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Labor dep’t to release P2B under cash-for-work program during lockdown  

PHILIPPINE STAR/ WALTERBOLLOZOS

THE LABOR department will distribute P2 billion in cash-for-work assistance to workers who will be affected by the two-week lockdown in the capital region and other areas while waiting for the Budget department’s decision on its request for another P2 billion for cash aid.    

In a news briefing on Wednesday, the Labor department’s Information and Publication Service director, Raul M. Francia, said the initial P2 billion will be sourced from its existing cash-for-work program, which still has a P4 billion ready fund.  

Mr. Francia said the Labor department is currently waiting for the list of affected workers from companies that will implement a temporary suspension of operations during the lockdown on Aug. 6 to 20 before it disburses the initial P2 billion. 

Beneficiaries will be chosen from the list and assigned temporary work in their communities.   

The request for fresh funds was submitted Tuesday, he said.  

Based on the request for an additional P2 billion, the distribution will be: P776 million for workers in Metro Manila, P298.5 million in Central Luzon, P179.1 million in CALABARZON (Cavite-Laguna-Batangas-Rizal-Quezon), P159.2 million in Western Visayas, P39.8 million in Northern Mindanao, and P537.3 million for other areas that may be put under the strictest quarantine level.   

Mr. Francia said the P2-billion budget, if approved, will benefit 398,000 workers with each to be given up to about P5,000. 

He added that cash assistance will also be allocated for displaced overseas Filipino workers. — Bianca Angelica D. Añago  

House inquiry sought on OCTA Research group  

@HOUSEOFREPSPH

SEVERAL House representatives filed a resolution on Tuesday calling for an inquiry on the qualifications, affiliations, and operations of the OCTA Research group after a member of the Health department’s technical advisory group said the researchers’ findings are “problematic.”   

House Resolution 2075 asks the House Committee on Good Government to probe the “qualifications, research methodologies, partnerships, and composition” of the OCTA Research group.    

More specifically, the resolution seeks to investigate the research group’s projections on the increase of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infections, especially on the more contagious Delta variant, and its affiliation with the state-funded University of the Philippines (UP).  

The research group, which has been releasing studies and statements on the COVID-19 pandemic trends since last year, said on July 28 that Metro Manila is “officially in a surge” with reproduction rate at 1.33 from 0.6 last month. It also urged the government to impose a “circuit-breaker” lockdown to curb the rise in cases.   

“There is a public health and public policy need to ensure the safety and security of the population during this pandemic, and that information being distributed is correct and are not irresponsibly and erroneously published,” according to the resolution.   

Edsel T. Salvaña, director of the Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology at the National Institutes of Health-University of the Philippines Manila said in an ANC interview on Monday that the OCTA projections, especially the reproduction rate from cases in the last two weeks, are based on “incomplete” and “erroneous” data.    

OCTA Research said on Wednesday that it was going to release a “formal statement.”   

Earlier in the day, OCTA Research fellow Ranjit S. Rye said in a DZBB interview that they respect the House resolution but noted that the country’s enemy at the moment is not the researchers but COVID-19.   

He also said that OCTA Research is an “independent scientific group” providing monitoring reports as a form of public service, adding that their projections are based on data from the Department of Health. — Russell Louis C. Ku  

MWSS suspends water disconnection during 2-week lockdown 

PHILSTAR

THE REGULATORY office of the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) has suspended all water service disconnection activities during the two-week lockdown in the capital region from Aug. 6 to 20.   

MWSS Chief Regulator Patrick Lester N. Ty said Metro Manila’s two water concessionaires, Manila Water Co., Inc. and Maynilad Water Services, Inc., have been ordered not to disconnect customers with arrears and to ensure water supply availability within their respective service areas.    

“The MWSS-RO has directed Manila Water and Maynilad to suspend all service disconnection activities, whether temporary or permanent, for the duration of the ECQ (enhanced community quarantine) period,” Mr. Ty said in a statement on Wednesday.     

Mr. Ty also appealed to local government units in Metro Manila and the neighboring provinces of Cavite and Rizal to allow the meter readers of the two water concessionaires to carry on with their on-site water meter reading and billing operations during the ECQ.    

He said the continuation of water reading and billing operations will allow the water concessionaires to charge customers based on actual water consumption and help reduce complaints arising from the use of average consumption as basis.    

“The MWSS Regulatory Office has directed both concessionaires to ensure strict compliance of their meter readers and other personnel with the prescribed health and safety protocols in the conduct of read-and-bill,” Mr. Ty said. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave   

Tropical depression Gorio grazes through, but monsoon rains persist 

TROPICAL depression Gorio, the 7th typhoon to enter the country this year, just grazed through the northern boundary of the Philippine area on Wednesday, exiting the same day it entered, according to weather agency PAGASA.  

Gorio, initially a low pressure area, developed into a tropical depression Wednesday morning while about 700 kilometers northeast of Itbayat, Batanes.  

The tropical depression did not directly affect the weather condition in the country, but the southwest monsoon continued to bring rains in parts of the northern mainland Luzon, PAGASA reported.   

“Under the influence of the southwest monsoon… rains will be experienced in the next 24 hours over Ilocos Region, Cordillera Administrative Region, Batanes, Babuyan, Zambales, and Bataan,” the state weather bureau said in its 5 p.m. Wednesday bulletin.     

Marcial and Paalam shoot for spots in gold medal matches

EUMIR FELIX MARCIAL — REUTERS

FILIPINO boxers Eumir Felix D. Marcial and Carlo Paalam shoot for spots in Tokyo Games gold medal matches in their respective divisions at the Kokugikan Arena on Thursday.

Middleweight Mr. Marcial, 25, will take on familiar foe Oleksandr Khyzhniak of Ukraine in the semifinal round set for 2:03 p.m. (Manila time) while flyweight Mr. Paalam, 23, collides with hometown bet Ryomei Tanaka in the semifinals at 1:30 p.m.

Zamboanga native Mr. Marcial has been on a roll in his Olympic debut outing, making short work of his opponents so far and winning in the opening round.

He defeated Algerian Younes Nemouchi in the Round of 16 via a Referee Stopped Contest due to Injury then knocked out Armenian Arman Darchinyan in the quarterfinals to assure the country of another medal.

It is the same form he is looking to sustain when he collides with Mr. Khyzhniak for a spot in the gold medal match.

“I’m ready for this fight. When we first fought, I got injured which was why I lost. Right now, I’m confident of my conditioning and I’m ready heading into the fight,” Mr. Marcial communicated in Filipino to local sports media from Japan.

The Filipino bet lost to Mr. Khyzhniak back in 2018 at the Strandja Memorial in Sofia, Bulgaria.

Meanwhile, Mr. Paalam also has his sights on a shot at a gold medal and has made a strong case for himself.

Mr. Paalam has hurdled every challenge put in front of him in the ongoing tournament, the latest of which was world number one and erstwhile defending Olympic champion Shakhobidin Zoirov of Uzbekistan in the quarterfinals of the flyweight division on Tuesday.

He punched his way into the semifinals by winning on points by split decision in the second round.

Mr. Paalam came out aggressive in his last fight and took it to his opponent right at the opening bell, connecting with solid blows to the head and body en route to claiming the opening round.

In the second, action continued to be frenetic with both fighters tagging one another with clear shots.

Unfortunately, midway into the round both absorbed cuts after a head collision.

Ukrainian referee Pablo Vasylynchuk called for a halt to the play to have the two fighters checked by the ring physician.

With both fighters deemed unfit to continue because of the slight gash in their heads, the fight was halted and awarded to Mr. Paalam, who was ahead on points at the time of stoppage, 20-19, on four judges and a tied 19-19 score in the fifth official for a 4-0 win.

“We really wanted to take the opening round to put pressure on my opponent. Thankfully, we were able to do that and it affected how the fight went,” Mr. Paalam said in Filipino after his win.

He now channels his focus on Japanese Mr. Tanaka, who Mr. Paalam said he is not taking lightly

Messrs. Marcial and Paalam are looking to follow teammate Nesthy A. Petecio who made it to the gold medal match of the women’s featherweight division, but had to settle for silver. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

No shame in finishing with a silver for Petecio — analyst

NESTHY PETECIO — REUTERS

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

THE women’s featherweight gold medal match in the Tokyo Games boxing tournament on Tuesday ended with Philippine bet Nesthy A. Petecio ending up with the silver medal after bowing to Japanese Sena Irie by unanimous decision.

It was an outcome not a few raised a howl over, particularly in this side of the world, believing that Ms. Petecio was the more active fighter notwithstanding the strategy of Ms. Irie to hold and clinch most of the time to stymie any momentum the Filipino boxer was trying to build.

For boxing analyst Nissi Icasiano, Ms. Petecio has nothing to be ashamed of, or to be sorry for, the silver finish as she did everything she could with the situation she was presented with just as he said the outcome was not totally far off.

“Nesthy has nothing to be ashamed of. It was a tough journey for her. She failed to qualify for the 2016 Rio Olympics. She fell short in the qualifiers for Tokyo, but because of her ranking she was able to make it. This was just her first try in the Olympics and she won the silver medal,” said Mr. Icasiano in an interview with BusinessWorld following the women’s featherweight gold medal match.

“Look at her resume now. She’s both a world champion and an Olympic silver medalist. If there’s a Mt. Rushmore of Philippine boxing, Nesthy Petecio should be up there,” he added.

The analyst went on to say that the fight lived up to the expectations as being more than a clash for the gold medal, but a continuation of a rivalry.

“It was a rivalry between two of the best women’s amateur featherweight boxers. And in boxing, facing the same opponent over and over again is something that is perceived as a double-edged sword. As the old saying goes, familiarity breeds contempt. It can work in your favor or it can work against you… They knew each other’s strengths and weaknesses. It was neck-and-neck from start to finish, and that part is not surprising,” Mr. Icasiano said.

With the win, Ms. Irie extended her lead in her head-to-head matchup with Ms. Petecio to date, 3-1.

As to Ms. Irie being a recipient of a “hometown decision” after completing a unanimous decision victory — four judges scoring it, 29-28, and one having it, 30-27 — Mr. Icasiano said it is hard to speculate and that he is giving the judges the benefit of the doubt.

“A lot of people would argue or ask if there’s a hometown decision involved in the gold medal match. We have to remember that these judges follow four important points as to how to score a bout. First is effective aggression. Though Nesthy was pressing the action, she became hittable and predictable, allowing Sena to create angles and catch Nesthy in awkward angles,” he said.

“Second is ring generalship. For the majority of the fight, Sena was dictating the pace. The Japanese forced Nesthy to approach the fight differently, especially in the second round. Nesthy is a technical boxer, and in this bout, she decided to be the aggressor in order to cut the distance between her and Sena Irie due to the height of the Japanese and stop Sena from landing her jabs. But fighting a different fight proved to be detrimental for Nesthy.”

Then there is defense.

“Third and fourth are defense and clean punches. Nesthy was on the receiving end of big blows,” Mr. Icasiano continued.

Despite settling for silver, Ms. Petecio still made history by becoming the first Filipino female boxer to get a medal in the Olympics. It was also the first medal for Philippine boxing in 25 years in the Summer Games after Mansueto Velasco won silver in Atlanta in 1996.

Pagdanganan in strong start in first round; Saso struggles

BIANCA Pagdanganan (PHL) tees off on the ninth hole during the first round of the women’s individual stroke play of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Summer Games at Kasumigaseki Country Club. — REUTERS

BIANCA Pagdanganan had a strong showing while Yuka Saso struggled in the opening round of the women’s individual stroke play of the golf competition in the Tokyo Games at the Kasimugaseki Golf Club on Wednesday.

Ms. Pagdanangan, 23, fired a two-under par 69 to be in the mix at the top of the leaderboard at joint seventh place after the first 18 holes while Ms. Saso, 20, scored 3-over par 74, good for 47th place.

Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) Pagdanganan padded her push with back-to-back birdies in the first two holes while holding steady the rest of the way.

She is making her Olympic debut and made it known that she is looking to do well and give the Philippines a good representation.

United States Women’s Open champion Ms. Saso, meanwhile, did not have a good day, with a performance which saw her with five bogeys and just two birdies.

Sweden’s Madelene Sagström topped the opening round with a 5-under par 66, followed by Nelly Korda of the United States and Aditi Ashok of India with a 4-under 67.

Mses. Pagdanganan and Saso resume their Olympic bid in the second round on Thursday with tee-off set for 6:30 a.m. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Filipino teen Alex Eala off to winning start in maiden WTA 250 tournament

FILIPINO teen tennis ace Alex M. Eala

FILIPINO teen tennis ace Alex M. Eala got her maiden Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) 250 tournament campaign to a strong start, winning her Round of 32 assignment in impressive fashion on Tuesday night.

Rafa Nadal Academy scholar Ms. Eala, 16, defeated Paula Ormaechea of Argentina in straight sets, 7-5, 6-2, in the opening round of the 2021 Winners Open in Cluj-Napoca, Romania.

Ms. Eala, ranked 639th in the WTA, struggled early against 28-year-old Ormaechea (310th) in the first frame, dropping to a 0-4 hole, but was able to pick up her game as action proceeded.

She managed to level the count at 4-4, and continued to put on the pressure on her opponent before eventually claiming the win in the extended set.

In the second, propelled by the come-from-behind win she had in the opening set, Ms. Eala came out on a better footing, racing to a 5-1 lead and never allowing Ms. Ormaechea to gain any headway after.

“So happy to have won my debut match at a WTA 250 Tournament, The Winners Open,” wrote Ms. Eala in a Facebook post after her victory.

Long-time Globe ambassador Ms. Eala next plays 25-year-old Egyptian Mayar Sherif (187th) in the Round of 16.

Ms. Sherif beat Alize Cornet of France in the previous round in straight sets, 6-2, 6-4.

In the Winners Open, Ms. Eala, the world’s number two juniors player, is looking to build on the gains she has had for the year, which also include winning the girls’ doubles title at the French Open and claiming twin titles in an International Tennis Federation Juniors tournament in Milan in July. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Sta. Lucia Lady Realtors, Petro Gazz Angels in important PVL Open Conference match

THE Sta. Lucia Lady Realtors take on the Petro Gazz Angels in a key PVL Conference match, carrying playoff implications, on Thursday. — PVL MEDIA BUREAU

THE Sta. Lucia Lady Realtors and Petro Gazz Angels collide in a key Premier Volleyball League (PVL) Open Conference match, carrying playoff implications, at the PCV Socio-Civic & Cultural Center in Bacarra, Ilocos Norte, on Thursday.

The teams, currently having an inside track at a semifinal berth, face off at 7 p.m. where they hope to solidify their push for a spot in the next round.

Sta. Lucia is at fifth place with a 5-3 record while Petro Gazz is at joint third with a 5-2 card.

A win would assure them of at least a playoff for a semifinal spot if not direct entry to the final four of the ongoing tournament.

The Lady Realtors padded their push with a straight sets win, 25-13, 25-18, 25-16, over the Perlas Spikers on Aug. 3.

MJ Phillips and Jovielyn Prado showed the way for Sta. Lucia in the victory, finishing with 16 and 10 points, respectively. Mika Reyes and Jonah Sabete added nine each.

“It will be do-or-die for us in the next game as it will determine if we will get a chance to enter the playoffs or not. We will try to take our fate in our own hands and let’s see what happens,” said Ms. Reyes of their crucial match against Petro Gazz.

The Angels, for their part, defeated the Balipure Water Defenders in straight sets, 25-20, 26-24, 25-23, also on Tuesday to stay within the top four in the standings heading into the homestretch of elimination play.

Grethcel Soltones led the balanced attack by Petro Gazz in the shutout win, finishing with 14 points, nine coming off attacks.

Ria Meneses had eight points for the Angels while Myla Pablo and Jerrilli Malabanan added seven apiece.

Also playing on Thursday are Balipure (2-5) and PLDT Home Fibr Power Hitters (1-6) at 1 p.m. and Black Mamba Army (2-4) against Perlas (1-5) at 4 p.m. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Lakers to land Carmelo Anthony, add Kendrick Nunn, Malik Monk

CARMELO Anthony is joining close friend LeBron James with the Los Angeles Lakers, according to multiple reports.

Anthony agreed to a one-year deal according to his manager, Bay Frazier, and is set to join a rebuilt roster expected to include Dwight Howard, Trevor Ariza, Wayne Ellington, Kendrick Nunn and Malik Monk.

Monk agreed to a deal with the Lakers on Tuesday, per ESPN, before the team reached a two-year, $10-million deal with Kendrick Nunn.

ESPN reported Nunn, whose qualifying offer from the Miami Heat was rescinded, declined more money elsewhere to join the Lakers.

In addition, restricted free agent Talen Horton-Tucker has agreed to a three-year, $32-million deal to stay with the team according to multiple reports.

Anthony came out of retirement to play a meaningful role with the Portland Trail Blazers the past two seasons. At 37, the 10-time All-Star can still score — and shoot. In 2020-21, he averaged 13.4 points per game and shot over 40 percent from 3-point range for the second time in his 18 NBA seasons.

The Lakers are also in agreement on a trade for Russell Westbrook that can become official on Thursday. In that swap, Montrezl Harrell, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Kyle Kuzma would relocate to the Washington Wizards.

Given the massive salary figures for Westbrook, James and Anthony Davis — $120 million combined with Westbrook’s $44-million figure added to the scrolls — general manager Rob Pelinka has been shopping for short-term bargains to round out the roster.

Backup point guard Alex Caruso agreed to join the Chicago Bulls on a four-year deal on Monday. — Reuters

McLaughlin breaks world record to win 400 hurdles; Muhammad gets silver

TOKYO — Sydney McLaughlin shattered her own 400 metres hurdles world record to win gold in 51.46 seconds on Wednesday, getting the better of fellow American Dalilah Muhammad in a thrilling Tokyo Olympics final that lived up to all expectations.

The 21-year-old stuttered on the penultimate barrier and trailed Muhammad coming off the last hurdle but carried the momentum into the sprint to the line to cross first and beat her previous record of 51.90 set at the US trials in June.

Muhammad, the 2016 Olympic champion, ran the race of her life to take silver, coming home in a personal best 51.58, while Femke Bol of the Netherlands took bronze in a European record 52.03.

“I’m absolutely delighted. What a great race. I’m just grateful to be out here celebrating that extraordinary race and representing my country,” said McLaughlin. “I saw Dalilah ahead of me with one to go. I just thought, ‘Run your race.’

“The race doesn’t really start until hurdle seven. I just wanted to go out there and give it everything I had.”

The showdown between McLaughlin and Muhammad, 31, was among the most highly anticipated of the athletics program at the Tokyo Games and came a day after Norway’s Karsten Warholm destroyed his own world record in the men’s event.

While silver was not the medal she had been hoping for, Muhammad was thrilled to have set a personal best of 52.16 and said she was proud of her team mate.

“Just like the men’s race, all three of our times would have won any Olympics, any other year,” she added. “I’m so proud to be part of that history and even more proud of my teammate, Sydney.”

It was McLaughlin’s latest blockbuster performance since joining forces in 2020 with famed coach Bob Kersee, whom she credits with taking her to the next level after failing to reach the final at the 2016 Olympics.

Linking up with Kersee also turned her idol — six-time Olympic gold medalist Allyson Felix — into her training partner.

“(Kersee) just changed my perspective on how I approach the race, so yeah, I owe it all to him,” she said. “I knew he saw something different in me than a lot of people did. He knew how to get me there.

“We practise the last 40m so many times,” she added. “I knew I had to go and give it everything I had and dip at the line. Bobby was prepared for that kind of situation.”

Bol, who beat fourth-place finisher Janieve Russell of Jamaica by more than a second for her first Olympic medal, said she knew she had to bring her “A-game” to stand a chance of getting on the podium.

“Those other girls are so strong,” said Bol.

“I felt that I was super-fit. I thought, ‘I’m going to go in hard and see where I finish.’ I knew I was fast and I think I proved that to myself.” — Reuters

Young Japanese skaters win gold and silver in park

TOKYO — Young skaters from Japan and Britain soared to victory in the women’s park competition on Wednesday, with hometown heroes Sakura Yosozumi and Kokona Hiraki cinching gold and silver, while Britain’s Sky Brown took bronze.

In the gripping finals, Yosozumi, 19, landed two 540s in her impressive first run, earning the highest score of 60.09 to vault to top place.

Hiraki, 12, consistently showed smooth runs throughout Wednesday’s competition and took second place with her best score of 59.04.

Britain’s Brown, 13, was the favorite to win the women’s event but stumbled in her first two runs, with her final display of 540 spins and flip indies failing to vault her to a higher spot on the podium.

Far from the empty swimming pools of 1970s Southern California where this type of skating was born, skateboarding’s Olympic debut in Tokyo marks a turning point for the sport.

At times, the young skaters looked impossibly small against the giant grey and purple ramps and bowls at the Ariake Urban Sports Park that is emblazoned with the five Olympic rings. — Reuters