The Philippine team is made up of Miel Pahati, who is the top-ranked Filipino who placed fourth in last years competition after leading in the elimination round; Ina Flores, Kristine Robles, Justin Calingasan, Jeff Capili and Christian Guerrero. The team is coached by Joey Cuerdo of the Sport Climbing Association of the Philippines (SCAPI). Team manager is Omar Ermita. The team was given a simple, intimate send-off by ESPN Star Sports local representatives Thursday evening.
According to Cuerdo, the Philippines has never missed a competition since the Asian X-Games were first held in Phuket, Thailand in 1998.
"In terms of improvement, weve done pretty well. We started out as one of the youngest countries to enter this kind of competition. There was only one country younger than us, which is Brunei, they started only last year," Cuerdo recalls. "Despite being the youngest in Southeast Asia, weve actually risen to the top ranks in bouldering, where Japan and Korea really dominate."
This year, the team hopes to finish strong and land in the top three, something that eluded their grasp last year after an impressive start.
"Theres still a gap, but its not that big compared in the last two years," admits Pahati. "Were improving. The level of Japan and Korea can be attained in maybe three years by younger climbers who are competing more outside. Of course wed like to be in the top three this year. Last year we came really close, but there was a slight slip in the end. I guess were more mature this year and more solid."
Cuerdo, the one of the sports pioneers who built the successful Power Up chain of sport climbing gyms, explains that the sport requires creativity and alertness, and is not a discipline crafted by routine. Cuerdo believes this years team is mature enough to make a major breakthrough.
"Climbing is not like gymnastics where things are practiced and done in routine. Its not like rowing, where everything is pure movement," Cuerdo stresses. "Climbing has a lot of analysis. It has a lot of connection between mental and physical. It takes maturity to discern which way to go, the right path to take, the right sequence. Theres also an observation done on older climbers in the US. There are very, very strong climbers who are young. But its still the experienced climbers who come out as winners. True enough, its around 22 to 25 where they peak. Its when their physical strength coincides with their maturity."
Though the team has been training stringently for the last two months, the climbers have been competing non-stop in local circuits, so it has been easy to keep them in competitive shape.
"Climbing is movement centered. The big muscles are usually trained at the start, where you do your weight training," Cuerdo elaborates. "The movement exercises come in as the competition nears. Everybody also has to watch what they eat. Even if a lot of climbers say its OK, it will all boil down to: what you eat, you carry. If you eat too much, you have to lug that up with you."
There are roughly only 50 truly competitive climbers in the country, with a couple of thousand recreational climbers. SCAPI held an exhibition during the Southeast Asian Games here last year, and hope that sport climbing will be included in the SEA Games in the near future. Still, Smart was the only corporate sponsor the team was able to get, despite the intercontinental exposure they will get from ESPN Star Sports. The climbers will have to cover some of their expenses themselves.
"Weve learned not to depend, we find our own ways," Ina Flores adds. "We go to families, friends and other climbers for support."
"If youre not in the SEA Games, theres very little budget for your sport. Even if you are in the SEA Games but if youre not basketball or boxing, you have a hard time getting money," Cuerdo confirms. "But at least now that were part of the POC as an NSA, we can talk to people for help."
A Malaysian climber once stunned the field by placing second in a previous edition of the Asian X-Games. Last year, Pahati surprised everyone by towing the field in the eliminations, leaving everyone wondering where this skinny, determined kid came from. Now, the Japanese and Koreans are looking over their shoulders for Filipinos, who are coming up fast.
"It was the experience given by the veteran climbers before me, they give me so much feedback," Pahati reveals. "So when I joined the competition last year, I pretty much knew the field I got into. For the next younger climbers after me, thats also what I can do so they can benefit. I think that was the problem before. The sport was very young, we just joined and we didnt know what to expect.
Now, the secret is out. The Filipinos are not kids anymore. Theyre for real. As our climbers say, its not about us or them, its about beating the wall.