Thursday, September 11, 2014

Spare the girls, Mrs. Monfort-Bautista!

“Who would have known that this seed of innovation would grow, and carry to so many millions of kids who have participated since its creation? Little League, a simple idea has grown, multiplied and become an international institution.” Dave Winfield

By Alex P. Vidal

It’s been three weeks since our softball players from Zarraga, Iloilo came home from the 2014 Little League Softball (baseball) World Series in the United States, but the Iloilo provincial board, or any government agency for that matter, has not yet recognized their efforts and those of their coaches and mentors.
Although they failed to win the championships in Portland, Oregon last August 7-13 and in Kirkland, Washington last August 10-16, the girls, mostly below 18, ably represented the Asia Pacific Region despite coming for the twin tournaments late.
Because they forfeited their first matches, the softbelles finished by the wayside (not 10th or last as we wrote earlier).
Delegation chief, Dr. Myrna Castillo, DepEd-Iloilo division superintendent, blamed the delay of their arrival in the United States to the late release of their visas.
Battling a jetlag, the girls immediately buckled down to work as soon as they arrived and wrapped up their remaining matches, it was learned.
Lady luck wasn’t on their side as they lost one game after another en route to a dismal campaign.

FAIL

Even if they failed to bring home any trophy or medal, the Ilonggo girls made us all proud as representatives of not only the Philippines but the entire Asia Pacific in the Little League World Series, which incidentally is on its 75th year.
If they were Cubans, Chinese or Guamanians, the girls would have been given the red carpet welcome despite their dismal performances.
Even socialist and communist regimes like Fidel Castro’s Cuba celebrate the defeats of their athletes. 
No blaming game. No finger-pointing.
In the World Series, what counts most is the teams’ presence in the prestigious gathering of softball players—seniors and juniors—from Asia-Pacific, Australia, Canada, Caribbean, Europe-Africa, Japan, Latin America, and Mexico.  
The teams’ participation is more of a commitment to promote and establish international goodwill, peace and camaraderie rather than counting of trophies and medals.  
The Zarraga girls and their coaches left and arrived in the Philippines in cognito
No frills and fusillades of publicity.
But instead of being cited for their gallantry, they or their coaches and other delegation members will be summoned for investigation in the Sangguniang Panlalawigan (provincial board) committee on youth and sports development.

FIASCO

Their trip, results of their matches and the composition of the official delegation are being tagged as a “sports fiasco.”
Board Member Carmen Rita Monfort-Bautista, the committee chair, has requested the committee on education to join the investigation.
We don’t know what is there to be investigated for, in the first place, since there was no taxpayers money involved in the girls’ trip, according to Dr. Castillo, who spearheaded the last-ditch efforts to solicit from private sources to raise funds.
DepEd officials and other non-playing team members spent their own money, added Dr. Castillo, saying they could not afford to skip the tournament or face suspension from the organizers next year.
Instead of passing a resolution to congratulate the girls and their coaches in order to lift their spirits, this is what Monfort-Bautista and her peers will give to our tired and weary World Series heroes.
Adding insult to the girls’ and the coaching staff’s injury.

PUSH

If the committee investigation will push through, it will send a wrong signal to our young baseball girls and other athletes.
They will think that their local officials have no love lost for them; they will feel abandoned and betrayed.
“Is this the price that we have to pay only because we failed to win the championship?” they might ask themselves.
Still basking in the glory and prestige of having played in a major international sports arena, the girls will end up demoralized if not emotionally and mentally terrorized.
Is this how we reward our returning athletes? Only in Iloilo. Only in the Philippines.


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