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Olympic-bound Obiena wins gold in Sweden 

Olympic-bound pole-vaulter EJ Obiena of the Philippines won the gold medal in the Folksam Grand Prix in Gothenburg, Sweden, on Thursday (Manila time).

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

Olympic-bound pole-vaulter EJ Obiena got further momentum in the lead-up to the Summer Games after winning the gold medal in the Folksam Grand Prix in Gothenburg, Sweden, on Thursday (Manila time). 

Mr. Obiena, 25, the number 10-ranked pole vaulter in the world, cleared 5.70 meters in his first attempt to win the men’s event. 

The clearance bested that of world No. 6 and Rio Olympics champion Thiago Braz of Brazil (5.65m) and Pal Haugen Lillefosse of Norway (5.6m). 

The Filipino gold medal winner tried to clear 5.80 meters after but failed thrice. 

Messrs. Braz and Lillefosse, meanwhile, attempted to hurdle 5.75 and 5.70 meters, respectively, but also fell short. 

The win provided a boost to Mr. Obiena’s push with the Tokyo Olympics less than 60 days away. 

Mr. Obiena was the first Filipino athlete to qualify for the rescheduled Olympic Games, earning a spot in a tournament in Chiara, Italy, in September 2019. 

Since then, eight other athletes have qualified, namely, gymnast Caloy Yulo, boxers Eumir Felix Marcial, Irish Magno, Nesthy Petecio and Carlo Paalam, weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz, rower Cris Nievarez and taekwondo jin Kurt Barbosa. 

The Olympic Games happens from July 23 to Aug. 8.

Antipolo, Pasig venues eyed for PBA’s opening conference

THE Ynares Sports Center in Antipolo City, Rizal, is one of the venues being eyed for the PBA’s Season 46. — RAMON VELASQUEZ

THE Philippine Basketball Association’s (PBA) push to open its Season 46 continues to take form as the league said it was eyeing the cities of Antipolo and Pasig as possible hosts for its season-opening All-Filipino tournament.

League commissioner Willie Marcial shared that the Ynares gymnasia in Antipolo, Rizal, and Pasig have been short-listed for their new season, which is targeted to begin late this month or early July under a closed-circuit setup where player movements are restricted to home-gym-home.

The venues may not be the usual big arenas that typically host the PBA, but Mr. Marcial said these will do for now considering the prevailing conditions with the pandemic.

“Right now, we don’t need the bigger venues to host us. We still cannot have fans because of the pandemic,” the PBA chief said in a television interview on Thursday.

“I have talked to Mayor Junjun Ynares about the possibility of using the Ynares Sports Center in Antipolo for the All-Filipino tournament. We are also considering the Ynares Sports Arena in Pasig and we need to talk to Mayor Vico Sotto about it.”

Mr. Marcial shared that nothing is definite yet as they are still awaiting the next announcement of the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) on the quarantine classification for “NCR Plus,” which includes the National Capital Region and the province of Rizal.

NCR Plus is under General Community Quarantine (GCQ) with “heightened restrictions” until June 15, leaving the PBA unavailable to fully take its preparation in Metro Manila and nearby provinces.

Currently, PBA teams are doing workouts and scrimmages in Batangas, Ilocos Norte and Pampanga, areas under MGCQ or with lower quarantine restrictions.

The PBA is hoping to stage two conferences this season to give fans more basketball action. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Azkals to take on China first in joint qualifier return

THE Philippine Azkals resume their joint FIFA World Cup and AFC Asian Cup Qualifiers campaign next week, taking on China first on June 8 at the Sharjah Stadium in the United Arab Emirates. — CEDELF TUPAS FB PAGE

THE Philippine Azkals resume their joint 2022 International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) World Cup and the 2023 Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Asian Cup Qualifiers campaign next week, taking on China first at the Sharjah Stadium in the United Arab Emirates.

Back in action after a 17-month layoff because of the pandemic, the national men’s football team looks to finish strong in the joint qualifiers and book its spot in the prestigious FIFA and AFC tournaments.

The Philippines is currently at third place in Group A of the qualifiers with seven points from a 2-1-2 record, behind Syria (5-0-0) with 15 points, and China (3-1-1) with 10.

Maldives (2-0-3) and Guam (0-0-5) round out the group.

The Azkals last played in the qualifiers in November 2019, losing to Syria (1-0) in Dubai.

Scheduled qualifying matches of the team in 2020 failed to push through because of the pandemic.

China will be the first for the Azkals in their joint qualifier return set for June 8 at 1 a.m. (Manila time).

The two teams fought to a goalless draw in their first encounter on Oct. 15, 2019 at the Pana-ad Park and Football Stadium in Bacolod.

The Chinese, however, are coming off a huge 7-0 victory last May 30 in Suzhou entering their match against the Azkals.

Suzhou, China, incidentally was the original venue for the Group A matches until local authorities decided to pull out from hosting at the last minute over coronavirus concerns.

The UAE then stepped in to accommodate the matches.

The Azkals, too, were supposed to face Guam first on June 3 had the competition proceeded as scheduled in Suzhou.

For the qualifiers, the Azkals have brought in some 25 players as part of the player pool, led by veteran Stephan Schröck, who was named captain.

Also part of the pool are Patrick Reichelt, Martin Steuble, Jarvey Gayoso, Mark Hartmann, Angel Guirado, Mike Ott, Luke Woodland, Kenshiro Daniels and Alvaro Silva.

The team, however, was also hit by player pullouts, notably top goalkeeper Neil Etheridge, who had to undergo surgery.

The Azkals think tank admitted that the team’s buildup was not without hiccups but that they are exploring every possibility to further strengthen the squad that they have now.

After the China contest, the Philippines takes on Guam at 10 p.m. on June 11 and Maldives at 10 p.m. on June 15.

All the Azkals matches in the qualifiers at the Sharjah Stadium can be seen on One Sports and One Sports+. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Serena through to French Open 3rd round after second-set blip

PARIS — Former world number one Serena Williams, chasing a record-tying 24th Grand Slam singles title, overcame a second-set blip to reach the French Open third round with a (6-3, 5-7, 6-1) win against Romania’s Mihaela Buzărnescu on Wednesday.

Three-time Roland Garros champion Williams, who has been stuck on 23 major titles since 2017, one behind Margaret Court’s all-time record, went through the gears in the opening set before letting her guard down.

The 39-year-old, who is seeded seventh in Paris but has not been past the fourth round here since reaching the final in 2016, fell 4-2 behind in the second set as Buzărnescu broke for the first time.

But the American was back to her dominant self as she stole her opponent’s serve in the next game and set up two break points in the 11th game.

Buzărnescu kept her composure to stave them off and level for 5-5 before sealing the second set on Williams’s serve.

“I had some really good chances in the second set to win that if I would have won just one point here or there, like four or five times it would have been a different second set,” Williams told reporters after the match.

“Going into the third, I just had to zero in on those one important points. If I could just take those, it would be an easier time for me.”

Williams was 4-0 up after breaking twice in the decider, but the scoreline did not reflect the fight the Romanian put up to stay in the contest.

Williams’s experience, however, prevailed in the key moments as she set up a meeting with fellow American Danielle Collins.

Williams has come agonizingly close to matching Court’s record since winning the 2017 Australian Open.

She has fallen in four Grand Slam finals and earlier this year lost in the semi-finals at the Australian Open.

Following that she underwent oral surgery and played only three Tour-level matches heading into the French Open, winning one. — Reuters

Hawks, Jazz and Sixers advance

UTAH Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell (45) pushes the ball past Memphis Grizzlies center Jonas Valančiūnas (17) and to the basket during the first quarter in game five of the first round of the 2021 NBA Playoffs at Vivint Arena. — REUTERS

TRAE Young continued his breakout postseason, scoring 18 of his game-high 36 points in the fourth quarter as the visiting Atlanta Hawks eliminated the New York Knicks with a 103-89 win in Game 5 of their Eastern Conference quarterfinals.

The fifth-seeded Hawks, who won the final three games by a combined 42 points to clinch their first series win since 2016, will face the top-seeded Philadelphia 76ers in the conference semifinals beginning on Sunday.

The 30-point game was the third of the series for Young, who averaged 29.2 points per game.

Clint Capela (14 points, 15 rebounds) had a double-double for the Hawks while De’Andre Hunter scored 15 points and John Collins 13. Julius Randle (23 points, 13 rebounds) posted a double-double as a resurgent season ended for the fourth-seeded Knicks, who made the playoffs for the first time since 2013.

JAZZ 126, GRIZZLIES 110
Donovan Mitchell amassed 30 points and 10 assists to lead Utah to a first-round-clinching Game 5 victory over Memphis in Salt Lake City.

Sixth Man of the Year winner Jordan Clarkson added 24 points and Rudy Gobert totaled 23 points with 15 rebounds and three blocks as the Jazz, who led by as many as 35 points, earned their fourth consecutive win to eliminate the Grizzlies.

Ja Morant tallied 27 points with 11 assists while Dillon Brooks also scored 27 for the Grizzlies, who were in the playoffs for the first time in four years. Memphis had to win two games in the play-in — over San Antonio and Golden State — to qualify for the playoffs.

76ERS 129, WIZARDS 112
Seth Curry scored a playoff career-high 30 points, Tobias Harris added 28 points and nine rebounds and host Philadelphia eliminated Washington in five games.

Ben Simmons started at center and had 19 points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds for the top-seeded Sixers, who will meet the Atlanta Hawks on Sunday in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

Bradley Beal led the eighth-seeded Wizards with 32 points while Russell Westbrook had 24 points, 10 assists and eight rebounds. Rui Hachimura added 21 points. — Reuters

Jhanlo Mark Sangiao latest Team Lakay member in ONE Championship

LOCAL combat sports group Team Lakay has a new fighter in ONE Championship after Jhanlo Mark “The Machine” Sangiao recently signed with the promotion. — JHANLO SANGIAO FB PAGE
LOCAL combat sports group Team Lakay has a new fighter in ONE Championship after Jhanlo Mark “The Machine” Sangiao recently signed with the promotion. — JHANLO SANGIAO FB PAGE

LOCAL combat sports group Team Lakay has a new fighter in ONE Championship after Jhanlo Mark “The Machine” Sangiao recently signed with the promotion.

Son of Team Lakay founder and coach Mark, the younger Sangiao, 19, said he is excited to go for his mixed martial arts dream and make his family and team proud.

“I was shocked when my father gave me the contract. But when I saw the ONE Championship logo on the piece of paper, I read it and I was in disbelief,” said Mr. Sangiao.

“I can’t really explain what I was feeling. I was definitely excited. Since I was a kid, I had wanted to be here for so long. It has been my dream. I wanted to compete like all my [seniors] in the gym.”

Mr. Sangiao started making a name for himself in the local muay thai scene at the age of 14, winning in different tournaments.

Such success inspired him to work on his game with help from his father and other members of Team Lakay.

It is something he wants to extend with ONE Championship.

“I’m just grinding right now, training each day, and just getting myself ready both physically and mentally. My father always tells me to just be ready because my time will come, and here we are,” Mr. Sangiao said.

“There’s definitely pressure on me to do well, no escaping that. People will come up to me, asking me when I’m making my debut, so in my mind, that’s pressure in itself. People expect a lot, and I have to be at my best. But that kind of pressure makes me happy.”

ONE IN TOP 10
Meanwhile, in a release, ONE Championship said it was included in the top 10 global sports properties in the world in a report by data and market measurement firm Nielsen.

In the Nielsen report titled, “How the World’s Biggest Sports Properties Engaged Fans in 2020,” ONE is at #7 in total digital followers across Facebook, Instagram and YouTube at +113% — 28% higher than the next closest sports property in the Nielsen study.

In cumulative reach, ONE Championship ranks #3 behind the English Premier League (#1) and UEFA Champions League (#2), and ahead of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (#6), according to Nielsen. Cumulative reach measures the number of unique viewers who tune in to watch at least one minute of a TV broadcast.

As far as total video view, ONE ranks #4 overall, and in terms of engagement on Facebook #5.

ONE Championship also ranked #10 in 2020 broadcast hours despite the challenges presented by the COVID-19 pandemic, including a span of nearly three months without live global events. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Press gang: Osaka withdrawal puts spotlight on media mandate

MELBOURNE/PARIS — The waves of anxiety Naomi Osaka described before heading into a post-match press conference might be familiar to French Open finalist Sofia Kenin, whose gut-wrenching exit from the Australian Open was laid bare in front of cameras in February.

American Kenin, a year younger than Osaka, had seemingly the world at her feet when she arrived in Melbourne to defend her title only months after reaching her second Grand Slam final at Roland Garros.

Behind the scenes, however, the 2020 WTA Player of the Year was on shaky ground.

Weeks after splitting with her management, Kenin was holed up in a hotel room for two weeks as players fulfilled Australia’s strict COVID-19 quarantine protocols in the leadup to the Grand Slam.

Once back on the court, the cracks appeared when she cried at the Yarra Classic tournament after a (6-2, 6-2) loss to Garbine Muguruza, a rematch of their Australian Open final the year before.

She kicked off her Australian Open defense with a labored first round win over local wild card Maddison Inglis, crying before, during and after the match.

She finally crumbled in the next match against Kaia Kanepi because the “nerves big-time got to (her).”

If anyone deserved a leave pass from the compulsory post-match press conference, the anguished Kenin would surely have had a case.

Yet about an hour after the loss, she filed stoically into Melbourne Park’s window-less media conference room to take questions from reporters on site and others logged in by video conference from around the world.

“I feel like everyone was always asking me: ‘Would you want to? Do you see yourself getting (to Melbourne) and winning again?’” she said.

“Obviously, I said yes. With the way I’m playing, no.”

She then broke down in tears.

UNDER THE MICROSCOPE
Osaka’s press boycott, followed by her withdrawal from the French Open on Monday, has put the media under the microscope and triggered criticism of the Grand Slams that threaten fines of up to $20,000 if players skip compulsory press conferences.

Players can opt out without fear of sanction if injured or “physically unable to appear” but there is no provision for mental strain, a grey area made murkier with the emotional toll of a disappointing loss.

Players rallied around Osaka with supportive messages after she revealed her mental health battles on Monday yet none went so far as to publicly back her press boycott or berate the Grand Slams for being sticklers for the rules.

“It’s definitely not easy. I mean, this is what you signed up for. This is sport. There’s expectations from the outside, sponsors, and everyone,” Kenin said on Monday.

“You just have to somehow manage it. You have to have a good team around you who support you. You know they’re with you. Anything you say is to them, and that’s it. They’ll always support you and have your back.”

Some players, perhaps surprisingly given the agony of facing reporters after a poor performance, have defended the process as “part of the job” and credited the media for raising the profile of the game.

“The Grand Slams are protecting themselves and their own business. Of course, they are going to follow the rules and they are going to make sure that you are complying,” said world number one Novak Djokovic.

While more for the benefit of the tennis-watching public than the main actors on court, some players admit to enjoying the verbal rallies with the media.

Roger Federer has said his coaches watch his press conferences to gain insight into his mind-set.

Others, like Australian firebrand Nick Kyrgios, can not stand them and dismiss questions with contempt.

Venus Williams, a veteran of more than two decades of post-match media, is galvanized by her record of 49 titles, including seven Grand Slam singles crowns.

“For me personally, how I deal with it was that I know every single person asking me a question can’t play as well as I can and never will,” the 40-year-old said after her first-round exit from Roland Garros.

“So no matter what you say or what you write, you’ll never light a candle to me.”

After winning her second-round match against Romania’s Mihaela Buzărnescu on Wednesday, Venus’s sister and former world number one Serena Williams told reporters she believed “press conferences definitely play their part.”

“They’re very difficult to do at times. I’ve had my run-in with journalists,” said Williams, who was among those offering Osaka her full support this week.

“Venus said it best,” she added with a smile. — Reuters

Brad Stevens to leave bench, run Celtics’ basketball operations

BOSTON Celtics coach Brad Stevens is leaving the sideline to replace Danny Ainge as the president of basketball operations.

Ainge, 62, announced his retirement after 18 seasons on Wednesday but will assist during the transition this offseason.

A search for a new head coach will begin immediately with Stevens responsible for finding his replacement.

“This is a bittersweet day to commemorate the departure, retirement of an all-time great: Danny Ainge,” Wyc Grousbeck, the Celtics co-owner, said Wednesday afternoon in a news conference. “Won championships as a player and won a championship as a head of basketball. [It’s] unprecedented in Celtics history. [He’s] one of the truly finest people I’ve ever met in my life.”

The Celtics were eliminated from the playoffs in five games by the Brooklyn Nets, who dominated Game 5 of the first-round series on Tuesday. They finished the regular season with a 36-36 record, struggling to find their momentum amid losses to key players because of injuries and extended COVID-19 absences.

During Ainge’s tenure, the Celtics made 15 playoff appearances, seven Eastern Conference finals and two NBA Finals and won the championship in 2008, the franchise’s 17th and first in 22 years. As a player with the Celtics, Ainge won NBA titles in 1984 and ‘86.

“It was my decision,” Ainge said Wednesday. “I don’t know if there was a moment in time, but like I said earlier, I trust my instincts, and my instincts told me a couple months ago that it was time for me to move on, and that’s what’s best for us, that’s what’s best for the Celtics.”

Ainge said the mild heart attack he had in 2019 and the difficulties of working amid the pandemic contributed to the decision.

“In the bubble and all the rules and scrutiny and protocols that we had to go through has not made the job as much fun,” he said.

Sports Illustrated reported Ainge could weigh other opportunities.

“I don’t know what my future holds,” Ainge said. “I don’t have any plans right now. … My goal is to get Brad up to speed on the draft. Like I said, our whole staff will be able to help and try to make this transition, and put the Celtics in as good a place as we can be. And I’ll think about the future somewhere in the future.”

Stevens turned down a reported seven-year, $70 million offer to return to his home state and coach the Indiana Hoosiers this spring. He is a legend in Indiana, where he led Butler to back-to-back NCAA championship games in 2010 and ‘11.

ESPN said Stevens reportedly was “worn down” by coaching and welcomed the chance to transition to a new role.

At the news conference, he said he is up to the task.

“I understand and am looking forward to this new challenge and great responsibility,” Stevens said. “We’re driven to compete for championships. … This morning is a hard day and I know that there’s a lot of work ahead. … I really have enjoyed coaching, but this is the new challenge and this is what we need to do to hopefully be even better.”

The Celtics lost in the Eastern Conference finals three times in Stevens’ eight-year tenure as coach, including in 2020.

With the Celtics, the 44-year-old Stevens has a 354-282 record, plus a 38-40 mark in the postseason.

Yahoo! Sports reported on Wednesday that early candidates for the head coaching job are Jason Kidd, currently a Los Angeles Lakers assistant who previously was head coach of the Nets and Milwaukee Bucks, and Lloyd Pierce, fired this season as head coach of the Atlanta Hawks. — Reuters

Gio Urshela, Yankees take second straight from Rays

GIO Urshela hit an early two-run home run, Jordan Montgomery pitched effectively into the seventh inning and the New York Yankees edged the visiting Tampa Bay Rays (4-3) Wednesday night.

The Yankees secured at least a split of the four-game series and beat Tampa Bay for the fourth time in the past six meetings after opening the season series 1-5.

Urshela gave the Yankees a 2-0 lead four batters in when the right-handed hitting third baseman lined a 365-foot homer from Shane McClanahan (2-1) into the right field seats moments after Aaron Judge just avoided hitting into a double play.

Clint Frazier, who hit a game-ending two-run homer in the 11th inning on Tuesday, added a two-run single. The Yankees won their second in a row after scoring just six runs in a four-game losing streak that included a three-game sweep in Detroit over the weekend.

Montgomery (3-1) allowed three runs (one earned) on five hits. He struck out six and walked two in a 99-pitch outing.

It was the left-hander’s second straight win over Tampa Bay after he allowed eight runs in his first two outings against the Rays this year.

Montgomery started the seventh by misplaying Joey Wendle’s soft grounder for an error and allowing a single to rookie Taylor Walls. After striking out Brett Phillips, he exited to a nice hand from the limited-capacity Yankee Stadium crowd of 13,824.

The Rays got within a run after pinch hitter Ji-Man Choi hit an infield single off Jonathan Loaisiga’s glove to second baseman Rougned Odor, who was shifted up the middle. Loaisiga then ended the inning by retiring Austin Meadows on a groundout.

Chad Green worked a scoreless eighth and Aroldis Chapman survived a shaky ninth for his 12th save in 13 chances. Chapman opened the inning with consecutive walks but struck out Randy Arozarena and Choi before retiring Meadows.

Tampa Bay scored its first two runs on an RBI groundout by Manuel Margot in the fourth and a sacrifice fly by Yandy Diaz in the fifth.

Tampa Bay dropped consecutive games for the first time since May 11-12, also against the Yankees. It was only the third loss in 19 games for the Rays, who lead New York (7-5) in the season series.

McClanahan allowed four runs on five hits in 3 1/3 innings. He struck out six and walked two. — Reuters

Storied franchises

The two winningest franchises in National Basketball Association history took drastic turns yesterday. On one end stood the Lakers, deserved recipients of a shocking on-court shellacking that put into question their immediate future and, just as crucially, prospects in the medium term. On the other stood the Celtics, instigators of a needed off-court changing of the guard that, they wish, figures to change their fortunes for the better. The former is on the precipice of being just the sixth defending champions in league annals to be ousted in the first round. The latter is at a crossroads, crossing their fingers the path they aim to take will quickly take them out of mediocrity and justify their hope.

The NBA will be 75 years old in two days, and the Lakers and Celtics have encountered unparalleled success since its inception. In fact, it’s precisely because of their proud past that expectations run high every single season. They have fan bases that are extremely loyal, but likewise injected with irrational beliefs. For these diehards, there are no excuses; excellence should be a given regardless of circumstance. Which was why they have been catching no small measure of criticism for their far-from-stellar showing in recent memory.

For heralds of the green and white and purple and gold, no excuses can be accepted. It didn’t matter that the Celtics were handicapped from the get-go, and, even at full strength, intrinsically unable to upend the powerhouse Nets. Forget that the Lakers have ailing superstars let down by a severely underperforming supporting cast against the higher-seeded Suns. The bottom line cannot be denied. And second-guessing will, no doubt, continue to be the favorite pastime of those within and outside directly concerned circles. For the departed Danny Ainge and the promoted Brad Stevens, there is no warm sendoff and honeymoon period. Rob Pelinka and Frank Vogel’s bona fides are so last year, and don’t stand up to scrutiny in the here and now.

For the Celtics, the rebuilding of the brand — yes, the same one former stalwart Kyrie Irving saw fit to stomp on — starts now. For the Lakers, it isn’t that there remains fighting to be done in the 2021 Playoffs; it’s that there will always be fighting to be done. That’s what being part of storied franchises entails. That’s also why shoulders are “built for a reason,” as James described his, ultimately buckle under unreasonable pressure.

 

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.

Villar Group to hold first virtual property expo

Manuel B. Villar, Jr., chairman of Vista Land & Lifescapes, Inc.

THE Villar Group of Companies is launching its first virtual property expo, which will feature its real estate brands. 

“It has always been the group’s passion to contribute in the improvement of the lives of the Filipinos by not just providing them with homes to comfortably live in or as investment across the country but also implementing creations to make necessities within their reach,” Manuel B. Villar, Jr., chairman of Vista Land & Lifescapes, Inc., said in a statement on Thursday.  

The Villar Group Convention or “ViCon” will run from June 24 to 25. Those interested to join the event may register through www.vportal.ph

Aside from Vista Land, the event will feature brands under Golden MV Holdings, Inc, namely: Bria Homes, Inc., Lumina Homes, Camella Homes, Inc., Crown Asia Properties, Inc., Brittany Corp., Camella Manors, and Vista Residences, Inc. 

The group’s death care property developer Golden Haven Memorial Park and commercial developer Vistamalls, Inc. will also join the virtual exhibit. — Keren Concepcion G. Valmonte 

Eye-catching details could blindside us

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

We all rejoiced when Standard and Poor’s (S&P) global ratings on May 27 maintained the Philippines’ BBB+ rating and assigned it a “stable” outlook on expectations of a healthy economic recovery. S&P announced in its formal statement that it “affirmed the ratings because we believe the Philippines will continue to have good economic recovery prospects once the COVID-19 pandemic is contained, and that the government’s fiscal performance will strengthen accordingly.”

Anchoring this steady rating action are what S&P described as “signs of recovery” following the Government’s ability to contain the pandemic through more decisive sourcing and rollout of the COVID-19 vaccines. For S&P, three other factors are critical: strong external payments position, fiscal reforms, and strong infrastructure support.

S&P trusts that the Philippine economy could grow by 7.9% in 2021 from last year’s 9.6% recession, even surpassing the official target of 6-7%. With an actual contraction of 4.2% in Q1 2021, we need to grow by an average of at least 9.4% for the last three quarters to deliver on the low end of the output target. To meet S&P’s forecast, real GDP should grow by nearly 12% average for three quarters. Base effects will be overworked.

Moody’s Analytics takes a different view on the growth prospects and we should combine its insight in our whole of nation efforts to manage the risks on the ground. Moody’s raises the issue of our weak pandemic management, that based on today’s pace, it might take another two years to achieve massive vaccination and ensure mass protection. Income inequality could also be a hindrance to a more bullish performance.

We all realize that this pandemic is indeed like no other crisis, so every bit of understanding should be precious. But what happens if we fail the growth standard of S&P?

Growth is the logical outcome of successful pandemic mitigation through sustained observance of health protocols as we aim for a more massive administration of the vaccines.

Taming the pandemic remains a big problem. Worldometer reports that as of June 2, the Philippines’ infections totaled 1.24 million while deaths stood at 21,158. For perspective, the world as a whole has vaccinated more than 1.9 billion out of the global population of nearly 7.9 billion. In absolute number, the US topped the list with 295 million doses administered, translating into 41.29% coverage. The Philippines managed to complete 4.3 million doses covering about 0.93% of its over 110 million population.

In one of the interviews with Vaccine Czar Carlito Galvez, Jr., he cited a rollout speed of about one million vaccines per week! With some 31 weeks to go before the end of 2021, we would have around 35 million doses, or roughly 17.5 million people of two doses each. This is good progress, but still a far cry from what herd resilience is all about.

Some jurisdictions with higher vaccination rates than the Philippines have recently experienced a resurgence of some variants and re-imposed restrictions on mobility and business activities. In an earlier estimate, The Economist presented a timeline showing the country will achieve some 60% vaccination only by Q4 2023. We should prove it wrong and minimize this downside risk to economic growth.

In previous columns, we had commented on the three planks of S&P’s confidence in our economic prospects. On the balance of payments, it looked good in 2020 because the economy was in four quarters of economic contraction. Thus, the decline in imports and outward investments combined with strong inflows of foreign loans produced a significant balance of payments surplus, a strong peso, and a sharp accumulation of gross international reserves. Recent data on foreign investments continue to indicate weak flows and confidence of the foreign investment community in our short-term economic prospects. Once we see some stronger signs of economic recovery, a reversal is unavoidable.

For instance, Oxford Economics reported that the “Philippines remains a laggard in the ASEAN-6 economies… even as exports are likely to rebound from a dismal 2020 performance.” This think tank also observed that the Philippines’ economic scars from the pandemic were the deepest and most serious. For this reason, it is believed our economic recovery will be protracted.

On fiscal reforms, the recent enactment of the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises (CREATE) Act should be able to provide businesses, especially micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), with sharp cuts in corporate income taxes (CIT) and a redesigned fiscal incentives system to attract investments and create jobs in a big way. Of course, this is negative for revenues. More tax reform measures are pending in Congress but it is heroic to assume they can be legislated in time for this year and the next to produce quick results.

In addition, two game-changing developments should be managed by Congress. The demand for limited public revenues has risen with, one, the increase in the military and uniformed personnel salaries and pension, and, two, the Supreme Court ruling on the Mandanas-Garcia case which expands the revenue base of local government units’ (LGUs) share of internal revenue allotment.

The fiscal challenge is not only on the revenue and expenditure sides. Financing will be equally thorny. It is possible the National Government (NG) would probably attempt a budget realignment to achieve a deficit-neutral budget next year. This is impossible because revenues are scarce during recession and 2022 is an election year. Instead, the NG could ramp up borrowings, sell public assets, and require more dividends from government-owned and -controlled corporations and financial institutions.

How these interconnected fiscal dynamics would play out this year and the next to support growth while maintaining fiscal sustainability will certainly be a big problem for our hard-working economic managers. Whatever they can accomplish today should be an important springboard for the next government.

On infrastructure, the challenge is the timely implementation of Build, Build, Build flagship projects to fuel economic recovery. A few months back, it was reported that some 104 projects worth P4.1 trillion had been identified since 2017. These projects cover the gaps in transport and mobility, water, power and energy, information and technology, urban development and renewal, as well as health. Four had already been completed and 42 were on-going construction.

In his confirmation the other day at the Senate, Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Chua updated the legislature that 112 projects have been identified, 80% have already been approved and 51 projects are in the construction stage, and 31 are under pre-construction or awaiting implementation.

Funding holds the destiny of these projects, and with competing demands on the budget in the light of the pandemic, prioritization becomes key. The next administration will hopefully inherit a good set of projects that, according to Secretary Chua, are “well designed and are financially capable and they will not add to future burden to the people in terms of payment or liabilities.”

Nobody can deny that a host of uncertainties remain out there. It is always wise to process important pieces of the macroeconomic puzzle rather than be mesmerized by the more salient information. The data on corporate distress as highlighted by the Financial Stability Committee last year indicates a possible slow burn contagion. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas data on non-performing loans indicates a slow but invariably rising trend of corporate distress and bank difficulty. Mobility indicators are somewhat picking up pace but still lower than normal. Domestic liquidity and bank loans are pointing south. Oil prices could jump up and upset inflation forecasts. Power outage hinders growth.

With good governance, these are not insurmountable.

We can always admire Trade and Industry Secretary Ramon Lopez’s singular optimism that “the domestic economy is still on track for a V-shaped recovery with improved investment climate this year.”

 

Diwa C. Guinigundo is the former Deputy Governor for the Monetary and Economics Sector, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). He served the BSP for 41 years. In 2001-2003, he was Alternate Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, DC. He is the senior pastor of the Fullness of Christ International Ministries in Mandaluyong.