by Mike Limpag
I ONCE announced in an online forum that I’d run as naked as the day I was born if the Philippines made the semifinals of the 2005 Southeast Asian Games.
I admit, it was one of those if-you-want-the-moon-then-aim-for-the-stars kind of move.
I also admit it was one of those dares I was so looking forward to finding an excuse not to do.
But on the night the Philippines crashed out, losing to Malaysia, 4-2—in a match the team led, 2-1, I was disappointed.
No, not because I lost the chance to do my dare. What I said was so far from my mind that night.
What I was thinking was those 15 minutes when the Philippines was ahead, 2-1, and a semifinal appearance—seemingly impossible only a week before—was right there for the taking.
If only…
But curiously Vince Santos, the then team manager, was giddy.
We just crashed out and this guy was optimistic?
I thought he was crazy.
But then he pointed out the obvious.
The core of the squad was eligible for another SEA Games.
“Guys like the two Phils are eligible for two more SEA Games,” I remember Vince saying as we sauntered off Draft Bar in Bacolod City, a few merry drunken hours after the team lost their final game to Malaysia.
Then he mentioned all the possible starters in the next SEAG and I think I was drooling at what could have been the strongest-ever SEA Games team.
I also remember thinking that perhaps a football medal in the SEA Games in my lifetime wasn’t preposterous?
But then reality happened.
Vince, who said it would be a very nice problem to solve who will make the team, never got to solve the problem.
That possible strongest-SEAG team ever?
We never sent them in 2007, ditto in 2009.
But then 2010 happened and the PSC, who in 2007 and 2009 thought football didn’t pass the must-be-a-medal-contender criterion and hence wasn’t sent to the SEA Games, realized that not sending a football team to this year’s Seag would probably start a Twitter riot.
So we are sending one, finally.
And like Vince, Dan Palami and the coaching staff are having fits finalizing the squad, what with 47 members in the training pool.
But unlike Vince, who could have signed a 7-foot gay keeper and nobody would have
noticed, whatever Dan does or doesn’t do is analyzed ad infinitum.
Heck, these days, we sometimes get more football updates from Showbiz Central!
The changes in the Philippine football scene are really quite remarkable.
Vince once told me, a day before the 2005 SEAG football event started, that
basketball’s loss was the chance for other sports to shine.
If you remember, basketball then was scrapped due to the country’s suspension from Fiba.
“This is our chance to show the country what we can do!” Vince said.
Now, the football team doesn’t need that.
The 2010 Suzuki Cup success made them mainstream news. What they do on field (and sometimes who they do off-field?) are a regular staple in the news.
Heck, this early, folks are saying that we can win a medal in this year’s SEA Games.
Really?
This early?
That’s preposterous!
We have a training pool, not a team.
And we haven’t even seen the draw yet.
A medal in the SEA Games?
No, I won’t go that far, yet.
But this I promise. I’ll run the 2012 Cebu City Marathon with only my football cleats on if the Philippines wins the gold medal in Jakarta.
And Dan Palami will be my pacer. Source
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