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How do we conquer vaccine skeptics? We listen.

ASK on the street in Hong Kong if passersby will get the COVID-19 vaccine, and you may hear what I did: “Sometime.” “Maybe.” “No.”

Combating this hesitancy here and elsewhere will take more than opprobrium and exhortation. It requires tuning in.

A combination of deep-seated distrust in government, ignorance and lack of urgency — in a territory that has kept coronavirus cases low — means Hong Kong is now struggling to get enough residents inoculated. This week, when appointments opened for people over 30, tens of thousands of us rushed to book, picking between Chinese-made Sinovac Biotech Ltd. and the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Many more, out of 5.5 million eligible in a population of 7.5 million, did not.

Hong Kong is a perfect storm of problematic factors, from political tumult to reports of seven deaths among more than 160,000 people given the Sinovac shot that have caused unease, though the incidents haven’t been linked to the vaccine. Even before the shots were made widely available, many indicated they would delay. But the city is hardly alone. Skepticism and anxiety are as old as vaccines themselves, haunting even inoculation pioneer Edward Jenner, and run from the backstreets of Lahore to high-end Paris neighborhoods.

It’s not a problem that can be brushed off. There’s little hope of life returning to normal, much less of conquering a virus that has killed 2.7 million and paralyzed economies, until enough people step up to achieve herd immunity — probably upwards of 70%. Even a small shortfall could be enough to cost lives and livelihoods.

The good news is that experience has taught us plenty about campaigns and resistance. Plus, while COVID-19 has been a catastrophe, it’s also an unprecedented opportunity, given the visible public health ravages, to change minds and prove the value of vaccines.

The less positive news is that the causes of skepticism are manifold and complex. Misinformation is one problem: We know that from episodes like the Nigeria polio vaccine boycott in 2003-04, or the scare around the diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus vaccination in the 1970s and 1980s. Today, social media means even very modest numbers of militant anti-vaxxers move fast through online chatrooms to conquer the hesitant, sometimes just by sowing doubt. A Facebook study showed a small subset of users was responsible for most of the skeptical content posted. But there are plenty more sources, from lack of trust in authorities to healthcare barriers to simple racism. Episodes like the 40-year Tuskegee syphilis study that denied Black men in the US state of Alabama diagnosis and treatment cast a long shadow.

It’s a far lengthier list for COVID-19, where disinformation was present from the start, fed by geopolitical tensions and polarized domestic agendas as in the US, where President Donald Trump minimized the threat and fed conspiracy theories. There was outright denial in places like Turkmenistan, reporting no confirmed cases, and Tanzania, which stopped publishing data last April.

The swift appearance of vaccines unsettled even more people, unclear where time was saved or how risks balance against rewards. Europe’s suspension of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine over reports of blood clotting may be understandable as a show of caution, but real-world evidence suggests the shots are safe. Once sown, doubts are very hard to clear.

In a way, it’s odd that vaccines spark so much debate. Far fewer people feel so strongly about allergy medication or cough syrup. Heidi Larson, who runs the Vaccine Confidence Project at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and studies rumors, connects it to the involvement of government and big business — institutions in which distrust runs high. In a recent address, she said it’s less an information problem than a relationship one. Low faith in authorities, as in Hong Kong or Lebanon, another skeptical hotspot, means few will take risks. It’s no accident that vaccine skepticism so often overlaps with poor governance and populist politics.

It’s clearly necessary to block anti-vaccine disinformation on social media platforms, but it’s not a solution on its own, any more than mandating the injection — a move that would further antagonize and polarize, damaging future efforts. Simply shutting down skeptics is a poor tactic when exclusion is half the problem.

For a long time, distrust in lifesaving shots seemed to me a fringe position stemming from ignorance. Then I had a child on the autism spectrum, and found myself interrogated far too frequently and too publicly on his vaccine schedule: Had he had the shot against measles, mumps and rubella, the MMR? It’s a reference to a long-discredited study that links autism and the inoculation that has done untold harm, turbo-charging the anti-vaccine movement. These were not uneducated people or conspiracy theorists, but they had questions.

That’s where we need to start.

Pictures of vaccinated celebrities, simple booking mechanisms, and basic access to injections are all important. But it’s vital to listen to the doubters and understand where the problems are coming from. The Philippines, for example, is still feeling the impact of a dengue vaccine that could worsen symptoms in people not previously infected. Some Hong Kongers will need to be reassured on the provenance and safety of vaccines. Elsewhere, it may be a question of explaining why it is a priority, when other health threats loom large, too. Tailoring the response matters, as does providing it from a locally respected source — whether doctors, priests or elders.

One option is what one US public health specialist described to me: Focus groups that connect peers and seek to answer questions and educate without preaching. His experience among Hispanic and other communities suggests naysayers are brought around after evidence from a friend or relative, or when an acquaintance has been vaccinated without adverse consequences. Behavioral science in areas like climate change shows similar results: We’re happier to change our views if someone we can relate to does the convincing.

Such efforts are possible almost everywhere. Community discussions won’t fix deep-seated distrust in government and may not reconcile everyone with science. It’s late — the push should have started months ago. But we can still reach enough people to make a difference.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Ten key technology trends

MACROVECTOR-FREEPIK

To compete in the world of tomorrow, companies should stay on top of these digital trends

THE COVID-19 crisis has dramatically accelerated corporate digital transformation. As companies hurry to develop new digital capabilities, build resilience and retool for the post-pandemic world, keeping up with fast-moving technology trends is critical.

Based on our meetings with a carefully selected group of over 100 technology companies and startups, Bain & Company has identified 10 trends that are having an impact on a wide range of industries.

TREND 1: EDGE AI TRANSPLANTS BRAINS TO FACTORY TOOLS AND MACHINERY.
Considered the next wave of artificial intelligence, “edge AI” makes it possible for AI algorithms to run on the edge of a network, closer to or even on the devices collecting the data. These networks preserve bandwidth and increase efficiency by processing information closer to the users and devices that require it. Latency is reduced, and insights can be generated faster while lowering cloud services usage and cost. Plants located in remote areas are also less subject to costly connectivity losses.

TREND 2: 5G FACTORY REVOLUTIONIZES MANUFACTURING.
Capable of meeting the power requirements of millions of connections to data-intensive applications — and up to 100 times faster than 4G — 5G also offers drastically reduced latency, speeding data analysis, erasing processing delays and ensuring factory systems can react in real time. 5G is expected to accelerate the shift toward Industry 4.0, even possibly usher in an era of machine-to-machine communication.

TREND 3: SMARTPHONE DATA POWERS USAGE-BASED AUTO INSURANCE WHILE IMPROVING SAFETY.
The market for usage-based insurance is projected to reach $126 billion by 2027. Using sensors and tracking technologies embedded in smartphones, mobile telematics allows auto insurers to collect real-time data and better understand their customers’ driving habits. Ultimately, this will help insurers offer more competitive and innovative behavior-based insurance programs while fostering driver safety.

TREND 4: AUTOMATED AND EXPLAINABLE AI MAKES FINANCIAL ORGANIZATIONS SMARTER.
Banks and insurance companies are quickly increasing their investment in AI — but to get the most return, employees with little or no computer science background need to be able to use it. User-friendly AI platforms that allow employees to quickly build models, understand and trust their output, and then confidently make decisions will be critical. Banks are beginning to explore such platforms’ use in fraud detection, and insurers are using them to assess customers’ product preferences.

TREND 5: IN CYBERSECURITY, AUTHENTICATION RIGHTS AND NETWORK ACCESS GET THEIR DUE.
According to Interpol, the COVID-19 crisis has created an unprecedented opportunity for cybercriminals. Yet most companies overestimate their cybersecurity. Identifying common IT security weaknesses is central to building a truly resilient digital organization, and the potential compromise of a company’s active directory infrastructure is one gaining attention. By gaining user authentication rights and company network access, a cybercriminal might take over a CEO’s phone, usurp his or her identity, and retrieve confidential information.   

TREND 6: WORKFORCE TECHNOLOGIES BOOST AGILITY AND PROFITABILITY.
Globally, absenteeism costs companies hundreds of billions of dollars per year. Retail is particularly dependent on face-to-face interactions between customers and in-store employees, something COVID-19 disruptions have made especially challenging. Workforce management technologies, however, can help retailers quickly respond to activity peaks and employee absenteeism, understand employee availability and temporarily transfer personnel, improving both operational performance and profitability.

TREND 7: HEALTH DATA IS GOLD.
Healthcare’s big data market is expected to reach nearly $70 billion in 2025. The rapid acceleration of health data collection gives the industry an unprecedented opportunity to deploy groundbreaking digital capabilities, such as AI, to enhance treatment. Smart use of health data has the potential to dramatically improve patient care and lower costs.

TREND 8: IN HR, COGNITIVE SCIENCE AND GAMIFICATION WIN THE WAR FOR TALENT.
By 2025, millennials will account for three-quarters of the global workforce. As organizations increasingly work with a digital-native pool of candidates, they must modernize recruitment. Technology can help identify the most promising candidates in ways that look quite different from traditional recruiting processes, such as leveraging cognitive science and gamification to evaluate technical expertise, intellectual skills, and even soft skills and cultural fit.

TREND 9: SHIFTING FROM SELLING TO RENTING BECOMES THE GREEN WAY OF DOING BUSINESS.
As consumer and shareholder preferences shift toward sustainability, transactional relationships based on selling products are giving way to a model of production and consumption that involves sharing, leasing, reusing, and recycling existing materials and products. To reduce consumption of natural resources, companies are developing rental models for an expanding variety of products, paving the way for a truly inclusive, circular economy.

TREND 10: TECHNOLOGY WORKS TOWARD ZERO FOOD WASTE.
According to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization, more than 30% of the world’s food is lost or wasted every year. Using technology to reduce waste could put a significant dent in the food discarded by retailers and businesses, increase food security, and alleviate suffering. New apps that match consumers to food retailers, manufacturers and wholesalers are already making a difference. 

COVID-19 has catalyzed a technological shift of unprecedented magnitude. In the race to retool for the digital world of tomorrow, companies are smart to study and take advantage of the critical technology trends of today. 

 

Aadarsh Baijal And Truc Mai Dupont Vohong are from Bain & Company. Truc Mai Dupont Vohong is vice-president of the firm’s EMEA Digital Partnership, Business Development and Design initiatives. Aadarsh Baijal is a partner and head of Bain’s Digital practice in Southeast Asia.

Asia fast-tracks AstraZeneca rollouts

VIALS with Pfizer-BioNTech, AstraZeneca, Sputnik V, and Moderna coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine labels are seen in this illustration picture taken Mar. 19. — REUTERS

TAIPEI/CANBERRA — Many Asian countries are accelerating the rollout of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine after confidence in its safety was hit, following reports that the shot was linked to rare blood clots in Europe earlier this month.

After briefly halting its use, many European countries have resumed using the shot in their inoculation programmes after a regional regulator said it was safe, while several country leaders are also taking the vaccine to boost confidence.

The AstraZeneca shot was among the first and cheapest of the COVID-19 vaccines to be developed and launched at volume and is set to be the mainstay of vaccination programmes in much of the developing world.

But its brief suspension raised concerns that a slowdown in vaccination rollouts could hurt the global fight against the pandemic, as coronavirus cases surge in some countries, overwhelming healthcare systems and hurting economies.

“I have just finished getting the (AstraZeneca) injection, there is no pain at the injection site, and there is no soreness of the body,” Taiwan Premier Su Tseng-chang told reporters as the island launched its inoculation campaign on Monday.

Thailand’s prime minister also became the first person in the country to be inoculated with the AstraZeneca vaccine after its rollout was temporarily put on hold over safety concerns, while Indonesia began using it on Monday after suspending it last week. But Indonesia’s Food and Drug agency has warned against its use on people with blood clotting disorders.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in, 68, plans to get the shot on Tuesday after the government said it could be used on older people.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson received his first dose of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine on Friday, saying he “did not feel a thing.”

HEADWINDS
The European Medicines Agency regulator said on Thursday the vaccine is effective and not linked with a rise in the overall risk of blood clots.

Yet a survey released on Monday showed that people in seven European countries were more likely to see the vaccine as unsafe than as safe.

Many Asian countries heavily rely on the AstraZeneca vaccine to end the pandemic, as the shot is being used in inoculation programmes in Australia, South Korea, the Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand, and India.

Some countries could face supply issues.

India, which has the highest coronavirus caseload after the United States and Brazil, is delaying supplies of the vaccine to several countries, as it faces a second surge in cases, said a source with direct knowledge of the matter.

The Serum Institute of India (SII), which produces the AstraZeneca vaccine, has told Brazil, Saudi Arabia and Morocco that further supplies will be delayed due to surging demand at home, the person said.

Australia, which has inoculated just 1% of its population so far, is also accelerating vaccination after the country’s pharmaceutical regulator approved on Sunday the local manufacturing of the AstraZeneca vaccine by CSL.

Within 12 weeks, CSL is expected to produce 1 million doses of the vaccine each week. — Reuters

India reports worst daily rise in COVID-19 in months

People are seen at a crowded market amidst the spread of the coronavirus disease in Mumbai, India, Mar. 19, 2021. — REUTERS/FRANCIS MASCARENHAS

NEW DELHI — India reported its most COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) cases and deaths in months on Monday, on the first anniversary of the start of a chaotic nationwide lockdown that left many people jobless and shrank the economy.

Authorities reintroduced some curbs to slow the spread of the virus, especially in the western state of Maharashtra, which accounted for nearly two-thirds of the 46,951 new infections and the majority of the 212 deaths. Some hospitals in the country’s worst-affected state have begun to run short of beds.

With the biggest rise in cases since early November, India’s total has surpassed 11.65 million, the highest in the world after the United States and Brazil. The increase in deaths was the largest since early January, and took the total to 159,967.

In some parts of India, most people still go out without masks and flout advice on social distancing, including politicians campaigning in four states where elections will begin later this month.

The health ministry has also warned that a huge gathering of devotees for a Hindu festival could lead to a spike in cases as people from all over the country flock to the banks of the Ganges river in the holy northern town of Haridwar.

Local authorities have said they expect 150 million visitors at the weeks-long Mahakumbh that began this month and peaks in April. The festival is held only once every 12 years, and many Hindus believe bathing in the river during this period absolves people of sins. 

The surge in cases has also brought into focus India’s low rate of immunization relative to population, despite being the world’s biggest maker of vaccines.

VACCINE EXPORTS
India has administered more than 44 million doses since starting its vaccination campaign in mid-January, but wants to cover 300 million — a fifth of its 1.35 billion population — by August.

India has donated or sold more than 60 million vaccine doses to 76 countries, saying some shipments are necessary to meet contractual obligations.

As vaccine demand rises at home, top vaccine manufacturer the Serum Institute of India (SII) has delayed further shipments of the AstraZeneca shot to the United Kingdom, Brazil, Saudi Arabia and Morocco.

Gripped by a second wave of infections, some states are seeking to accelerate the vaccination drive to include younger people.

Maharashtra, India’s richest state, has offered to make doses itself to ease the supply pressure on SII and vaccine developer Bharat Biotech, whose COVAXIN shot is also being used in the country’s inoculation programme.

The state reported 30,535 new coronavirus infections in the past 24 hours, forcing local authorities to reopen some quarantine centers. The centers had been closed after the national daily caseload began to decline after peaking at nearly 100,000 cases a day in September.

Maharashtra, home to India’s financial capital Mumbai, has been accounting for more than half of the country’s total cases after the full reopening of its economy unleashed a second wave of infections late last month.

Nearly a dozen other states, including Punjab, Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka, home to the tech hub of Bengaluru, have also seen a spike in cases in the past few weeks. — Reuters

National athletes’ Tokyo Summer Olympic preparation continues

PSC COMMISSIONER RAMON FERNANDEZ shared that Team Philippines’ preparation for the Tokyo Olympic Games continues despite the cloud of uncertainty over its staging later this year. — PSC FACEBOOK PAGE

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

A CLOUD of uncertainty still hovers on the staging of the Olympic Games in Tokyo this year, but Team Philippines’ preparation for the sporting spectacle continues.

To date, six Filipino athletes have booked spots in the Olympics with a number more still trying to qualify.

Those who have qualified are pole-vaulter EJ Obiena, gymnast Caloy Yulo and boxers Eumir Felix Marcial, Irish Magno, Nesthy Petecio, and Carlo Paalam.

Athletes still vying to make it to the Games include those from weightlifting, golf, karate, skateboarding, fencing, and 3×3 basketball.

Speaking on The Chasedown program last Saturday, Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) Commissioner Ramon Fernandez shared that while the ongoing pandemic has made the national athletes’ preparation all the more challenging, the grind continues for them with the end view of having a competitive showing come the Games.

“For the Olympics, all of our athletes, both those who have qualified and those still trying to qualify, their training is ongoing. They have their own bubble not only here, but in different parts of the world,” said Mr. Fernandez.

He made mention of the national karate team which is currently in Turkey training, which could extend all the way to the middle of this year before the Olympics in July to August.

National boxers are in Thailand while the fencing team is in Ormoc, Leyte.

Hidilyn Diaz, the 2016 Olympic silver medalist, is gearing up to formalize her entry in weightlifting for this year’s Games and is training in Malaysia. The same goes for skateboarder Margielyn Didal, who is just a competition away from formalizing her qualification.

Mr. Fernandez said that PSC has the athletes’ back in their Olympic push in tandem with their respective mother sports associations, trying their best to furnish what they need as far as their training goes notwithstanding the limitations presented by the trying times.

He went to say though that the situation with the coronavirus pandemic and how it would affect the rescheduled Olympic Games is a concern they are keenly keeping an eye on.

“Frankly, the Tokyo Olympics is still not 100 percent [sure to push through]. But we’ll cross the bridge when we get there. We’re playing it by the ear,” said Mr. Fernandez, who is also the chief of mission of Team Philippines for the 31st Southeast Asia Games in Vietnam later this year.

In the last Olympic Games in 2016 in Rio, Brazil, the Philippines was represented by 13 athletes in eight sports. Ms. Diaz was the lone athlete to win a medal.

IBF super flyweight champ Jerwin Ancajas raring to get it going in ring return

IBF WORLD SUPER FLYWEIGHT CHAMPION JERWIN ANCAJAS of the Philippines is set to defend his title against Mexican Jonathan Javier Rodriguez in April. — ALVIN S. GO

INTERNATIONAL Boxing Federation (IBF) world super flyweight champion Jerwin “Pretty Boy” Ancajas has not fought in more than a year, which is why in his ring return next month he is all in and ready.

Mr. Ancajas (31-1-2), who is currently training in the United States, is set to defend his world title against Jonathan Javier Rodriguez of Mexico on April 10 (April 11 Manila time) at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut.

The fight was twice-postponed previously, the last time in April last year, a victim of the coronavirus pandemic.

“I’m excited and happy for this opportunity to be back in the ring after some time. Waiting is nothing new to me. I have experienced this in the past,” said Mr. Ancajas in Filipino in a virtual press conference on Monday.

The Davao del Norte native last fought in December 2019 in Mexico, where he successfully defended his title against Chilean challenger Miguel Gonzalez by technical knockout in the sixth round.

“As a fighter, I always keep myself ready; whoever I’m up against and wherever it may be,” he said of the mind-set he has.

MP Promotions President Sean Gibbons, whose group handles the professional career of Mr. Ancajas, said they are viewing the Filipino’s upcoming fight with much significance.

“This has been a long time coming. For various reasons, it did not push through in the past. But we are excited to finally get this going. This is an important fight for Jerwin. He needs to get past this to go for the other top fighters,” said Mr. Gibbons, who joined Mr. Ancajas and coach Joven Jimenez in the press conference.

Mr. Gibbons said they are not looking past Mr. Rodriguez just yet, but possible opponents for Mr. Ancajas after include Thai Srisakit Sor Rungvisai, American Joshua Franco (regular WBA champions), and Japanese Kazuto Ioka (WBO champion).

In Mr. Rodriguez (22-1), Mr. Ancajas is up against a boxer who is on a roll, winning his last six fights and determined to seize the title from the reigning champion.

The 25-year-old fighter last saw action in December against compatriot Julian Yedras, where he won by knockout.

Mr. Ancajas, however, reiterated that he is ready to fight and defend his title for the ninth time.

“Since I came over here last year (in the United States), we have been training steadily. For this fight, I’m already 95 percent ready,” he said.

The Ancajas-Rodriguez fight is part of a triple-header with the main event featuring American Jaron Ennis and Russian Sergey Lipinets.

Also part of the event is the clash between undefeated fighter Mark “Magnifico” Magsayo (21-0) of the Philippines against Pablo Cruz (21-3) of the United States.

The Rodriguez fight is the first for Mr. Ancajas under Al Haymon’s Premier Boxing Champions group after being released from his contract by Top Rank Promotions of Bob Arum.

The fight will be broadcast in the country over One Sports and One Sports+. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

International spectators to be barred from Olympics

TOKYO — International spectators will not be allowed to enter Japan for this summer’s Olympic Games amid public concerns over coronavirus, organizers said on Saturday, crushing many fans’ hopes and setting the stage for a drastically scaled-back event.

Some 600,000 Olympic tickets purchased by overseas residents will be refunded, as will another 30,000 Paralympic tickets, Toshiro Muto, the chief executive of the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee, told a news conference.

He declined to say how much the refunds would cost.

The Olympic Games were postponed last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. While the outbreak has chilled public opinion toward the event, both organizers and Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga have vowed to press ahead with the Games, now scheduled to take place on July 23-Aug. 8, with the Paralympics on Aug. 24-Sept. 5.

The decision on international spectators will “ensure safe and secure Games for all participants and the Japanese public,” Tokyo 2020 organizers said in a statement following five-way talks that included the head of the International Olympic Committee, Thomas Bach, and the Tokyo governor.

“People who are involved in the Olympics in some way may be allowed to enter the country, whereas regular visitors will not be able to,” Tokyo 2020’s Muto said.

He said costs for hotel cancelations would not be covered. Organizers may also consider cutting the number of staff members who will participate in the Games.

Mr. Bach said he shared the disappointment of Olympic fans as well as the families and friends of athletes who had planned to travel to Tokyo.

“For this, I’m truly sorry. We know that this is a great sacrifice for everybody. We have said from the very beginning of this pandemic that it will require sacrifices,” Mr. Bach said in a statement.

But he said safety had to come first, adding, “I know that our Japanese partners and friends did not reach this conclusion lightly”.

“Together with them, the IOC’s top priority was, is and remains to organize safe Olympic and Paralympic Games for everyone,” Mr. Bach said.

Media polls have shown that a majority of the Japanese public are wary about letting in international spectators to watch the Games as the country grapples with the tailend of a third wave of the pandemic.

STRIPPED-DOWN GAMES
A stripped-down Games means the government will not get the tourism boom it had long counted on. Japan has grown increasingly reliant on foreign tourists, particularly from Asia, to bolster its weak domestic economy.

Like other countries, it has seen tourism unravel with the pandemic and its hotels and restaurants have been hit hard.

Saturday’s decision did not cover local spectators. Mr. Muto said organizers will decide next month on caps for spectators in venues.

“It’s very unfortunate,” Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said of the decision on international spectators, speaking to reporters after the meeting.

But she added that the conclusion was “unavoidable” given that the main priority for holding a successful Games would be the health of the athletes and the Japanese public.

Kyodo news service earlier reported that organizers were leaning towards barring overseas volunteers from helping at the Games.

Sources told Reuters earlier this month that the Japanese government had concluded it would not be able to allow spectators from abroad. — Reuters

Matt Jones ends ‘tough’ 7-year drought with Honda triumph

AUSTRALIAN Matt Jones won the Honda Classic on Sunday to end a seven-year drought on the PGA Tour and turn the page on what he said was at times a challenging stretch in his career.

The Sydney-born golfer’s last tour victory came at the 2014 Houston Open, when he edged Matt Kuchar in the first hole of a playoff with a 42-yard chip in for birdie.

He did not allow it to be as close at PGA National in Florida on Sunday, firing a final round two-under-par 68 to win by five strokes.

“I’ve had some tough times between then and now,” he said while fighting back tears.

“Sorry, pretty emotional. Seven years. I just worked hard. I worked hard with my coach back in Australia Gary and it has finally paid off.”

Sunday’s win guarantees Jones entry into next month’s Masters, the first major of the year.

He should arrive in Augusta brimming with confidence after the superb ball-striking display he put on over the last four days.

“To be honest, I struck it amazing,” he said. “I was pretty confident going into the week, which is not normal for me. — Reuters

Dončić’s 3-pointer barrage leads Mavs past Blazers

LUKA Dončić matched his career best of eight 3-pointers and scored 37 points in just three quarters as the Dallas Mavericks steamrolled the host Portland Trail Blazers (132-92) on Sunday night.

Dončić missed just once from long range and collected seven rebounds as the Mavericks led by as many as 45 points while winning for the 13th time in the past 18 games. The winning margin was the club’s second-largest of the season behind a 124-73 rout of the Los Angeles Clippers on Dec. 27.

Josh Richardson scored 21 points and Dorian-Finney Smith added 13 for Dallas, which made 19 of 37 from 3-point range and shot 55.8 percent overall. Kristaps Porziņģis had 12 points, while Tim Hardaway, Jr. and Dwight Powell tallied 11 apiece.

Damian Lillard scored 19 points and Gary Trent, Jr. added 16 for Portland, which had a three-game winning streak halted. Nassir Little scored 14 points and CJ McCollum added 13 for the Trail Blazers.

Lillard (seven attempts) and McCollum (five) missed all 12 of their 3-point attempts. Portland was just 9 of 41 from behind the arc while shooting 38.2 percent overall.

The one-sided triumph marked Dallas’ lone win in the season’s three meetings with Portland. The Trail Blazers beat the Mavericks (125-119) on Friday despite Dončić’s 38 points.

The other time Dončić made eight 3-pointers also came versus the Trail Blazers. He was 8-of-12 in a 120-112 win on Jan. 17, 2020. Dončić drained three 3-pointers during a 19-0 run to start the second half. — Reuters

Pro hoops commissioner is PSA’s executive of the year awardee

PBA COMMISSIONER WILLIE MARCIAL is this year’s recipient of the PSA Executive of the Year award. — PBA IMAGES

LOCAL professional basketball league commissioner Willie Marcial is the recipient of this year’s Executive of the Year award from the Philippine Sportswriters Association (PSA).

Mr. Marcial, the 10th commissioner of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA), is being honored by the PSA by successfully steering the league in staging a tournament “bubble” last year amid the pandemic.

The award is one of 32 awards to be handed out in the virtual PSA Awards Night happening on March 27.

Forced to recalibrate their season last year because of the coronavirus pandemic, Mr. Marcial led the league’s push to save its Season 45 by holding a tournament bubble in Clark City in Angeles, Pampanga.

From October to December, the PBA wove its way through the many challenges of holding its first-ever bubble tournament en route to completing the delayed Philippine Cup, with the Barangay Ginebra San Miguel Kings crowned as champions.

The successful PBA bubble proved to be a viable “blueprint” for other leagues to follow in holding their own confined tournaments.

Mr. Marcial is the second PBA commissioner to be named Executive of the Year by the PSA after Chito Salud in 2012.

Past winners of the award are William Ramirez, Ramon S. Ang, Manny V. Pangilinan, Wilfred Uytengsu, Hans Sy, Ricky Vargas, Dan Palami, Jude Echauz, and Philip Ella Juico.

The PSA Awards Night will be held virtually at the TV5 Media Center. It will be aired on March 28 over One Sports+ from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Record-breaking Messi scores twice as Barcelona hammer Real Sociedad, 6-1

SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain — Lionel Messi celebrated becoming Barcelona’s highest appearance maker of all time by scoring twice as his rampant side crushed Real Sociedad (6-1) away in La Liga on Sunday with a stunning team display.

Antoine Griezmann opened the scoring by netting against his old club in the 36th minute and right back Sergino Dest stretched Barça’s lead shortly before half time after latching on to a sweeping pass from Messi.

Dest struck again early in the second half before Messi controlled a sumptuous pass from Sergio Busquets and scored to mark a night on, which he overtook Xavi Hernandez as Barça’s record appearance maker, with 768 games for the club.

Ousmane Dembélé struck his side’s fifth goal of the night in the 71st minute after a brilliant solo run while Sociedad’s Ander Barrenetxea hit arguably the best goal of the game to give his side a rare moment of joy.

Messi, however, had the final say, finishing off a flowing team move in the 89th minute to score his 23rd league goal of the season, increasing his lead at the top of the scoring charts.

The victory took Barça above Real Madrid into second place in the standings on 62 points, four behind leaders Atletico Madrid with 10 games left to play.

“This is a difficult place to come. Barça always used to struggle here, but we came flying out of the blocks,” said Griezmann.

“We worked very hard, we won the ball lots of times deep in their half and reacted well every time we lost it. It was a great Barcelona performance.”

Barça used to dread facing Sociedad away from home, failing to beat them in San Sebastian for more than a decade, and even though they ended up hammering the Basques they did not get off to the best start.

Sociedad forward Alexander Isak should have given the hosts an early lead from close range but could only shoot straight at keeper Marc-André ter Stegen, who denied the Swede again moments before Dest doubled Barça’s lead.

“This wasn’t our best game and they were clearly better than us and overwhelmed us,” said Sociedad forward Mikel Oyarzabal.

“They were more ruthless than us; we went into halftime feeling bad as they scored all their chances while we couldn’t convert ours and the second half was very different as a result. But no one likes to lose like that.” — Reuters

AstraZeneca vaccine 79% effective in US, shows no safety issues

AstraZeneca Plc’s coronavirus vaccine fared better than expected in a U.S. clinical trial, providing reassurance about its safety and efficacy.

The shot developed with the University of Oxford was 79% effective in preventing COVID-19, and an independent monitoring board found no safety concerns, the company said Monday. The shot also protected all those immunized from severe disease and death in a study of more than 30,000 volunteers.

The findings should bolster confidence in the product after confusion over its true efficacy and the best dosing regimen impacted take-up. The vaccine has faced numerous setbacks, most recently over supply issues and possible side effects. Even after the European Medicines Agency declared it safe last Thursday, not all European Union countries have resumed vaccination on concern about reports of blood clots.

“Efficacy is better than we had expected,” Peter Welford, an analyst at Jefferies, wrote in a note to clients. “Importantly, after recent largely unfounded safety concerns in Europe, the study confirms the safety profile.”

Astra shares rose as much as 1.2% in London trading.

A shortfall in deliveries to the EU has put Astra at odds with the bloc and led officials to oppose exports of the shot from the region as they seek to hold the company to account.

Clinical trials in the U.K. and Brazil last year produced a range of readings due to different dosing amounts and regimens used, and at least 10 EU countries only approved the shot for under-65s initially.

Many have since reversed that decision after more data from real world use showed the vaccine was effective for everyone. Older adults made up about a fifth of the U.S. test, which showed efficacy of 80% in that age group. Trials last year failed to provide conclusive data due to a lack of participants over the age of 65.

A number of cases involving serious blood clots found in individuals following their inoculation has also damaged the vaccine’s image. More than a dozen countries suspended use of the shot last week on the reports. The European Medicines Agency and U.K.’s regulator said Thursday that no definitive link could be established between the clots and the vaccine, and the benefits of its use continued to outweigh the risks. The U.S. trial review that found no safety concerns looked specifically at blood clots.

Skepticism over the vaccine started last year. When Astra and Oxford first reported initial data from clinical trials conducted in the U.K. and Brazil last November, they produced two very different efficacy readings of 62% and 90%. Because of a manufacturing error, one group of participants had received a lower first dose, which produced the higher reading, compared with those getting two standard doses. Further analysis suggested it was the dosing gap rather than the amount that had created the difference.

More than 70 countries globally have approved the Astra-Oxford shot for use and the partners plan to produce up to three billion doses of the vaccine this year.

The vaccine is particularly important to the global effort to end the pandemic because it’s easy to store and transport and the company is providing it at no profit during the crisis. Unlike vaccines from Pfizer Inc. and partner BioNTech SE, and Moderna Inc., which have to be kept frozen, the Astra shot can be held at fridge temperature. — Bloomberg

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