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Gilas men survive Iranians in cliffhanger; China up next

POCF-PSC MEDIA POOL

HANGZHOU, China — Faced with nightmarish defeat after Iran razed a 21-point Gilas lead with a barrage of three-pointers, June Mar Fajardo and Justin Brownlee came to the rescue with clutch hits in the gut-wrenching closing moments on Tuesday, as the Nationals hung on by a thread 84-83 to advance to the men’s basketball semifinals of the 19th Asian Games at the Zhejiang University Gymnasium.

Like the Persian desert sun, Iran, behind Matin Aghajanpour (three triples in the 4th quarter), Mohammandsina Vehedi (4 of 8 treys overall) and Navid Razaeifar (2 of 6 triples), melted a double-digit third quarter Gilas spread and twice seized the lead, first at 81-80 and then at 83-82.

But on both occasions, Gilas rose to the challenge and reclaimed the upper hand — on a putback by Mr. Fajardo 82-81, and a tough baseline jumper by Mr. Brownlee for 84-83, with 41 seconds remaining.

Then everything came down to an open three-point shot by Mr. Aghajanpour before the Gilas bench with 17 seconds to go. He missed.

Gilas called time and came out with what looked like a four corner offense until the clock ran out.

Tim Cone was a foot or two away from the Iranian shooter when he launched the three that would have broken the hearts of Gilas fans back home.

“I was literally almost right behind him so I could see the trajectory, it was going left,” Mr. Cone said. “When he released it, I knew it was a miss. It was just a matter of ‘can we get the rebound?’ We did, and they chased us around but couldn’t get a foul off us.”

Losing the 21-point lead was not exactly a shocker, said Mr. Cone.

“In the international game, things can turn on a dime, and this did in the fourth quarter,” he said. “Luckily we had a big lead. We should have never put ourselves in that position, but that’s the way these kinds of games are.”

Mr. Brownlee led Gilas with 36 points but was held to the game-winning basket in the fourth quarter by a box-and-one defense thrown by the Iranians that stifled his movement through most of the second half.

“I think we did a good job in the first three quarters. But when they threw a wrench into our plans with that box-and-one, we just kinda struggled,” said Mr. Cone. “I think the Iranian coach did a great job bringing his team back.”

Gilas now faces host China, which routed South Korea 84-70 in another quarterfinal matchup that somehow didn’t live up to expectations at the Hangzhou Olympic Sports Center.

A place in the gold medal play awaits the winner in the Final Four encounter at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 4, exactly four weeks after the Philippines, on the crest of Jordan Clarkson’s 34-point explosion, crushed China in the classification phase of the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup at the SM Mall of Asia Arena.

The loser fell into the battle for the bronze medal, a podium finish that would allow the Philippines to duplicate its third place in the 1998 Bangkok Asian Games, also under Mr. Cone.

It was the last time the country won a basketball medal in the Asiad, the closest coming in 2002 where the Nationals lost to South Korea in the semifinals on a buzzer-beating three-pointer by Lee San-Min and then collapsed altogether, as a consequence, against Kazakhstan in the fight for bronze.

Nobody is thinking bronze at the moment, however, least of all Mr. Cone, who is aching for payback against preliminary round tormentor Jordan, a rematch that could only materialize if both teams make it to the finals.

Gilas is one step away. Jordan was beating Saudi Arabia handily at press time and will next go up against either Japan or Chinese Taipei in the semis.

“We also played China in the semis 25 years ago,” said Mr. Cone. “But it’s a totally different ballgame now, so we’ll see.”

A full quarter and a half away from walking back into the locker room and probably admiring themselves in the mirror for a job well done after the Iranians fell behind 62-41, the Nationals turned a little careless with ball possession and paid the prize.

It was still 71-54 for Gilas after three quarters. Then came a torrent of three-pointers from Iran, with five straight points from Mr. Vehedi giving the Middle Eastern team its first taste of the lead since 4-3, setting up the heart-stopping finish.

“It feels great,” said Mr. Brownlee later. “Never say die, right? We just kept fighting.”

Jun Mar Fajardo, whose two free throws held Iran at bay 80-76 with 2:17 to go, had 18 points with eight rebounds while Scottie Thompson added 11 points with six rebounds. — POCF-PSC Media Pool

Ateneo vs DLSU headline quadruple-header in UAAP Season 86 men’s basketball

PHILIPPINE STAR/JUN MENDOZA

Games Wednesday
(Mall of Asia Arena, Pasay City)
10 a.m. — UP vs UE
12 p.m. — NU vs FEU
2 p.m. — AdU vs UST
6 p.m. — ADMU vs DLSU

AFTER contrasting debut results, archrivals Ateneo de Manila University (ADMU) and De La Salle University (DLSU) tangle in early collision to headline an explosive quadruple-header in the UAAP Season 86 men’s basketball tournament today at the Mall of Asia Arena.

The new chapter of the storied Blue-Green rivalry erupts at 6 p.m. with reigning champion Ateneo eyeing a quick rebound opposite an on-target De La Salle crew coming off a rousing debut under Topex Robinson.

The Blue Eagles kicked off their title defense with a 77-64 defeat at the hands of the National University (NU) Bulldogs as the Green Archers poured it down on the Far Eastern University (FEU) Tamaraws, 87-76, making it an interesting duel for the two rivals this early in the season.

Apart from a litmus test for De La Salle raring for redemption after missing the Final Four last season, the rivalry game will serve as a baptism of fire for Mr. Robinson with only a game in his pocket as a first-time UAAP mentor after his stints in the NCAA with Lyceum of the Philippine University and San Sebastian College-Recoletos, and the PBA with Alaska and Phoenix Super LPG.

“When I was growing up way, way back, I used to watch that rivalry and up to know, I’m just excited for that. It just came in so early but whether we like it or not, we’re gonna face each other,” said Mr. Robinson, a former Golden Stag before scaling the coaching ranks.

“Obviously, there’s a lot of hype and a lot of stories behind the game. At the end of the day, Ateneo’s a worthy rival. That will never change. Coach Tab Baldwin is a worthy rival. We’ll always compete against each other and it’s just an opportunity for me to get better learning from Coach Tab and Ateneo.”

Standing in his way is Mr. Baldwin, the author of Ateneo’s four titles in the last five seasons, including a three-peat.

As deflating as the debut loss was for now a young Blue Eagles unit, Mr. Baldwin is not pressing the panic button yet as he expects a stronger showing from his wards against their adversaries from Taft.

“Hopefully our players exhibit a little bit more pride and I think they will,” said the seasoned tactician as Ateneo entered a new era without long-time anchor Ange Kouame.

“I don’t like to use the word wake-up call because we aren’t asleep. We just played badly. Irrespective of adjustments and NU created scenarios that we needed to continue to adjust and we didn’t adjust enough. Credit to Jeff (Napa) and credit to NU team. That’s a veteran team.”

Led by Kai Ballungay, Mason Amos and Joseph Obasa, the youthful Blue Eagles though will be up against another experienced squad in the Green Archers, with an intact core that ruled the PBA D-League prior to the UAAP.

In other games, opening day winners University of the Philippines (1-0) and University of the East (1-0) clash at 10 a.m. followed by NU’s 2-0 bid against FEU (0-1) at 2 p.m. and the race for first win between University of Santo Tomas (0-1) and Adamson University (0-1) at 4 p.m. — John Bryan Ulanday

Eumir Marcial eyes Asian Games finals, outright 2024 Paris Olympics berth

EUMIR MARCIAL — PHILIPPINE STAR/JUN MENDOZA

HANGZHOU, China — Eumir Marcial guns for a seat in the finals and an outright berth in the Olympics when he climbs the ring Wednesday night in the semifinals of men’s boxing in the 19th Asian Games.

Mr. Marcial, 27, faces Ahmad Ghousoon of Syria in one of two semifinal bouts at 80kg set at the Hangzhou gymnasium.

A win by the Filipino pro boxer will have him advance in the gold medal round, but more importantly, secure a ticket to the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Boxing is one of six sports which serve as a qualifier to the Olympics.

Mr. Marcial won a bronze in the Tokyo Games while fighting as a middleweight.

Yet he appears to be settling in his new weight class at light-heavy given the outcome of his previous fights, including a second round knockout win over Weerapon JongJoho of Thailand in Sunday’s quarterfinals.

Mr. Ghousoon, who comes from a family of boxers and served as flagbearer of Syria during the Asiad opening ceremony, fights with an aggressive stance and doesn’t know how to back down, a style which Philippine head coach Ronald Chavez finds to Mr. Marcial’s liking.

“Palusob,” was how Chavez describes the 27-year-old Syrian, a 5-0 winner against Taijikistan Shabbos Negmatulloev in the quarterfinals.

By reaching the semis, Mr. Marcial is already assured of matching the same finish he had during the 2018 edition of the Asiad in Palembang, Indonesia.

But this time he wanted more, including that coveted automatic spot in the Paris Olympiad. — POC-PSC Media Pool

Gymnast Finnegan books Olympic ticket

WHEN Aleah Finnegan failed to advance to the United States Olympic trials three years ago and eventually kissed her Tokyo Games chances goodbye, the Fil-Am artistic gymnast from Missouri thought her Olympic dream was over.

Until she got a call from the Gymnastics Association of the Philippines asking her if she wants to represent the country and continue her Olympic pursuit.

Her answer was yes.

It was a momentous decision that resulted in the 20-year-old Ms. Finnegan achieving her Olympic dream after she recently qualified to next year’s Paris Games via a strong performance in the World Championships in Antwerp, Belgium.

There, the Southeast Asian Games gold medalist placed 32nd in the two-day individual all-around qualifications after amassing 51.366 points that proved enough to book her a ticket to Paris.

Ms. Finnegan, whose mother Linabelle was born and raised in the Philippines, thus joined pole-vaulter and Hangzhou Asian Games gold winner EJ Obiena and fellow gymnast and two-time world titlist Carlos Yulo as the Philippines’ first three Olympic entrants.

It was also historic since Ms. Finnegan became the first Filipina gymnast journey to the Olympics since Evelyn Magluyan and Maria Luisa Floro competed in the 1964 Tokyo Games.

“It’s a dream come true,” said an emotional Ms. Finnegan in an interview at Olympics.com. “I’ve been wanting to go to the Olympics since I knew what the Olympics were.” — Joey Villar

Gilas women bow out of Asiad

HANGZHOU — Gilas Pilipinas women’s team made an abrupt exit in the 19th Asian Games following a 93-71 loss to South Korea in the quarterfinals late Monday night.

An 11-2 run late in the opening period was all the Sokors needed to take control of the match that had the Filipina cagebelles playing catch up the rest of the way after taking the early initiative, 5-0.

The first quarter ended at 23-13 for Korea, which later led by as many as 25 points at the Shaoxing Olympic Sports Centre gymnasium.

Khate Castillo topscored for 18 points in a losing cause for Gilas, which also got a double-double from center Jack Animam with 15 points and 14 rebounds. Ms. Animam, Mae Cabinbin, and Janine Pontejos were all reduced to tears as they tried to console each other on the way to the dugout. — POC-PSC Media Pool

Yulo needs a new coach, extensive training, and competitions after qualifying in Paris

PHILIPPINE STAR/JUN MENDOZA

WITH a ticket to the 2024 Olympics in the bag, the next major task is to get Carlos Yulo fully-equipped for his golden mission in Paris.

Gymnastics chief Cynthia Carrion said Mr. Yulo needs an extensive training and competition program overseas under the supervision of a new coach in place of Munehiro Kugiyama after wrapping up his stint in the Olympic-qualifying World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Antwerp, Belgium.

“To get gold medals in the Olympics, he needs to compete in all World Cups for practice and see his competitors as well as the Asian Championships in Kazakhstan,” Ms. Carrion told The STAR.

Mr. Yulo secured a seat to Paris Games after emerging as the highest-ranked eligible athlete in the floor exercise in the world meet. The Philippine pride scored 14.600 points in the preliminaries to third behind Artem Dogopyat of Israel (15.100) and Frederick Richard of the US (14.600), both of whom had already secured Olympic berths prior, going to the floor finale.

“Having the highest score in the floor, as two others ahead of him are part of the (qualified) team or all-around, he is entitled to compete in all apparatus,” Ms. Carrion said.

But Mr. Yulo will embark on this journey minus Mr. Kugiyama, who played a big part in his development as a world-class gymnast. The two went their separate ways ahead of the Antwerp worlds.

“I will get him a coach to monitor him as he knows what to do to win but needs good monitoring,” said Ms. Carrion.

She said it would be better for the 23-year-old pocket rocket to have his preparations overseas, away from distractions.

“He wants to join a lot of training camps away from the Philippines. That is our plan to go forward as he can get at least two gold medals in the Olympics,” she said.

Ms. Carrion also advised Mr. Yulo to “stop reading all the gossip in social media as it will distract him.”

She underscored the need to hire a nutritionist and psychologist for Mr. Yulo.

“Need PSC (Philippine Sports Commission) full support,” said Ms. Carrion.

Mr. Yulo won’t be the only gymnast from the Philippines seeing action in France. Fil-Am Aleah Finnegan also booked a ticket to the Olympiad yesterday after placing among the 14 strongest all-arounders whose teams did not qualify. — Olmin Leyba

Altas scores its first win in beating the Chiefs

Games Wednesday
(Filoil EcoOil Arena)
2 p.m. — CSB vs Mapua
4 p.m. — EAC vs JRU

UNIVERSITY of Perpetual Help (PHSD) overpowered Arellano University (AU) in a showdown between doormat teams, 85-66, yesterday to breathe some life into its Final Four hopes in NCAA Season 99 at the Filoil EcoOil Arena.

Mircus Nitura delivered a memorable performance with 19 points that went with nine rebounds, five assists and a steal as the Altas claimed their first win after two losses in a row.

The game also produced heroes in Christian Pagaran, Art Roque and Mark Omega, who scattered 17, 13 and 12 points, respectively.

It was the third straight defeat for the Chiefs, who joined underperforming reigning three-peat titlist Letran at the bottom.

It was Messrs Nitura and Roque who sparked UPHSD’s early breakaway where they led at the break, 47-34.

Unrelenting, the Altas sustained their rampage with unstoppable scoring and rock solid defense in outscoring the Chiefs, 21-9, in the third quarter crushed whatever hopes left with the latter.

Jade Talampas was a lonesome dove for AU as he tried to carry the fight and erupted for 20 first half points before losing steam in the end as he was held to just three points the rest of the way. — Joey Villar

The scores:

First Game

UPHSD 85- Nitura 19, Pagaran 17, Roque 13, Omega 12, Razon 7, Abis 6, Boral 4, Ferreras 3, Nunez 2, Barcuma 1, Gelsano 1, Sevilla 0, Cuevas 0, Ramirez 0

AU 66- Talampas 23, Ongotan 9, Geronimo 9, Sunga 9, Dayrit 6, Capulong 5, Villarente 4, Mallari 1, Camay 0, Abastillas 0, Yanes 0, dela Cruz 0, Valencia 0, Rosalin 0, Lustina 0

22-10; 47-34; 68-43; 85-66

PHL men’s 4×400 team makes Asiad finals

HANGSHOU, China — Backstopped by the son of an athletic legend and a new Fil-American recruit, the Philippines advanced to the finals of the 4×400 men’s relay of the 19th Asian Games here after topping heat 2 at the Hangzhou Olympic Sports Centre Stadium on Tuesday.

Fil-heritage athlete Umajesty Williams led the charge of the Philippines with a team-best 44.16 seconds, followed by athletic great Isidro del Prado’s son, Michael, who timed 45.88.

Joyme Sequita and Frederick Ramirez provided decent support at 46.74 and 49.37, respectively, as the Philippines ruled the heat with a new national record of 3:06.15.

That proved enough to beat the 3:06.60 of fellow final qualifiers Sri Lanka and Korea (3:07.10).

The Philippines, the reigning 4×400 champion in the Southeast Asian Games, will have a repeat showdown in the finals at 8:35 p.m. on Wednesday against its SEAG runner-up Thailand (national record 3:06.96), Iraq (NR 3:07.58), Bahrain (NR 3:06.2), Korea (NR 3:04.03), India (NR 3:03.81), Sri Lanka (3:06.60) and Qatar (NR 3:01.00).

Also on Wednesday, the women’s 4×400 Philippine team of Fil-heritage athletes Lauren Hoffman, Robyn Brown, Angel Frank and Maureen Maureen Schrijvers will clash with fellow Southeast Asian rivals Thailand and SEA Games champion Vietnam in the finals slated at 8:15 p.m. Also in the finals are India, Bahrain, Sri Lanka and Mongolia.

The Philippine team is supported by the Philippine Sports Commission. — POC-PSC Media Pool

NBA fans win

Jrue Holiday may be no messiah, but it took all of three days for the Celtics to nab him and thereby resurrect their championship hopes. The Bucks had previously catapulted to the top of oddsmakers’ lists following their acquisition of Damian Lillard, but at the cost of losing him. As soon as he landed with the Blazers, however, lines became busy in a frenzy for his services. No surprise there; after all, he’s one of the top on-ball perimeter defenders in the National Basketball Association, and his relative reliability on the other end of the court decidedly makes him a valuable piece for would-be contenders to the throne.

For the Blazers, dealing Holiday to the Celtics culminates an offseason of second-guessing and doubt. After Lillard made his wishes to be traded to a contender — and particularly the Heat — known, they wasted no time looking for a suitor willing to bite at their asking price. That said, they resolved to temper the inevitability of his departure with patience; at no instance would they allow him to change addresses for pennies to the dollar. And throughout their quest to find a landing spot for him, they never wavered in their stance.

Needless to say, the Heat come out big losers in the Lillard sweepstakes. They should have been at the front of the line considering his desire to don their colors; instead, their refusal to go all in ultimately left them with an empty bag. The Blazers may well have made it harder on them in order to spite their erstwhile foundational piece, but, make no mistake: If they offered enough, they would have claimed him in any case. As things turned out, the Bucks had the assets — bannered by Holiday and a handful of future assets — to entice his transfer.

All things considered, it can be reasonably argued that those involved in the player movements got what they wanted. The Blazers managed to accelerate a pivot to a rebuild with a treasure trove of draft picks. The Bucks propped up title aspirations and bought some peace of mind in regard to Giannis Antetokounmpo’s contract situation. The Celtics swooped in to regain favored — make that heavily favored — status. The Suns rationalized for the better. And, in the end, the fans win.

 

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.

Trump reaped over $100M through fraud, says AG

Former U.S. President Donald Trump attends the trial of himself, his adult sons, the Trump Organization and others in a civil fraud case brought by state Attorney General Letitia James, at a Manhattan courthouse, in New York City, Oct. 2, 2023. — REUTERS/BRENDAN MCDERMID

NEW YORK — A defiant Donald Trump attacked New York’s attorney general (AG) and the judge overseeing his civil fraud trial as it began on Monday, with a state lawyer accusing the former president of generating more than $100 million by lying about his real estate empire.

Attorney General Letitia James is seeking at least $250 million in fines, a permanent ban against Mr. Trump and his sons Donald Jr. and Eric from running businesses in New York and a five-year commercial real estate ban against Mr. Trump and the Trump Organization.

Testimony in the Manhattan courtroom began following opening statements, with Donald Bender, a partner at Mazars USA and longtime accountant for Mr. Trump’s businesses, as the state’s first witness.

Mr. Trump told reporters before the trial began that the case was a “scam,” a “sham” and a political vendetta by Ms. James, and during a lunch break called the Democrat “a corrupt person, a terrible person. Driving people out of New York.”

He was equally unsparing of the judge, Arthur Engoron, calling him a partisan Democrat who is using the case to interfere with the 2024 presidential election, where Mr. Trump holds a big lead for the Republican nomination.

“This is a judge that should be disbarred,” Mr. Trump told reporters. “This is a judge that should be out of office.”

Mr. Trump’s election campaign used the start of the trial for fundraising, saying he was defending his family and reputation from New York Democrats it called “corrupt tyrants.”

The case concerns accusations by the attorney general that Mr. Trump inflated his assets and his own net worth from 2011 to 2021 to obtain favorable bank loans and lower insurance premiums.

‘MONA LISA PROPERTIES’
Ms. James has accused Mr. Trump of materially overvaluing assets including his Trump Tower penthouse apartment in Manhattan, his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida and various office towers and golf clubs, and inflated his own fortune by as much as $2.2 billion.

“This isn’t business as usual, and this isn’t how sophisticated parties deal with each other,” Kevin Wallace, a lawyer from Ms. James’ office, said in his opening statement. “These are not victimless crimes.”

Christopher Kise, a lawyer for Mr. Trump, countered in his opening statement that Mr. Trump’s financials were entirely legal.

“He has made a fortune literally being right about real estate investments,” Mr. Kise said. “There was no intent to defraud, there was no illegality, there was no default, there was no breach, there was no reliance from the banks, there were no unjust profits, and there were no victims.”

Alina Habba, another lawyer, separately told Mr. Engoron that Mr. Trump’s assets were “Mona Lisa properties” that could fetch premium prices if Mr. Trump sold them.

Mr. Trump wore a dark blue suit, a brighter blue tie and an American flag pin on his lapel in court.

As he entered, he called the case “a continuation of the single greatest witch hunt of all time.”

Ms. James said her office was ready to prove its case.

“The law is both powerful and fragile,” she said. “No matter how much money you think you may have, no one is above the law.” 

SIX CLAIMS
Mr. Engoron is hearing evidence without a jury.

Last week, the judge found Mr. Trump, his adult sons and 10 of his companies liable for fraud, describing in scathing terms how the defendants made up valuations.

He said these included valuing the Trump Tower apartment as if it were three times its actual size and worth $327 million, and estimating that Mar-a-Lago was worth up to $739 million though its assessed value was no more than $28 million.

The judge canceled business certificates for companies controlling pillars of Mr. Trump’s empire, and said he would appoint receivers to oversee their dissolution.

Mr. Trump responded at the time by calling Mr. Engoron “deranged.”

The trial will review six additional claims including falsifying business records, insurance fraud and conspiracy, and address how much in penalties the defendants should pay.

Before opening arguments, Mr. Engoron described himself as a generalist on the law. “One thing I know a lot about is the definition of fraud,” he said.

Mr. Wallace played an excerpt from a deposition where Michael Cohen, who had been Mr. Trump’s personal lawyer and fixer but has since turned against his former boss, said the goal was “to attain the number that Mr. Trump wanted.”

Mr. Kise countered that just because people disagree about valuations does not mean one valuation must be fraudulent.

“They are not designed to be absolutes,” he said.

In his testimony, Mr. Bender said he relied on information provided by Mr. Trump and his companies when compiling Trump’s personal financial statements.

“The original numbers come from the Trump Organization, and any changes that would have been made at the end would have been approved by the Trump Organization,” Mr. Bender said.

The trial is scheduled to run through early December. — Reuters

Assets seized in Singapore money laundering case now at $2B

REUTERS

SINGAPORE — Total assets seized in a major money laundering case in Singapore have reached S$2.8 billion ($2 billion), with more arrests and seizures possible, a government minister said on Tuesday.

In a speech to lawmakers, Second Minister for Home Affairs Josephine Teo said the case was one of the city-state’s largest anti-money laundering operations, and was on the radar of police since 2021 after the filing of suspicious transaction reports by financial institutions.

“We started investigations because we suspected that offenses had been committed in Singapore. Once we confirmed our suspicions, we acted,” said Ms. Teo.

In simultaneous raids in mid-August, authorities seized gold bars, designer handbags and fistfuls of jewelry, as well as scores of properties and luxury cars, in a haul that shocked the wealthy nation known for low crime rates.

Ms. Teo said rumors that the operation happened because of pressure from authorities in China were “completely untrue.” — Reuters

Pope Francis hints at slight opening to blessings of same-sex couples

REUTERS

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis has appeared to leave open the possibility of priests blessing same-sex couples, if they are limited, decided on a case-by-case basis and not confused with wedding ceremonies of heterosexuals.

Pope Francis made his opinion known in one answer to five questions from five conservative cardinals from Asia, Europe, Africa, the United States and Latin America.

The cardinals sent the pope a set of formal questions, known as dubia (“doubts” in Latin), about issues relating to a global gathering that starts at the Vatican on Wednesday.

One of the questions specifically regarded the practice, which has become relatively common in places like Germany, of priests blessing same sex couples who are in a committed relationship.

The written exchange took place in July and the Vatican published the pope’s responses on Monday after the five cardinals unilaterally disclosed their initiative, saying they were not satisfied with Pope Francis’ answers.

The pope’s nuanced response differed from an explicit ruling against such blessings by the Vatican’s doctrinal office in 2021.

In his seven-point response, Pope Francis said the Church was very clear that the sacrament of matrimony could only be between a man and woman and open to procreation and that the Church should avoid any other ritual or sacramental rite that contradicted this teaching.

Still, he said “pastoral charity should permeate all our decisions and attitudes” adding that “we cannot be judges who only deny, reject and exclude”.

At times, he said, requests for blessings were a means through which people reached out to God to live better lives, even if some acts were “objectively morally unacceptable”.

The Church teaches that same-sex attraction is not sinful but homosexual acts are.

Any eventual blessings, Francis said, should not become the norm or get blanket approval from Church jurisdictions such as dioceses or national bishops conferences.

Francis DeBernardo, executive director of New Ways Ministry, which promotes Church outreach to LGBT Catholics, said that while the response was not a “full-fledged, ringing endorsement” of such blessings, it was very welcomed.

In a statement Mr. DeBernardo said that the pope’s words implied “that the church does indeed recognize that holy love can exist between same-gender couples, and the love of these couples mirrors the love of God.” — Reuters

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