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Gymnast Yulo makes a go at lone shot at Olympic gold; Knott debuts

CARLOS YULO at the 74th All Japan Artistic Gymnastics Individual All-Around Championship Men’s Vault Final at Takasaki Arena, Gunma, Japan. — REUTERS

FILIPINO gymnast Carlos H. Yulo resumes his Tokyo Olympic Games campaign on Monday and looks to succeed in his lone shot at winning a gold medal.

Manila native Mr. Yulo, 21, will be competing in the vault finals of the gymnastics event set at 5:51 p.m. (Manila time) at the Ariake Gymnastics Center in Tokyo.

The Philippine bet only qualified for the finals of the men’s vault out of a possible seven events during the qualification phase on July 24.

Mr. Yulo made the cut in vault by scoring 14.712 points, good for sixth and inside the top 8 that was needed to qualify.

He, however, fell short in the all-around (47th), his pet event floor exercise (44th), pommel horse (69th), rings (24th), parallel bars (55th) and horizontal bar (63rd).

Mr. Yulo lamented not being able to advance to more gymnastics events, but vowed to perform better in the vault finals even as he said it is going to be tough.

“I was surprised that I was able to qualify [in vault],” said Mr. Yulo in Filipino after the qualification round, taking note of how the vault event is not among his stronger suits.

“It’s going to be tough as there are many good competitors in the event. But I can still improve on my performance. So let’s see,” he added.

Gymnastics Association of the Philippines President Cynthia Carrion-Norton shared to Filipino sports journalists in Japan that Mr. Yulo is moving on and will be coming in the vault finals prepared and determined.

Meanwhile, also on Monday, Filipino-American track athlete Kristina C. Knott will begin her Olympic campaign in the 200m run in qualifying heats beginning at 10:18 a.m. at the Olympic Stadium.

Ms. Knott, 25, born to a Filipino mother who hails from Cavite, qualified for the Olympics by gaining a universality place from World Athletics.

In the lead-up to her campaign, she worked out at the Transcosmos Track and Field stadium in Isahaya City in southern Nagasaki.

Her preparation was overseen by coach Rohsaan Griffin and strength and conditioning coach Carlo Buzzichelli.

Ms. Knott is the second athletics athlete to represent the Philippines in the Tokyo Games after pole-vaulter Ernest John Obiena, who is through to the finals of his event. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Rain or Shine comes back to beat Terrafirma, halts slide

THE Rain or Shine Elasto Painters came from behind to beat the Terrafirma Dyip, 83-77, on Sunday to halt their losing streak in the PBA Philippine Cup. — PBA IMAGES

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

THE Rain or Shine Elasto Painters came back from a double-digit deficit to beat the Terrafirma Dyip, 83-77, in PBA Philippine Cup action at the Ynares Sports Arena in Pasig City, Sunday.

Rain or Shine used a strong charge back late in the third quarter and early in the payoff canto to turn things around and defeat the Dyip to halt their losing streak in the season-opening Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) tournament to two games.

Ray C. Nambatac and veteran Gabe V. Norwood showed the way for the Elasto Painters in the comeback win, finishing with 17 and 15 points, respectively.

Terrafirma was threatening to pull away in the game, building a 14-point cushion, 61-47, with 6:51 left in the third quarter.

But Rain or Shine steadily narrowed its deficit as the quarter drew to a close, with the team down by just four points, 65-61, heading into the final frame.

In the fourth quarter, the Elasto Painters maintained the momentum they built, seizing the lead, 68-67, with 8:34 left and never looking back from there.

Adrian Wong also scored 15 for Rain or Shine, which improved to 4-2 in the Philippine Cup, good for solo fifth spot. Mark R. Borboran added nine points, all coming from beyond the arc.

For Terrafirma, which remains winless in four matches, it was Juami B. Tiongson who led the way with 20 points and seven assists. Sophomore Roosevelt Adams, meanwhile, added a double-double of 13 points and 16 rebounds while guard JP Calvo had 11 points and eight boards.

Next for Rain or Shine is a clash against Philippine Cup defending champions Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings on Friday, Aug. 6, at 3 p.m., while Terrafirma returns on Wednesday, Aug. 4, against the Phoenix Super LPG Fuel Masters in a game set for 6 p.m.

Alex Eala to see action at WTA 250 event in Romania as a wild card

FILIPINO teen tennis ace Alex Eala is set to compete in her first WTA 250 event this week as a wild card entry. — ALEX EALA FB PAGE

FILIPINO teen tennis ace Alex M. Eala is set to compete in her first Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) 250 event this week after earning a wild card berth.

Ms. Eala, 16, a Rafa Nadal Academy scholar, is part of the roster for the clay tournament Winners Open 2021 at Cluj-Napoca in Romania happening from Aug. 2 to 8.

She herself announced the welcome development in a Facebook post on Saturday, expressing her excitement over the new challenge she will be taking on.

The long-time Globe ambassador is coming off a successful outing in an International Tennis Federation Juniors tournament in Milan in July where she captured both the singles and doubles titles.

Ms. Eala, currently ranked 634th in the WTA and the world’s number two juniors player, now looks to sustain the same form previously as she continues to build on the gains she has had for the year, which also include winning the girls’ doubles title at the French Open.

In Romania, she will face a still-to-be-named qualifier in the Round of 32. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Chery Tiggo holds down Petro Gazz in three sets

The Chery Tiggo Crossovers improved to 5-2 in the PVL Open Conference after beating the Petro Gazz Angels in straight sets on Sunday. They also earned a playoff for a semifinal berth. (PVL Media Bureau) 

The Chery Tiggo Crossovers won their second straight victory in the Premier Volleyball League Open Conference on Sunday, defeating the Petro Gazz Angels in three sets, 25-18, 25-20, 25-22, at the PCV Socio-Civic & Cultural Center in Bacarra, Ilocos Norte.

Jaja Santiago led the way for Chery Tiggo as the Crossovers bucked a slow start in the third set and made a spirited attack late to complete the shutout win.

It was the fifth victory in seven games for the currently third-running Crossovers, who also secured a playoff for a semifinal berth in the process.

Ms. Santiago tallied 20 points, 16 off kills, three from blocks and one ace.

Her sister, Dindin Santiago-Manabat, added 12 points while Mylene Paat and Maika Ortiz had nine and seven points each for Chery Tiggo.

“We have some challenges along the way but we were still able to work on them,” said Chery Tiggo coach Aaron Velez after their win.

For Petro Gazz, it was Ria Meneses who top-scored with 11 points, followed by Ces Molina and Myla Pablo with nine points apiece.

The loss stopped a three-game winning streak for the Angels, who now sport a 4-2 card.

Chery Tiggo takes on Black Mamba Army on Wednesday before closing out its elimination campaign against Choco Mucho on Sunday, Aug. 8.

Petro Gazz, for its part, returns to action against the Bali Pure Water Defenders on Tuesday at 3 p.m. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Basketball: US clinches playoff spot; France and Australia go 3-0

TOKYO — The United States clinched a quarterfinal berth in Olympic men’s basketball on Saturday as seedings for next week’s last-eight showdowns took shape.

Kevin Durant led Team USA to a commanding 119-84 victory against the Czech Republic in the final group game at the Saitama Super Arena, north of Tokyo.

The US ended the preliminaries 2-1 after dropping their first match to France, the first Olympic loss for the Americans since 2004.

“We’re all just trying to figure each other out. This is literally our third game with all of us together,” said Jrue Holiday, who plays for the National Basketball Association’s (NBA) Milwaukee Bucks. “But we knew KD would come in and do what he always does.”

Team USA started slowly against the Czech team and were trailing at the end of the first quarter. But the Americans pulled away in the second half on a barrage of three-pointers from Durant and Jayson Tatum.

In earlier matches, France and Australia completed sweeps of their preliminary groups.

Real Madrid’s Thomas Heurtel led with 16 points in France’s 79-62 victory over Iran. They went 3-0 in Group A, including their shock defeat of Team USA on Sunday.

Despite his team’s dominant showing so far, Evan Fournier would not speculate on France’s chances of a medal.

“Quarterfinal first. Focus on that,” said Fournier, who plays for the NBA’s Boston Celtics. “Too many times we’ve beaten very, very good teams and we lost in the semifinal, so no more of that.”

SCINTILLATING MILLS
Australia’s Patty Mills was scintillating behind the 3-point line, powering his team to an 89-76 victory over Germany in Group B.

Australia will go into the quarterfinals without forward Aron Baynes who aggravated a neck injury after a bathroom slip and is out of the Games.

Germany and the Czech Republic finished 1-2, but the Germans advance to the quarterfinals on Tuesday based on the relative scoring records. One final last-eight slot remains and will go to winner of Argentina against Japan in Group C on Sunday.

Italy finished 2-1 in the preliminaries and will advance. Nico Mannion drained a three-pointer in the last 30 seconds to fend off a comeback from Nigeria, with his team holding on to win 80-71.

“Honestly, it felt good just to see one go in. I shot it terrible the whole night,” said Mannion, who plays for the NBA’s Golden State Warriors. “But you know, shooters keep shooting.”

Team USA has historically been the team to beat, with a 139-6 record and 15 gold medals since 1936.

But as the sport has grown in popularity around the globe, many national teams can field players with NBA experience, and the US’s talent advantage has shrunk.

Before losing to France at these Olympics, the US dropped two straight exhibition games this month, including a defeat by world 22nd-ranked Nigeria.

Both Iran and Nigeria finished their Olympic journeys winless, and offered bitter parting words.

Arsalan Kazemi said travel restrictions on Iran prevented the team playing in friendly matches, while Nigeria’s Chimezie Metu blasted the nation’s government for lack of support.

“Our government and the Olympic committee of Nigeria, they make it extremely difficult for us to go out there and just focus on performing our sport,” he said. — Reuters

Swiss Bencic clinches gold as Djokovic exits without medal

TOKYO — Belinda Bencic became the first Swiss woman to win a tennis gold medal at the Olympics with a victory in the singles final on Saturday, while Novak Djokovic went home empty-handed for the third successive Games.

Djokovic withdrew from his mixed doubles contest with a shoulder injury shortly after being beaten (6-4, 6-7(6), 6-3) by Spain’s Pablo Carreño Busta in the singles bronze-medal match.

The Serbian world number one’s exit came a day after he failed in his bid to complete the Golden Slam.

World number 12 Bencic outlasted Markéta Vondroušová of the Czech Republic (7-5, 2-6, 6-3) in a nervy final to become the first Swiss to win an Olympic singles title since Marc Rosset won the men’s event in 1992.

Bencic dedicated her win to former Swiss number ones Roger Federer and Martina Hingis as neither player ever won a singles gold at the Olympics.

“I think I accomplished it for them (Federer and Hingis),” she told reporters.

“They did so much in their careers. I’m not sure I will be ever be able to do what they did, but maybe I could help them to accomplish this one with giving them this Olympics. So it’s both for Martina and for Roger.”

Bencic could claim another gold in Tokyo as she and Viktorija Golubic will take on Czech top seeds Barbora Krejčíková and Kateřina Siniaková in the women’s doubles final on Sunday.

In the bronze medal match, Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina fought back to prevail (1-6, 7-6(5), 6-4) over Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan.

The victory ends a whirlwind month for Svitolina, who lost in the second round at Wimbledon before marrying French tennis player Gael Monfils a week before the Games began.

“It was extremely tough and that’s why… when I finally won that match point, it was just the explosion of the emotions,” Svitolina said.

MISSED OPPORTUNITIES
Djokovic had arrived in Tokyo aiming to become the first man to win all four majors and an Olympic gold medal in the same calendar year, after securing victories at the Australian Open, the French Open and Wimbledon.

But that quest came to an end after he was beaten by German Alexander Zverev in Friday’s semifinal.

Djokovic’s withdrawal from Saturday’s mixed doubles, along with partner Nina Stojanović, resulted in an automatic bronze for Australian pair Ash Barty and John Peers.

“I do have a regret for not winning a medal for my country and opportunities missed both in mixed doubles and singles. I just didn’t deliver yesterday and today,” Djokovic said, adding that he was still aiming to play at the 2024 Paris Games.

“The level of tennis dropped also due to exhaustion, mentally and physically.”

Saturday’s loss to Carreño Busta marked Djokovic’s third appearance and second defeat in a singles bronze medal match.

He won the bronze at the Beijing Games in 2008 before losing to Argentina’s Juan Martin Del Potro in London four years later. Del Potro beat him again in the first round of Rio 2016.

Carreño Busta’s win capped a giant-killing week for the 30-year-old, after he took down world number two Daniil Medvedev in the quarterfinals.

“This has been an exceptional match… This is even more incredible than winning a tournament. I have won the Davis Cup, gone far in other tournaments, but winning an Olympic medal is amazing. Words fail me,” said Carreño Busta.

His victory also extends Spain’s remarkable Olympic record, having secured a tennis medal at every Games but one since 1988.

In the women’s doubles, Brazilians Laura Pigossi and Luisa Stefani saved four match points against Veronika Kudermetova and Elena Vesnina of the Russian Olympic Committee to snatch the bronze medal. It was Brazil’s first medal in tennis. — Reuters

McKeon gets record seventh medal; Dressel clinches sprint double

TOKYO — Australia’s Emma McKeon became the first female swimmer to win seven medals at a single Olympic Games on Sunday after completing the sprint double with victory in the 50m freestyle and then winning another gold in the women’s 4×100 medley relay.

American Caeleb Dressel confirmed his dominance in men’s sprint swimming, powering to victory in the 50 free to go with his 100 gold and clinching a fifth medal of the Games as Team USA triumphed in the men’s medley relay.

There was more gold joy for the United States with Robert Finke completing the distance double, producing another late push to win the 1,500 freestyle to add to his 800 gold.

The United States ended what has been an enthralling swimming competition in Tokyo with 11 gold medals, five less than in Rio and London.

Australia won nine, their most swimming golds at a Games, and Britain left with four golds as part of a record haul of eight total medals.

McKeon, who has pocketed four golds in Tokyo, swam the butterfly leg as part of Australia’s “Awesome Foursome” in the medley relay, with Cate Campbell’s superb final leg pushing the United States into silver.

That saw McKeon join Michael Phelps, Mark Spitz and Matt Biondi as the only swimmers with seven medals at a Games. Russian gymnast Maria Gorokhovskaya, in 1952, is the only woman to have won seven in any other sport.

“It still feels pretty surreal. I never thought I would win two golds in one session… I’m very proud of myself,” she said.

Teammate Campbell was full of praise for McKeon’s performances in Tokyo.

“Full credit to Emma… I think that we just need to acknowledge what an incredible job she has done,” Campbell said.

“She walks away from these Games with four gold medals now and I honestly could not be happier for her. She is such an important part of this team and I think that needs to be recognized.”

McKeon outsprinted the field in the 50m freestyle, with Swede Sarah Sjöström taking silver and Rio 50m champion Pernille Blume of Denmark bronze, and was then quickly back in the pool for the medley relay.

The Australians were second all the way to the final turn when Campbell pulled away from Abbey Weitzeil to secure the ninth gold medal for the country in the Tokyo pool — eight of which have come from the women’s squad.

PRETTY FATIGUED
Dressel, the 100m free and butterfly champion, completed his sprint double with a huge margin of 0.48 second over France’s Florent Manaudou, the London gold medal winner and silver medalist in Rio. Bruno Fratus of Brazil took the bronze medal.

The 24-year-old Floridian then produced the defining butterfly leg in the United States’ medley relay victory, powering ahead of Britain’s James Guy to set up Zach Apple, who sped home on the freestyle anchor leg to touch first.

Britain took silver, to secure their most successful Games in the pool, with Italy taking bronze.

Finke delivered a repeat performance of his success in the 800 free with another perfectly timed late sprint to grab his second gold. His last 50 metres was almost two seconds faster than German Florian Wellbrock, who had led going into the final turn.

Wellbrock opened up a lead at the 300 mark and held it until the final length but then Finke put in a stunning surge to grab victory with Ukraine’s Mykhailo Romanchuk taking silver and the German bronze.

“I was pretty fatigued, but then I realize everyone else in the field is feeling the same way I was confident in my ability to come home,” Finke said.

“I came in not really expecting to get a medal or anything and to come out of it with two golds — so I’m just going to do my best to process things.” — Reuters

New partnership

Make no mistake: The Lakers swung a trade for Russell Westbrook because resident All-Stars Anthony Davis and LeBron James wanted to welcome the California native into the fold. Never mind the former Most Valuable Player awardee’s seemingly questionable fit as a low-efficiency volume shooter who requires the ball in order to thrive. Meeting at the Space Jam: A New Legacy thespian’s home two weeks ago, they resolved to iron out evident kinks in their disparate styles of play, committing to make the requisite sacrifices on the process.

Whether promise turns to practice remains to be seen, but the Lakers have always been moved by star power. And, certainly, Westbrook carries heavy wattage. It isn’t that they need any more reasons to entice their already intensely loyal fans. It’s that they fervently believe the formula leads to championships, and there can be no disabusing them of the notion given the 17 banners hanging high at Staples Center. The roster of players having donned the purple and gold reads like a Who’s Who of the sport’s greats, and their latest addition doesn’t so much as add to its luster as continue the tradition for which it stands.

The bottom line is clear, of course, and remains the only validating factor for the Lakers. Having been used to, and spoiled by, success, they acknowledge that the new partnership will ultimately be judged by its capacity to claim the Larry O’Brien Trophy when the battlesmoke clears. Nothing else matters. Thusly, going for Westbrook cannot but be regarded as a high-risk, high-reward move; his contract runs for two more years, which means he’s tied to them until James’ own deal expires. The latter must have been convinced enough of the pluses of the development to commit to it.

Indeed, the Lakers could have acquired sharpshooter Buddy Hield vice Westbrook for much less. That they sprung for the nine-time All-Star instead speaks volumes of their willingness to go all in and accept the results. No doubt, they were spurred by the presence and endorsement of James, whose singular skill set and vast experience figure to make the transition easier. That said, it won’t come without pitfalls; not for nothing is their new recruit playing for his fourth team in as many seasons. His polarizing personality has been both a boon and a bane; it fuels his dynamism, but likewise his refusal to compromise.

The hope is that Westbrook will listen to James and, to a lesser extent, Davis in pursuit of the one thing his resume still lacks. If that hope is answered, then well and good; it means he truly values the ring to agree to change. If not, then the Lakers are in trouble. They stand to waste the twilight years of arguably the league’s greatest player of all time just to learn these: not all purple is good, and not all that glitters is gold. Some are from eminently avoidable beatings, and some are from fools.

 

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.

Myanmar army ruler pledges elections, ASEAN cooperation

FLOWERS hang during a nationwide flower campaign against the military coup in Yangon, Myanmar, April 2, 2021. — REUTERS
REUTERS

BANGKOK — Myanmar’s military ruler Min Aung Hlaing on Sunday again promised new multi-party elections and said his government is ready to work with any special envoy named by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

He spoke in a televised address six months after the army seized power from a civilian government after disputed elections won by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s ruling party, which he called “extremists” and accused of inciting violence.

“Myanmar is ready to work on ASEAN cooperation within the ASEAN framework including the dialogue with the ASEAN Special Envoy in Myanmar,” Min Aung Hlaing said.

ASEAN foreign ministers are to meet on Monday, when diplomats say they aim to finalize a special envoy tasked with ending violence and promoting dialogue between the junta and its opponents.

Min Aung Hlaing also repeated a pledge to restore democracy, though again without detailing a time frame.

“I guarantee the establishment of a union based on democracy and federalism,” he said.

The army seized power on Feb. 1 from the civilian government led by Aung San Suu Kyi after her ruling party won elections that the military argues were tainted by fraud. It has said its takeover was in line with the constitution.

The country’s electoral commission has dismissed the fraud allegations.

Since the coup, military authorities have faced protests, strikes that have paralyzed public and private sectors, and a resurgence of armed conflicts in the borderlands.

The military authorities have branded their opponents terrorists.

“At present, the whole country is stable except for some terrorist attacks,” Min Aung Hlaing said in his speech.

The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners activist group has accused the armed forces of killing 939 people in suppressing dissent since the coup and said at least 6,990 military opponents have been arrested.

The military said the number of protesters killed is far lower and members of the armed forces have also died in violence. It said its response has met international norms in the face of threats to national security.  Reuters

China mulls booster shots for some as Delta variant spreads

CHINA is studying if it’s necessary to give booster COVID-19 vaccine shots to vulnerable groups such as the elderly, people with underlying diseases and those who work in high-risk areas.

There isn’t yet enough evidence to suggest that a third shot is needed for everyone, Wang Huaqing, an expert with Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), said at a press briefing Saturday.

The country recorded 328 new locally-transmitted cases in July, almost equaling the amount of cases reported in the previous five months combined, National Health Commission spokesman Mi Feng said at the same briefing. The virus being transmitted currently is mostly the delta variant, but China’s virus control measures are still effective against it, Mr. Mi said.

Mass vaccinations alone can’t contain the spread of the Delta strain, and must be complimented with stringent curbs such as social distancing and the wearing of masks, said Shao Yiming, a researcher with the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention. That’s the lesson from many developed countries, where cases are rebounding after authorities eased COVID restrictions when they reached a high vaccination rate level, he said.

The government will also step up its work on vaccinating the elderly and teenagers, National Health Commission official He Qinghua said. — Bloomberg

US top diplomat Blinken to court Southeast Asia in virtual meetings

United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken — COURTESY OF FACEBOOK/ANTONY BLINKEN

WASHINGTON — United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken will meet virtually with Southeast Asian officials every day this week, a senior state department official said on Saturday, as Washington seeks to show the region it’s a US priority while also addressing the crisis in Myanmar.

The top US diplomat will attend virtual meetings for five consecutive days, including annual meetings of the 10 foreign ministers of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and other nations and separate meetings of the Lower Mekong subregion countries Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam and Thailand.

“I think it’s a clear demonstration of our commitment to the region,” said the official, who briefed Reuters on condition of anonymity.

In recent years top US officials have not always attended ASEAN meetings and have sometimes sent more junior officials to the region’s summits.

The virtual meetings come after the Biden administration in its early days was seen as paying little attention to the region of more than 600 million people, which is often overshadowed by neighboring economic giant China, which the administration sees as its major foreign policy challenge.

But that has been partly addressed by recent visits to the region. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman visited Indonesia, Cambodia and Thailand in May and June, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was in Vietnam and the Philippines last week, and Vice President Kamala Harris is set to visit Singapore and Vietnam.

“That steady flow of high-level engagement is going to pay dividends. It’s noticed,” the official said, adding that countries in the region “notice when we don’t show up and that’s when you start hearing some complaining maybe about not taking them seriously or taking them for granted.”

The official said that donations of COVID-19 vaccines to the region had been a “game changer in terms of how our image is perceived.”

On Sunday, the United States shipped 3 million doses of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine to Vietnam and it has sent doses to other Southeast Asian countries too, but an agreement it reached in March with Japan and Australia and India to provide a billion doses to the region stalled due to an Indian export ban.

By mid-week the United States will have donated 23 million doses to countries in the region, which is experiencing a surge of the coronavirus with vaccination rates well below countries in the West, the official said.

But none of those doses have gone to Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, where military generals staged a coup on Feb. 1 and detained elected leaders including Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, sparking sanctions from Washington and other Western capitals.

The meetings will see Mr. Blinken in the same virtual meetings as representatives of Myanmar’s military government, but the official said rather than bestowing legitimacy on those officials, this was an opportunity to get messages to the military government.

“We’re not prepared to walk away from ASEAN because of the bad behavior of a group of generals in Burma,” the official said, adding that US officials were also engaging with the National Unity Government that opposes the military government there. — Reuters

Two Sumatran tigers recovering from coronavirus

JAKARTA — Two Sumatran tigers at an Indonesian zoo were recovering from COVID-19 after they tested positive in mid-July, the Jakarta government said in a statement on Sunday, adding that authorities were trying to find out how they were infected.

Tino, a 9-year old tiger, and Hari, a 12-year old, were tested for coronavirus after both showed flu-like symptoms, had trouble breathing and lost their appetite, the statement said.

The tigers had undergone around 10 to 12 days of treatment and were gradually showing signs of recovery, Jakarta’s Head of the Parks and City Forest Office, Suzi Marsitawati, said.

“Their appetites have returned and they are back to being active,” Ms. Suzi said, although both tigers remain under close observation.

She said authorities are doing tracking and tracing to figure out how the tigers were infected.

“When the animals started to show symptoms, the Ragunan zoo was already closed due to emergency mobility restrictions,” Ms. Suzi said, referring to the Jakarta zoo.

She added that none of the caretakers and workers had tested positive with coronavirus around the time the animals were infected.

Indonesia has suffered the worst coronavirus infection in Southeast Asia with over 3.4 million infections and more than 94,000 deaths since the start of the pandemic. — Reuters