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Stories of Filipino frontliners in the US

Cecilia Yap-Banago was a registered nurse at the Research Medical Center in Kansas City. The 69-year-old mother migrated to the United States in 1970 and dedicated her life serving as a healthcare professional.

The five foot tall Celia is described by colleagues as a “little fireball” since she was known to work with speed and gusto in whatever department she was assigned to, be it the trauma unit or the critical care unit. It was typical for Celia to work 72 hours a week.

Celia was a woman of great empathy as well, said her colleagues. Not only did she care for patients as if they were personal friends, she cared for their families as well. She was known to spend hours explaining the condition of the patient to their loved ones and would even take phone calls from them during her rest days. She would update them on the patient’s latest test results and console them should the patient lose their battle. Her heart was as big as her talent.

Like most Filipino healthcare workers, Celia was the breadwinner of her family. Her son, Josh, remembers her as a demonstrative and affectionate mother. She loved to laugh and would often play practical jokes on her children as a show of affection. You knew she loved you if she was pranking you, Josh tearfully remembers.

Last March, Celia treated a patient who later tested positive for COVID-19. Due to budget cuts, Celia was not provided personal protective equipment since she was not working in an area designated for COVID patients. She got infected and spent her final days in isolation away from her children. Celia died on April 21 due to complications resulting from COVID-19.

Meanwhile, over in New Jersey, Alfredo Pabatao worked as a medical orderly while his wife, Susana, worked as a nurse’s assistant. The couple have been married for 44 years, with the last 20 spent in the US working as medical frontliners. They were loving towards one another, recalls youngest daughter, Sheryl. Alfredo would regularly come home with a bunch of flowers for Susana for no reason except to show his appreciation. The Pabataos were a loving family who derived strength from one another especially amid the financial and social challenges that come with being an immigrant.

Susana was an excellent nurse, say her colleagues. She was full of empathy, especially towards the elderly. She would treat aging patients with the same tenderness as her own parents. Somehow, she always had the right words to say and it always brought comfort to those she was tending to. She was a woman with a calm soul and it shone through.

Last March, Alfredo attended to a patient infected with COVID-19. He fell ill days later and was immediately put in confinement. Alfredo and Susana would communicate daily through FaceTime even when Alfredo was connected to a ventilator. Susana was his pillar of strength — she would encourage him to fight and be strong. For his part, Alfredo tried to show his bravado. In one of their FaceTime conversations, he attempted to do yoga poses to prove that he was recovering, recalls Sheryl.

But he could not fool Susana. She knew perfectly well how serious Alfredo’s condition was. In the privacy of her room, Sheryl would hear her mother sobbing through the night.

Alfredo died on March 26. Susana fell ill a few days after that. Her health spiraled down due to both the lethality of the COVID-19 virus and depression. She died a month after, on April 30.

Filipino healthcare workers are the backbone of the American healthcare system. In New York City alone, 34% of nearly 300,000 Filipinos are connected in the healthcare industry. In California, 20% of all nurses are of Filipino ancestry.

Filipino healthcare workers in America are dying at a 40% mortality rate, significantly higher than the 3.7% mortality rate of COVID-19 patients in the US, according to the John Hopkins Institute. This is due to their daily exposure to infected individuals and oftentimes, less-than-ideal safety conditions.

Evelin Weber, a Wall Street executive, philanthropist and founder of the Philippine Foundation, says that Filipinos are the soldiers in America’s battle against COVID-19. Often serving without personal protective equipment, these brave health workers have cared for 5.4 million infected Americans, 170,000 of whom have died. They are the unsung heroes who work tirelessly and without fanfare or complaints, to protect Americans from this terrible virus.

Co-founder of the Philippine Foundation and advocate of Philippine-American relations, Trevor Neilson, recognizes how Filipinos healthcare workers have set aside their own safety to help others. Many have died in the process. As a result, countless Filipino families have lost a father, mother, sister or brother, and many of them were the breadwinners of their families.

The Philippines Foundation, in partnership with the Los Angeles-based Manny Pacquiao Foundation, has recently established a fund to ease the burden of the families of fallen Filipino healthcare workers. The goal is to help 100 Filipino families with their immediate financial needs, whether it be to purchase food, rent, tuition fees and other such pressing necessities.

Apart from the seed fund that the Philippines Foundation and the Manny Pacquiao Foundation are providing, they are also accepting donations from concerned citizens. The more funds raised, the more families can be helped. Donations can be made through www.thephilippinesfoundation.org. All donations are tax deductible.

What is good about this initiative is that the donations go directly to the families of fallen Filipino healthcare workers who need it most. The Philippines Foundation also has a system to ensure that the funds go towards the basic needs of the family.

Families of Filipino healthcare workers killed by COVID-19 who have not yet been accredited by the fund can contact the website mentioned above.

Our countrymen abroad who work as medical frontliners live tough lives. They are exposed to this insidious virus on a daily basis and are dying at 11 times the rate of COVID patients themselves. The initiative of the Philippines Foundation to recognize and assist slain Filipino frontliners in America is both timely and a godsend. It deserves our full support.

 

Andrew J. Masigan is an economist

The NBA realizes racism is bad for business

By Stephen L. Carter

THE National Basketball Association (NBA) players who briefly staged a work stoppage in the wake of the shooting of Jacob Blake have decided to play their games after all. The threat to the truncated baseball season is also over. And herein lies a tale about sports and the limits of protest.

The courts where the NBA is staging its contests have “Black Lives Matter” emblazoned on them. Critics complain, on the other hand, that although players and team officials are permitted and even encouraged to speak up about racial injustice at home, the league won’t allow them to criticize the government of China, a country from which the NBA earns billions in revenue. Assume that the charge is true. It’s not hypocrisy. It’s just business. It’s also evidence that when it comes to political protests in professional sports, the players get the publicity but the owners are in charge.

Some conservatives angrily charge that the NBA owners are trying to show how “woke” they are, but that’s an oversimplification. Like other corporate entities, the teams have First Amendment rights, and as they read the shifting political winds, they’re trying to position themselves to maximize profit. They see no gain in antagonizing Beijing; and they see little loss in siding with Black Lives Matter.

This era is like every other. It takes nothing away from the sincerity of the players to point out that protests in sports succeed when the leagues and owners support them. Otherwise … not so much.

Case in point: In January of 1959, the Minneapolis Lakers arrived in Charleston, West Virginia, to play a basketball game against the Cincinnati Royals. But the hotel where the Lakers were staying refused to give a room to superstar Elgin Baylor because he was Black. (A White teammate is said to have scolded the desk clerk: “This man is more successful than you, and makes a lot more money than you ever will!”)  Later that evening, Baylor and the team’s two other Black players found that no local restaurant would seat them. Having had enough, Baylor refused to play. Tickets had been sold on the promise of his presence on the court. Instead he sat on the bench in street clothes. Sportswriters were angry. Local business leaders complained. The league considered handing down discipline, then backed off after the team’s owner supported his star.

The following year, a football player named Art Powell, a member of the Philadelphia Eagles, refused to play in a preseason game in Norfolk, Virginia, after learning that he could not stay at the team hotel because he was Black. Powell wasn’t a star. He’d been in professional sports for all of one season. The team didn’t support him. It released him. The protest has largely been forgotten. (At this writing, it’s not mentioned in Powell’s Wikipedia entry.)

A few years later, now a member of the Oakland Raiders, Powell was one of several Black players who threatened to boycott a preseason game in Mobile, Alabama, because stadium seating was segregated. When the venue wouldn’t budge — “We don’t want four boys from Oakland telling us how to run our stadium,” stadium management said — the league arranged for the game to be moved elsewhere.

Maybe the owners were sympathetic to civil rights. But it’s also true that by 1963, when the controversy over Mobile arose, the issue of racial equality had become more salient, and it was clear as crystal which argument was in the descendant. It was important that the owners of professional sports franchises, whatever their private views, wind up on the winning side.

Just a year earlier, the Washington football team had been informed by the Department of the Interior that unless they added Black players to the league’s last remaining lily-White roster, they would no longer be welcome at the government-owned DC Stadium. The majority owner at the time was the venerable racist George Preston Marshall, who was determined never to integrate his team. But Marshall was a businessman. He saw the writing on the wall. Segregation was no longer profitable. He caved.

Not that things were always so clear. Consider some of the early Black players in major league baseball, long before the Brooklyn Dodgers signed Jackie Robinson: Vincent Nava in the 1880s, George Treadway in the 1890s, Charles Grant at the dawn of the 20th century. Owners hired them to help their teams win more games, then tried to pass each as an acceptable ethnicity: Nava as Hispanic, Treadway as American Indian or perhaps White, and Grant as White. Each was soon outed as Black, and abandoned by his team. The issue of race was salient indeed, but the winds were blowing in a different direction.

We could argue for a right of protest that is independent of the views of the league. But there’s a catch. If we’re going to respect protest rights, let’s respect them across the board. The social media attacks on the NBA’s Jonathan Isaac for refusing to kneel during the National Anthem are wrong-headed, to say the least. In 2017, two high school football referees, upset that players were kneeling, walked off the field. “They’ve got the right to protest and so do we,” said one. After being disciplined for their walkout — even high school leagues know who butters their bread! — the refs wound up quitting.

To respond that the pair got what they deserved is to endorse the position of the National Football League owners accused of refusing to hire Colin Kaepernick after he began kneeling four years ago. They, too, were surely trying to maximize profit by outguessing the political winds. They just got the direction wrong.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

Lakers eliminate Blazers, 131-122

ANTHONY DAVIS scored 43 points and LeBron James added 36 to lead the Los Angeles Lakers to a 131-122 victory over the Portland Trail Blazers on Saturday night near Orlando to win the Western Conference first-round series in five games.

Davis was 14-of-18 shooting and collected nine rebounds, while James made 14 of 19 shots and recorded 10 rebounds and 10 assists to increase his NBA playoffs 30-point, triple-doubles record to 13.

Los Angeles won a playoff series for the first time since beating the Denver Nuggets in the first round in 2012 during Kobe Bryant’s tenure.

The Lakers will face the winner of the series between the Houston Rockets and Oklahoma City Thunder in the conference semifinals.

CJ McCollum recorded 36 points and seven assists and Carmelo Anthony added 27 points for the Trail Blazers, who were without Damian Lillard. The five-time All-Star returned to Portland to have his sprained right knee examined. Lillard suffered the injury in Monday’s Game 4.

Los Angeles won the final four games of the series after Portland prevailed in Game 1.

Kentavious Caldwell-Pope added 14 points and Dwight Howard had 11 for the Lakers. Los Angeles shot 54.5 percent from the field, including 14 of 36 from 3-point range.

Jusuf Nurkic registered 16 points, 10 rebounds and five steals, Gary Trent, Jr. also scored 16 points and Anfernee Simons had 13 for Portland. The Trail Blazers shot 47.3 percent from the field and made 13 of 27 from behind the arc.

Portland trailed 100-92 entering the fourth quarter before scoring the first eight points, tying the score on a 3-pointer by Simons with 9:46 remaining.

The score was knotted again at 109 after a 3-pointer by Trent with 6:52 left. But Caldwell-Pope answered with a 3-pointer 17 seconds later, and Davis made a 20-footer to make it 114-109 with 5:11 to play.

Trent connected on another 3-pointer to pull Portland within two before Davis scored the next nine points, including back-to-back dunks to make it 123-112 with 3:39 left. James added a basket 38 seconds later to end the decisive 11-0 spurt.

Earlier, Caldwell-Pope drained two 3-pointers and James knocked down one during a 13-0 surge that saw the Lakers open up a 90-76 lead with 6:19 left in the third quarter. Los Angeles led 100-92 entering the final stanza. — Reuters

Stakeholders enter partnership under PeSO to lift PHL Esports

THE LARGEST and most credible esports companies and personalities in the Philippines have come together under the revamped banner of the Philippine E-sports Organization (PeSO). Backed by telecommunications giant, Smart Communications, PeSO is comprised of the most recognizable names in Philippine esports — Bren Esports, Gariath Concepts, Mineski Philippines, The Nationals, PlayBook Esports, Tier One Entertainment, TV5, and TNC Holdings.

PeSO has the distinction of being the sole organization accredited by the International Esports Federation (IESF) since 2012. PeSO’s member organizations had previously worked together under the banner of the Esports National Association of the Philippines (ESNAP) and the Philippine Southeast Asian Games Esports Union (PSEU) for the successful staging of the first ever esports event in the SEA Games held in the Philippines in 2019. The AESF had sanctioned the PSEU to execute the SEA Games esports tournament. The AESF had also signed in March 2020 a landmark agreement with the IESF, wherein the IESF recognizes and acknowledges AESF as the sole federation for esports in Asia, while the AESF recognizes and acknowledges the IESF as the sole international federation for esports.

The Philippine E-Sports Organization (PeSO) has been accredited by the International e-Sports since 2012.

PeSO President Mr. Brian Lim with other member countries of the IESF in 2012

In the 2019 SEA Games Esports Tournament, Bren Esports, Gariath Concepts, and TNC worked under the leadership of The Nationals Commissioner Ren Vitug to be the National Technical Officials (NTOs) of the tournament, while Mineski Philippines and TV5 co-produced and streamed the event for all the participating countries. Distinguished individuals from Bren Esports, Mineski Global, PlayBook Esports, and Tier One Entertainment provided the coaching and management staff for Team Sibol, the Philippine National Esports Team. Gariath Concepts managing partner Joebert Yu was also overall competition manager for the tournament.

Member organizations of the Esports National Association of the Philippines (ESNAP) have merged with PeSO for a powerhouse group to elevate Philippine esports.

To kick off this significant milestone, PeSO will be mounting the Philippine Qualifiers for the 12th IESF World Championship to be held in Eliat, Israel in December. This year’s Philippine Qualifiers will be an online format, featuring DOTA2 and Tekken 7. Team Sibol’s Andreij “PBE.Doujin” Albar took him the bronze medal in last year’s IESF World Championships, and PeSO is confident that this time, Team Sibol can match, if not exceed, last year’s contingent’s performance and standing.

“With the support of Smart Communications, there is no doubt that we are in a stronger position to place in this year’s IESF World Championships,” said Brian Lim, president of PeSO. “Smart’s commitment to support and grow esports and the national team, Sibol, is crucial and is definitely appreciated.”

Jane Jimenez Basas, SVP and Head of Consumer Wireless Business at Smart, had this to say about Smart’s support for the esports national team: “Our goal is to continue leading the way to bring glory to Philippine esports. After supporting Team Sibol in the 2019 SEA Games, Smart reaffirms its commitment to the esports industry by looking for the next members of Team Sibol who will represent the Philippines in the IESF World Championships. “

PeSO has also applied for accreditation from the Philippine Olympic Committee (POC) to be the official National Sports Association (NSA) for the Philippines, giving it the main responsibility to govern and develop esports nationwide. PeSO’s application for NSA accreditation is bolstered by the unified presence of the biggest and most credible collection of esports stakeholders in the Philippines, who have tirelessly worked towards the industry’s growth and betterment since the early 2000s.

The search for the newest members of Team Sibol starts this September 2020. Details on the Philippine Qualifiers for the 12th IESF World Championship will be announced through the PeSO Facebook Page. TV5 and Cignal, who have been strong advocates of esports on Philippine airwaves, will air the Philippines Qualifiers on One Sports and One Sports Plus.

UP Fighting Maroons’ Kobe Paras renews ties with Chooks-to-Go

KOBE PARAS inked a new deal with Chooks-to-Go to serve as its ambassador, Saturday afternoon.

And there was no doubt that Paras would come back. After all, it was Chooks-to-Go president Ronald Mascariñas who had his back when he was left in limbo back in 2018.

“Chooks-to-Go has been there for me since the lowest point in my life. They’re really a family to me. What we do here is not business. It’s basically taking care of one another, and I’m just really grateful that Boss Ronald continues to help me and other people,” shared the 22-year-old UP Fighting Maroon.

“Right now I just feel really grateful.”

During the summer of 2018 — March 9 to be exact — Paras left Cal State Northridge.

With father Benjie seeking for help to bring his son back to the Philippines, Mascariñas did not hesitate in shouldering Kobe’s flight. Moreover, Mascariñas vouched for the 6-foot-6 stalwart to be part of the 23-for-2023 Gilas Cadets that played in the 2018 Chooks-to-Go Filoil Premier Cup.

The president of BAVI (Bounty Agro Ventures, Inc.) also played a huge part in bringing Kobe to University of the Philippines.

Mascariñas himself has seen Kobe mature in the last two years. And he can’t wait to see him blossom more in the coming years.

“When he first arrived, Kobe was in what we say, a dark place. He was very guarded then. But as he stayed here with us, he was able to realize who he really is and more,” said the amiable executive.

“I could definitely say, he has become a true Isko!”

Besides dazzling in the UAAP, Kobe has also been active in numerous outreach activities, even initiating his own drives.

“Being able to reach out to people in need in the provinces, and students as well, humbles me. It makes me realize that this is why I do what I do. It’s not specifically for me, but to make other people happy and make other people believe in themselves,” expressed Kobe.

Entering his final year in UP, Kobe does not know what lies in the future. But one thing he is not closing his doors on is the possibility of playing in the country’s first-ever professional 3×3 basketball league, Chooks-to-Go Pilipinas 3×3.

“Why not?”

Messi will not attend Barcelona training on Monday, Spanish media report

MADRID — Lionel Messi will not take a planned pre-season coronavirus test on Sunday or return to training on Monday after his shock announcement earlier this week that he wants to leave Barcelona, Spanish media reported on Saturday.

Spanish sports paper Marca said Messi was “going to war” with his lifelong club by making the decision.

La Vanguardia reported Messi will send another burofax, the method by which he told the club he wanted to leave, to inform them of his decision not to join his team mates for the first training session under new coach Ronald Koeman.

A burofax is a service used in Spain to urgently dispatch a document through a certified email, which issues a digital certificate with legal validity.

La Vanguardia reported the letter will be signed by Jorge Messi, the player’s father and agent, and Messi has already told Barcelona president Josep Maria Bartomeu of his decision.

Messi informed the club on Tuesday he wished to leave immediately, plunging Barca into fresh turmoil less than two weeks after its humiliating 8-2 Champion’s League defeat by Bayern Munich.

According to Spanish media, lawyers representing Messi have said he does not need to attend training as he has already expressed his desire to leave the club and therefore his contract has ended.

They are invoking a clause in the four-year contract, signed in 2017, which would have allowed Messi to leave the club for free if he had requested it by June 10.

They will argue that that date — nominally the end of the season — is now irrelevant after the coronavirus delays that led to the season’s extension and the team playing deep into August.

Under the terms of the contract which expires in 2021, the only way Messi can leave without the club’s consent is if a rival side pays his release clause of €700 million ($833 million).

Speculation has been rife over possible destinations for Messi, with favorites so-far including Manchester City, PSG and Inter Milan. — Reuters

Djokovic’s move to form new players association meets resistance

NOVAK DJOKOVIC has announced his resignation as head of the ATP’s Player Council and intends to form a new breakaway body to represent athletes — but his plans have immediately met with stiff resistance from within tennis.

World number one Djokovic, Canadian Vasek Pospisil and top-ranked American John Isner all resigned from the council after they were formally requested to step down by other members, a source told Reuters on Saturday.

Djokovic’s move to form a separate players association seemed to have brought together the governing bodies, who called for unity at a time when tennis has been ravaged by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Serb, who beat Canada’s Milos Raonic in the final of the Western & Southern Open 1-6 6-3 6-4 in New York on Saturday, was however still determined to push ahead with the breakaway group.

“I have read in the letter from ATP, that they think that ATP cannot co-exist with the association,” the 17-times Grand Slam winner said. “I have to respectfully disagree.

“This is not a union. This is a player association.”

The ATP governs the men’s professional tour and its board, chaired by former Italian professional player Andrea Gaudenzi, is composed of representatives of both players and tournament owners.

“We recognize the challenges that our members face in today’s circumstances, however, we strongly believe that now is a time for unity, rather than internal division,” an ATP statement said.

“We remain unwavering in our commitment to deliver for our players across all areas of our business, ensuring they receive maximum benefit from their years on Tour, and their voices are heard.”

Besides the ATP and the WTA, the sport is also controlled by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) and the boards of the four Grand Slams.

In a joint statement, the governing bodies said they have worked “tirelessly” to ensure the sport returned safely after a five-month hiatus and help the players who needed financial help during the shutdown.

“Now more than ever we need collaboration and strong relationships, and we fully support the ATP in its role in representing the best interests of players throughout this process,” it said.

FEDERER, NADAL WEIGH IN
The players are now present in New York’s bio-secure bubble ahead of the US Open, which starts on Monday.

Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal, who make up the ‘Big Three’ of men’s tennis along with Djokovic, are also part of the council but have opted out of playing this year’s US Open.

Nadal echoed the ATP’s thoughts.

“The world is living a difficult and complicated situation. I personally believe these are times to be calm and work all of us together in the same direction,” he said on Twitter.

“It is time for unity, not for separation.”

Federer, the most successful men’s player with 20 Grand Slam singles titles, agreed with Nadal.

“These are uncertain and challenging times, but I believe it’s critical for us to stand united as players, and as a sport, to pave the best way forward,” said the 39-year-old, who is recovering from double knee surgeries.

Djokovic said he “would love to have Roger and Rafa on board” but that he understood their perspective.

“It’s like having a baby. The time is never right or it’s always right,” said Djokovic.

“We are just trying to get a sense of how many players do really want to join this initiative. Then we will take it from there.” — Reuters

Johnson, Matsuyama share lead at unforgiving Olympia Fields

WORLD number one Dustin Johnson and Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama will share a two-stroke lead going into the final round of the BMW Championship on Sunday after shooting one-under-par 69s on Saturday.

The Olympia Fields Country Club, where 69 players are battling it out for 30 spots in next week’s Tour Championship, continued to torment the world’s best golfers and the leading pair were alone in having tournament totals under par.

Their tally of one-under 209 gave them a bit of breathing space at the top of a crowded leaderboard ahead of Australia’s Adam Scott (70), Canadian Mackenzie Hughes (69) and Chilean Joaquin Niemann (68), who shared third place.

Johnson tore up the TPC Boston for an 11-shot victory in last week’s Northern Trust Open — the first of three FedExCup playoff events — and the American thought he had hit upon the right strategy for success at the trickier Illinois course.

“Felt like I hit a lot of fairways, a lot of greens, and it really doesn’t matter how far away you are, you’ve just got to be in the fairway,” he told reporters.

“That’s the only way to control the ball and control the spin, and even then it’s still difficult to get it close to the hole.”

Johnson, who will extend his lead at the top of the FedExCup standings if he can snare a third BMW Championship title on Sunday, mixed three birdies with two bogeys.

Matsuyama made the perfect start with an eagle at the par-five first but two birdies against three bogeys over the rest of the round deprived him of the outright lead.

Rory McIlroy, who shared the overnight lead, fell off the pace and into a share of sixth with five others on two-over after shooting a 73, later explaining that the imminent arrival of his first child had been a distraction.

Spain’s Jon Rahm also shared sixth after carding the joint lowest round of the day with a five-birdie 66 that would have been better had he not forgotten to put a marker on the fifth green before picking up his ball. He was docked a stroke.

“I was holding my marker in my pocket, just went at it, and for some reason I just picked up the ball thinking I marked it already,” said Rahm.

Tiger Woods sits in a share of 55th heading into the final round after a 72 on Saturday. — Reuters

Silver lining

THE BLAZERS could very well just have folded. Down one and three in their first-round series, they could have readied themselves for the inevitable, and, under the circumstances, the desired: a departure from the National Basketball Association’s (NBA) bubble environment at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in Orlando Florida, and a much-awaited return to their families. After all, they were missing Damian Lillard, their leader and best player by far, due to a bum knee while up against the heavily favored Lakers. They were tired, beaten up both on the court following three straight defeats and off it by their compelling calling to be part of protests against abuse of authority, particularly over Blacks. And yet they competed from the get-go and until the final buzzer, if for no other reason than because they stood for what was right.

Indeed, the Blazers proved ready and willing to undertake the Sisyphean endeavor from the get-go yesterday. True, they played catch-up ball throughout. Even though they led for parts of the first half, at no time did they seem in control. And even though they battled to ties for parts of the second half, at no time were they able to take the lead. Yet, for all their lack of star power, they forced the Lakers to rely on a regular rotation until crunch time. In fact, the vaunted one-two punch of LeBron James and Anthony Davis had to put up monster numbers — a 30-point triple-double and a 43-nine-four line, respectively — in order to put them away for good.

The record books will show the Blazers being swept out of the 2020 Playoffs after having claimed the first outing. Nonetheless, they have ample reason to hold their head high. After entering the Walt Disney World campus eight games under 500, they needed to win six of the eight seeding contests and the play-in for the last postseason spot in the West. They built momentum in so doing, but unfortunately caught the injury bug once again; although Jusuf Nurkic was back from a long layoff, they missed Rodney Hood (due to an Achilles tendon tear) and Trevor Ariza (who opted out of the bubble) even more after Zach Collins had to be sidelined anew. And then, not counting CJ McCollum’s gutsy decision to play with a fracture on his back, there was the clincher; once Lillard’s knee acted up late in Game Four, their fate was sealed.

Moving forward, the Blazers have cause to take stock of their future. Lillard and McCollum — and, yes, Nurkic — will always give them a chance to stand toe to toe with the league’s acknowledged best. It’s certainly why they reached the conference finals last year. On the other hand, it’s also fair to wonder if they’ve already reached their peak, and if their formula is sustainable. They have a tendency to ride their starters, who, naturally, find ways to rest while on the floor. They become a sieve on defense, which then places further pressure on their offense. And so on, and so forth.

To be sure, the questions are for another day. Meantime, the Blazers have every right to look for silver linings to their campaign. As snakebitten as it may have been, they made significant strides. They know there’s water in the glass, and they can say with their heads held high that it’s not half empty, but, rather, on the way to being full.

 

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.

Global coronavirus cases surpass 25 million

GLOBAL CORONAVIRUS cases surged past 25 million on Sunday, according to a Reuters tally, as India marked a worldwide record for daily new cases in the COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic.

The data showed steady global growth as the disease’s epicenter shifts again, with India taking center stage from the United States and Latin America.

India’s single-day tally of 78,761 new coronavirus infections on Sunday exceeded the one-day increase of 77,299 reported by the United States in mid-July. The south Asian country’s surge took the global caseload to 25,074,751.

The official number of global coronavirus cases is now at least five times the number of severe influenza illnesses recorded annually, according to World Health Organization data.

Around the world, there have been more than 840,000 deaths, considered a lagging indicator given the two-week incubation period of the virus. That has exceeded the upper range of 290,000 to 650,000 annual deaths linked to influenza.

India, the world’s second-most populous country, is third behind, the United States and Brazil, in total caseload, but has consistently outpaced both in new daily cases since Aug. 7, according to the Reuters tally.

Despite the surging case numbers, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been pushing for a return to normalcy to lessen the economic pain of the pandemic, having imposed a strict early lockdown of the country’s 1.3 billion people in March.

The government announced on Saturday that it will reopen underground train networks — a lifeline for millions in the capital city of New Delhi — and allow sports and religious events in a limited manner from next month.

Latin America is the region with the most infections in the world, although some countries in the region are beginning to show a slight decline in infections.

In the United States, metrics on new cases, deaths, hospitalizations and test positivity rates are all declining, but there are emerging hotspots in the Midwest.

The global pace of new infections has steadied a little. It has taken about three weeks for the caseload to jump by 5 million cases to 25 million. That compared with the 19, 24 and 39 days it took, respectively, to add 5 million cases to the 20 million, 15 million and 10 million marks.

The rate of new daily cases has slowed to around 1.2% over August so far. That compared with 1.7% in July, 1.8% in June, 2.1% in May, 4.6% in April and 7.7% in March.

Health experts stress that official data almost certainly underreports both infections and deaths, particularly in countries with limited testing capacity.

While COVID-19’s trajectory still falls far short of the 1918 Spanish flu, which infected an estimated 500 million people, killing at least 10% of patients, experts worry the available data is underplaying the true impact of the pandemic. — Reuters

Jokowi’s economic reboot stumbles as virus hits factories

INDONESIA’S EFFORTS to revive the economy took a stumble as virus outbreaks forced factories in one of its biggest manufacturing hubs to shut.

South Korea’s LG Electronics, Inc., and Japan’s Suzuki Motor Corp. and NOK Corp. were told to stop operating their facilities in Cikarang, West Java, after more than 300 workers at the industrial area tested positive for the new coronavirus.

President Joko Widodo has sought to turn the pandemic into an opportunity to set Indonesia on a path toward becoming a developed country. He pledged to ramp up state spending after the economy fell into its first contraction in more than 20 years. Meanwhile, the new clusters and the rising number of infections may keep offices and factories shut while consumers are opting to stay home.

“The prolonged local outbreak remains a major risk to the recovery, especially because economic centers are still hotspots,” Euben Paracuelles and Rangga Cipta, economists at Nomura Singapore Ltd., wrote in a report. “This will keep household and business cautious even if no lockdown is reinstated.”

Indonesia added more than 3,000 new virus cases for a second day on Saturday, another record, with Southeast Asia’s highest death toll soaring to 7,261.

The surge in new cases could keep investors and Indonesians with higher spending power wary, said David Sumual, chief economist at PT Bank Central Asia. Spending by such consumers would otherwise bring a significant multiplier effect to the economy as they make bigger purchases, he added.

Manufacturing contributes nearly 20% to gross domestic product, while household consumption accounts for about 60%. Capital Jakarta, which boasts the highest concentration of wealth, decided to extend social-distancing measures through Sept. 10 and keep cinemas shut.

“Testing, tracing and isolation should become the basis for policy making,” said Nurul Nadia Luntungan, a public health expert at the Center for Indonesia’s Strategic Development Initiatives. An on-off restriction policy must be carried out until a vaccine is discovered, she said.  Bloomberg

Japan’s Suga to join race to succeed PM Abe — media

TOKYO — Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga will join the race to succeed his boss Shinzo Abe as prime minister, local media said on Sunday, as the competition heats up to succeed Japan’s longest-serving leader.

Mr. Suga, a longtime lieutenant of Mr. Abe’s in a key supporting role, has denied interest in the top job but attracted attention with a series of interviews, to Reuters and other news organizations, in the days before Mr. Abe’s abrupt resignation for health reasons.

A Suga government would extend the fiscal and monetary stimulus that defined Mr. Abe’s nearly eight years in office.

Mr. Abe’s announcement on Friday, citing a worsening of a chronic illness, set the stage for a leadership election within his Liberal Democratic Party. The LDP president is virtually assured of being prime minister because of the party’s majority in the lower house of parliament.

Mr. Suga decided to join the LDP race judging that he should play a leading role, given expectations for his ability to manage crises, such as the COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) pandemic and Japan’s deepest postwar economic dive, Kyodo news agency said, citing an unnamed source.

Calls to Mr. Suga’s parliamentary office seeking comment on Sunday went unanswered.

Mr. Suga would join such candidates as former foreign minister Fumio Kishida and former defense minister Shigeru Ishiba.

A self-made politician in a country of political dynasties, Mr. Suga was chosen by Mr. Abe in 2012 for the pivotal role of chief cabinet secretary, acting as top government spokesman, coordinating policies and riding herd on bureaucrats.

“I’m thinking of running in the LDP leadership race. I’d like you to support me,” Mr. Suga told LDP secretary-general Toshihiro Nikai in a secret meeting on Saturday, TV Tokyo reported.

It quoted Mr. Nikai as replying, “Please do your best,” which it said was a sign of his backing for Mr. Suga.

“Everyone wants to be on the winning side, so if Mr. Nikai is supporting Mr. Suga, they will jump on the bandwagon,” said Koichi Nakano, political science professor at Sophia University.

LDP heavyweights aim to hold a slimmed-down leadership contest around Sept. 13 to 15, public broadcaster NHK said on Sunday.

Mr. Nikai and Parliamentary Affairs Chief Hiroshi Moriyama agreed late on Saturday to move quickly to avoid a “political vacuum,” NHK said, without citing any sources for the information.

Usually, a leadership vote is held by LDP members of parliament along with grassroots party members in a month-long process. But in the event of a sudden resignation, an extraordinary vote can be called with participants narrowed to MPs and representatives of the LDP local chapters.

The scaled-down version may disadvantage Mr. Ishiba, a longtime Mr. Abe critic who promotes boosting regional economies in Japan’s depopulating hinterlands. He is popular with the public but less so among party MPs.

LDP factions will play a dominant role in the election, Sophia’s Mr. Nakano said. There might be media criticism that this is not a real contest, which might give Mr. Ishiba a bump up, but “not enough to change the momentum,” he said. — Reuters

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