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Australian Open set to introduce final-set tiebreak

THE AUSTRALIAN Open has joined Wimbledon in introducing a final-set tiebreak from next year’s competition, following the “most extensive” consultation in the event’s history, tournament director Craig Tiley said on Friday.
According to the new rules, which will come into force at the Jan. 14-27 event, matches tied at 6-6 in the final set will move into a tiebreak and the first player to reach 10 points with a difference of two will win the contest.
“We asked the players — both past and present, commentators, agents and TV analysts whether they wanted to play an advantage final set or not and went from there,” Tiley said.
Wimbledon said in October that next year’s Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis Club would feature a tiebreak when the score reaches 12-12 in the final set of all matches.
The move came after this year’s semifinal between American John Isner and South Africa’s Kevin Anderson turned into an epic marathon in which the final set alone, won 26-24 by Anderson, lasted almost three hours.
“We went with a 10-point tiebreak at six-all in the final set to ensure fans still get a special finale to these contests, with the longer tiebreak allowing for that one final twist or change of momentum in the contest,” Tiley said.
“This longer tiebreak also can lessen some of the serving dominance that can prevail in the shorter tiebreak. We believe this is the best possible outcome for both the players and the fans around the world.”
The Australian Open’s move means that each of the four Grand Slams has a different way of deciding the final set.
The US Open employs traditional tiebreaks even in the final set, with the first player to reach seven points with a difference of two declared the winner.
The French Open does not have a final set tiebreak, with matches continuing until a player secures a two-game lead in the decider. — Reuters

Singapore’s Lee in do-over fight with Filipino Kelly

FORMER ONE Featherweight World Title challenger Christian “The Warrior” Lee of Singapore is set to face the Philippines’ Edward “The Ferocious” Kelly in a highly anticipated rematch at “ONE: Eternal Glory,” set for the Istora Senayan in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Jan. 19. The two warriors have met each other before, with Lee dropping a disqualification loss to Kelly after an illegal suplex.
The two featherweights are tops in their division, whose champion is Australia’s Martin “The Situ-Asian” Nguyen. A victory for Lee or Kelly would certainly bring either closer to a shot at the ONE Featherweight World Title.
The first time they met at ONE: Beyond The Horizon last September, it started off as a heated battle. Kelly had his moments early, tagging Lee with a couple of hard shots, while the young Singaporean dominated the grappling exchanges. An ill-fated suplex ultimately led to the disqualification ruling, with Kelly landing on his head and the referee calling a halt to the contest shortly after.
Matters are expected to be resolved in the do-over bout, and this time, fans expect a more decisive finish.
The 20-year-old Lee is one of ONE Championship’s top prospects. Even at such a young age, “The Warrior” has shown incredible poise and polish. Guided by his father Ken Lee at United MMA in Hawaii, and by the world champions at Evolve MMA in Singapore, Lee is a martial arts prodigy.
He is the younger brother of reigning ONE Women’s Atomweight World Champion “Unstoppable” Angela Lee and often trains with her. In May 2018, Lee was on the wrong end of a split decision when he challenged Nguyen in his first shot at the ONE World Title. This championship experience however has made him a better fighter.
Kelly, on the other hand, is a prominent member of the famed Team Lakay, one of the top martial arts outfits in the world. The stable includes World Champions such as Eduard Folayang, Joshua Pacio, Geje Eustaquio, and Kevin Belingon, who Kelly trains with regularly.
ONE: Eternal Glory features a headline bout between ONE Strawweight World Champion Pacio and Japanese challenger Yosuke Saruta.

Standout moments (1)

The Year 2018 is about to end and in hindsight, as a sportswriter, there were a lot of standout moments in Philippine sports to remember.
Basketball surely had its share of memorable moments, both of the famous and the infamous kind.
The Philippine Basketball Association began the year by settling things following a rocky leadership crisis with the naming of erstwhile officer-in-charge and media bureau chief Willie Marcial as commissioner in place of embattled Chito Narvasa, who was asked by a majority of the board members to resign late in 2017 over “loss of confidence.”
PBA games were for the most part competitive with each of the three conferences won by teams under the San Miguel umbrella.
The San Miguel Beermen took the Philippine Cup over the Magnolia Hotshots Pambansang Manok, 4-1, in the finals. It was the Beermen’s fourth straight All-Filipino title.
The Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings, meanwhile, latched on to the midseason PBA tournament Commissioner’s Cup by edging San Miguel, 4-2, in the best-of-seven final series.
Magnolia eventually completed the SMC shutout in Season 43 of the PBA by winning the season-ending tournament Governors’ Cup, 4-2, over the Alaska Aces.
The young basketball Maharlika Premier Basketball League, meanwhile, continued to will its way into the national consciousness at the conclusion of its maiden season and into its second year while Alab Pilipinas got back to the top of the ASEAN Basketball League by winning the crown at the expense of Thai team Mono Vampire in May.
Gilas Pilipinas, right smack in the middle of its FIBA World Cup Asian Qualifiers campaign, started the year strong in its bid but hit some roadblocks after, including the now-infamous brawl with Australia in July that resulted in numerous suspensions on players and coaches as well as a major revamp of the team that saw Yeng Guiao named as new Gilas coach.
The nationals ended the year on a sour note as they fell in their matches in the fifth window of the qualifiers here at home that had them dropping in the standings in their grouping and needing to make things happen in the sixth big time and final window in February.
The year also saw Gilas player and PBA star Kiefer Ravena banned for a year and half for failing a FIBA substance test in May.
Collegiate ball had it solid, too, highlighted by the resurgence of the University of the Philippine Fighting Maroons in the University Athletic Association of the Philippines.
Riding the “Atin ‘To” battle cry, the Maroons made their move all the way to the finals of UAAP Season 81 after a 32-year finals appearance drought.
It made the UAAP finals a blockbuster in more ways than one.
They, however, would fall short, swept in the finals by the currently gold standard Ateneo Blue Eagles.
Also stamping their class in collegiate basketball was the San Beda Red Lions, who won their third straight title in the National Collegiate Athletic Association by dominating the Lyceum Pirates in the finals of Season 94.
In football, the Philippine Azkals made history by booking a place in the 2019 AFC Asian Cup with a gutsy victory over Tajikistan in March.
They made a coaching change in the middle of this year, selecting British Terry Butcher to replace American Thomas Dooley. Butcher though would reconsider his decision to take over the Azkals job less than two months after being named as coach.
In came World Cup coach Sven-Goran Eriksson who helped the team get back into the semifinals of the AFF Suzuki Cup and now channelling his focus on the Asian Cup where the Philippines is grouped with South Korea, China, and Kazakhstan.
In the local pro league, Ceres-Negros FC continued with its dominance by claiming another Philippines Football League title while Kaya FC-Iloilo was crowned the maiden winner of the Copa Paulino Alcantara.
The PFL though was hit by a number of pullouts in 2018, with the teams citing difficulty in maintaining a team in the league, among other things.
Ilocos United FC and Loyola Meralco Manila Sparks were no longer part of the league when the 2018 PFL season began while Davao Aguilas FC decided to leave the league after the season ended.
Reports have it though that the PFL has been rebranded as the Philippine Premier League, which will be under a new leadership but nonetheless is hoping to continue its thrust of helping in the development of football in the country.
The development is said to be garnering interest from possible new league entrants, something stakeholders, especially the fans who are hoping the sport gets its due chance in the sporting ecosystem of the country, are banking on.
Also noteworthy was the performance of the Philippine Malditas who are now through to the second round of the Tokyo Olympic qualifiers.
(To be continued)
 
Michael Angelo S. Murillo has been a columnist since 2003. He is a BusinessWorld reporter covering the Sports beat.
msmurillo@bworldonline.com

Spurs’ reality

For a while there, it looked as if the Spurs would prove preseason prognoses right. Rocked by a heavy roster turnover that included the departure of key figures to their protracted streak of success, they were pegged by not a few quarters to miss the playoffs for the first time since 1997. Following an auspicious 6-2 start that saw them bent on bucking conventional wisdom, they went an abhorring 5-12 through the next month; from the outside looking in, their failure to register back-to-back wins over the period underscored a talent deficiency that exposed their relative lack of competitiveness.
And then something happened. The Spurs became, well, the Spurs. Reflecting a preferential option for excellence that permeated every aspect of their operations on the court and off, they promptly went on a tear that catapulted them from doormats to division leaders. They claimed seven of their next eight outings, the lone blemish a fluke setback to the otherwise-overmatched Bulls. So good were they during the two-week stretch that their average margin of victory stood at a whopping 25.8 points, the highest and lowest at 38 and 13, respectively.
Over the weekend, though, the Spurs could not add to their run of excellence. They trekked to the Toyota Center determined to take the measure of the highly touted Rockets, who likewise seem to have recovered from initial stumbles. And, as is typical under head coach Gregg Popovich, they hung their hats on defense. As badly as they shot from the field, they managed to compel their opponents to shoot much worse. Reigning Most Valuable Player and scoring leader James Harden was particularly errant, as good an indication as any of their excellent coverage.
That said, the Spurs found themselves ultimately succumbing to the Rockets, their determined efforts to force misses undone by a glaring inability to thereafter secure possession. For all their solid play, they were overcome by second-chance attempt after second-chance attempt, not to mention an unrelenting barrage of threes. The stats said it all; they gave up 19 offensive rebounds and 19 made shots off 54 attempts from beyond the arc, nine more than they themselves canned from 30 less tries. Broken down to basics, the difference was what accounted for their seven-point defeat.
Given how the match unfolded, it’s fair to note that the Spurs aren’t close to contenting for the hardware. Given the midrange predilections of their leading lights, they appear hard-pressed to stand toe to toe against the acknowledged best of the best. Invariably, they’re very, very good at what they do, but the output isn’t enough — not in this day and age of advanced metrics calling for treys or layups and close to nothing in between. It’s a change in mindset that Popovich has termed “boring … There’s no basketball anymore. There’s no beauty in it.”
Still, the Spurs will leave nothing in the tank every time out. It’s why they can’t be written off, and why their ups speak more of them than their downs. Regardless of circumstance, their sets on both ends of the court will be like balletic dances designed to elicit intended outcomes. Meanwhile, the Rockets represent the polar opposite, with isolation-heavy forays dictated by moneyball objectives. That the latter won speaks volumes of where pro hoops is. Popovich understands, and is adjusting as best he can with what he has. “It is what it is and you need to work with it,” he said. True, and sadly so.
 
Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is the Senior Vice-President and General Manager of Basic Energy Corp.

Divining the 2019 local automotive scene:Cloudy, with a chance of hybrids

By Kap Maceda Aguila
2018 is about to be done and dusted and, truth to tell, many in the local motoring industry are heaving a sigh of relief.
It wasn’t a pretty picture, you see. The sector’s figures were down across the board for the first time after posting multiple, successive years of record growth. The joint report released by member brands of the Chamber of Automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines, Inc. (CAMPI) and the Truck Manufacturers Association (TMA) showed total vehicles sales in November fell by 23.4% year-on-year (from 40,799 to 31,258). From January to November, the dip was 14.4% — from 380,179 down to 325,465 units.
Sales in November declined 5.7% compared to October, or to 31,258 units from 33,150 units in the earlier month. Despite the decline, the industry is still positive with the result.
CAMPI president Rommel R. Gutierrez said: “We remain confident that the industry will continue to recover as the year ends.”
By category, passenger car sales went down by 2.6% with 9,197 units in November from 9,444 units in October. The commercial vehicle segment also declined by 6.9%, with 22,061 units sold in November compared to 23,706 units in the previous month. Sales of Asian utility vehicles (Category I) shrank 7.8%, with 3,142 units from 3,409 units in October.
The light commercial vehicle (Category II) was also down by 6.9% with 17,594 units delivered in November from the previous month’s 18,896-unit result. Sales of light trucks (Category III) increased 4.4% with 753 units, ip from 721 units. Deliveries of trucks and buses (Category IV) recorded the highest decline among all the segments, dropping 22.2% with 425 units from 546 units.
Aggregate sales for the first 11 months of the year retracted by 14.4% with 325,465 units compared with 380,179 units in the same period a year ago.
In terms of market share, Toyota Motor Philippines (TMP) remains the market leader with a 42.5% market share, followed by Mitsubishi Motors Philippines Corporation with 19%. Nissan Philippines, Inc. came in at third with 9.7% market share, followed by Ford Motor Company Philippines, Inc. and Honda Cars Philippines, Inc. with 6.6% and 6.5%, respectively going by year-to-date sales figures, the Asian utility vehicle segment has taken the biggest hit, falling by 39.1% from 73,414 to 44,732 units. Passenger cars didn’t fare much better with a 20.4% decline from 125,242 to 99,719 units.
In late November, Hyundai Asia Resources, Inc. president and CEO (and Association of Vehicle Importers and Distributors, Inc. head) Ma. Fe Perez-Agudo expressed in a statement accompanying a report of the company’s sales numbers that “the performance of the automotive industry is beginning to normalize.” On the heels of Hyundai’s 9.6% sales increase in October (compared to the same month last year), Ms. Perez-Agudo declared, “Our growth outlook remains to be upbeat for the remainder of the year.”
The release proposed that the “sales performance of the brand [remained] consistent with the overall demand for automotive vehicles in the country [and that the] monthly trend would show that unit sales would eventually pick up in the last two months of the year.”
MOVING FORWARD
What does 2019 bring for the automotive scene? That is probably the biggest question that auto executives need to divine the answer to. As this waning year was an unmitigated, if expected, letdown people are scrambling to provide clarity on the immediate future of our mobility here.
Mr. Gutierrez said at the recent launch of the all-new Toyota Camry that the industry is projecting a recovery of sorts next year by a modest rate of 10%. According to TMP senior vice-president for marketing Jose Maria Atienza, the company is expecting the eighth-generation Camry to move 40 to 60 units a month. TMP last year sold 286 units of the mid-size sedan.
Perhaps no one is betting more heavily on an automotive sector comeback in 2019 than AC Industrial Technology Holdings, Inc., or AC Industrials. On Jan. 30, the Ayala Corporation-steered firm will officially take over Kia through a brand relaunch, as well as the introduction of three new models. New Kia Philippines president Emmanuel A. Aligada recently said in news conference the brand aims to sell 10,000 units in 2019.
Appointed last December 5 as the exclusive local distributor of the South Korea-headquartered international auto giant, Mr. Aligada said: “Our objective is to stabilize the business… build the Kia brand, emphasizing on the Ayala partnership.”
Even casual observers readily attribute the sales downtrend this year to the effects of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) Law, which effectively drove up vehicle prices (with a few exceptions) through higher excise taxation. And because the market was able to anticipate the implementation of the tariff scheme, many bought new vehicles — further driving up 2017 sales figures, and providing a starker contrast to the diminished total of this year. Obviously, a lot of people stayed away from the showrooms.
Victories in this strange new time can still be had though, as the pickup segment has picked up owing to tax exemption for the genre, as well as for purely electric vehicles. The shock has also started to wear off, and buyers are starting to troop into the brick-and-mortar and digital showrooms.
But if automobile players are up for it, 2019 can be the year of the hybrids — which also benefit from lower excise tax (half of that levied on regular automobiles). This can be Toyota’s opportunity to properly push its longstanding Prius product. TMP executives have been ruing the general public’s lack of awareness regarding the technology and idea behind hybrid vehicles, which boast an internal combustion engine and electric motor. “Media can help us propagate the idea,” said Mr. Gutierrez.
As mentioned, purely electricity-powered automobiles have the benefit of full tax exemption, and now’s the best time to push this format. This not only puts the onus on car companies but, perhaps more significantly, on government to help provide an environment where prerequisite charging stations can be more widespread.
Will 2019 be the year of ICE alternatives? Maybe future-proofing our transportation tale can start next year since we’ve found ourselves pushed to the wall by our tariff scheme anyway.

Ferrari to mark Schumacher’s 50th birthday with exhibition

FERRARI said its museum in Maranello is dedicating a special exhibit to Michael Schumacher, which is set to open on Jan. 3, 2019, on the occasion of the race driver’s 50th birthday. The car maker noted the exhibit is “intended both as a celebration and a mark of gratitude to the most successful Prancing Horse driver ever.”
It added Mr. Schumacher has a special place in Ferrari’s history because of his numerous records. Between 1996 and 2006 the German won five consecutive drivers’ titles, and is also credited for his “major contribution” to the Scuderia’s haul of six manufacturers’ titles over those years.

Michael Schumacher 2
The Champion in 2002.

Ferrari said its museum will look back over the seasons which the seven-time world champion (he won two titles driving for Benetton) gifted to Ferrari fans. The exhibition will also show Mr. Schumacher’s crucial contribution to the development of extraordinary GT cars in his years at Maranello as a driver and, later, as a consultant.
Called the “Michael 50” exhibition, it will benefit the Keep Fighting Foundation, a non-profit initiative for Mr. Schumacher, who was seriously injured in a skiing accident in France in December 2013.

Traction and attraction:Mitsubishi demonstrates Strada pickup’s updated styling is matched by genuine off-road skills

RACE DRIVER Hiroshi Masuoka, who counts 21 Dakar Rally starts to his name (plus a back-to-back title in 2002 and 2003), in his present capacity as a “senior expert” in Mitsubishi Motors Corporation’s (MMC) public relations department was again wheeled out by the car maker so he could demonstrate the enhanced off-road capabilities of the revised Mitsubishi Strada pickup. Besides receiving refreshed bodywork, the Strada — also known as the L200 or Triton — now has an improved four-wheel drive system.
The latest version of the truck made its global premiere on Nov. 9 in Bangkok, Thailand (the Strada is built at Mitsubishi’s Laem Chabang plant in Thailand).
It went on sale in Thailand on Nov. 17, marking the start of its roll out in 150 markets. The new Strada is set to be released in the Philippines in January 2019.
MASUOKA’S OFF-ROAD METTLE
Making up a part of the Strada’s global reveal program was a series of test-drives. One was held on a simulated off-road track on the grounds of the Impact Arena, just outside Bangkok; the next involved a 200-kilometer drive from Impact Arena to Spirit 4×4, an off-road driving park south of the capital; still another called for tackling a tight, twisty trail in the woods near the Spirit 4×4. Though Mr. Masuoka’s role in the activities was confined to a driving exercise around the Impact Arena course, it pitched the Strada’s off-road skills — and Mitsubishi’s expertise on such matters — succinctly.

Mitsubishi Strada 2
Rear of updated Mitsubishi Strada blockier than previous model’s.

As can be expected, Mr. Masuoka was assigned to take journalists aboard the four-wheel drive Strada on full-throttle, high-speed runs across a dirt track. The course used for these runs mixed in a few tight turns and fast, sweeping bends with dips, plus one big crest, over which the Strada easily caught air. Yes, it was no Dakar Rally stage, but the mastery of Mr. Masuoka showed the Strada could be driven quite hard without it rolling over, and jumped without any of its chassis components breaking. That it could switch directions quickly enough — not easy considering its long wheel base — proved impressive as well.
The trip to Spirit 4×4, reached via expressways and national highways that occasionally passed through town centers, only confirmed what had long been one of the Strada’s (and its Montero Sport platform-mate’s) strengths — its comfortable and refined ride over pavement. Even with an empty bed, the Strada did not bounce over uneven road surfaces, and could be jarring only when the truck went over large crests and dips. But minor ruts and highway expansion joints were easily soaked by the suspension. Also, the truck’s structure, as well as insulation materials, filtered much of the noise, vibration and harshness created by the vehicle and its contact with the air and the road that conversation in the cabin was never strained even at speeds over 100kph.
At Spirit 4×4, nearly a dozen technical off-road driving exercises were arrayed, each one of which designed to highlight an aspect of the Strada’s chassis and four-wheel drive system. These included mud-fording (to test wading-depth capability), boulder- and mound-crawling (traction, suspension articulation), and hill-climbing (power) and hill-descending (advanced electronic and mechanical traction systems). The drive through the wooded trail, about a couple of kilometers’ long, was meant to add a real-world dimension to the off-road driving tests. Driven correctly, the Strada managed to traverse both courses without any glitch.
WHAT’S NEW?
MMC has embarked on creating a uniform visual identity for all its models — especially the vehicles’ fascia. So the Strada’s front end is now defined by the corporate “Dynamic Shield” styling marked by a high hood, equally high placements for the squinty headlamps and narrow grille, a large aperture on the bumper for the fog lights, a second, bigger air inlet, and plenty of complex, angular lines. Oddly, the redesigned elements in front are contrasted in the rear by simpler tail lights and a bumper and tailgate that received noticeably less contouring when compared to those on the previous truck.
Mitsubishi Strada 3
Rally driver Hiroshi Masuoka demonstrating the truck’s climbing prowess.

In any case, the new nose job thankfully matches the unchanged elements on the truck’s flanks. The edgier, more fiddly lines in front complement the sculpted wheel arches, sharply angled greenhouse and pronounced creases on the expanses of bodywork on the side. There would be no confusing the updated Strada with the model it is replacing.
Beneath the sheet metal, new to the Strada are larger discs and pistons for the brakes in front (marginally improving both stopping power and pedal “feel”), rear dampers containing more fluid (better control of up and down motions), and a six-speed automatic transmission (adding another cog means engine output can be spread across the rev range so that acceleration gets quicker while cruising speeds turn more frugal on fuel).
Also upgraded is the Strada’s four-wheel drive system, which now comes with Mitsubishi’s new Off-road Mode. The feature offers four selectable modes: Gravel, Mud/Snow, Sand and Rock. When any is engaged, the system governs engine power output, transmission speed (or resistance) and braking to eliminate wheel slip, guaranteeing traction over bad surfaces, as well as lending the truck the ability to slog through mud (or snow). The enhanced hill-descent control of the four-wheel drive system also makes sure that — operated properly — the Strada won’t come tumbling down hills.
Surely, it’s a handy feature whether one is a Dakar Rally driver or not. — Brian M. Afuang

The top automotive business stories in 2018

The most accurate, most honest and most succinct assessment of the Philippine automotive industry’s performance in 2018 came from the unlikeliest of sources and at the most unexpected of occasions: BMW Philippines president Adrian Spencer Y. Yu at his company’s year-ending Christmas party for the motoring media.
“I think you will all agree that 2018 is a year to forget,” Yu said during his speech. It seemed to dampen the celebratory mood somewhat, but it was spot on. With overall industry sales down by several tens of thousand vehicles from last year, no amount of alcohol consumption and raffle prizes could mask that fact. Best to acknowledge it and strive for better things in 2019.
With that, allow me to share with you my short compilation of the most memorable car business stories this past year.
1. Philippine car sales plummeted. The local auto industry’s sales performance was so bad that by September, the year-to-date tally had already been 40,000 units fewer than the total from the same period in 2017. I suspect this was why I stopped receiving the combined sales reports from the Chamber of Automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines (CAMPI) and the Association of Vehicle Importers and Distributors (AVID) in the last quarter. Perhaps the car companies simply got tired of looking at the numbers. Maybe those digits gave them anxiety attacks. With the notable exception of Nissan and Suzuki, most car distributors in the country saw a substantial dip in vehicle sales versus last year. Sure, one might argue that the 2017 figures were artificial — that many of the purchased cars last year were merely the result of people buying in advance to avoid the perceived pricing increase brought about by the new TRAIN law — but it’s not that simple.
As Toyota Motor Philippines president Satoru Suzuki told me last week at his firm’s media thanksgiving lunch, the number one car company is likely to close the year with 154,000 sold vehicles. That’s a massive drop from last year’s 183,908 units (with Lexus sales), yes, but it’s also down from Toyota’s 2016 total (158,728, also with Lexus). Clearly, this wasn’t just the handiwork of the TRAIN-induced advance purchases. Other factors — like inflation, fuel prices, traffic congestion, the rise of transport network companies, scarcity of parking — also played a role in the local industry’s sales decline.
All in all, our car industry should just be thankful if it wraps up 2018 with more than 400,000 sold cars (versus 470,000 last year). That is still quite an accomplishment, especially considering the circumstances. Hopefully, our importers and sellers will bounce back in the coming year.
2. Pickup trucks are now exempt from excise tax. Thanks to the above-mentioned Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion Act, mechanical workhorses that were previously associated with commercial use are now being positioned as lifestyle vehicles. Yes, the TRAIN law was officially ratified in December 2017, but it was in 2018 when Filipinos enjoyed its rare pro-consumer benefits — specifically the zero excise tax on pickups. Car companies started adjusting the prices (lowering them, obviously) of their pickup offerings at the beginning of the year. And then they updated their trucks one by one to make them more appealing to customers (Toyota’s Hilux Conquest, Isuzu’s D-Max X-Series and D-Max RZ4E Blue Power, Chevrolet’s Colorado High Country Storm, and Ford’s updated Ranger lineup).
Of course, one of the hottest product news in our market this year was the arrival of the Ford Ranger Raptor, whose surrounding hype was drowned out only by that of the Suzuki Jimny. It’s a badass truck on its own, but much of the electricity that accompanied its launch was courtesy of its attractive P1,898,000 price tag — no doubt made possible by the excise tax exemption. Next up: the face-lifted Mitsubishi Strada in January (or February, if things get delayed).
3. The phaseout of diesel engines has started. Overseas (in Europe, particularly), the motoring industry’s drastic shift away from oil-burners prominently figured in the news in 2018. In February, a court stamped its approval on the proposal to ban diesel in key cities in Germany. In March, Japanese automaker Toyota announced it was soon ceasing the distribution of diesel products in Europe. In May, Swedish car manufacturer Volvo declared that it would “no longer develop a new generation of diesel engines,” and that the third-generation S60 sedan would be the first-ever model in the brand’s history to not have a single diesel variant.
And then, in June, the German government fined Volkswagen a billion euros over the Dieselgate fiasco, and also ordered Daimler to recall a total of 774,000 diesel vehicles that were fitted with emissions-cheating shutoff devices.
What an ignominious year for diesel. With the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change revealing in October that global warming could reach catastrophic levels by as early as 2030 if we don’t curb our pollutive ways, you can expect more auto companies to move away from diesel and just focus their resources on electrification. Unfortunately, the Philippine government seemingly remains clueless about the harmful effects of diesel on both humans and the environment.
4. Nissan, Renault and Mitsubishi chairman Carlos Ghosn was arrested in Japan. The legendary French-Lebanese industry executive, who had famously saved Nissan from bankruptcy after joining the Asian company in 1999, was detained by Tokyo prosecutors for alleged financial violations committed in Japan. Specifically, Ghosn is said to have understated his income on his financial statements. Also accused of misappropriating company assets, the fallen boss was subsequently relieved of his duties at both Nissan and Mitsubishi. Depending on the industry whispers you choose to listen to, it looks like there is so much more to this story than what we read in the press. Nevertheless, an undeniable truth is apparent here: No one stays in power forever.
5. Several auto brands were taken over by new Philippine distributors. Of course, the biggest of these developments was Kia being transferred from Columbian Autocar Corporation to Ayala Corporation. After many months of rumors and speculations, the Korean car brand is now officially under Ayala’s AC Automotive umbrella, right next to Volkswagen. Another brand that changed distributor hands this year was the British-Chinese MG, which went from mom-and-pop to corporate almost overnight when it was acquired by Chevrolet handler The Covenant Car Company Inc. from a little-known independent importer.
And then there’s Ferrari, whose Philippine representative was given a new lease on life when Phoenix Petroleum chairman and president Dennis A. Uy invested in the venture — a “partnership” that was formally announced at the market launch of the Portofino in October. Interestingly, the new general manager that is expected to lead Ferrari in the Philippines moving forward is Ginia R. Domingo, the former president of Kia Philippines (which now has an Ayala-appointed boss in Emmanuel A. Aligada).
It’s a ruthless business, this automotive trade. It’s an industry that is greatly affected by countless market forces over which no executive — no matter how brilliant and experienced — has control. You strategize, you execute, you either succeed or fail, and then you move on. Just like in life, I guess.

PACC wants additional powers and jurisdiction

By Arjay L. Balinbin, Reporter
THE PRESIDENTIAL Anti-Corruption Commission (PACC) is preparing to ask President Rodrigo R. Duterte to grant the agency prosecutorial powers and expand its jurisdiction.
PACC Chairman Dante L. Jimenez, in a phone interview with BusinessWorld last Dec. 21, said the “number one goal” of the commission next year is to “request the President to strengthen [its] mandate.”
“We just came from Beijing and Hong Kong to visit our counterparts… we learned that ang kanilang mga (their) anti-corruption agencies can investigate and can even prosecute,” he said.
In comparison, Mr. Jimenez said the PACC remains very “anemic” after eight months of works since March.”
“So we will request the President to strengthen further the PACC,” he said, adding that this could be one step closer to institutionalizing the agency through legislation.
Asked if the commission wants prosecutorial powers as well, he said: “Yes, katulad sa (like the) Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) of Hong Kong, they can investigate, they can prosecute and at the same time [it has a program on] prevention and education.”
Whether these powers, once granted, will not overlap with the duties of the Ombudsman, Mr. Jimenez said: “Wala namang problema ‘yun. Pwede naming magtulungan. Sa dami ng problema sa corruption, at sa bagal ng Ombudsman, eh ‘di kaya nila (That won’t be a problem. We can help each other. With all the problems on corruption, and the slowness of the Ombudsman, they really can’t handle it all).”
The expansion of jurisdiction they will recommend includes handling cases of government workers below the salary grade 26 level.
Alongside the expansion of powers and jurisdiction, he said the PACC’s manpower should also be increased as well as provided with its own budget, little-by-little, “pero dapat ma-prove muna namin sarili namin (but we should prove ourselves first).”
On the other hand, lawyer and Ateneo Policy Center research fellow Michael Henry Ll. Yusingco said in an e-mail to BusinessWorld on Dec. 25, “For me, it does not matter what the PACC aims to do. I am totally against its very existence.”
“For further explanation, please let me share an old op-ed piece of mine,” he added, referring to his commentary titled “Rethinking the Anti-Corruption Mandate” that was first published on Mindanews in 2016.
In his article, Mr. Yusingco argued that having different offices that handle corruption complaints will inevitably result in a “turf war.”
“As we have seen many times in the past, the ‘turf war’ syndrome has afflicted the various anti-corruption offices. And if not engaged in the blame game, officials of these agencies rarely coordinate with each other. The ultimate effect of having multiple offices undertaking anti-corruption functions is the dilution of resources. Spreading funds across different agencies performing the same mandate is obviously counter-productive,” he explained.
The PACC was formed in 2017 through Executive Order No. 43. The commission operates under the Office of the President and is primarily made up of a chairperson and four commissioners.
The commission was established in the wake of Mr. Duterte’s criticisms against former ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales, whose office is constitutionally mandated to investigate public officers or employees and government agencies.
“There is a need to create a separate commission under the Office of the President solely dedicated to providing assistance to the President in the investigation and hearing of administrative cases and complaints, and in the conduct of lifestyle checks and/or fact-finding inquiries concerning presidential appointees and other public officers allegedly involved in graft and corrupt practices, or have committed other high crimes and/or violations of the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for Public Officials and Employees,” the EO reads.

Treaty review to strengthen US-PHL alliance

By Vince Angelo C. Ferreras
DEFENSE Secretary Delfin N. Lorenzana’s expressed intent to review the country’s Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) with the United States could strengthen and reassure the alliance between the two nations, analysts said.
“When Secretary Lorenzana manifested the intent of the President to revisit the agreement, he wanted to make sure the America is really worthy of our relationship with us,” said University of Santo Tomas (UST) political science professor Marlon M. Villarin in a phone interview with BusinessWorld last Dec. 22.
Last Dec. 20, Mr. Lorenzana told reporters that he is open to such review as the US was “ambivalent” on its stand regarding the West Philippine Sea dispute based on the existing accord.
The Defense chief said the MDT covers only “metropolitan Philippines,” which does not seem to cover some of the disputed areas such as the Kalayaan islands.
He added, “The US has always said it will not meddle into territorial disputes… ‘hands off kami.’ So that’s how we look at it.”
Signed on August 30, 1951, the MDT binds both countries to come to each other’s aid during an attack.
Aside from honing a good relationship, Mr. Villarin said the review is needed because the treaty is only limited to military trainings, citing the annual military drills or Balikatan exercises.
He said, “Makikita natin na ‘yung (We can see that the) Mutual Defense Treaty is limited… and at the same time, abstract. What the President wants is to be more specific and more detailed.”
For his part, foreign policy expert and political analyst Richard J. Heydarian said the intention of the Philippines to review the decades old treaty is a good chance for the United States to become clear with its relationship with the country.
“What I can say is that this is a great chance for the United States to come clean. It’s more ambiguity than strategic. Because clearly the ambiguity has let China creeping in to Philippines’ areas of claim and undermining the position of the Philippines in the Kalayaan Group of Islands,” said Mr. Heydarian in a phone interview with BusinessWorld last Dec. 22.
Mr. Heydarian added that the Duterte administration turned the relationship of the US and the Philippine into “transactional” from being “sacrosanct.”
“I think this review is historic in a sense that it comes at the point of transition in Philippine strategic mindset. If the Americans are going to be ambiguous this time just like in the past, they may nudge the Philippines towards greater neutrality and less dependence on and interoperability towards with the US, in favor of much more diversified relations which automatically means closer ties with China and possibly with Russia and other countries around the world which don’t have the best relationship with the United States,” he said.
Mr. Heydarian added, “This is a great chance for the United States to finally come clear in this issue and reassure the Philippines that they will stand by the Philippines the same way they reassured the Japanese that they will stand by them over the Senkaku Islands based on the Japanese-American Defense Treaty.”
Meanwhile, Ateneo Policy Center research fellow Michael Henry LI. Yusingco said the review of the treaty must be transparent and the President should consider whatever will be the outcome.
“He is right to question whether some items there are still relevant today. But the review process has to be transparent. Civil society organizations must be allowed to participate. And there must be a firm assurance that the President will seriously consider the outcome of the review process,” said Mr. Yusingco via email to BusinessWorld last Dec. 22.
Mr. Lorenzana said areas in the South China Sea over which the Philippines has sovereign rights should be covered by the treaty to oblige the US to help the Philippines if ever the country is attacked by other states.
However, UST Political Science Department chairperson Dennis C. Coronacion said it is impossible to include areas beyond the metropolitan Philippines in security coverage as stated in the accord.
“I think the Secretary knows very well that his wish of including the disputed territory in the WPS (West Philippine Sea) in the areas where the MDT should apply will not happen. That wish goes against the usual nature of defense treaties,” said Mr. Coronacion in an online message to BusinessWorld last Dec. 22.
He added, “In addition, I don’t think the US Congress would approve a review of the MDT to include territorial disputes. They would argue that getting entangled in territorial disputes would be against their national interest. In other words, it’s a hard sell.”
However, Mr. Coronacion said the US will still honor its commitment to the country within the parameters of the treaty.
“US will honor its commitment with us within the parameters set by the MDT. But, it will avoid any proposal to widen the scope of the MDT, such as that made by Sec. Lorenzana, since it will be against US national interest,” he said.
According to Article IV of the treaty, each party recognizes that an armed attack in the Pacific area on either of the parties would be dangerous to its own peace and safety, and declares that it would act to meet the common dangers in accordance with its constitutional processes.
Moreover, Article V of the treaty states that for the purpose of Article IV, an armed attack on either of the parties is deemed to include an armed attack on the metropolitan territory of either of the parties, or on the Island territories under its jurisdiction in the Pacific Ocean, its armed forces, public vessels or aircraft in the Pacific.
Defense analyst and Institute for Policy, Strategy and Development Studies Fellow Jose Antonio A. Custodio explained that the Philippines is not technically part of the Pacific Ocean.
“Pacific Ocean is identified separately,” he told BusinessWorld in a phone interview last Dec. 23. “Hindi na tayo
sakop ng Pacific Ocean (We are not part of the Pacific Ocean anymore). The term pacific refers to operational area.”
Despite the ambiguities on the part of the US, Mr. Villarin believes that the US and the Philippines will continue to have a strong relationship in the future.
“It will continue to be a solid-rock relationship… Regardless with the political colors we have right now, the US will remain focused on its interest to us. The same with the Philippines, regardless of our political relationship, whether it’s good or bad to the US, they will continue to see US as our strong ally politically, economically, and of course historically,” said Mr. Villarin.
For his part, Mr. Yusingco said, “I believe the Philippine-US relationship will endure. We may be presently experiencing challenging times but our countries have mutual interests that require the partnership to carry on. The preservation of our nation’s security is just one feature of our relationship with the US. But it is a very important one. Hence, the call of Sec. Lorenzana to review the defense treaty should not be easily dismissed.”

DoJ to help speed up cases of rebels

THE DEPARTMENT of Justice (DoJ), as a member of the national task force formed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte for localized peace processes, will help in the speedy investigation and trial of people involved in the communist armed conflict, Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra said.
“The DoJ through the NBI (National Bureau of Investigation), NPS (National Prosecution Service), and the PAO (Public Attorney’s Office), will help expedite the apprehension, investigation, and trial of those persons who will reject or defy the government’s offer of a peaceful solution to the long-festering problem of local armed conflicts,” Mr Guevarra told BusinessWorld.
The regional and local offices of the NBI, NPS, and PAO will handle the participation of the department, Mr. Guevarra said.
Mr. Guevarra also said that first orders will be given to the NBI.
“Initially, the directive will be issued to the NBI and its field offices to assist the PNP (Philippine National Police) and other law enforcement agents in the detection and apprehension of local armed insurgents, rebels, and terrorists,” he said.
Guidelines for the conduct of speedy investigation and prosecution will come “early next year.”
Mr. Duterte signed on Dec. 4 Executive Order (EO) No. 70, initiating a “whole-of-nation approach” and creating a National Task Force to end local armed conflicts by bringing together different government agencies, local government units, and representatives from the private sector
The whole-of-nation approach would address the root causes of insurgencies and other armed conflicts and threats “by prioritizing and harmonizing the delivery of basic services and social development packages by the government.”
Department of National Defense (DND) Public Affairs head Arsenio R. Andolong said the President “intends to end the Communist Terrorist Group in 2019.”
For the Defense department’s part, Mr. Andolong said Secretary Delfin N. Lorenzana has ordered to sustain the Focused Military Operations against armed terrorist groups and the implementation of localized peace talks with communist terrorist groups.
“The DND and AFP (Armed Forces of the Philippines) are also working hand-in-hand with the DILG (Department of the Interior and Local Government), PNP, DAR (Department of Agrarian Reform), NHA (National Housing Authority), DoH (Department of Health), Tesda (Technical Education and Skills Development Authority), OPAPP (Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process), and other agencies in implementing the Enhanced Comprehensive Local Integration Program or E-CLIP, which is processing the return of Former Rebels, who have expressed their sincere desire to rejoin society and live a peaceful life with their loved ones,” he said.
In late 2017, Mr. Duterte ended peace talks with the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP), the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) and its armed wing, the New People’s Army (NPA). — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

UNESCO, PTFoMS to sign partnership on media safety program

THE PRESIDENTIAL Task Force on Media Security (PTFoMS) is set to sign an agreement with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) for a program on media safety and raising the standards of the journalism practice in the country. In a phone interview last Dec. 21, PTFoMS Executive Director Joel Sy Egco said they are aiming to roll out the two-year UNESCO program in early 2019. Mr. Egco said they are now finalizing the agreement terms for the program, which he wants to be “inclusive.” He said, “Everybody should be beneficiaries of this project. So lahat ng (So all) media groups na pwede nating ma (that we can) tap ay merong (will have a) say.” Mr. Egco also said that PTFoMS will team up with UNESCO on reports regarding crimes against media practitioners in the country.
CARAVAN
As for the task force’s focus next year, he said they will hold a Press Freedom Caravan nationwide, which will include discussions on the Freedom of Information (FoI) Program contained in Executive Order No. 02 signed by President Rodrigo R. Duterte in July 2016. The audience, he said, are local stakeholders, “mostly media, local government officials kasi may (because we have the) FoI, academe, and civil society groups.” The PTFoMS, he added, will also “seek audience with the UN (United Nations), UNESCO, (and) international watchdogs… for them to understand what is really happening in the country.”
MAGUINDANAO MASSACRE
Mr. Egco also vowed that he will resign if none of the suspects in the 2009 Maguindanao massacre will be convicted by the first quarter of 2019. “Within the first quarter of 2019, we expect the promulgation of the case,” he said. “I promised them, if there will be no Ampatuan who will be convicted, I will resign, that’s how confident I am na ang mga (that the) main suspects will be meted the guilty verdict,” he said. — Arjay L. Balinbin