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Eala beats Volynets to advance to Round of 64 in Miami Open

ALEX EALA — FACEBOOK.COM/WTA

ALEX EALA scored a historic main draw win, taking down world No. 73 Katie Volynets of the USA, 6-3, 7-6(3), in the opening round of the 2025 Miami Open on Thursday at the Hardrock Stadium in Florida.

Ms. Eala, WTA No. 140, erased a flat 1-3 start by blanking Ms. Volynets the rest of the way in the first set before flaunting composure in the extended second to squeak through into the Round of 64.

The 19-year-old Filipina sensation will test her mettle against world No. 5 Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia, who gained a bye in the Round of 128 as a top-ranked player.

Ms. Eala, playing in her first Miami Open main draw campaign after multiple exits in the qualifiers, showed jitters against the 23-year-old home bet by staring at an early two-game deficit.

But she was quick to adjust and recover, breaking Ms. Volynets’ multiple serves while holding her own to win the next six games for a 1-0 lead.

It was the polar opposite in the second as Ms. Eala nearly wasted a 5-3 lead and allowed a tiebreaker, where she proved to be the steadier bet down the stretch.

Ms. Eala is one of the eight wildcard entries in the 128-player Miami Open main draw along with former Grand Slam champions Petra Kvitova (Czech Republic) and Sloane Stephens (USA), Victoria Mboko (Canada), Sayaka Ishii (Japan), Tyra Caterina Grant (USA) and Ajla Tomljanovic (Australia).

Top-ranked players Aryna Sabalenka (Belarus), Iga Swiatek (Poland) and Coco Gauff (USA) headline the star-studded cast of the Miami Open that also features the stacked men’s division led by Serbian ace Novak Djokovic, Carlos Alcaraz of Spain, Alexander Zverev of Germany and Russian Daniil Medvedev. — John Bryan Ulanday

Belen leads MVP race after first round

BELLA BELEN — UAAP

NATIONAL UNIVERSITY (NU) ace spiker Bella Belen is on track to capture her second straight and third overall Most Valuable Player (MVP) plum after topping the statistical race at the end of the UAAP Season 87 women’s volleyball first round.

Ms. Belen amassed 159.6 statistical points (SPs) in seven games to pace the women’s division MVP race as the NU Lady Bulldogs completed a first-round sweep to bolster their title retention bid.

The senior spiker notched the UAAP Rookie-MVP honors in Season 84 (2022) and the MVP citation in Season 86 (2024).

She moved closer to another milestone that would put her among the league greats with three MVP awards by flaunting all-around numbers across all departments.

After the first round, Ms. Belen was No. 1 in aces (0.63 per set), No. 7 in scoring (107), No. 8 in spiking efficiency (33.47%), No. 6 in digs (2.6 per set) and No. 5 in receiving efficiency (33.58%).

Trailing Ms. Belen are De La Salle University’s Shevana Laput (157.692), super rookie Shaina Nitura (145.556) of Adamson University, Season 85 Rookie-MVP Angel Canino (141.538), and her teammate Vange Alinsug (130.000).

NU’s Alyssa Solomon (126.000), last season’s Finals MVP, Angge Poyos (120.345) and Regina Jurado (113.103) of University of Santo Tomas as well as NU libero Shaira Jardio (106.400) and setter Camilla Lamina (101.600) rounded out the Top 10.

In the men’s division, Ken Batas of Ateneo de Manila University took the driver’s seat with 160.370 SPs after topping the points (142). He’s also fourth in spiking efficiency at 45.52%, fourth in aces with 0.37 per set and eighth in digging with 1.44 per set.

Behind him are Santo Tomas rookie JJ Macam (148.750), Far Eastern University’s Mikko Espartero (147.917), La Salle’s Noel Kampton (145.000) and Santo Tomas’ Popoy Colinares (140.833). — John Bryan Ulanday

Lakers knock off Nuggets for ninth straight home win

LUKA DONČIĆ scored 21 of his 31 points in the first quarter, Austin Reaves added 22 total and the Los Angeles Lakers turned a fast start into a 120-108 home victory over the short-handed Denver Nuggets on Wednesday.

Dorian Finney-Smith scored 14 points and Gabe Vincent and Dalton Knecht each added 12 as the Lakers earned their third straight win and ninth consecutive home victory despite playing without LeBron James (groin) for the sixth straight game and Rui Hachimura (knee) for the 11th straight.

The victory allowed the Lakers (43-25) to tie the Nuggets (44-26) for third place in the Western Conference standings. — Reuters

Medrano, Fernando tops Milo Marathon Manila leg for deaf

Teacher Karen Samson (left) along with Mhigz Medrano (center) and Aliyah Reese Fernando as the 200-strong delegation of the Philippine School for the Deaf participated in the Milo Marathon for the first time in history at the MOA Arena Concert grounds last weekend.

RUNNING is for everyone, including for those who could not hear their steps as they traverse an unfamiliar territory.

Two of them were Mhigz Medrano and Aliyah Reese Fernando who made a giant leap as Milo championed inclusivity with the participation of the Philippine School for the Deaf (PSD) in the Milo Marathon Manila leg for the first time ever.

“Running is not only for the hearing people. The race is for everyone,” beamed Ms. Fernando, through a translation by her teacher Karen Samson after completing the 3K run at the Mall of Asia Arena concert grounds in Pasay last weekend.

Aside from Mr. Medrano and Ms. Fernando, around 200 students from PSD joined the festive race as the delegation veered away from the serenity of their home and classrooms to attempt at blazing the trail for persons with disability in the future.

And they did as Mr. Medrano, for his part, crossed the finish line of the tough 5K run.

Much has been said about inclusivity in different sectors but for Mr. Medrano, there’s nothing like a first-hand experience with other people as if you’re in one, similar beautiful spectrum.

“Other people think that we’re scared to join this kind of activity but we’re not. Though it’s not noticeable with other disabilities, we finally get to join and jive. Everyone is accepted in today’s society and we’re happy for that,” smiled Mr. Medrano, a Grade 11 Technical-Vocational-Livelihood-Information and Communications Technology (TVL-ICT) student.

“Running is about togetherness. There’s no pressure in running,” added Ms. Fernando, also a Grade 11 student.

Both Mr. Medrano and Ms. Fernando ran with their families and friends, making it more of a journey than a race. And for Milo, that’s exactly the heart of the Milo Marathon that assembled almost 20,000 runners all over the archipelago.

For PSD, albeit unknown to everyone its activeness in sports with varsity athletes for badminton, volleyball and basketball among the few, making this giant leap in running was just the beginning.

“The PSD excels in ICT but the dream of course is to be known in other fields, not only here in the Philippines but in other countries too. It’s a good start and awareness for us in sports,” said teacher Samson, who joined her students in completing their journey of a lifetime. — John Bryan Ulanday

AIA brings Tottenham Hotspur coaches to Baguio to lead football clinic for 100 students

BAGUIO CITY, Philippines — AIA Philippines, formerly Philam Life and now the local arm of Hong Kong-based AIA Group, recently brought world-class football training to 100 students from eight elementary schools in Baguio City.

This was done in partnership with Tottenham Hotspur Football Club, a top-ranking team in the English Premier League for which AIA is a Global Principal Partner.

Held at the seven-hectare complex of the Baguio City Athletic Bowl in Burnham Park, the AIA football clinic is a special initiative of the AIA Healthiest Schools (AHS) program that aims to raise awareness of the importance of building healthy habits among young Filipinos.

The clinic, led by Tottenham Hotspur’s International Football Development Manager Shannon Moloney and International Football Development Coach Lily Jervis, in collaboration with Baguio City local football coaches, proved to be an unforgettable experience for participating students and schools from Baguio.

The two-day training featured exciting football drills and skill-building exercises for local coaches and kids, which focused on effective play, enhanced agility and footwork, and breaking tackles and gaining yardage.

Honorable Mayor Benjamin Magalong, along with other local government officials and representatives from the Department of Education in Baguio, were also in attendance. Mayor Magalong acknowledged the value of AHS, complementing its efforts to strengthen the local government’s quality education and sports initiatives in the City of Pines.

Launched in the Philippines in August 2024, the AIA Healthiest Schools program is a pioneering initiative designed to boost health literacy among students aged 5 to 16 and teach them the importance of healthy eating, active lifestyle and overall well-being. Following successful implementations across Asia and Australia, the program has so far reached over 7,200 students and trained 139 teachers across five regions in the Philippines. AIA Healthiest Schools provides free, curriculum-linked resources and materials based on four pillars of well-being: healthy eating, physical activity, mental health, and sustainability.

In the Philippines, the program is implemented in partnership with the Corazon S. Atayde Memorial Foundation (CSAMF), which serves grassroots communities to promote reading, learning and financial literacy to underserved communities.

AIA Philippines plans to expand the AIA Healthiest Schools program to reach even more students across the country, ensuring that future generations are more empowered to live healthier, longer, better lives.

DPOY

If Draymond Green is once again in the conversation for the Defensive Player of the Year (DPOY) award, it’s because of his work during the Warriors’ remarkable run in recent memory. While it’s fair to argue that the arrival of erstwhile Heat Jimmy Butler at the trade deadline triggered the ascent of the blue and yellow in league standings, all and sundry likewise know he and Stephen Curry remain the anchors. Not coincidentally, they’re the only holdovers left from the dynastic years — which is to say they know how to win, and all they needed was a spark to be reminded of how.

There can be no questioning the part Butler has played in the Warriors’ rejuvenation. In the six weeks since they spread the welcome mat for him, they have gone a heady 15-3 and are now sixth in the highly competitive West. That said, his norms as their starting forward — 17.2 points, 5.9 rebounds, and 6.1 assists in 32.1 minutes of exposure — are middling at best, especially for a six-time All-Star with a $48.8 million salary. In other words, he has shined in a supporting role — effectively polishing the games of Curry on offense and Green on defense.

To be sure, Green would still not be in the DPOY conversation had the Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama, previously a lock for the accolade, not been sidelined for the remainder of the 2024-25 campaign due to deep vein thrombosis. Narratives count as well. It’s why Evan Mobley is now considered the frontrunner for the award; the Cavaliers have been at the top of National Basketball Association standings since the start of the season in large measure because of his work on the less-heralded side of the floor.

Storylines can change quickly, of course, and developments heading into the playoffs could sway DPOY voters in Green’s favor. As he noted the other day after shutting down the Bucks’ Giannis Antetokounmpo in a win, “I look around the league and don’t see many players impacting the game on the defensive end the way I do. I don’t see many players completely throwing off an entire team’s offense the way I do.” Meanwhile, he would do well to keep plodding on. Only if the Warriors continue their upward trajectory will his case for the award be given its due.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

In Japan’s ski resort area of Myoko, trepidation as more foreign money pours in

A VISITOR snowboards at Myoko Suginohara Ski Resort in Myoko, Niigata Prefecture, Japan, March 5, 2025. — REUTERS

MYOKO, Japan — Three winters from now, Japan’s snowy Myoko highlands will be home to a $1.4- billion mega-resort built by a Singaporean fund, with hotels charging some $1,350 a night.

The project by Patience Capital Group (PCG) promises to create 1,000 jobs and spur winter tourism. But for many Myoko locals, foreign interest has become a double-edged sword, threatening overdevelopment, sky-high prices and the sweeping away of traditional culture.

Even before news of PCG’s interest, many inns, ski rental shops and restaurants in Akakura — one of five major ski resort towns in the Myoko region — had been snapped up by foreigners.

But they’re only interested in the snow and once that melts, those businesses shut. The town, also once a bustling hot-spring destination, no longer has enough going on to attract many visitors during the rest of the year.

“If you come to Akakura in summer, it’s pitch dark at night,” said Masafumi Nakajima, owner of local inn Furuya and head of the 200-year-old town’s hot spring-inn tourism association. He estimates only 10 of about 80 inns in Akakura operate year-round.

Located roughly 2.5 hours from Tokyo by train in Niigata prefecture, Myoko, along with the more famed Japanese ski resorts of Niseko and Hakuba, is known for powder snow, dubbed “Japow.”

The resort areas are a huge part of Japan’s tourism boom, also fueled by a weak yen, which saw inbound tourist numbers jump 17% in February, hitting a record high for that month.

Mr. Nakajima said many foreign business owners in Akakura have refused to join the local tourism association. One consequence is a lot of broken rules on the part of businesses and tourists that range from not disposing of garbage properly, to overparking to late-night fireworks.

“We have no idea who they are and what they’re doing. They just come in December and disappear when spring comes,” he said. Mr. Nakajima recently started approaching foreign businesses to offer lectures on the town’s rules.

PRICED OUT
Many locals fear Myoko could go the way of Niseko.

The resort on the northern island of Hokkaido has become a world-renowned winter sports destination on the back of high-end foreign developments, but the surge in property prices brought higher taxes for locals choosing not to sell. Inflation there — from labor costs to a bowl of ramen —  has gone through the roof, pricing locals and most domestic travellers out of the market.

Hakuba, in the Japanese Alps, has followed a similar path, while one township in Myoko has already seen land prices jump as much as 9% last year.

PCG’s Tokyo-born founder, Ken Chan, said he’s mindful of local fears about his project, which will span 350 hectares and two ski slopes.

To attract visitors year-round, PCG wants to promote its two planned luxury hotels for business conferences and is considering discounts during non-peak times for local residents who want to ski or snowboard, he told Reuters.

He also intends to host a meeting with residents in the coming months.

Myoko City mayor Yoji Kido said he’s cautiously optimistic about PCG’s development plans but has heard few specifics.

Mr. Kido has been fielding more enquiries from foreign investors and conscious of local concerns, the city is considering new regulations for larger projects from the 2027 fiscal year.

“It’s going to be an unusually big development for our city,” he said. “I can’t deny that things aren’t worry-free.”

Koji Miyashita, the owner of a half-century-old shop in Akakura that sells steamed buns filled with red bean paste, said he sometimes feels like he doesn’t live in Japan as Westerners throng the town’s streets.

Development in Myoko should sustain the region’s culture, he said, adding: “We don’t want to be another Niseko.” — Reuters

Microsoft Malaysia to launch three data centers in Q2 2025

REUTERS

KUALA LUMPUR — Microsoft will launch its first cloud region in Malaysia with three data centers by midyear, the tech company said on Thursday, nearly a year after it announced a $2.2-billion investment in the Southeast Asian country.

The data centers, known as the Malaysia West cloud, will be located in the greater Kuala Lumpur area and will start operations in the second quarter, Laurence Si, managing director of Microsoft Malaysia, said at a press conference.

Microsoft did not reveal the capacity of the data centers.

Asked if Microsoft has faced any issues in exporting chips to Malaysia due to US export controls on semiconductor chips, Mr. Si said the company was monitoring the situation.

“At this point, everything is status quo for us. We do have a good relationship with all the various stakeholders. Everything that we intend to invest and go live with in our region, that continues to stay on track,” he said.

In May last year, Microsoft announced an investment of $2.2 billion over the next four years to expand its cloud and artificial intelligence (AI) services in Malaysia.

Mr. Si said Microsoft estimated its commitments in Malaysia over the next four years would generate $10.9 billion in revenues and create more than 37,000 jobs.

“Local businesses and organizations will be able to innovate faster and more securely, driving the country’s progress towards becoming the hub for cloud and AI growth in Southeast Asia,” he said. — Reuters

BRICS, planes, and beef in spotlight as Brazil’s Lula set to visit Vietnam

Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva — REUTERS

HANOI — Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva will visit Vietnam next week, bringing with him a business delegation including executives from planemaker Embraer and food giant JBS that are both in talks for possible deals in the Southeast Asian country, sources said.

Mr. Lula’s second visit to Vietnam as president will take place as Vietnam, under pressure from the Trump administration to reduce its large trade surplus, is pledging to boost imports from the United States, including of farm products such as soybeans of which Brazil is a top exporter to the country.

Mr. Lula will travel to Vietnam on March 27-29 after visiting Japan, according to the Brazilian government.

M. Lula is expected to invite Vietnam to attend a BRICS summit in Brazil in July, a Brazilian official said, noting Vietnam was invited last year to become a BRICS partner but has so far not taken an official position on the matter.

Vietnam’s foreign ministry did not reply to a request for comment. Brazil’s embassy to Vietnam declined to comment.

The two countries are expected to agree on an action plan on defense, agriculture and energy, which could boost cooperation on ethanol, a fuel of which Brazil is a major global producer, the Brazilian official said.

Brazil wants also to increase exports to Vietnam and is asking Hanoi to authorize imports of its beef, the official said confirming earlier reports on Vietnamese state media.

BUSINESS TALKS
The opening of the Vietnamese market for Brazilian beef is a precondition for an investment that Brazil’s food giant JBS is considering in Vietnam, three people briefed about the talks, including the Brazilian official, told Reuters.

The company is studying building a meat-processing hub in northern Vietnam, its first plant in Asia, with a possible investment of tens of millions of dollars, the three people said, declining to be named because the information was not public.

JBS declined to comment.

Separately, Embraer is also in talks for the possible sale of 10 E190 narrow-body jets to flag carrier Vietnam Airlines, the Brazilian official said.

It is also trying to sell C-390 military transport planes, with a possible showcase flight in Vietnam in May, the official and an industry source said.

Embraer declined to comment. Vietnam Airlines did not reply to a request for comment.

Hanoi is in talks with the US to buy C-130 military transport planes produced by Lockheed Martin.

Vietnam is one of the world’s fastest-growing aviation markets and local carriers have long been seeking to expand their fleets. — Reuters

Evidence mounts that universe’s dark energy is changing over time

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Arek Socha from Pixabay

WASHINGTON — New data involving millions of galaxies and luminous galactic cores is providing fresh evidence that the enigmatic and invisible cosmic force called dark energy  — responsible for the universe’s accelerated expansion — has weakened over time rather than remaining constant, as long hypothesized.

The findings announced on Wednesday are part of a years-long study of the history of the cosmos, focusing upon dark energy. The researchers analyzed three years of observations by the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument, or DESI, at Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona.

“The DESI results tantalizingly hint at an evolving dark energy,” said Arjun Dey, an astrophysicist at the US National Science Foundation’s NOIRLab and the NOIRLab project scientist for DESI.

The new analysis used data from DESI’s first three years of observations of almost 15 million galaxies and quasars, which are extremely bright galactic cores where a supermassive black hole hungrily consumes surrounding material.

This analysis, combined with other astrophysical data, offers mounting evidence that the impact of dark energy may be weakening over time and that the standard model of how the universe works may need to be revised, the researchers said.

Those other measurements include the light left over from the dawn of the universe, exploding stars called supernovae and the manner in which light from distant galaxies is warped by gravity.

“The new findings, both from DESI and from a number of other experiments, now suggest that whatever is causing the universal expansion may be decaying — that is, decreasing in strength,” Mr. Dey said. “This once again changes our fundamental understanding of nature, and in particular our understanding of the future of our universe. Will the expansion continue forever, or will the acceleration slow, stop and turn into a deceleration?”

The Big Bang event roughly 13.8 billion years ago initiated the universe, and it has been expanding ever since. Scientists in 1998 disclosed that this expansion was actually accelerating, with dark energy as the hypothesized reason. The physical nature of dark energy is presently unknown.

“DESI data tell us about how the size of the universe has grown over time. We can relate the rate at which it is growing directly to the strength — or energy density — of dark energy at a given time, since dark energy is what causes that growth rate to accelerate,” said University of Pittsburgh astrophysicist Jeff Newman, another of the researchers.

The universe’s contents include ordinary matter — stars, planets, gas, dust and all the familiar stuff on Earth — as well as dark matter and dark energy.

Ordinary matter represents perhaps 5% of the contents. Dark matter, which is known through its gravitational influences on galaxies and stars, may make up about 27%. Dark energy may make up about 68%.

“Dark energy is definitely one of the most puzzling and mysterious components of the universe. We don’t yet know what it is, but we can detect its clear effect on the expansion of the universe,” Mr. Dey said.

“All the matter in the universe has gravity which should be slowing down the rate of expansion. Instead, we observe that the universal expansion is accelerating, and we attribute this unexpected behavior to dark energy, a component of the universe which exerts a pressure to push things apart — kind of like a negative gravity,” Mr. Dey added.

The new findings were presented at the American Physical Society’s Global Physics Summit in Anaheim, California.

“Our findings in DESI that the dark energy is evolving in time and is not the cosmological constant is probably the most important result about cosmic acceleration since its discovery in 1998 that led to the Nobel Prize in physics in 2011,” said cosmologist Mustapha Ishak of the University of Texas at Dallas and co-chair of the working group that analyzed the DESI data.

“The new and unexpected result is likely to change the future of cosmology and our understanding of its standard model,” Mr. Ishak added. Reuters

Philippines to resist large swings in peso, BSP governor says

Eli Remolona, governor of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, during a Bloomberg Television interview on the sidelines of the InvestPH conference organized by the Philippine Stock Exchange in Manila, the Philippines, on Wednesday, March 19, 2025. — LISA MARIE DAVID/BLOOMBERG

The Philippine central bank will resist big swings in the peso, particularly if it is weakening, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Eli Remolona said, as emerging markets from Indonesia to Turkey turned volatile this week.

“A big swing toward the direction of depreciation tends to be inflationary,” Mr. Remolona said in an interview with Bloomberg TV’s Haslinda Amin on Wednesday. “So we worry about that, so we have to somehow resist that.”

Intervention by Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas has helped a gauge of one-month peso volatility decline from a four-year high touched in November. However, worries over domestic politics hammered the Turkish lira and Indonesian stocks this week, putting emerging-market central banks on guard as risk sentiment turned fragile.

Volatility could rise again if the dollar regains strength and the local currency might be at risk of breaching the record-low 59 level it last touched in December, Mr. Remolona said. — Bloomberg

Toyota Motor Philippines inspires racers to push their limits through TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Academy

Leading mobility company brings motorsports closer to Filipinos through racing school

Toyota Motor Philippines (TMP) recently held the TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Academy Philippines (TGRA) at the Clark International Speedway, where aspiring racers got to experience the thrill of the racetracks for themselves.

During the first half of the program, participants were oriented on the basics of racing, proper racing etiquette, car control techniques, and braking points on the track.

In the second half of the program, students got to apply what they had learned during the orientation through guided track activities. The slalom activity tested the participants’ agility, while the ‘follow the leader’ activity allowed them to get a feel of the racetrack’s straights and corners by following the racing line.

The TGRA was met with enthusiasm by first-timers, who composed a majority of the participants:

“I race go karts, so I wanted to try driving a car to see kung anong pinagkaiba. It’s almost the same, but also different because the car is bigger. For me, I feel like mas masaya ito,” shared Karis Alexandra Santos.

“Since bata pa ako mahilig ako sa kotse and manood ng racing. I’m also fascinated by the mechanical aspects of cars. Kaya I took the opportunity to sign up nung nakita ko na may slot sa TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Academy,” shared Nemuel Obas.

“The TGRA makes it more accessible to get into this sport. It was beyond my expectations. Akala ko yung first few exercises lang gagawin namin yung avoiding the cones and braking. Yun pala we also get to go around the track a few times and at a good speed,” shared Miguel Corrales.

Pangarap ko makapag-drive sa speedway, sa track yung ma-experience yung ganitong driving environment at ma-enhance yung skills ko, so in-encourage ako ng mga anak ko mag-enroll [sa TGRA]” shared Javi Rios.

“As a woman in motorsports, I’m excited to promote diversity and break down barriers in a traditionally male-dominated sport. I think the TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Academy is the perfect place to bring this passion of mine to life,” shared Ella Nicole Bornilla.

“The TGRA is our way of making motorsports more accessible to racing fans,” shared TMP Assistant Vice-President for Marketing Services Andy Ty. “We’ll have more batches of the TGRA this year, so we invite those who missed this first batch to join us in the next ones.”

The TGRA was launched in 2014 as a training ground for hopefuls looking to kick-start their racing career. Some graduates of the program have gone on to pursue professional racing careers, with some participating in the TGR Philippine Cup, TMP’s premier racing series.

Racing fans can continue to join in the fun at Race Weekend 1 of the TGR Philippine Cup, which will be happening this Saturday, March 22, 2025 at the Clark International Speedway. Admission is free.

The TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Academy Philippines is accredited by the Automobile Association Philippines (AAP) and brought to you by Official Fuel & Lubricants Partner Petron and Official Tire Partner GT Radial. This event is also supported by Toyota Financial Services Philippines, myTOYOTA Wallet, Denso, AVT, 3M, ROTA, Tuason Racing, OMP, and Kinto One.

For more information on the TGRA and other TGRA events, visit https://toyota.com.ph/tgrphilippines. Follow TOYOTA GAZOO Racing on Facebook and Instagram and TMP’s official pages — Toyota Motor Philippines on Facebook and Instagram, ToyotaMotorPH on Twitter, and join the Viber community at Toyota PH for updates.

 


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