The need to cover sports
>> Sunday, May 27, 2012
BENCHWARMER
Ramon S. Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY -- A proposed ordinance filed by city councilor
Peter Fianza last week is most sober. There is really a need to include
parent-coaches and trainers and a media coverage team to our city (and
regional) delegation to regional and national sports competitions. Likewise, it
won’t hurt to add our high school journalists who need exposure in actual
coverage under the guidance of the media pool.
I’ve had
my years of covering sports events up to the “PalarongPambansa”. How I wish the
younger crop of Baguio journalists would have the drive and passion to do so in
their prime. Not as an excuse to see places, but an opportunity to witness and
capture the thrill and drama of competitions.
Not an
arm-chair coverage that depends on the results brought to the billeting
quarters at the end of the day by coaches and athletes themselves. Not veiled
plagiarism by way of rewriting and converting the dispatches of a
fellow journalist who actually covered and then passing these as one’s own.
It’s honestly and actually getting the results from the field. It’s a labor of
love.
It’s not
all about winning and losing. Coverage goes beyond the daily medal count of
gold, silver and bronze. It has something to do with recording honesty and fair
play that are the marks of a Baguio and Cordillera boy and girl - in and out of
the playing field.
The year
skips me now, but my memory goes back to the final of the 100-meter dash for
high school girls at the Benguet State Universitygrounds in one regional
competition. It resulted in a photo finish and the judges eventually declared
winner the runner from Benguet. Baguio lodged a protest.
At the
victory stand, the Benguet lass suddenly handed her gold medal to her Baguio
rival and slid the silver around her neck. It was a gesture the venerable
sports booster, Dr. Fernando Bautista Sr., wouldn’t let pass. He handed the
girl a cash award, gripping her hand in a firm handshake. The founder of
the University of Baguio was as proud as any father would be over the
winning feat of a daughter.
A few
years later, while conducting a journalism training in Dalupirip, Itogon,
Benguet, I was told the honest girl had married and was living nearby. I
accompanied the students whom I assigned to interview her for a feature
story. Finding her holding her baby on her lap, I was sure the
toddler got her mother’s athletic genes and would grow up to become
another winner.
Beside
highlighting victory and fair play, media coverage can help rectify lapses in
judgment, as councilor Fianza pointed out in his measure. In Pozorrubio,
Pangasinan, when the Cordillera was still with the Northern Luzon Athletic
Association, the late Baguio journalist Willy Cacdac composed for then city
superintendent of schools Jose Olarte Sr. a protest letter over the
importation by a province of basketball players from another province and
region.
At a
“BatangPinoy” edition in Bacolod, judges had to play the video recording by
Peewee Agustin to overturn a referee’s spotty decision to give the gold to the
opponent of Baguio taekwondo player Mark Bautista.
Still in
Bacolod, then Cordillera regional sports supervisor Romeo Palod asked me to
draft a protest against the elementary boys football coach of Iloilo who led
his wards in chasing and abusing the Baguio boys who had just beaten them, 1-0.
The losing team simply couldn’t accept their fate against the wards of coach
Golocan.
At a
“PalarongPambansa” in Koronadal, Cotabato, I had to point out to a recorder at
finish that he had missed writing the names and clocking of two Cordillera
runners who had just topped their respective heats on the track. As a rule,
coaches and athletes are not allowed anywhere near the oval. The recorder must
have wondered why I was behind him, almost breathing down his neck. He checked
my reporter’s ID before correcting the errors by omission in his entries.
There were
amusing and sad incidents. Midway into the “Palaro” in Gen. Santos City, I was
typing out my daily radio dispatch when some Cordillera school officials came
to bid goodye
“Agawidkamin
ta napasyar mi metten to Mindanao (We’re going home as we’ve already visited
Mindanao),” one of them told me.
Time was
when our athletes had to do with under- or over-sized uniforms, or running
shirts that scratched and hurt the skin, giving credence to the suspicion that
they were made of plastic material like “plastic abot-abot”.
Coverage
then was far more stressful than today. Some officials were reluctant to let
you peek into the results. Venues were not centralized that you had to daily
commute to and from Gen. Santos City to Koronadal or from and to Naga City and
Pili town in the Bicol Region. You had to wait for the national
media to write and send their stories before you could get access to the
limited typewriters, computers, fax machines and phone lines.
You meet
people who, despite their lofty positions, treat you like a
long-lost friend. We were preparing for home when a pick-up stopped by our
school billeting quarters in Gen. Santos. Out came three security men with
guns, followed by a diminutive yet authoritative figure who asked delegation
officials where he could find me.
Before
school supervisor Vic Panagan could figure out an answer, the man
saw me. “Hindi kamakakaalisng Mindanao kung di kasasamasaamin,” boomed Manny
Pinol. The seasoned sports writer and commentator was then the mayor of M’lang,
Cotabato and would later serve as governor.
Manny
dipped his hands into the pick-up’s open rear flatbed and fished out a bunch of
chickens.
“Paki-pinikpikann’yo ito
at ipasyalkomuna ‘tong kapatidko (Cook these the Igorot
way and I’ll tour my brother around),” he advised Manong Vic.
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