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Never Underestimate the Heart of a Champion.

RP’s karate coach sees golden future

Friday, December 15th, 2006

 

 


December 15, 2006 

By REY BANCOD

DOHA, Qatar — Foreign training paid off for the national karate team that won a silver and a bronze in the 15th Asian Games.

Ma. Marna Pabillore, part of the seven-man team that trained and competed in Europe for 10 weeks, broke new ground when she won the country’s first silver medal in the quadrennial event.

Pabillore, a 26-year-old blackbelter from Cagayan de Oro, won three bouts to reach the final against reigning world champion Tomoko Araga of Japan.

Although outclassed, 1-9, by the Japanese, Pabillore was in superb form against other opponents.

She crushed North Korea’s Ha Ryon Rok, 7-1; routed Kazakhstan’s Venera Zhetibay, 3-1; and disposed of Chinese-Taipei’s Lim Lee Lee, 3-1.

"Pabillore is world-class material," said Italian coach Romano Guiseppe, a former World Cup champion. "Give her a few more years, she will beat the Japanese."

Guiseppe said Pabillore is as good as anyone, but has developed fear of the Japanese.

"She (Pabillore) always thinks of the Japanese. She’s better than the Japanese. She doesn’t know that," said Guiseppe.

Guiseppe said the Philippines can win at least two gold medals in the Asian Games four years from now.

He mentioned Mae Soriano and Gretchen Malalad, if healthy, as potential world beaters.

Soriano, who was eliminated in the quarterfinals, had her period before her first bout and made extra effort to make the weight limit.

"It’s a pity. The same thing happened during the Southeast Asian Games in Manila," said the 24-year-old housewife.

Soriano won her first bout comfortably, beating Ana Maria Paula Pinto of Timor Leste, 9-1. But she lost consecutively to Vietnamese Vu Thi Nguyet Anh, 1-2; and Jittikan Tiemsurakan, 1-3.

Malalad, on the other hand, was hampered by a right knee injury a few weeks before the Games.

The 26-year-old Southeast Asian Games champion fought as hard as she could against Macau’s Carion Paula Pereira, but the handicap took its toll.

"I couldn’t even move my legs, much more raise it," said Malalad who nevertheless scored the first two points of the bout.

But once she figured out Malalad's problem, Pereira became aggressive and pulled off a narrow 7-5 verdict.

The country’s bronze medal came in kata a non-combat discipline.

Noel Espinosa, campaigning in the 70-kilogram class, showed poise and the right tension in beating Palestine’s Diaaldeen Al Karay, 5-0, in the battle for the bronze medal.

Espinosa, who trained for two months in Osaka, Japan, won his first assignment at the expense of Korean Lee Chi Kit, 4-1.

A loss to eventual winner Tetsuya Furukawa of Japan, 0-5, relegated Espinosa to the repechage events where he defeated Thai Inthanousone Vilaysouk, 5-0, for a place to the medal bout.

Philippine Karate Federation president Eduardo Ponce said a revamp in the composition of the men’s team is in the offing following the expected retirement of some of its veterans.

Nelson Pacalso, fighting in the 65-kilogram, split his outings.

The 36-year-old Baguio blackbelter demolished Mohammed Abobaker of Yemen, 8-0; but bowed to Lim Yoke Wai of Malaysia, 1-7.

Bernardino Chu, 28, of Cagayan de Oro lost his bout to Abdullah Dalloul of Qatar, 0-6, while Irineo Toribio was beaten by Ihtiyor Sharapov of Uzbekistan, 0-1.

Junel Perania, a 34year-old police officer, bowed to Abdullah Al Otaibi of Kuwait, 0-8, and Ali Younes of Lebanon, 5-7.

Taken from Manila Bulletin Online at this link. 

Posted by gretchenmalalad at 4:01 pm | permalink | Add comment

Message from Gege’s SIDEKICKS

 

 

CHAMPIONS

are not men who never fail

but men who NEVER QUIT. 

 

” Champions aren’t made in gyms.
Champions are made from something they have deep inside them:
A desire, a dream, a vision.
They have to have late minute stamina,
They have to be a little faster,
They have to have the skill and the will.
But the will must be stronger than the skill.”


— Muhammad Ali —

Posted by gretchenmalalad at 11:28 am | permalink | Add comment

‘Gege’ natsugi sa Asiad karate

December 15, 2006 08:32 PM Friday

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gretchen Malalad

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DOHA, Qatar - Nabigong sundan ng Philippines ang impresibong ipinakita sa opening day ng 15th Asian Games karate makaraang mabigo sina Southeast Asian Games gold medalists Gretchen Malalad, Nelson Pacalso at veteran Junel Perenia sa kanilang kampanya sa pagsasara ng kompetisyon kamakalawa ng gabi dito.
    
Nakakapanghinayang si Malalad, na pinapaborang manalo ng gintong medalya, kung saan maaga siyang nasibak sa kontensiyon sa women’s +60 kg. individual kumite preliminaries makaraang masilat ni little-known Macau bet Paula Pereira, 5-7.
   
Sa hindi inaasahang pagkatalo, walang katiyakan ang magiging kinabukasan kung magpapatuloy si
Malalad sa karate, dahil sa kanyang oras sa mundo ng showbiz.  Naglaro ang 26-anyos na dating beauty pageant contestant na may injury sa tuhod na natamo sa kanyang kasagsagan ng ensayo nitong nakaraang buwan.
   
Nabokya naman si Perenia sa first round ng men’s +70 kg. individual kumite kung saan tumupi siya kay Abdullah Al Otaibi, 0-8, habang napahiya si Pacalso kay Malaysia’s Lim Yoke Wai sa men’s +65 kg. quarterfinals, 1-7.
   
Sa kabila ng kabiguan na makakuha ng medalya sa ikalawang araw, naitala ng Pilipinas ang pinaka-impresibong ipinakita sa karate magmula nang isama ang sport na ito sa Asiad calendar noong 1994.
   
Naipuslit ng tubong-Cagayan de Oro na si Marna Pabillore ang silver medal sa women’s -53 kg. indi-vidual kumite event habang nagsubi si kata specialist Noel Espinosa ng bronze medal.
   
Si Pabillore, na nagwagi ng gintong medalya sa SEA Games noong nakaraang taon, ang kauna-unahang Asian Games silver medalist ng Pilipinas sa karate.
   
Nakarating lamang sa quarterfinal rounds sina Mae Soriano (-48 kg. ku-mite) at Bong Toribio (-53 kg. kumite).
   
Ang Pilipinas ay nagtapos sa ninth place sa 17 bansa sa karate competi-tions na dinomina ng Japan habang ang Vietnam (4th) at Malaysia (8th) ang best performing nations sa Southeast Asia.  

 
Taken from Journal Online at this link.

Posted by gretchenmalalad at 11:18 am | permalink | Add comment