Showing posts with label #OlympicGames. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #OlympicGames. Show all posts

Saturday, September 18, 2021

`Olympic diving queen Vicki was my wife`

"Sport allows us to engage in dialogue and to build bridges, and it may even have the capacity to reshape international relations. The Olympic Games embody perfectly this universal mission."

Richard Attias

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

I MET the late former U.S. Olympic coach Lyle Draves, husband of the first woman in history to win the Platform and Springboard gold medals in the 1948 London Olympics.

Victoria “Vicki” Manalo-Draves, who died in 2010 at the age of 85, was half-Filipina and half-British.

Had she represented the Philippines, we could have won our first Olympic gold medal after the World War II.


The highest we that have achieved, so far, were 1 gold medal produced by weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz (2020 Tokyo Olympics), five silver medals courtesy of boxers Anthony Villanueva (1964 Tokyo Olympics), Mansueto "Onyok" Velasco, Jr. (1996 Atlanta Olympics), weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz (2016 Rio de Janeiro), boxers Carlo Paalam (2020 Tokyo Olympics), boxer Nesty Petecio (2020 Tokyo Olympics), and seven bronze medals.

When Vicki was invited by President Elpidio Quirino in MalacaƱang in July 1949, she was feted like a Filipina Olympic champion, Lyle told this writer in a meeting in California in 2011.

Lyle, then 96, narrated his wife’s great exploits in an exclusive interview inside his unit in a retirement village in the City of Laguna Woods.

"My late wife was half-Filipina," Lyle volunteered.

 

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He accompanied Vicki in the MalacaƱang visit and they were given a red carpet welcome.

“We hardly had any sleep then,” mused Lyle, the first pure diving coach in history who produced three Olympic gold medalists: Vicki Manalo-Draves (1948 London Olympics), Pat McCormick (1952 Helsinki Olympics and 1956 Melbourne Olympics), and Sue Gossick (1968 Mexico Olympics).

“We were herded from one party to another like real celebrities and almost everybody recognized us, especially Vicki. Man, I can’t forget that moment.”

Husband and wife visited the Philippines a year after Vicki Manalo-Draves made history: she became the first woman in history to win the Platform and Springboard gold medals in the 1948 London Olympics.

“I was her coach and Vicki narrowly beat (fellow American) Zoe Ann Olsen for the gold in her last Springboard dive,” recalled Lyle, who had been permanently enshrined in the International Swimming Hall of Fame at the Fort Lauderdale, Florida on May 12, 1989. 

“I replaced the regular coach, Fred Cady, who got sick and could not make it to the Olympics that year.”

Lyle said Vicki was elected in the same highest sports pedestal in 1969.

 

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On October 27, 2006, San Francisco mayor and now California Governor Gavin Newsom signed a proclamation naming a two-acre park as Victoria Manalo Draves Park in her honor on Folsom and Sherman streets in San Francisco where she was born.

Vicki's father was a Filipino musician from Orani, Bataan who migrated to San Francisco, California. Her mother was British Gertrude Taylor, also a migrant in the same state.

Lyle and Vicki have four sons – David, Jeffrey, Dale and Kim – all divers. They have eight grandchildren.

Prior to competing in the 1948 Olympics, Draves won five United States diving championships. 

Draves turned professional after the Olympics, joining Larry Crosby’s “Rhapsody in Swimtime” aquatic show at Soldier Field in Chicago in 1948.

 

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When Vicki died on April 11, 2010 from complications of pancreatic cancer at Desert Regional Medical Center in Palm Springs, California, Lyle relocated to a plush retirement village at the Rushmore Towers in Laguna Woods, California where he has been living alone.

“I missed Vicki so much. But every night I talked to her,” sighed Lyle, who was partly deaf.

Lyle coached female divers to 12 Olympic medals and 35 National Championships. His Olympic silver medalists include Paula Jean Myers and Zoe Ann Olsen, each of whom took a bronze. His divers’ Olympic medal count reads 7 gold, 3 silver and 2 bronze.

Lyle has been described as America’s first great diving coach beginning an era when diving coaches could specialize in divers and not coach swimmers too, or vice versa.

He was a Hollywood film editor and his showbiz background has helped his coaching or again, vice versa, since Lyle was diving in and then producing, top-rated diving water shows before he became a film editor.

An Iowa farm boy, Lyle met Fred Cady at a swimming meet in Iowa. Fred invited him to California where Lyle began coaching divers at the Lido Club at the famed Ambassador Hotel and at the Los Angeles Athletic Club.

 

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One of his first pupils was a 12-year-old girl named Zoe Ann Olsen. Next, they both moved to the Athens Athletic Club in Oakland where he met Vicki Manalo. He later married Vicki, who was given away by 1948 and 1952 platform winner Sammy Lee.

After the Olympics, Vicki and Lyle toured the United States and Europe with Buster Crabbe and Dick Smith.

He described the tours as “our great opportunity to travel as husband and wife since we have been traveling a lot together as coach and diver.”

Lyle returned to his coaching, first at tennis champion Jack Kramer’s Athletic Club and then at UCLA.

The Draves boys are Acapulco and World Champion high divers who have followed the showbiz side of their father’s heritage doing high and trick dives in such places as Magic Mountain, Sea World and Marineland.

Lyle described Fred Cady as “the most brilliant man” he ever met.

“He was the team coach during the 1936 (Berlin) Olympics and he was truly a great diving coach,” Lyle said.

The secret to success in coaching diving, Lyle emphasized, is “to follow Sir Isaac Newton and his third law of motion.”

He said, “Divers should know how to utilize the muscles inside their bodies by following the third law of motion.”

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo)

Tuesday, August 10, 2021

How Pacquiao ‘missed’ seven Olympic Games


“Boxing is the most beautiful thing after women.”

Canelo Alvarez

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

IF Senator Emmanuel “Manny” Pacquiao did not turn professional on January 22, 1995 and was recruited in the Philippine amateur boxing team, would he have been a shoo-in in the 1996 Atlanta Olympics?

In the amateur ranks, however, Pacquiao would need to first dispatch SEA Games gold medalist Mansueto “Onyok” Velasco Jr. to earn a berth in the RP Olympic Team.

And he would have to pass through the proverbial eye of the needle in the bone-jarring pre-Olympic qualifiers.

Flashback in 1996: both Pacquaio, 18, and Velasco, 22, weighed 48 kg, a light flyweight.

It was Velasco, now 47, who represented the Philippines in the light flyweight division and won a silver medal after losing to Bulgaria’s Daniel Petrov Bojilov, 19-6, in the final.

It was the Philippines’ last silver medal until the 2016 Rio Olympics when Hidilyn Diaz won another silver medal for the Philippines.

If Pacquaio was the one who clinched Velasco’s berth and reached the final round against the slick-punching Bojilov, would Pacquiao, who is taller than Velasco, win the Philippines’ first gold in the Olympics?

Fate, however, had a different journey: Pacquiao was on his 16th professional fight, disposing of Indonesian Ippo Gala at the Mandaluyong City Sports Complex on July 27, when the 1996 Atlanta Olympics unfurled from July 19 to August 4.

 

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It took six more Olympics since Velasco’s haul before Philippine boxing tasted another silver; in fact two silvers in the just concluded 2020 Tokyo Olympics: Nesthy Petecio’s (featherweight, 57 kg women) and Carlo Paalam’s (flyweight, 52 kg men).

In the 2012 London Olympics, professional boxers were allowed to box in the Olympics.

Then 32-year-old Pacquiao’s chances to fight in the Olympics became impossible as he was already holding a WBO welterweight title he lost to Timothy Bradley Jr. on a controversial 12-round split decision at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas on June 9, 2012.

If Pacquiao did not win any world crown in professional boxing and elected to serve his country by fighting in the Olympics instead of bankrolling hundreds of millions of US dollars as a prizefighter under Top Rank’s tutelage, he could still be “qualified” in the 2016 Rio Olympics. Under the rules only pugilists aged 18 to 40 can join the Olympics.

When the 2016 Rio Olympics was held from August 5-21, Pacquiao was only 36.

 

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Even if he wanted to, the eight-time world champion, who will fight Errol Spence Jr. for the unified WBC and IBF welterweight titles in Las Vegas on August 21, could have been barred from joining the 2020 Tokyo Olympics as he’s already 42.

Including the 1996 Atlanta Olympics when Pacquiao had his golden chance to participate and probably bring home the Philippines’ first gold medal, he “missed” seven Olympic Games: 2000 Sydney; 2004 Athens; 2008 Beijing; 2012 London; 2016 Rio; and 2020 Tokyo, owing to his rather bigger role and more lucrative exposures in the pro ranks.

Win or lose against Spence, Pacquiao, who will turn 45 when the 2024 Paris Olympics blasts off, can never see action in the future Olympic Games.

In the pantheon of boxing greats, Pacquiao stands alone and notches higher. His achievements are already his own version of Olympic Games gold medal.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two dailies in Iloilo)