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Eumir Marcial among five boxers to watch at the Tokyo Olympics

THE 25-year-old middleweight Eumir Marcial hoping to earn the Philippines its first ever Olympic gold medal. — BW FILE PHOTO

FIVE boxers to watch out for at the Tokyo Olympics:

EUMIR MARCIAL (PHILIPPINES)
The 25-year-old middleweight qualified for Tokyo last year and will be hoping to earn the Philippines its first ever Olympic gold medal.

Marcial has inevitably drawn comparisons with his country’s greatest boxer, Manny Pacquiao, and has been preparing under the tutelage of the multiple world champion’s trainer Freddie Roach after turning professional last year.

JULIO CESAR LA CRUZ (CUBA)
Whether he ends up fighting at light-heavyweight or heavyweight in Tokyo, La Cruz is always worth watching for the distinctive defensive technique that earned him the nickname ‘La Sombra,’ or ‘the Shadow.’

The elusive 31-year-old, who won gold in Rio and four amateur world titles at light-heavyweight, drops his guard and invites his opponents on before using his athleticism to swerve out of the way of the punches that come his way.

SHAKHOBIDIN ZOIROV (UZBEKISTAN)
Zoirov won flyweight gold as Uzbekistan topped the boxing medals table in Rio and after winning the 2019 world title and his first three professional fights will be back in the Olympic ring to defend his title. Southpaw ‘Shakho,’ who tries to emulate his hero Muhammad Ali with his footwork and ringcraft, fires quick body-head combinations before making a swift exit out of range.

MC MARY KOM (INDIA)
The face of the campaign to get women’s boxing into the Games and flyweight bronze medalist at London 2012, the 38-year-old mother of four is set for her Olympic swansong.

The pint-sized boxer is one of the most decorated women fighters in the amateur game with a record six world championships titles, the last of which came in 2018. She has also won gold medals at the Asian Games and Commonwealth Games.

LAUREN PRICE (BRITAIN)
The reigning world and European Games heavyweight champion, Price is determined to follow in the footsteps of trailblazer Nicola Adams by winning boxing gold for Britain.

A former world champion kickboxer and international soccer player for Wales, the 26-year-old makes up for her relatively short stature by using clever footwork and fast hands to score points on the counter. — Reuters

Fate of SEA Games in Vietnam to be known

THE Southeast Asian (SEA) Games Federation meets on Thursday to decide on whether to push through with the staging of the biennial sporting meet in November in Vietnam or postpone it to next year.

This was shared by Philippine Sports Commission official Ramon Fernandez during his session on the online Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum on Tuesday.

Mr. Fernandez is also the chef de mission of the country’s delegation for the Hanoi Games set for Nov. 23 to Dec. 2.

“They are going to meet on June 24 to discuss the matter,” said Mr. Fernandez.

He, however, said that is the most they know at the moment and everything is up in the air as far as the staging of the SEA Games.

Mr. Fernandez went on to say that they are just going to wait for the result of the key meeting, which will have Philippine Olympic Committee President Abraham Tolentino and other National Olympic Committee (NOC) officials in the region attending.

The idea to postpone the Vietnam Games was broached in a meeting among NOC members two weeks ago.

The host country proposed the postponement because of the new virus outbreak there, which has Hanoi and 11 other locations at the center.

The development, Vietnam said, has hampered considerably its ability to prepare for hosting the best way it can.

During said SEA Games Federation meeting, the majority of the competing countries voted against the postponement.

They were the Philippines, Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Timor-Leste.

Vietnam and Myanmar supported the proposal to postpone while Laos abstained.

The countries which wanted to push through, however, recognized that the final decision on the matter was still with the Vietnam government.

In the event the SEA Games is postponed, it will be the second time in its history, the first in 1963 when political unrest in Cambodia prevented the event from being staged.

Amid the uncertainty, Mr. Fernandez expressed hope that the SEA Games pushes through because the athletes are really looking forward to competing there after the forced break because of the pandemic. But he also understands the predicament Vietnam is in.

“It will be hard for sure for the athletes if the SEA Games is postponed because they have been looking forward to this but we just have to understand if ever,” he said.

“As of now, we’ll just continue training and preparing. The official training starts on July 1 although others have already begun,” added Mr. Fernandez, saying the preparations are also geared for other international events.

The Philippines, defending overall SEA Games champion, intends to send 626 athletes who will be competing in 39 sports in Vietnam.

Vaccination of national athletes is currently ongoing so as to adhere to the “no vaccine, no participation” policy that will be in effect in the Games. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Tokyo Olympic Games-bound shooter Jayson Valdez takes aim at gold medal

FILIPINO shooter Jayson Valdez — JAYSON VALDEZ FB PAGE
FILIPINO shooter Jayson Valdez — JAYSON VALDEZ FB PAGE

ONE of the last athletes to qualify for his event in the Olympic Games in Tokyo, shooter Jayson Valdez has become more determined to go for the gold.

Mr. Valdez earned qualification for the Summer Games in the men’s air rifle 10-meter event through the quota system implemented by the International Shooting Sports Federation.

It all came just when he thought his Olympic push was over, especially when the quadrennial event was postponed last year.

But as it turned out, from his participation in the World Cup and Asian qualifying tournaments previously, he met the minimum qualifying scores to earn a ticket to the Games.

Now in a position to showcase what he can do in the Olympics, Mr. Valdez said he will do everything he can to have the best possible showing.

“This is a great opportunity for me. We’ll see. Anything is possible at that stage,” said Mr. Valdez during his session on the online Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum on Tuesday.

“In the Olympics, my immediate goal is to beat my personal record [of 630]. If I could do that, I’m sure I’ll enter the Top Eight and go to the medal round. From there, everybody’s back to zero,” he added, noting that some of his possible opponents in the Olympics own personal best of either 631 or 632.

Added motivation for Mr. Valdez is for his father Julius’ Olympic dream to live through him.

“He always wanted to be an Olympian but he was not able to,” he said of his father who won three gold medals and a silver in the 1987 Jakarta Southeast Asian Games.

Now, the elder Valdez and veteran Tac Padilla, a five-time gold medal winner in the SEA Games, are helping him prepare.

Mr. Valdez is the latest Filipino shooter to qualify for the Olympics after Paul Brian Rosario, who competed in men’s skeet as a wild card entry in London 2012.

Prior to receiving his Tokyo qualification notice, Mr. Valdez was already set to enter the military. He said he is postponing it for now and concentrate first on his Olympic quest. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Judoka Watanabe and sprinter Knott also through to Olympics

IT’S now 15 and counting as far Filipino athletes qualifying for the Tokyo Olympic Games.

Filipino-foreign athletes Kiyomi Watanabe of taekwondo and Kristina Knott of athletics have officially earned their spots in the rescheduled Olympics kicking off next month.

Judoka Watanabe qualified by way of the continental quota in the women’s -63kg class as released by the International Judo Federation on Wednesday.

It was announced around the same time as Filipino-American Knott received university places in the women’s 200m from World Athletics.

The two’s Olympic qualification came a day after professional golfer Juvic Pagunsan also booked his spot as among the top 60 players in the rankings. He is currently ranked 49th.

Both Filipino-Japanese Watanabe and Ms. Knott are making their Olympic debuts in Tokyo.

Unfortunately for 25-year-old Knott, she tested positive for COVID-19 as she received news of her Olympic qualification. She, however, is asymptomatic and is fully vaccinated.

The Philippine Athletics Track and Field Association in a press conference on Wednesday said Ms. Knott is now in isolation and that it is confident that she will be fully recovered in time for the Tokyo Olympics.

Apart from the two and Mr. Pagunsan, Filipino athletes who have qualified earlier are pole-vaulter EJ Obiena, gymnast Caloy Yulo, boxers Eumir Felix Marcial, Irish Magno, Nesthy Petecio and Carlo Paalam, weightlifters Hidilyn Diaz and Erleen Ann Ando, rower Cris Nievarez, taekwondo jin Kurt Barbosa, skateboarder Margielyn Didal, and shooter Jayson Valdez.

The total qualified athletes to date has already surpassed the 13 that saw action at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.

The rescheduled Olympic Games happens from July 23 to Aug. 8. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Juan Gomez de Liaño heading to Japan league

GILAS PILIPINAS and University of the Philippines player Juan Gomez de Liaño will play for EarthFriends Tokyo Z in the second division of the Japan B.League. — FIBA

GILAS Pilipinas and University of the Philippines player Juan Gomez de Liaño is heading to Japan to play in the second division of the B.League.

In an announcement made on Wednesday, the EarthFriends Tokyo Z club said it has signed the explosive guard to play for the team in their upcoming season.

That makes Mr. Gomez de Liaño the latest homegrown Filipino player to sign and play in the Japanese league after brothers Thirdy and Kiefer Ravena, although the latter’s move is on hold because of his commitment with the Philippine Basketball Association.

The former Fighting Maroon said he is very excited to take his talent to the B.League and help EarthFriends Tokyo Z bounce back after a rough season.

“I am honored to be part of the EarthFriends Tokyo Z Team. I am very excited to battle it out with you guys and to be part of this journey,” Mr. Gomez de Liaño said in the official team statement.

“I am looking forward to meeting you all soon. I hope I can count on your continuous support through the challenges ahead. Let’s get it!”

EarthFriends Tokyo Z finished last season with a 13-46 record.

Mr. Gomez de Liaño played for the Gilas national squad in the first two windows of the just-concluded FIBA Asia Cup Qualifiers. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Ayton’s last-second dunk lifts Suns over Clippers

DEANDRE Ayton made a go-ahead alley-oop dunk off an inbound pass with 0.7 second remaining as the Phoenix Suns earned a 104-103 victory over the visiting Los Angeles Clippers on Tuesday to take a 2-0 lead in the Western Conference finals.

Cameron Payne scored a career-high 29 points for the Suns, and Ayton contributed 24 points and 14 rebounds. Devin Booker scored 20 points, playing after getting his nose bloodied late in the third quarter and having stitches.

The Suns increased their playoff winning streak to nine games.

Payne stepped up to make 12 of 24 shots from the field and had nine assists with no turnovers. He was starting at point guard for the second consecutive game with Chris Paul in health and safety protocol after he reportedly tested positive for COVID-19.

Paul George scored 26 points and Reggie Jackson added 19 for the Clippers, who fell behind 2-0 in their third consecutive series. They rallied to defeat the Dallas Mavericks in the first round and came back against the top-seeded Utah Jazz in the conference semifinals.

George missed a pair of free throws with 8.2 seconds remaining that gave the Suns a chance to win the game.

The Clippers were playing their fourth consecutive playoff game without forward Kawhi Leonard, who is out due to a sprained right knee.

Game 3 is set for Thursday night at Los Angeles, where the Clippers have won their past four after losing their first three home contests to Dallas. — Reuters

NBA mock draft: Pistons can’t pass up Cade Cunningham

THE Detroit Pistons won the NBA draft lottery Tuesday night, meaning they will select first overall for the first time since 1970.

Their chances to land the No. 1 pick were tied for the best with the Houston Rockets and Orlando Magic. Houston ended up second, while Orlando slipped to fifth.

In the spirit of immediate reactions to a draft order that is guaranteed to change via trades between now and July 29, here are our best bets for the first 14 picks on draft night.

1. Detroit Pistons: G Cade Cunningham, Oklahoma State

The Pistons need an injection of talent all over their roster, and they earned the right to land the most complete talent in this class, an enviable blend of size, playmaking skill and shooting ability.

2. Houston Rockets: G Jalen Suggs, Gonzaga

John Wall is not the long-term answer at point guard. Suggs can dish the ball to Christian Wood and whoever else is left on this roster as Houston starts over.

3. Cleveland Cavaliers: C Evan Mobley, Southern California

The Cavaliers’ backcourt of the future is set with Collin Sexton and Darius Garland, so Mobley can join a frontcourt that features an aging Kevin Love.

4. Toronto Raptors: G Jalen Green, G League

Adding Green would be especially useful to the Raptors’ offense if Kyle Lowry walks in free agency.

5. Orlando Magic: F Jonathan Kuminga, G League

A new option on the wing for a team sorely lacking them, Kuminga also would bolster an already solid rebounding team.

6. Oklahoma City Thunder: G Davion Mitchell, Baylor

So you missed out on first dibs on the Oklahoma State product. It’s a lottery, after all. A nice consolation prize at guard is this tough defender who just carried his team to the NCAA championship.

7. Golden State Warriors: G Keon Johnson, Tennessee

The Warriors made up for a down year with a nice lottery haul, as Minnesota’s No. 7 overall pick was conveyed to them. They start with a wing to help on the defensive end of the floor.

8. Orlando Magic: F Jalen Johnson, Duke

The Magic’s second pick is conveyed from Chicago. This team needs frontcourt help, too, and Johnson can move the ball around from down low.

9. Sacramento Kings: F Scottie Barnes, Florida State

Sacramento was bottom five in the NBA in both scoring defense and perimeter defense in 2020-21. Barnes is a versatile defender who can help in those departments.

10. New Orleans Pelicans: F/C Alperen Sengun, Turkey

Zion Williamson is great on his own. Pair him with this budding star from overseas, the Turkish League’s MVP at just 18 years old, and the Pelicans’ frontcourt would be one to reckon with.

11. Charlotte Hornets: F Corey Kispert, Gonzaga

One of the top shooters in the draft falls to a team that would love to pair someone up with Rookie of the Year LaMelo Ball and boost its below-average 45.5 percent team shooting rate.

12. San Antonio Spurs: F Franz Wagner, Michigan

No longer the postseason lock they used to be, the Spurs need some help just about everywhere. Wagner does a little bit of everything, from defending to facilitating to scoring.

13. Indiana Pacers: G James Bouknight, UConn

Domantas Sabonis and Malcolm Brogdon can’t do everything for the Pacers going forward. Let’s give them some added scoring from a guard who could quickly become a nice complement to a healthy Caris LeVert.

14. Golden State Warriors: F/C Isaiah Jackson, Kentucky

So last year’s second overall pick James Wiseman didn’t have the best rookie campaign. We’re not saying the Warriors should bail on him, but having more options to mix and match with an aging Draymond Green couldn’t hurt. — Reuters

England gets the job done with 1-0 win over Czechs

LONDON — England delivered an efficient but hardly scintillating display to beat Czech Republic 1-0 with an early Raheem Sterling header on Tuesday to advance to Euro 2020’s last 16 as Group D winners, with the Czechs through as one of the best third-placed teams.

Sterling scored his and England’s second goal of the tournament in the 12th minute but the initial injection of pace, intensity and crowd-pleasing excitement brought by Jack Grealish and teenage man of the match Bukayo Saka gradually dissipated as the game petered out into an utterly forgettable second half.

Neither side will mind though as they now begin to plot their assaults on the knockout phase.

England returns to Wembley on Tuesday to face the runners-up from Group E — likely to be France, Germany or Portugal — while the Czechs must wait to find out which group winner they play.

They were dislodged from second place by Croatia, who beat Scotland 3-1 and will play the Group E runners-up — Sweden, Slovakia, Spain or Poland — in Copenhagen on Monday.

On the positive side of England’s balance sheet is two wins and a draw, three clean sheets, a return to Wembley and a good number of players getting a taste of the action.

Conversely, they have scored only two goals — the lowest by any team ever to top a Euros group — were sluggish and over-cautious for long periods of all three games and the midfield combination and approach seemingly remain anything but settled. They also face a potentially daunting last 16 game next. “We are not fluent but we have moments where we look a good side,” said England coach Gareth Southgate.

“The Czechs are a really good side. They use the ball well and are really tough to break down. There is more to come from us, definitely. We have not scored from a set play yet. They are crucial in big matches and we have to get those nailed.

“All of our next opponents will be different games but there are a lot of good things we are doing.”

SHARP END
Sterling was at the sharp end of England’s early attacks as they began full of energy. He struck a post in the second minute when he lifted the ball past advancing keeper Tomas Vaclik — the third time England had hit a post of the same goal early in each match.

Ten minutes later, Sterling found the target with a close-range header from a delicious floated cross by Grealish after a driving run by Saka had splintered the Czech rearguard.

Making his first appearance of the tournament, the 19-year-old wide man showed a willingness to run with the ball that was painfully absent from England’s first two performances and, with Grealish a constant menace, the hosts looked more threatening.

Harry Kane looked sharper too and had a shot well saved late in the first half by Vaclik, but that early promise was gradually replaced by the all-too-familiar caution and England barely mustered another meaningful attempt.

The Czechs were neat and tidy without carrying a huge amount of penalty box threat, though Tomas Holes had a shot palmed clear by Jordan Pickford and Tomas Soucek fired just wide in the first half.

Substitute Jordan Henderson thought he had scored his first goal for England on his 60th appearance five minutes from time after a scramble, only to see it ruled out for offside.

Overall though, it was desperately thin gruel for most of the second half, with the loudest cheers reserved for the big screen announcements of Croatia’s goals that eliminated Scotland. — Reuters

Singapore’s millionaires count expected to surge 62% by 2025 — report

REUTERS
A VIEW of the city skyline in Singapore, Dec. 31, 2020. — REUTERS

SINGAPORE’s count of millionaires could increase by more than 60% over the five years from 2020 to 2025, according to Credit Suisse Group AG, part of a surge in millionaires expected in Asia as financial capitals emerge from the Covid-19 pandemic.

The city-state may have 437,000 millionaires by 2025 compared with 270,000 in 2020, according to the bank’s 2021 Global Wealth Report. That 62% pace would be faster than Hong Kong’s estimated 60% for the same period, but slower than the growth forecast in mainland China, India, Australia, South Korea and Taiwan.

Singapore’s millionaire density — or percentage of millionaires in the total population — was 5.5% in 2020, the second-highest in Asia after Hong Kong’s 8.3%, the report said. The island nation’s Gini coefficient — a more broad-based measure of wealth inequality — was at 78.3 in 2020, much higher than Japan’s 64.4, South Korea’s 67.6 and Taiwan’s 70.8.

The wealth share of the top 1% in Singapore was almost 34% at the end of 2020, compared with 18% for Japan, 24% for South Korea and 28% for Taiwan. In a small country like Singapore, higher wealth inequality can result from an unrepresentative cluster of very high net-worth individuals, the report said. — Bloomberg

Canada’s Trudeau hits China over proposed probe into indigenous children’s remains

GENEVA/OTTAWA — China and its allies called on Tuesday for an investigation into the discovery of the remains of indigenous children in Canada at the site of a former boarding school, prompting an angry response from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

The remains of 215 children, some as young as three years old, were found at the Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia that closed in 1978, the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc Nation said on May 28.

“We call for a thorough and impartial investigation into all cases where crimes were committed against the indigenous people, especially children, so as to bring those responsible to justice, and offer full remedy to victims,” Jiang Duan, a senior official at China’s mission to the United Nations in Geneva, told the Human Rights Council.

Canada, locked in a trade and diplomatic dispute with Beijing, later delivered a joint statement on behalf of more than 40 countries calling for access to China’s Xinjiang region to look into allegations of the government’s mass detention of Uyghur Muslims.

Mr. Trudeau, condemning what he called “the systemic abuse and human rights violations” in Xinjiang, said a Canadian truth and reconciliation commission had worked from 2008 to 2015 to address the mistreatment of the indigenous population.

“Where is China’s truth and reconciliation commission? Where is their truth? Where is the openness that Canada has always shown and the responsibility that Canada has taken for the terrible mistakes of the past?” Mr. Trudeau asked.

“China is not recognizing even that there is a problem … that is why Canadians and people from around the world are speaking up for people like the Uyghurs,” Trudeau told reporters in Ottawa.

Mr. Jiang read the statement out on behalf of countries such as Russia, Belarus, Iran, North Korea, Syria and Venezuela, all of which have been criticized by Western nations for human rights violations.

Canada’s residential school system, which forcibly separated indigenous children from their families, constituted “cultural genocide,” the truth and reconciliation commission said in 2015. — Reuters

Oxford University explores anti-parasitic drug ivermectin as COVID-19 treatment

REUTERS

THE UNIVERSITY of Oxford said on Wednesday it was testing anti-parasitic drug ivermectin as a possible treatment for COVID-19, as part of a British government-backed study that aims to aid recoveries in non-hospital settings.

Ivermectin resulted in a reduction of virus replication in laboratory studies, the university said, adding that a small pilot showed giving the drug early could reduce viral load and the duration of symptoms in some patients with mild COVID-19.

Dubbed PRINCIPLE, the British study in January showed that antibiotics azithromycin and doxycycline were generally ineffective against early-stage COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019). While the World Health Organization, and European and US regulators have recommended against using ivermectin in COVID-19 patients, it is being used to treat the illness in some countries, including India.

“By including ivermectin in a large-scale trial like PRINCIPLE, we hope to generate robust evidence to determine how effective the treatment is against COVID-19, and whether there are benefits or harms associated with its use,” co-lead investigator of the trial Chris Butler said.

People with severe liver conditions, who are on blood-thinning medication warfarin, or taking other treatments known to interact with ivermectin, will be excluded from the trial, the university added.

Ivermectin is the seventh treatment to be investigated in the trial, and is currently being evaluated alongside antiviral drug favipiravir, the university said. — Reuters

NK markets in turmoil as borders stay closed

REUTERS

SEOUL — Currency exchange rates and commodity prices appear to be wildly fluctuating in North Korea (NK) as a resumption in major trade with China hasn’t materialized, media reports and analysts say, increasing the hardship for residents facing food shortages.

After steadily rebounding in the first few months of the year, China’s exports to North Korea in May fell to $2.71 million from $28.75 million in April, quashing hopes among traders along the border that more than a year of anti-coronavirus closures could soon ease.

North Korea is highly insular and it is difficult to pinpoint the situation within the country. But reports this week that China, its biggest ally, plans to keep pandemic border restrictions in place for at least another year have cast doubt on North Korea’s prospects.

In some areas, that appears to be among the factors that sparked significant volatility in foreign exchange rates and the prices of some key goods.

“The fuel and forex price swings are likely caused by the foreign trade situation,” said Peter Ward, an expert on North Korea’s economy.

Daily NK, a Seoul-based website that has tracked such indicators in North Korea for years, reported on Tuesday that North Korea’s won had surged 15-20% against the US dollar and China’s renminbi in the space of around a week.

The swings seem driven in part by North Korean organizations and individuals selling off their dollars and yuan because the expected restart of China-North Korea trade did not materialize, the website reported, citing sources in the country.

“After years of relative stability, the wild swings in prices and internal exchange rates in recent days threaten to raise the level of popular desperation and may make reopening trade with China more difficult,” a report from the US-based 38 North program, which tracks North Korea, said this week.

Last week, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said the country’s economy improved this year but called for measures to tackle the “tense” food situation caused by the coronavirus pandemic and last year’s typhoons.

State media reported that the government would produce and distribute more grain to the people.

Daily NK reported that corn and rice prices in some of the country’s major cities, including Pyongyang, have fallen after local residents received government rations. But some other areas have seen prices soar for basic supplies, the website said.

Earlier this year, some imported luxuries reappeared on store shelves in Pyongyang as border restrictions appeared to ease, but prices have shot back up again, one Western source with contacts in the city told Reuters.

Some shampoo has been selling for $200 per bottle and a kilogram of bananas for $45, NK News, which monitors North Korea, reported last week.

“From what we can learn through Asia Press and Daily NK, the food situation outside a few major cities is very bad,” Ward said. “If these trends continue, we will have to start to worry about hunger and even starvation amongst North Korea’s poorest.” — Reuters