. Luke Voit followed with a walk but was out at second on Giancarlo Stanton’s grounder to third.
Stanton hit a grounder to third baseman Eduardo Nuñez, who made a high throw to second baseman Ian Kinsler. Voit was originally called safe, but the call was overturned as Kinsler stayed on the bag.
Four pitches later, Sanchez hit a 2-1 fastball 479 feet onto Lansdowne Street beyond the Green Monster to make it 6-1.
“If we have the opportunity to score runs like that, you know, even if it’s 300 feet, I’ll take it,” Sanchez said through an interpreter. “Anytime we score and we’re helping the team, I’m going to take those.”
New York’s Masahiro Tanaka (1-0) allowed a solo homer to Xander Bogaerts in the fourth among three hits in five innings. He struck out four and walked one in a 78-pitch outing.
After allowing the homer, Tanaka issued a four-pitch walk to Nuñez but struck out Kinsler to end the fourth. He then finished the outing by getting Mookie Betts on a lineout.
Dellin Betances pitched a scoreless sixth by getting three groundouts but allowed an RBI double off the Green Monster to Kinsler with one out in the seventh. Betances finished the inning and kept the score at 6-2.
Zach Britton pitched a scoreless eighth, and Aroldis Chapman tossed a scoreless ninth. — Reuters

New World Golf Cup 3 successfully held at Manila Southwoods G&CC

THE THIRD ANNUAL “Golf for a Cause” of New World Makati Hotel and AG New World Manila Bay was successfully held on Sept. 28 at the Manila Southwoods Golf & Country Club in Cavite, raising P400,000 to support 96 scholars of their partner-beneficiary, the Springboard Foundation.
In line with the group’s Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) thrust of giving back to the community it serves, the day-long event gathered players who were willing to share their time and resources to help Springboard Foundation scholars in continuing their secondary education this academic year.
Declared champion of this year’s tournament, which had a four-man scramble format, was the team of Steve Borril, Michael Denison, Tony Kennerly, and Phil Connolly.
Coming in close at second place was the team of Antonio Payumo, Javier Berenguer-Testa, and Raymond Lacdao. Third place was the team of Kim Yong Min, Yoon Hui Cheol, Park Sang Yun, and Ahn Jun Seong.
Winners were given trophies, gift certificates, and other prizes from New World Hotels and Resorts and its sponsors.
The event was held in partnership with Fortunegate Holdings Philippines Inc., Jeeves of Belgravia Manila, media partner Solar Sports, and airline partner Philippine Airlines. — MASM

Gonzalez, Houston Astros rally past Cleveland Indians for 2-0 lead

HOUSTON — Marwin Gonzalez produced a four-hit effort, Alex Bregman homered for a second consecutive game and Gerrit Cole pitched a masterful start as the Houston Astros beat the visiting Cleveland Indians 3-1 on Saturday in Game 2 of this American League Division Series.
Roberto Osuna posted a four-out save for the Astros, who will take a 2-0 series lead to Cleveland for Game 3 on Monday.
Gonzalez finished 4-for-4, with his two-run, opposite-field double off Indians left-hander Andrew Miller lifting the Astros to a 2-1 lead with one out in the sixth inning. The switch-hitting Gonzalez had recorded a pair of singles off Indians right-hander Carlos Carrasco (0-1) and delivered again when Miller entered and forced Gonzalez to bat from the right side of the plate.
Jose Altuve, who reached on an infield single, and Bregman scored on the play to erase a one-run deficit. Bregman (1-for-3 with a walk) homered an inning later off Indians right-hander Trevor Bauer, drilling a 1-1 slider 396 feet to left-center field for a critical insurance run.
Cole (1-0) was exceptional. He allowed three hits and recorded 12 strikeouts over seven dominant innings. His lone blemish came with two outs and a two-strike count against Indians shortstop Francisco Lindor in the third, with Lindor blasting a slider into the right field seats.
Cole recovered by striking out the side in the fourth and fanning two batters apiece in the fifth and sixth.
After the lengthy Houston rally in the bottom of the sixth, Cole returned to retire the side in order in the seventh inning, becoming just the second pitcher in postseason history to record at least 12 strikeouts without issuing a walk. New York Mets right-hander Tom Seaver did so against Cincinnati on Oct. 6, 1973, in Game 1 of the National League Championship Series.
Carrasco proved effective at inducing ground balls and keeping his teammates busy in support. He finished the season fourth in the American League in strikeouts with a career-high 231 yet produced only three while pitching 5 1/3 innings. — Reuters

Home sweet home for Cebu Sharks

CEBU — Considered as the hotbed of basketball, Cebu City hosted the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL) games for the first time this season and there’s no better way to be rewarded than seeing its local team, the Cebu Sharks-Casino Ethyl Alcohol winning Saturday night’s game against the favored Makati Skyscrapers.
Looking back, Cebu has been a city with rich basketball tradition.
University of San Jose Recolletos-Basak Coliseum, to which the double header of Saturday night’s matches were slated, had become a rich product of talents from the time of Abet Guidaben down to the period when Jojo Lastimosa, Dondon Ampalayo, and Zaldy Realubit formed a deadly triumvirate in making USJR the most powerhouse squad in the nation.
Cebu made its mark as well in regional basketball stage when teams like Mama’s Love and Lhuillier Jewelers, the Cebu Gems and the Cebu Niños were able to bring glory to the city.
Even the top two big men in the country today — reigning four-time PBA MVP June Mar Fajardo and Greg Slaughter, traced their roots in Cebu basketball and they were long-time college rivals, a rivalry that spilled over all the way to the pro league.
So when the MPBL Datu Cup brought the games to the Queen City of the South, the most radical basketball fans came out to support the Sharks, knowing that their team needed their backing the most.
Prior to the game, the Sharks had won just once in nine games and were staring at a four-game losing skid.
It’s not surprising that Patrick Cabahug and the rest of the mainstays played with much urgency so as not to disappoint the fans that came out in full force.
Cabahug led the way, finishing with 22 points, seven rebounds and hitting four three-point shots.
William McAlloney came away with a double-double effort, tallying 13 points and 10 boards while the rest of the gang helped any which way they can.
For Cabahug, pride is the only thing they’ve been thinking. There was a time when the team was held scoreless in one of the games the entire quarter and the squad bounced back strong the next game, beating inaugural staging champion Batangas City.
In front of the Cebuanos, Cabahug & company did not let them down.
The 2-8 standing of the Sharks is not an indication of how much resolve the team has. But make no mistake about it, this Cebu team is not about to roll over and die in the tournament. They’re determined to keep their playoffs hopes alive.
The victory at home could be the start of something new for the Sharks.
 
Rey Joble has been reporting PBA games for more than a decade. He is a member of the PBA Press Corps and Philippine Sportswriters Association.
reyjoble09@gmail.com

ALDS

If the mood in the visitors’ locker room of Fenway Park was somber following Game One of the American League Division Series (ALDS), it wasn’t just because the Yankees lost. It was because they did so after wasting a couple of grand opportunities. It was bad enough that they fell into an early 0-5 hole against Red Sox Ace Chris Sale, who, having pitched a mere 17 innings since August, hitherto appeared ripe for the picking. Worse still was their inability to keep pressure on an otherwise-shaky bullpen.
Indeed, the Yankees managed to get the bases loaded on the sixth inning after finally knocking Sale and limiting replacement Ryan Brasier’s stint on the mound to a run-producing forced out and a walk. Unfortunately, Brandon Workman steadied himself after another walk to induce Gleyber Torres to a swing and a miss for strike three, ending the threat. And when they tried to rally anew in the seventh, all they could produce with their bases-loaded, no-out chance was a single run.
Reflecting on the outcome, Yankees cleanup batter Giancarlo Stanton lamented his failure to get the job done in crucial situations. Perhaps the four-time All-Star could be forgiven; after all, it was his first-ever postseason appearance in his eight-year major league career. Meanwhile, sophomore Aaron Judge saw fit to look at the bright side; the effort, he said, would manifest itself in coming games, what with Red Sox manager Alex Cora burning through pitchers — including potential Game Three starter Rick Porcello — just to claim the win.
As things turned out, Stanton and Judge were both right. Living up to expectations, the Yankees made quick work of noted playoff underachiever David Price, scoring three runs by the second inning and forcing the Red Sox to use six pitchers all told en route to a convincing triumph. Given how Game One unfolded, they could very well have been up 2-0 in a best-of-five affair heading into homer-friendly confines.
In any case, the prognosis is bright. The Yankees have the momentum and, slated to host Games Three and Four, could conceivably end the series in their own park, where they are seven of seven in the playoffs the last two years. In other words, they’re where they want to be after winning 100 regular-season games: in control of their destiny against their arch rivals.
 
Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994.