THIS early, the Philippine Olympic Committee is looking at the next Southeast Asian Games — in Cambodia.
A year from now when the nation of just over 17 million people hosts the SEA Games for the first time, and with no realistic shot at the overall title, POC chief Abraham Tolentino sees a wide-open race.
“It’s anybody’s ballgame,” Tolentino said yesterday’s Philippine Sportswriters Association online forum.
“With due respect to Cambodia, of course,” added Tolentino, who vowed to send a full contingent to the next SEA Games, which comes 12 months after the Hanoi edition that was rescheduled from 2021 due to the pandemic.
The Philippines is coming off a fourth-place finish in Hanoi with 52 gold, 70 silver and 104 bronze medals, its biggest medal haul in the last 11 editions when it was not the host.
“We are proud of our athletes. Thank you, athletes. It was very successful,” Tolentino said eight days after the Hanoi Games, where Filipino gymnastics world champion Caloy Yulo won five gold medals, came to a close.
Team Philippines will shoot for a podium finish or something better than that in Hanoi where the Philippines won 70 silvers, 40 of them in subjective sports and 27 of them against Vietnamese athletes.
“We have to accept reality na sila ang host,” Tolentino added in the public sports program backed by San Miguel Corp., Milo, Philippine Sports Commission, Philippine Olympic Committee, Amelie Hotel Manila, Unilever, and the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp.
Tolentino said Cambodia will come up with the final list of events this coming month, and from there, the various national sports associations, in coordination with the Philippine Sports Commission, can plan ahead.
Proper training, overseas or on home soil, and under foreign coaches should be on top of the agenda as Team Philippines prepares to challenge Vietnam, Thailand and the host country.