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PNP assures protection to Chinese nationals amid rise in kidnapping cases

PHILIPPINE STAR/ BOY SANTOS

POLICE CHIEF Guillermo Lorenzo T. Eleazar on Thursday gave assurance that the police force will continue to protect Chinese workers in the country amid the rise of kidnapping incidents, mainly perpetrated by their fellow Chinese nationals.

“We assure the Chinese Embassy officials that the PNP (Philippine National Police) is continuously monitoring and stepping up its operation to protect their citizens in the country,” Mr. Eleazar said in a statement.

The Chinese Embassy in Manila confirmed on Tuesday that it has sought the help of the PNP to prevent kidnapping cases of Chinese nationals.

Mr. Eleazar said they will strengthen coordination with their Chinese counterparts, noting that “regardless of the nationality of both the victims and the perpetrators, an attack committed in the Philippines is an attack on our sovereignty.”

Data from the PNP’s Anti-Kidnapping Group (AKG) show 53 Chinese kidnapping cases were recorded in 2017, rose to 58 in 2018, and almost doubled to 82 in 2019. There have been 22 cases of Chinese kidnappings in the country of Sept. 30. Most of the cases are kidnap-for-ransom, while others are related to casino and Philippine offshore gaming operators. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago

First Morales fight turning point in Pacquiao’s career — analyst

FILIPINO boxing legend Manny Pacquiao — ALVIN S. GO

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

MANNY “Pacman” Pacquiao announced his retirement on Wednesday, dropping the curtain on a legendary boxing run which lasted for two decades.

The General Santos City native Mr. Pacquiao exited the game as boxing’s only eight-division world champion, compiling a record of 62-8-2 with 39 knockouts. He is a 13-time world champion, three-time fighter of the year, hailed as 2000s’ Fighter of the Decade, and holds the record of being the only boxer to win world titles in four different decades.

All these solidified his place as among the best in the sport of boxing all-time.

He fought and defeated other legends in the sport like Marco Antonio Barrera, Juan Manuel Marquez, Erik Morales, Oscar De La Hoya, Miguel Cotto and Shane Mosley.

For boxing analyst Nissi Icasiano, of all the many great fights that Mr. Pacquiao was part of, the first of his trilogy fight with Mexican Morales was notable as it pretty much served as a turning point in his career.

“In my book, the best fight of Manny Pacquiao in his career was the first fight against Erik Morales. I truly believe that fight brought out the best in him and it served as the jump-off point to where he is at right now in sports history, not just boxing,” said Mr. Icasiano in an interview with BusinessWorld.

Messrs. Pacquiao and Morales first fought on March 19, 2005 for the vacant World Boxing Council (WBC) and International Boxing Association (IBA) super-featherweight titles. It was the Filipino legend’s first outing in the 130-lb division.

Pacman, however, lost to the Mexican legend by unanimous decision, with all judges scoring the fight 115-113 for Mr. Morales.

The two reengaged in January 2006 with Mr. Pacquiao exacting payback with a 10th-round technical knockout win.

The last fight happened in July of the same year. Pacman also claimed the win with an impressive third-round knockout.

“The first fight against Morales was a huge turning point in his (Pacquiao) career. It was a hard-hitting and honest fight, with both fighters landing punches and combinations throughout. Every time Pacquiao looked like he was about to take charge, Morales would rally. Yes, he lost that fight, but it did more good than harm career-wise,” the analyst said.

“If we recall, that’s Manny’s first fight at 130 pounds. Plus, he was dealing with issues outside the ring, one of which was a contract dispute with Murad Muhammad. He got a cut above his right eye early in the fight. Aside from it being a test of character in the ring, Manny just blew off the ceiling of his potential from that. I don’t think we would have a bona fide first-ballot Hall-of-Famer in Manny Pacquiao if not for that fight,” Mr. Icasiano added.

While it remains to be seen if the decision of 42-year-old Mr. Pacquiao to hang up his gloves stays, Mr. Icasiano said the boxer’s standing as a legend is already set.

“There will never be another Manny Pacquiao. I even think it’s blasphemous to imagine a boxer to eclipse what he has accomplished in the sport… We’re fortunate that our generation had an athlete like him who transcended the four corners of the ring.”

San Miguel KO’s Northport

THE San Miguel Beermen are through to the semifinals of the PBA Philippine Cup after sweeping the Northport Batang Pier in their best-of-three quarterfinal series with a 100-95 win in Game Two on Thursday in Pampanga. — PBA IMAGES

THE San Miguel Beermen knocked out the Northport Batang Pier to advance to the semifinal round of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) Philippine Cup.

San Miguel completed a sweep of Northport in their best-of-three quarterfinal series with a 100-95 victory in Game Two on Thursday at the Don Honorio Ventura State University Gym in Bacolor, Pampanga.

CJ Perez and Mo Tautuaa provided solid contributions from the bench to help the Beermen to the victory which thrust them to the best-of-seven semifinal series against top seeds TnT Tropang Giga.

While San Miguel had control of the contest for much of the time, Northport stayed close and gave itself a chance to win the game.

The Batang Pier made a last-ditch push at the end but the Beermen had an answer each time their opponents were making some headway to preserve the win and move a step closer to reclaiming the Philippine Basketball Association All-Filipino title.

Mr. Perez top-scored for San Miguel with 21 points, followed by Mr. Tautuaa who had 17.

Marcio Lassiter had 15, going 4-of-5 from beyond the arc, while June Mar Fajardo and Arwind Santos finished with double-doubles of 12 points and 12 rebounds, and 11 points and 13 boards, respectively.

For Northport, which finished the eliminations as the number five team, it was Greg Slaughter who led with 27 points to go along with 12 rebounds and three blocks.

Rookie Jamie Malonzo had 17 points and eight rebounds while Robert Bolick had a near-triple double of 12 points, eight rebounds and 14 assists.

“We wanted to finish the series right away and not send it to a do-or-die where anything can happen,” said San Miguel coach Leo Austria in the postgame press conference.

“We do not know yet when the semifinals will start, but we will just prepare for TnT which is a tough team and playing well,” he added.

DO-OR-DIE
Meanwhile, the Meralco Bolts and NLEX Road Warriors play in a do-or-die quarterfinal match on Friday at 6 p.m.

The Road Warriors escaped with an 81-80 victory against the twice-to-beat-armed Bolts on Wednesday to survive the first hurdle and send the series into a deciding contest.

Rookie Calvin Oftana was the hero in the NLEX victory, scoring the go-ahead layup in the dying seconds.

“Coming in, we wanted to keep the game close and give ourselves a chance to win in the game. And good thing it was exactly what happened. But we haven’t accomplished anything yet. We just extended the series and let’s see what happens in the next game,” said NLEX coach Yeng Guiao.

In the playoffs, Meralco is seeded second while NLEX is seventh. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

PHL women’s teams begin AVC club tourney campaign

TWO women’ teams from the Philippines begin their campaigns in the 2021 Asian Volleyball Confederation (AVC) Women’s Club Volleyball Championship on Friday in Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand.

The squads, assembled by the Philippine National Volleyball Federation (PNVF), will pit their skills against some of the top club teams in the region in the seven-field competition happening from Oct. 1 to 7.

PNVF is using the tournament as part of its push to shore up its national team program.

The teams will play under the Rebisco and Choco Mucho names and to be handled by Brazilian consultant-coach Jorge Edson Souza de Brito and national team coach Odjie Mamon.

Mr. Souza de Brito will coach the Rebisco women’s team which has veteran Aby Maraño along with Eya Laure, Jema Galanza, Faith Nisperos, Dindin Santiago-Manabat, Mhicaela Belen, Imee Hernandez, Ivy Lacsina, Rhea Dimaculangan, Kamille Cal, Jennifer Nierva, and Bernadette Pepito. They will play in Pool B.

The Choco Mucho women’s team, playing in Pool A, meanwhile, will be coached by Mr. Mamon, with Iris Tolenada as skipper. The team also has Kalei Mau, MJ Phillips, Tin Tiamzon, Gel Cayuna, Mylene Paat, Kianna Dy, Ria Meneses, Majoy Baron, Dell Palomata, Deanna Wong and Dawn Macandili.

The national teams trained in a semi-bubble at the Aquamarine Gym in Lipa City, Batangas, prior to leaving for Thailand early this week.

Choco Mucho will first see action at 1:30 p.m. (Manila time) on Oct. 1 against Nakhon Ratchasima with Rebisco following suit at 7 p.m. against Altay of Kazakhstan. On Oct. 2, it’s Choco Mucho vs Zhetyssu (Kazakhstan) at 1:30 p.m. and Rebisco against Supreme Chonburi (Thailand) at 4:30 p.m. And Oct. 3 it is Rebisco versus Saipa (Iran) at 7 p.m. The playoffs follow after.

The 2021 AVC Women’s Club Volleyball Championship can be seen live over One Sports+ as well as on Cignal Play. It would also be shown live on the One Sports+ Facebook page. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

NBA updates instant replay rules

THE National Basketball Association (NBA) Board of Governors has approved updates to the instant replay rules as they pertain to out-of-bounds challenges.

“In an effort to improve game flow, particularly at the end of games, the NBA has eliminated referee-initiated replay review of out-of-bounds violations during the last two minutes of the fourth period and the last two minutes of any overtime period,” the league said in a statement on Wednesday.

Now, it will be solely up to teams whether to trigger a replay review of out-of-bounds violations via the coach’s challenge, which can now be used at any time of the game.

The changes were only approved for the 2021-2022 season on a “one-year trial basis,” per the league’s memo.

Basketball fans clamored for better rules to be put in place after instances during the 2021 playoffs featured excessive replays and overturned calls that slowed down important games. The NBA’s Competition Committee recommended the changes to the Board of Governors. — Reuters

Champions League: Ronaldo late show gives Man United win over Villarreal

MANCHESTER UNITED’S Cristiano Ronaldo scores their second goal. — REUTERS

MANCHESTER, England — Cristiano Ronaldo grabbed a stoppage-time winner as Manchester United came from behind to secure a fortunate 2-1 Champions League Group F win over Villarreal at Old Trafford on Wednesday.

On the night he set the new record for the most appearances in the competition, the 36-year-old Portuguese delivered the killer blow to save his manager Ole Gunnar Solskjær from another disappointing result and the inevitable inquests.

United had fallen a goal behind to Paco Alcacer’s 53rd-minute opener before drawing level with a brilliant volley from Alex Telles, but failing to make the most of the momentum shift.

After three defeats in their last four games, including the loss in Bern to Young Boys in the group opener, United could ill-afford another slip-up.

But for long stretches of the game, an upset looked very much on the cards and had the visitors been sharper in front of goal, the contest might have been over by the break.

Villarreal had beaten Solskjær’s team on penalties in last season’s Europa League final and Unai Emery’s side’s excellent organization and ability on the break again posed problems for a disjointed United.

DIFFICULT HALF
With Harry Maguire, Aaron Wan Bissaka and Luke Shaw all missing from the defense, United were easily opened up in the first half with Diogo Dalot enduring a particularly difficult 45 minutes.

Arnaut Danjuma tormented the United right back and tested David De Gea twice after cutting in from the left flank.

Alcacer had a header from a Danjuma cross tipped over by the United keeper and, after a slip-up by Raphael Varane, found himself one-on-one with De Gea, but fired wide.

After squandering those chances, however, Villarreal took a deserved lead when a counter-attack was finished off by Alcacer who turned in Danjuma’s low cross.

United struck back seven minutes later with a cleverly worked free kick as Bruno Fernandes chipped the ball deep to Telles on the left and the Brazilian fired home a perfect volley.

Edinson Cavani missed a good chance to grab a winner for United, heading wide at the back post, and the hosts survived a goalmouth scramble with Boulaye Dia going close for Villarreal.

Then, deep into stoppage time, substitute Fred crossed from the left and Ronaldo headed to Jesse Lingard who fed the ball back for the Portuguese to drive home.

Old Trafford erupted in relief and joy and Ronaldo picked up a yellow card for ripping off his shirt and throwing it into the crowd in his 178th Champions League match.

Atalanta tops the group standings with four points, one ahead of Young Boys and United.

Villarreal is bottom with one point after a cruel end to the match.

“We’re annoyed. The game was basically over, we just needed to see it out and we didn’t. We need to learn from this. We were impeccable before that, taking the lead, creating chances, being better than Man United at Old Trafford,” defender Pau Torres said. — Reuters

Gilas Pilipinas Women tries to avert relegation in game vs India

GILAS Pilipinas Women faces off with India on Friday for seventh place in the FIBA Women’s Asia Cup and tries to avoid being relegated to Division B play in FIBA Asia. _ FIBA

It is gut check time for the Philippine national women’s basketball team in the ongoing International Basketball Federation (FIBA) Women’s Asia Cup in Amman, Jordan.

Following its 93-52 defeat at the hands of Chinese Taipei early on Thursday morning (Manila time), Gilas Pilipinas slid to the bottom of Group B in preliminary play and will now take on the last place team from Group A — India — in the battle for seventh place on Friday.

The losing team between the Philippines and India will be relegated to Division B play in FIBA Asia.

It is the same predicament that the nationals faced in the last edition of the Women’s Asia Cup in 2019.

Against Chinese Taipei, the Filipina ballers battled early, but just could not sustain it the rest of the way.

Gilas stayed within striking distance of its opponent in the opening half, down by just 15 points, 45-30.

In the second half, however, Chinese Taipei piled it up, outscoring the Philippines, 31-11, in the third canto and just coasted along after on its way to the win.

The loss was the third straight for Gilas after losses to China and Australia previously.

Wen-Yu Lin paced Chinese Taipei with 19 points, followed by I-Hsiu Cheng and His-Yeh Liu with 14 and 13 points, respectively.

For the Philippines, it was Afril Bernardino who showed the way with a solid double-double of 24 points and 14 rebounds. Clare Castro, meanwhile, had 14 points and six boards.

“While we played better, we still have to improve on so many things. We just have to continue playing very hard, and come back stronger next time,” said Gilas Women coach Patrick Aquino in the post-game press conference. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Rays clinch home-field advantage throughout AL playoffs

BRANDON Lowe and Ji-Man Choi homered while Drew Rasmussen allowed one hit over five scoreless innings as the Tampa Bay Rays clinched home-field advantage throughout the American League (AL) postseason with a 7-0 victory over the host Houston Astros on Wednesday.

The Rays set a single-season franchise record with their 98th victory while handing the Astros their fifth loss in six games. Houston would have clinched the AL West with a victory.

The Astros (92-66) hold a 3 1/2-game lead over the Seattle Mariners (89-70) with a magic number of one to wrap up the division title.

Lowe slugged his 35th home run to cap a three-run rally against Astros right-hander Luis Garcia (11-8) in the second inning as the Rays capitalized on a two-out error by Houston center fielder Jose Siri, who failed to catch a fly ball in right-center field off the bat of Brett Phillips.

Phillips scored when Francisco Mejia lined a single to right and Lowe followed by drilling a first-pitch cutter 390 feet to right-center.

The Rays struck again off Garcia with two outs in the fifth. After surrendering a one-out double to Lowe, Garcia issued a two-out walk to Nelson Cruz that led to a mound visit from Astros pitching coach Brent Strom. Choi, mired in a 1-for-24 slump, jumped on the first pitch of the ensuing at-bat for his 11th home run to drive home Lowe and Cruz and double the lead.

Garcia, who had totaled just three strikeouts in his previous two starts, recorded his first four outs via the strikeout against the Rays. But he allowed six runs (three earned) on seven hits and two walks with six strikeouts over five innings in what was likely the final start of his rookie season.

One night after Michael Wacha tossed five hitless innings, Rasmussen (4-1) didn’t allow a hit until there was one out in the fifth. Rasmussen struck out two batters and did not issue a walk. Houston managed three singles and didn’t put a runner in scoring position until there were two outs in the ninth.

Rays rookie shortstop Wander Franco doubled to left with one out in the first to extend his on-base streak to 43 games, matching Hall of Famer Frank Robinson for the longest in history for a player 20 years old or younger. Robinson accomplished the feat in 1956 with the Reds. — Reuters

NBA: Unvaccinated players to face extensive COVID-19 curbs

NBA players who are not vaccinated against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) will have to comply with a long list of restrictions to take part in the upcoming season, according to a memo obtained by Reuters.

The National Basketball Association’s (NBA) tentative protocols released to teams on Tuesday showed vaccinated players will only be tested if they show coronavirus symptoms or are a close contact of a positive case.

However, unvaccinated players will have to undergo daily testing prior to entering a team facility, participating in team activities or interacting with players and coaches.

The protocols outlined in the memo are pending agreement between the league and the National Basketball Players Association (NBPA).

The NBPA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The 2021-2022 season is set to begin on Oct. 19 amid continuing concerns over the highly contagious Delta variant of the novel coronavirus that has hit those who are unvaccinated particularly hard.

A handful of high-profile players, including Brooklyn Nets’ Kyrie Irving and Washington Wizards Bradley Beal, have publicly refused to receive the shots, while some have repeated claims about the vaccine shown to be false by medical professionals.

“It’s untrue,” the nation’s top infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci told the Hugh Hewitt syndicated radio show on Wednesday referring to claims that the COVID-19 vaccine is dangerous or could hurt those who receive it.

“Although I do respect people’s individual rights… when you’re dealing with a deadly pandemic, you’ve got to also understand your responsibility to the society within which you live.”

Among US adults, 11% — or roughly 23 million people — have said they do not want the vaccine, do not plan to get it and that there was nothing that would encourage them to do so, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted in August.

‘BEST SUITED’
Four-time NBA champion LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers said he decided to get the vaccine after initially being skeptical, but stopped short of widely encouraging the jabs.

“I don’t talk about other people and what they should do,” James said. “I don’t think I personally should get involved in what other people do for their bodies and livelihoods … I felt like it was best suited for me and my family and my friends.”

In July, NBA Players Association executive director Michele Roberts told Yahoo! Sports that vaccination was not mandatory, but 90% of players had already received their shots.

“The situation is obviously we would like to see essentially all of the players for the general safety to get vaccinated,” Fauci told MSNBC in an interview on Wednesday.

Under the NBA draft rules circulated, the league would not allow unvaccinated players to dine in the same room as other players and they must also be given a locker as far away as possible from other players.

Unvaccinated players will also have to remain at the team hotel during road trips, outside game time except for team and essential activities.

With strict vaccination requirements in some local markets, including New York City and San Francisco, players could risk losing pay if they are unable to compete.

“Any player who elects not to comply with local vaccination mandates will not be paid for games that he misses,” said league spokesman Mike Bass.

Damian Lillard, a Portland Trail Blazer who won a gold medal as part of Team USA at the Tokyo Olympics, this week said he got the COVID-19 vaccine just as he had other immunizations growing up, noting some of his relatives had died from COVID.

“I’m just not going to put their health or their lives in danger,” he told reporters. “It’s pretty simple, actually.” — Reuters

New NCAA endorsement rules could benefit women more than men

ONLY one week after the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) changed its endorsement rules on July 1, women college athletes found themselves on billboards in Times Square in New York, launching a clothing line collaboration and signing sponsorship deals for brands including a wireless carrier and a fastfood chain.

Women college athletes have historically been far more limited in their ability to profit off their athletic skills compared to their male counterparts. As an assistant professor of sport management who researches gender equity in college athletics, I believe the new name, image and likeness rules will begin to level the playing field.

In fact, women college athletes may have the most to gain from the NCAA change.

Throughout collegiate and professional sports, women are underrepresented among players, coaches, administrators and front office employees.

At best, the proportions of women working in college and professional sports have remained relatively stagnant over the past decade, with some high-profile gains at the men’s professional league levels.

Men account for roughly 60% of all NCAA women’s program head coaches and 98% of men’s program head coaches. Furthermore, 76% of Division 1 NCAA athletic directors, the highest administrative role, are held by white men.

These imbalances have caused many women college athletes to second-guess their ability to make a career in college coaching.

The average player salary in the WNBA is US$130,000, and the minimum salary is $59,000. In comparison, the average NBA salary for the 2021-2022 season is $7.5 million, with a minimum salary of roughly $925,000. The NBA minor league basketball organization, the NBA G League, pays select players $125,000 per season.

Women’s tennis provides some of the highest player salaries at an average of roughly $285,000 per season, but the salary totals for professional women athletes in other sports drop significantly from that starting point.

For professional women’s soccer, the average is $35,000. Professional men’s soccer players earn roughly $400,000 on average.

For professional fast-pitch softball, the number falls to a mere $6,000 per season. The average salary for Major League Baseball, meanwhile, was roughly $4.2 million for the 2019 season.

So, even when women athletes play professionally, they often do not earn enough for it to be their sole occupation.

Women college athletes also have fewer opportunities to play their sport at the professional level. That is to say, making a professional team is even more difficult for women college athletes than men.

For example, the WNBA is the toughest North American professional sports league to earn a roster spot within, given the total number of teams and roster limits. The WNBA has only 12 teams, and each roster is limited to 12 players. For comparison, the NBA has 30 teams and the roster permits 15 total players, as well as 29 G League teams with no roster limit of up to 13 players.

Despite their limited sport career prospects, women college athletes are highly marketable. This is evident in the growth in viewership for events such as the NCAA women’s gymnastics championship and the NCAA Women’s College World Series. For the 2020 Women’s College World Series, the average per game viewership was roughly 1.2 million, 10% higher than 2019. The 2020 women’s gymnastics final averaged over 800,000 viewers — five times more viewers than in 2019.

Women college athletes have also been shown to be savvy social media users, with some gaining hundreds of thousands of followers.

In fact, one 2021 analysis of projected earnings conducted by the marketing platform Opendorse found that eight of the top 10 most followed social media profiles among NCAA Tournament Elite Eight basketball players belonged to women athletes. These numbers were calculated by combining their total number of Twitter and Instagram followers.

This equates to higher earning power, as the top two women’s accounts range in potential endorsement value from $382,000 to $965,000 a year. Much of the earning potential is based on sponsored social media posts.

Some women college cheerleaders have already been earning upwards of $5,000 per Instagram post, as their sport is not governed by NCAA bylaws.

A similar 2020 analysis conducted by Athletic Director U found that, among all college athletes regardless of sport, more women than men — 14 versus 11 — are projected to be among the top 25 earners of endorsement revenue based on social reach. The annual projected endorsement potential for these top women college athletes ranged from $34,000 for Brooke Thomas of Oklahoma State University track and field to roughly $500,000 for Madison Kocian of UCLA gymnastics.

Some top women college athletes have been preparing for endorsement deals by signing contracts with talent management companies. Paige Bueckers, a University of Connecticut women’s basketball player; Cameron Brink of Stanford women’s basketball; and Sarah Fuller of Vanderbilt football and soccer are just a few of the college athletes that have recently signed with Wasserman, a sports marketing and talent management company based in Los Angeles.

These women college athletes now have a real opportunity to earn money off their skills as athletes in ways other professional sport career paths could never guarantee. — Reuters

US labor board official says college athletes are ‘employees’

THE top lawyer at the agency that enforces US labor laws said on Wednesday that many college athletes are their schools’ employees, effectively inviting players to take steps to unionize.

National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo in a memo said her office would bring complaints against colleges that interfere with players’ organizing efforts or assert that athletes are not employees protected by federal labor law.

Abruzzo, an appointee of US President Joe Biden, said players are schools’ employees because they provide services that generate profits and schools control the players’ athletic activities.

The NLRB’s general counsel acts like a prosecutor in unfair labor practice cases that are heard by the five-member board. Any ruling by the board that college athletes are employees who can join unions could be challenged in court.

The memo comes amid a broader shift in the legal landscape for college sports, which generate billions of dollars in revenue for schools.

The US Supreme Court in June struck down the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s (NCAA) limits on noncash compensation for athletes, such as scholarships for graduate school and paid internships.

Abruzzo in the memo said the court’s decision underscored that college sports are a profit-making enterprise, and said that a shift toward paying players only further supported the view that schools are their employers.

Abruzzo reinstated a 2017 memo by an Obama-era predecessor that also said college athletes were schools’ employees. The memo had been withdrawn later that year by an appointee of former President Donald Trump.

The NLRB in 2015 dismissed a bid by football players at Northwestern University near Chicago to join a union. The board said it lacked jurisdiction over the case, but did not rule on the key question of whether the players were Northwestern’s employees. — Reuters

Fight Night 193 kicks off busy month for UFC 

The Ultimate Fighting Championship kicks off a busy month with UFC Fight 193 on Oct. 3. 

Happening at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas, Nevada, the event is headlined by the All-Brazilian light heavyweight clash between former title contender Thiago Santos (21-9) and Johnny Walker (18-5). 

Thirty-seven-year-old Santos is looking to swing back to winning after dropping his last three matches, the most recent at the hands of Austrian Aleksansar Rakic by unanimous decision in March this year. 

“It is important to me. I need to come back and get a victory and win my fights and come back to the title contention. A win in this fight will put me close to the title,” said Mr. Santos in a media roundtable. 

He remains undeterred despite the slide he is currently in, working on his game despite the challenges presented by the pandemic. 

“I always work and it doesn’t matter who my opponent is,” he said. “When the lockdown started, I was in Brazil. It was hard to find a partner to train with. But when I returned to America, I was able to find a training partner. Now things are back in a normal way.” 

Mr. Walker, 29, for his part, halted a two-fight skid in his last outing in September last year, beating American Ryan Spann by way of a first-round knockout (elbow and punches). He now seeks to sustain the momentum generated by the win. 

Also part of the main card is the middleweight collision between Kevin Holland and Kyle Daukaus; welterweight Alex Oliverira against Niko Price; middleweight Misha Cirkunov versus Krzysztof Jotko; women’s bantamweight Aspen Ladd vs Macy Chiasson; and lightweight Alexander Hernandez against Mike Breeden. 

UFC Fight Night 193 is the first of five scheduled UFC events for the month of October. 

The event can be seen live in the country over TAP DMV’s over-the-top (OTT) platform TAP GO and linear channel, Premier Sports. 

Sports media distribution company TAP DMV and the UFC recently agreed to have the former be the exclusive home of the UFC in the country. 

In the agreement, TAP GO and Premier Sports will show all 42 live UFC events, including 12 numbered pay-per-view events and 30 UFC Fight Night events year-round. —Michael Angelo S. Murillo