Home Blog Page 12106

Nguyen recalibrates, focuses on heavier divisions

FOLLOWING two unsuccessful forays as a bantamweight, two-division ONE Championship world champion Martin “The Situ-Asian” Nguyen has reconsidered his career tack and focusing on the heavier weight divisions.
The reigning featherweight and lightweight champion, Mr. Nguyen saw his quest for a third world title shut down in successive fashion.
He fell first to bantamweight champion Bibiano “The Flash” Fernandez of Brazil in his first jab at the 65.8-kg division crown, losing by split decision in March before being silenced by Filipino Kevin “The Silencer” Belingon by unanimous decision in their battle for the interim world title in July.
The twin defeats had forced Vietnamese-Australian Nguyen to reevaluate, before finally deciding to focus for now on featherweight and lightweight.
“I was naive. I thought the weight cut was not going to be an issue, but it played out in the fight,” said Mr. Nguyen, referring to his last fight against Mr. Belignon.
“I did not feel tired — I could have gone another five rounds, but with my toe, it just came to a point where my reactions were off, and Kevin’s speed was impeccable. I could not adjust, and everything just came into play,” he added.
Mr. Nguyen underscored though that his bantamweight sojourn was not completely for naught as it allowed him to better understand himself as a fighter and should serve him well moving forward.
“It was a good learning curve, and a good experience overall, but I will stick to my roots where my body feels stronger and more comfortable,” Mr. Nguyen said.
The two-division world champion went on to say that he is ready to take on all-comers for his belts, who include former champions Shinya Aoki of Japan and Filipinos Eduard Folayang and Honorio Banario in lightweight, and Narantungalag ‘Tungaa’ Jadambaa of Mongolia in featherweight.
Mr. Nguyen has yet to defend his lightweight belt after seizing it from Mr. Folayang in November last year while he defeated Christian Lee of Singapore in their featherweight title clash in May. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Djokovic overcomes stomach trouble as Zverev exits in Cincy

CINCINNATI — Novak Djokovic battled stomach issues to beat Adrian Mannarino and reach the third round in Cincinnati on Wednesday as women’s title holder Garbine Muguruza crashed out.
Wimbledon champion Djokovic called for the doctor during the second set against Mannarino but put aside his discomfort to progress 4-6, 6-2, 6-1 over the Frenchman before rain halted the afternoon play.
“I wasn’t feeling well, I didn’t have a great night and wasn’t feeling that well for the first set and a half,” said Djokovic, who has won every Masters 1000 title except Cincinnati.
“I kind of made it through, and with the help of the doctor and God…I’m just, you know, happy that I managed to overcome the challenge.
“Credit to him playing well the first set, but I wasn’t myself.”
Seventh-seeded Muguruza played for the first time since crashing out in the second round of her Wimbledon title defense, falling 2-6, 6-4, 6-4 to Lesia Tsurenko.
“It was a very ugly match, but I’m happy that I fought, even if the level wasn’t very high,” said Muguruza, who got a late start to her hardcourt buildup to the US Open because of an arm injury.
“At the end she managed to come back in the third set and play better and found a way to win the match.
“I’m happy I didn’t feel (arm) pain. Obviously I didn’t have a lot of practices to try to recover, so I had to manage a little bit.”
Marin Cilic, the 2016 men’s champion, beat Romanian Marius Copil 6-7 (4/7), 6-4, 6-4, but third-seeded Alexander Zverev was upset 5-7, 6-4, 7-5 by Dutch veteran Robin Haase.
The German remains winless in four appearances at the pre-US Open tournament. His early exit comes a week after he lost in the Toronto quarter-finals to fellow youngster Stefanos Tsitsipas
The 55th-ranked Haase clinched a surprise victory when Zverev fired a return long after losing serve six times.
“I think I played well. Today my returns I think were really, really good,” Haase said.
“The first serve he hit at me was 136 (mph), and I just hit it right back. I was good from my side.
“Nowadays against top 10, 20, maybe top 50 you have to be a little bit lucky.”
Zverev came into the event leading the ATP with 43 match wins this season, while it was a seventh career win over a top 10 player for Haase. — AFP

Atletico comes back to beat Lopetegui’s Real Madrid in extra time to win the UEFA Super Cup

TALLINN — Saul Niguez and Koke scored in extra time as Atletico Madrid fought back to beat city rivals Real Madrid 4-2 and win the UEFA Super Cup in Tallinn on Wednesday, as Julen Lopetegui got off to a losing start with the European champions.
Real had earlier looked set to win the trophy in their first competitive game since the departures of Cristiano Ronaldo and coach Zinedine Zidane when a Sergio Ramos penalty put them 2-1 up in the second half.
That came after Karim Benzema cancelled out Diego Costa’s first-minute opener in the Estonian capital, but Costa hauled Diego Simeone’s side level again late on to force extra time.
Simeone’s men then looked stronger in the extra period as they won this competition, the annual meeting of the Champions League and Europa League winners, for the third time in nine seasons.
“I stayed at Atletico because the project is a good one. I have confidence in this club, in the coach and I saw tonight that I was not mistaken,” said Atletico striker Antoine Griezmann who was linked with a move to Barcelona in the summer.
Atletico defender Lucas Hernandez added, “To win this trophy is something great but to do it against our eternal rival is even better.”
Real had won the trophy under Zidane in each of the last two years, and emerged victorious against their neighbours in the Champions League finals of 2014 and 2016.
But this result comes after a close season in which Atletico have strengthened while Real look to have gone backwards, with no replacement signed for Ronaldo after his move to Juventus.
Griezmann started for Atletico at the compact Lillekula Stadium, fresh from helping France to World Cup glory last month.
In contrast, former Spain coach Lopetegui left Luka Modric on the Real bench at kick-off, seeking to ease the Croatian playmaker back after he led his country to the World Cup final. — AFP

Major Davis Cup shake-up eyed by divided tennis leaders

ORLANDO — A major Davis Cup revamp that would condense the annual global tournament into an 18-team, week-long event will be voted upon Thursday with major tennis leaders divided over the proposal.
The International Tennis Federation (ITF) annual meeting in Orlando will see about 120 delegates decide the fate of the 118-year-old men’s team competition with two-thirds majority support needed to approve the measure, which is backed by federation president David Haggerty.
Kosmos, a group led and founded by Barcelona football star Gerard Pique and backed by Japanese billionaire Hiroshi Mikitani, has vowed $3 billion over 25 years to support the new event.
Haggerty vows more money, about $25 million, will go to national tennis associations to invest in grassroots level support.
“The money that we make will be put back to the nations for their development programs and the future of tennis,” Haggerty said.
But opponents of the plan include Tennis Australia and Britain’s Lawn Tennis Association (LTA).
“There are a lot of people, a lot of current and former players, who are frustrated by it and see this as a money grab,” Aussie Davis Cup captain Lleyton Hewitt said.
Added Aussie tennis legend John Newcombe: “Unfortunately their plan is a recipe for the death of the Davis Cup as we know it.”
The LTA came out against the reforms Wednesday ahead of ITF delegate discussion on the plan.
“After consulting widely, regrettably, we do not feel we can support the proposals as they stand,” said LTA chief executive Scott Lloyd.
An LTA statement cited concern over scheduling the event in November, stretching the schedule after the ATP season-finale into an already-thin off-season, risking top player attendance and fan support. The LTA also raised concerns over “the clarity of how the business case will work in practice” and the great division over the idea. — AFP

Long comeback

SERENA Williams showed no trace of disappointment when she faced members of the media following her second-round defeat at the Cincinnati Open the other day. If anything, she took pains to underscore that her comeback from a lengthy absence due to childbirth and pregnancy-related complications is proceeding as well as she can hope it to be. Never mind that her efforts in returning to competitive tennis already appeared to have paid off with a sterling run to the Wimbledon Ladies’ Singles Final last month. And forget that it was followed by the most lopsided loss of her career in her opener at the Silicon Valley Classic.
Perhaps Williams accepted that her latest tormentor is far from a slouch; in fact, Petra Kvitova has already won five titles this year, best on the Women’s Tennis Association Tour. Perhaps she also saw in the two-time Grand Slam titleholder’s own experience that the road to recovery requires patience. “I’m still at the very beginning,” she contended. “This is a long comeback.” She’s right, of course, and her advanced age — when countless other pros at 36 have difficulty getting up in the morning, let alone getting back to the top — makes the work doubly difficult.
Nonetheless, Williams cannot but be expected to prevail every time she treks to the court regardless of the quality of the opposition. After all, it’s also what she expects of herself, the burdens of child-rearing and family life aside. Which is why, at the United States Open later this month, she figures to do the same old, same old: compete as best she can and carve a path to the championship. As tall an order as it may appear, she believes she’s ready and able; whenever she wields a racket, she wields to win.
In the immediate term, Williams will have to make a decision. Does she sign up for the Connecticut Open next week as a wild-card entry? Or does she come in from the cold at Flushing Meadows? The answer should provide fans a glimpse of her level of confidence heading into the last major stop of the year. As for her level of preparedness, only time can tell.
 
Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994.

Duterte orders DFA to talk to Chinese counterparts regarding recent actions in disputed sea

The recent remarks of President Rodrigo R. Duterte asking China to temper its behavior in the South China Sea has not affected the country’s relations with the Philippines, Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter S. Cayetano said.
The President made the statement in response to reports that the Chinese navy stationed in the region has issued warnings to a Philippine military aircraft flying over the militarized area in South China Sea.
In an interview with reporters on Wednesday evening, Mr. Cayetano said he, along with Defense Secretary Delfin N. Lorenzana and National Security Adviser Hermogenes C. Esperon, Jr., has informed the President Wednesday afternoon that the radio warnings were just “routine.”
Despite the assurances, he said Mr. Duterte has instructed them to talk to the his counterparts in China to find a “better way of talking to each other.”
“I was with the Defense secretary and the NSA secretary then we went to the President this afternoon, and we told him Sir, this is routine. We continue to tell anyone who goes into our waters fly over that you are in Philippine territory, and they continue to tell us,” he said.
“But the President gave us instructions regardless if it’s routine, regardless of good intentions, whatever, that’s not how friends treat each other so he asked me please talk to your counterparts we’ve worked out many things in the past he’s confident we can work this out,” he added. — Camille A. Aguinaldo

China-US to resume low-level talks in bid to resolve trade war

China will dispatch Vice Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen to the U.S. for low-level trade talks in late August, the first official exchanges since earlier negotiations broke down two months ago.
The Chinese delegation led by Wang will meet with an American group led by David Malpass, under secretary for international affairs at the Department of the Treasury, at the invitation of the U.S., China’s Ministry of Commerce said in a statement on its website on Thursday.
The news buoyed risk sentiment in Asian trading, with futures on the S&P 500 Index rallying as much as 0.4 percent. The offshore yuan gained against the dollar for the first time in seven days.
“This will be ‘talks about trade talks,’” said Gai Xinzhe, an analyst at the Bank of China’s Institute of International Finance in Beijing. “Lower-level officials will meet and haggle and see if there is a possibility for higher-level talks.”
China’s equity market has suffered declines and the yuan has been on a losing streak for more than a month. Chinese authorities, bracing for an economic fallout, have introduced measures to support growth ranging from shifting toward a more accommodative monetary policy to boosting fiscal spending.
The two nations had appeared to have reached a deal in May after Chinese Vice Premier Liu He — President Xi Jinping’s top economic adviser — led a group of officials to Washington. But Trump backed away from the agreement soon afterward, and ever since the two sides have been locked in a trade standoff as they slapped tariffs on billions of dollars of each other’s goods.
The commerce ministry reiterated in the statement that China is against trade protectionism and won’t accept any unilateral trade restrictions. “China welcomes communications and dialogue on the basis of reciprocity, equality and integrity,” it said.
The Trump administration imposed duties on $34 billion of Chinese goods last month, a move that also prompted immediate retaliation from Beijing. Another $16 billion in levies will be effective later in August. Earlier this month, China announced a list of $60 billion worth of U.S. imports it plans to apply tariffs on, after Trump ordered officials to consider imposing a 25 percent tax on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods, up from an initial 10 percent rate.
Wang, who is the key official leading China’s trade talks worldwide, led an advance team to Washington in May. In a July interview, he told Bloomberg that he didn’t understand why the U.S. quickly reversed its course.
“Good faith negotiation is required,” Wang said then. “For any talk to be successful, no party should point a gun at the other party.”
Economists weren’t expecting much from the planned talks.
“Malpass has no trade authority,” said Derek Scissors, chief economist at the China Beige Book. “But nice for Chinese stocks.” — Bloomberg

China developing satellites to monitor territory in South China Sea

China is developing a satellite system that will allow it to closely watch the South China Sea, the China News Service reported, helping it to consolidate control over the disputed waters.
The first of 10 satellites is expected to be launched in the second half of 2019, China News said, citing the Sanya Institute of Remote Sensing, which is heading the project with sponsorship from the government of Hainan, China’s southernmost island province.
Cameras and identification technology on the satellites will allow China to monitor ships sailing in the waters, the news agency reported. Plans to develop the system were announced in December last year.
China claims more than 80 percent of the South China Sea, a thriving fishing zone which carries around $3.4 trillion worth of global trade each year. Five other countries including the Philippines and Vietnam also claim parts of the same maritime area.
“The Chinese seem to have moved very fast on this,” said Collin Koh Swee Lean, a research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore. “Couching all this under an ostensibly civilian looking program that has numerous military and maritime law enforcement applications has far-reaching strategic ramifications for the South China Sea disputes.”
China has reclaimed thousands of acres of land in the waters and built ports, runways and other military infrastructure on seven artificial features it has created.
In June, U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis warned Beijing that it would face consequences in the long term that could persuade it to change track with regard to the South China Sea.
“I believe there are much larger consequences in the future, when nations lose the rapport of their neighbors,” Mattis told the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore. — Bloomberg

ERC sets public hearings for Napocor funding petition

The Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) has set public hearings starting next month for the petition of state-led National Power Corp. (Napocor) to avail of its quarter-centavo share of the universal charge collected from electricity users to fund its mandated environmental projects amounting to about P431.19 million.
In its petition with the ERC, the government-owned and -controlled corporation sought provisional authority to clear the funding for its projects for 2017 under its “Plan 14” or its proposed operations plan for the rehabilitation and management of watershed areas.
It was filed on March 10, 2017, but action on it has been long-delayed. The regulator has scheduled hearings in September and October on Napocor’s petition near the watershed areas and in its head office in Pasig City.
Under Republic Act No. 9136 or the Electric Power Industry Reform Act of 2001 (EPIRA), the agency is entitled to the environmental charge portion of the universal charge (UC-EC) equivalent to P0.0025 per kilowatt-hour (kWh). — Victor V. Saulon

ADB plans scaling up PHL pilot microgrid project without grant money

Asian Development Bank (ADB) plans to scale up its pilot microgrid project in the Philippines through a business model that will not require grant money from the multileral lending agency, its energy official said.
“We are trying to look for a business model to make sure that this can happen without always ADB grant money,” said Yongping Zhai, the bank’s energy sector group chief in an interview during the Ayala Finex Finance Summit on Wednesday in Makati City.
Launched in March 2016, the pilot project on Cobrador Island in Romblon province provides 24-hour electricity to about 244 households through a solar-diesel hybrid power generation system. It was funded by the bank’s grant money.
“We are sharing this information, the pilot. We’re doing detailed assessment on how much it the cost, what is the technology, how will it meet household demand,” Mr. Zhai said.
The pilot project shows how clean, renewable energy can be harnessed to upgrade existing rural electricity systems to meet the requirements of remote and energy-deficient communities in the country. — Victor V. Saulon

National Reinsurance Corp names new president

National Reinsurance Corp. of the Philippines (Nat Re) appointed Allan Rossi Santos as its new president and chief executive officer, succeeding Augusto Hidalgo III.
In a regulatory filing Thursday, Aug. 16, the reinsurance firm said Mr. Santos was appointed as the new chief executive effective Thursday, Aug. 16.
Prior to this, Ms. Santos was the executive vice-president and chief operating officer of Nat Re, overseeing finance, investments, data and analytics, technology, human resources and office services.
Mr. Santos will be joined by Christian Ladoux as Nat Re’s chief underwriting officer and Tisha Darvin as head of data and analytics.
Nat Re’s new president has more than 25 years of experience in local and international insurance and reinsurance markets.
He is a fellow of the Actuarial Society of the Philippines and the Society of Actuaries (US). He is also a member of the American Academy of Actuaries. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

BPI Direct BanKo expects six-fold growth in outstanding loans this year

BPI Direct BanKo, Inc., the microfinance arm of Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI), expects its loan book to grow six-fold this year supported by its aggressive branch expansion.
On Monday, BPI Direct BanKo President Jerome B. Minglana said the lender targets to have P3.3 billion in total outstanding loans by the end of the year, growing six-fold from last year’s P500 million.
“We will be targeting probably P2.1 billion in outstanding balance and about P3.3 billion in bookings this year, Mr. Minglana told reporters in a briefing in Quezon City.
He added that the bank expects a robust loan portfolio growth on the back of its rapid branch expansion.
“We’re not comparing apples to apples [since] we started last year with only 10 branches.”
BPI Direct BanKo said it will open 65 more branches this year to complete its target of having 200 offices by the end of the year. — Karl Angelo N. Vidal

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT