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Welcome to the XTERRA Tribe

March 13, 2012

Originally in the XTERRA PLANET magazine

publihed Spring 2011

 

 

When presented with a challenge, how do warriors respond?  In the realm of XTERRA, warriors smile more, relishing each obstacle in front of their swim goggles, mountain bike, and running shoes. 

 

Smiles couldn’t be more apparent than in the recently concluded XTERRA Philippines Championship held in Liloan, Cebu last 6 March 2011.  Was it because Filipinos, many of whom on race day lined the race route, cheering, waving flags, and at one point, even ran along side some racers, are generally considered one the happiest people on earth?  Or did the over 100 XTERRA participants simply marvel at the beauty of Cebu - the blue sea, the green landscape, the mix of modern and historic, man-made and natural?  Or maybe it was the roast pig post-race lunch?  Perhaps it was all of the above, and more.   

 

Defending XTERRA World Champion and women’s pro winner of this inaugural XTERRA Philippines triathlon, Shonny Vanlandingham, said she “got so much energy from the cheering of the community.”  She added, “It’s great to come to a place like the Philippines.”

 

Sam Gardner from the UK, was all praises too, and recounted his run to an overall first-place finish.  “Good thing I was able to get that big lead [in the bike]. In the run I was able to focus on just enjoying the race. I just soaked it in. I was high-fiving the locals and basically just enjoyed it all.”

 

The age-groupers, both local and from overseas, plus spectators and visitors plastered Facebook pages with hundreds of photos and reports, calling the event “great” “huge freaking fun” and “one of my best experiences ever!”

 

The start/finish and transition area was at Amara, a high-end residential subdivision, with the 1.5km swim along its shoreline. Then the two-loop 32km bike leg brought the riders out through the side streets, dirt roads, and single track parts of Liloan.  Who would’ve thought that a small town known more for its century old lighthouse and a home-made baked delicacy called rosquillos is now associated with a technical mountain bike portion called “the graveyard.” Then the 10km run was a race towards a fishing lagoon called Papa Kit’s where runners traversed bamboo bridges and where ducks and turkeys were strewn about.  The run turned out to be a unique highlight of the race.

 

Like Woodstock, audiences hardly get to see the behind-the-scenes struggles of putting up a major event.  Likewise with XTERRA, triathlon races don’t suddenly land via Hawaiian Airlines, nice and comfy in business class, ready to rock.  Months of planning and preparation was detailed, and most important, the people were ready to roll.

 

XTERRA Philippines organizers, led by Sunrise Events president, Fred Uytengsu, himself an XTERRA Warrior, wish to thank many unheralded persons who helped make the first XTERRA Philippines Championship a success.  First are the Liloan barangay captains of Calero, Catarman, Poblacion, and Tayud.  They rallied their residents to come out on a Sunday morning to cheer every swimmer, biker, and runner on the course.  Plus there is University of Cebu Chancellor Candice Gotianuy, whose green advocacy coincided nicely with XTERRA’s eco-friendly ways, thus she asked hundreds of her students to do a course clean-up on two separate weekends prior to the start of the event. 

 

Moreover, XTERRA wishes to thank the jolly giants of Papa Kit’s, the Mendoza family, who unselfishly opened their property for the run course.  Finally, there’s Mr. Edmund Porter, himself now an XTERRA Warrior, for opening up his family’s picture postcard marina for a portion of the bike route.

 

The smiles have not yet faded.  In fact, they are becoming more.  The challenges that make XTERRA warriors smile will be returning to the Philippines in 2012, and there’s no doubt the race will be even better.  How do we know?  Get the answer at www.xterraphil.com and just be there next year.    

 

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 4:32 pm | permalink | Add comment

From Kawayan Cove to the Red Sea

Published in the column Green Light

Manila Standard Today

March 5, 2012


FROM KAWAYAN COVE TO THE RED SEA

 

 

By Rene F. Concepcion

 

A few weeks ago, I was happily watching cartoons with my baby boy, when to my surprise, I get a text message saying I would, if I accept, represent the Philippines in the FINA Marathon Swimming 10k World Cup on April 1 in Israel. My initial reaction was: isn’t Israel right next to Syria?  Besides, the last time I suited up for our country was 18 years ago, and more than 18 pounds ago. Still, it was a privilege to be selected and couldn’t think of a more unique experience than racing in the Red Sea.  After much deliberation, I accepted, and now, I’m less than a month away from this international open water race.

 

A part of my preparation was swimming 10k in Nasugbu, Batangas from Kawayan Cove to Punta Fuego with my triathlon teammates. It was an epic swim for most of us, especially with fighting the current and being attacked by jelly fish. Safety, not speed, was our primary concern.  We were beside guide boats and were always parallel to shore, but when you’re staring down a dark, bottomless ocean for three hours, a John Williams score is so loud in your head.

 

I’ve done countless 10,000-meter swim workouts in my career, usually in a cozy (corny) pool.  Open water swimming has reinvented the way I swim.  There’s no need for precision starts and turns anymore. And no more butterfly sets!  In the open water, the best thing to do is be a fish.

 

There’s no better way to be one than to learn from the biggest one, the butanding or whale shark. To celebrate our wedding anniversary, my wife and I went to Oslob, Cebu — the new, not-so-secret destination to swim with the whale sharks.  The southeast coast of Cebu is so beautiful and blue.  Contemplating life, staring at the sea: it’s more perfect in the Philippines, indeed.  But I came down to swim. I put my Speedo fast skin full body suit on and my swim fins. We paid the local fees, listened to the rules, and got on a small boat.  Around 200-meters from shore, the big fish were there.  I jumped in and looked in awe.

 

The local rules say to stay five meters away — nope — wasn’t going to happen.  The strong currents pushed us right next to them.  My wife was clicking away with the GoPro camera at one butanding that she didn’t even see another one slam into her. The whale sharks are such gentle giants that despite 30 other tourists wanting that perfect Facebook shot, they seemed to oblige. I floated underwater and studied its movements. Each fin did its own thing, particularly when it would go vertical to feed on fishermen’s shrimp.  Apparently, the daily feeding brought these whale sharks to Oslob, and so they never left.

 

Then one of the big guys got full and took off.  I went after it.  I was at full speed.  It was simply gliding. Then the big guy slowed down, practically stopped, and I swear it was looking at me.  I popped my head up and realized we were already far from the tourist trap.  I looked down again and the big guy was still there, as if waiting for me.  Was it an invitation to the open sea?  I imagined it was.  At that moment, I knew I was ready for the Red Sea.  If a butanding “invites” me, then wow, that must mean something, even if it was to meet his friend tiger shark. I nodded my gratitude and bid goodbye, then swam back to reality.

 

A local fisherman asked me if I were a swimmer. I sheepishly smiled and said yeah.  I guess this is what Dicky Bachmann feels when he shows up at a barangay basketball court. We all have our small little turfs and tiny victories. It would be awesome if mine was owning the big, blue ocean, or at the very least in April, I am able to make the Philippines proud in the Red Sea. Yet each time the waves crash me back to shore, I’m reminded I belong on land. Hey, that’s cool, land is where I get to watch cartoons. Thankfully, my baby likes the ones with whales, and sharks, and many other fishes too.

 

———————————————

The author is the head coach of the reigning UAAP champion De La Salle University varsity swimming team. He is also teaching an introduction to entrepreneurship course  under the Philippine Sports Commission and De La Salle partnership to provide continuing education to national athletes and coaches.  Comments can be sent to his email: rene.concepcionatdlsu.edu.ph

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 4:17 pm | permalink | Add comment

2011: A Year of Voices and Choices

December 29, 2011

From the Column “A View From Taft”

BUSINESS WORLD (December 29, 2011)

 

2011:  A Year of Voices and Choices

 

By Rene F. Concepcion

 

We look back, as per tradition, on another year past to list the year’s top stories.  2011 was the year of the Arab Spring, Japan tsunami, and just this month, the end of the Iraq War.  Bin Laden was killed, Steve Job died, but William and Kate got married.  Locally, we always had P-Noy in the news, Pacman, past president GMA, and the love life of Piolo.  Typhoon Sendong was yet another tragedy of poor prevention affecting mostly those in poverty.

 

Time Magazine chose the collective “Protester” as the 2011 Person of the Year.  But it started with one person.  He was a 26 year old street-vendor named Mohamed Bouazizi of Tunisia.  By now we know his story:  he felt shame when a policewoman slapped him after confiscating his produce cart.  It was dignity, more than his fruit stand that he lost.  When denied attention despite his complaints, he returned to the government building and set himself on fire.  Bouazizi’s images went viral.  Soon after, Tunisian dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali lost his throne after 23 years.  To date, toppling of tyrants and major uprisings has happened in Egypt, Libya, Bahrain, Syria, Yemen, Algeria, Jordan, Kuwait, Morocco, and Oman.  The voice of the protester was finally heard.  It was deafening, with thundering echoes.

 

These yearly reviews have always been a personal favorite of mine.  Risking being callous, I usually turn to the back pages first where sports and entertainment would be.  What was the year’s best film?  Should Novak Djokovic be Sportsman of the Year?  I know these questions carry less weight in a larger picture where most pictures were of people occupying Wall Street, town squares, evacuation centers, and food lines.  Yet there is one sports story that was my 2011 favorite, so I will give it additional press here in the Philippines since it happened in America.

 

Patrick Witt, the star quarterback of Yale University, faced a tough choice.  The Harvard-Yale football game was scheduled the same day as his Rhodes scholarship interview, which could not be moved.  Should he play in his final Harvard-Yale game or go to the interview?  He chose to play.  Harvard destroyed Yale 45-7.  An additional plot line to this story was that Witt’s Yale football coach, Tom Williams, was discovered to have lied that, he too, was once a Rhodes finalist, and Williams even claimed he was with the San Francisco 49ers.  Both the Rhodes organization and the 49ers have no record of Williams. Williams has since resigned.  Witt will await his fate in the NFL Draft.

 

I made a very informal survey of what would you do if you were Witt, and hopefully, you are asking yourself too.  My survey resulted in a 50-50 split.  Those who said they’ll play gave the reason they didn’t want to let the team down.  Those who chose the interview said that teammates would understand since earning a Rhodes scholarship and getting an Oxford University degree would be very prestigious and a true lift-up in a young person’s career.  Is this a decision that could topple dictators, or perhaps save hundreds from natural disasters?  Yes, because it is a choice between self versus selfless. 

 

I would have chosen to play.  But I cannot blatantly claim those who won’t play are selfish.  Maybe a Rhodes scholarship and two years at Oxford could lead to career opportunities or discoveries that would be for the benefit of many versus the benefit of one.  Yet there is something heroic in a choice to be with your band of brothers.  Sadly, some of those I surveyed said they don’t care much for sports so it was a no-brainer choice, go for the Rhodes.

 

I admit a sense of hypocrisy in my grandiose magnanimity.  Even if I always espouse team and team work, I’ve had dislike for some teammates.  Even though I love the Philippines, there’s always a negative remark from me about Filipinos.  I donated a large package of medicines for Typhoon Sendong, yet I kept a bottle of ibuprofen, thinking I might need it.  And I don’t think I’ll ever set myself on fire.  Worst of all, my opinions when I write focus so much on I am right. 

 

Okay, maybe it’s time to slide back and review happier highlights of 2011.  Detroit car makers, the Big Three, had a comeback year. Kenneth Branagh turned Thor into Henry V.  Derrick Rose of the Chicago Bulls won the NBA MVP and his acceptance speech is proof for those who don’t care much for sports, should, because true sports men and women, have great minds too.  Besides, Derrick Rose was happy to have his picture taken with my nephew.  Finally, and you must forgive me, but my happiest highlight would have to be about me – I finished a full Iron-distance triathlon a few weeks ago.  Contrary to general impression, triathlon is a team sport.

 

Have a great new year!

 

 

Rene F. Concepcion is the head coach of the current UAAP champion De La Salle University varsity swimming team.  Comments can be sent to rene.concepcion(at)dlsu.edu.ph

 

 

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Breaststroke to a Better Freestyle

November 25, 2010

Breaststroke to a Better Freestyle

by Guy Concepcion

From the October issue of Multisport Magazine

 

 

Breaststrokers in the swim leg of a multi-sport race get too much disdain because they’re the ones blamed for kicking other racers in the face.  Plus, it’s known as the time-to-catch-my-breath-and-go-easy stroke, or it’s known as the slow-poke stroke.  For anyone who thinks so, I invite you to a day practicing only breaststroke. 

 

We can start with a nice Zone 1 warm-up of 400-meter breaststroke swim, followed by a Zone 2 600-meter breaststroke kick, then a simple main set like a Zone 3 5×200-meter breaststroke pull with dolphin kick with 30-seconds rest in between, and finishing up with some breaststroke sprints like 8 to 10 25-meter fast from a dive.  Cool down is breaststroke kick on your back.  Total mileage:  Between 2300 – 2500m and done in about an hour.

 

Now, now…before anyone invites me to bike to Bugarin instead and say “Oh yeah, where’s your breaststroke now, Guy,” and also, before anyone reminds me how easily they ran past me in Camsur, I should ask for trust that breaststroke can improve your freestyle.  Everybody reading this magazine (and I mean everybody) always want to improve their swim.

 

Perhaps your coach or teammate has told you the whole concept of “feel for the water,” urging you to do sculling drills and what-not.  Well, no other stroke is more reliant on feel than breaststroke.  The out-sweep and in-sweep motions of the arm pull is all about lift and feel.  Speed and strength certainly account for faster times, but you cannot just muscle yourself through breaststroke.  It’ll only cause more drag.  The lift and feel enables a breaststroker to rise higher in the water during the forward propulsion, thus eliminating some of the unavoidable water resistance.

 

How does this help your freestyle, especially since hands go out-then-in in breaststroke, while in contrast, hands push back in freestyle?  The answer is:  you’ll learn how to hold water better, as if your hands have become paddles.  You’ll begin to understand the suppleness of water once you learn to control non-moving water with your fingertips and palms. Eventually, when you return to freestyle, each stroke will be efficient, solid, enabling maximum distance per stroke.  You won’t be spinning your wheels, so to speak.

 

In addition, the breaststroke kick uses all the major muscle groups in your legs:  the hamstrings, quads, groin, and calves – plus your glutes too.  So it’s like doing squats in the pool - thus a great workout overall!

 

Of course, it’s better and faster to do freestyle in a tri-race.  But I highly recommend that breaststroke be included in a triathlete’s swim workout always.  Oh, did I mention backstroke and butterfly can help your freestyle too?

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 2:37 pm | permalink | comments[1]

XTERRA Says Live More!

September 23, 2010

 From the Sunday Inquirer Magazine

 

 

XTERRA says Live More!

- The World’s Premiere Off-Road Triathlon Brand is now in the Philippines

 

By Guy Concepcion

 

M

ost running and outdoor adventure magazines have a section where readers can send photos of their favorite and most scenic places to run.  The usual top choices are majestic places like Lake Tahoe or Tucson, Arizona.  I’m a big city person so I love running in busy sidewalks and tourist spots like the Museum Mile in Manhattan or the bay walk along Roxas Boulevard.  It’s hard to believe but I even enjoyed the challenge of running in Ho Chi Minh City during rush hour, fighting my way through thousands of motorcycles.   But even for a major-major urbanite like me, nothing beats the beauty of trail running.

 

I was fortunate enough to have lived very near cross-country trails in San Mateo County (California) where county parks, horse trails, and hiking trails – once interconnected – could go on and on for over 100 kilometers.  I never attempted to run each trail where all those arrows and mile markers led to, especially since there were signs that read “Things to do in case of mountain lion.”  But for the hour or so I would be out there, dwarfed by redwood trees, accompanied once in awhile by jack rabbits and deer, or occasionally disturbed by rustling noises of snakes (my imagination thinks so), I never felt healthier or alive.

 

It’s wonderful that running has become important to many Filipinos.  It’s great to see too that once bitten by the road race bug, the tendency is to increase the mileage (marathons then ultra-marathons), and then after that, the bitten tend to add two extra disciplines to the fore – swimming and biking.  The recent success of the hallmark event Cobra Energy Drink IronMan 70.3 Philippines in Camarines Sur reflects the tremendous growth of multi-sport in the country.

 

Now comes XTERRA!

 

Alaska Milk Corporation (AMC) president and CEO Wilfred Steven Uytengsu through his company Sunrise Events, Inc. (SEI) is bringing in XTERRA after the impact of the IronMan races in Camsur put the Philippines in the triathlon world’s radar.  It was such a big signal that XTERRA came calling. 

 

“We are honored to have the franchise for XTERRA in the Philippines.  We believe this creates opportunities for mountain bikers and trail runners (as well as conventional triathletes) to experience top quality events in the country,” Uytengsu stated. 

 

“I believe there are actually more mountain bikers in this country (as opposed to road cyclists),” Uytengsu added.  Therefore, he expects XTERRA races to be larger than the traditional triathlon races.

 

The first XTERRA Philippines event is the XTERRA Putik Pare!  It’s an off-road bike and run relay that will be held on November 7, 2010 in Nuvali, Laguna.

 

XTERRA Putik Pare! is a two-person duathlon relay which combines 18km of mountain biking and 8km of trail running in which each member does both disciplines.  At the start, one teammate must first do the bike, while the other will run.  After completing the first leg, team members then switch - using the same bike.  After completing both legs, partners then have to traverse a “mud pit” before crossing the finish line together.  XTERRA Putik Pare! will have three categories:  All Male, All Female, and Mixed.

 

Sponsors for this inaugural XTERRA event are: Alaska Milk, Clear, Gatorade, Oakley, Timex; with media partner MultiSport magazine; host venue Nuvali; XTERRA launch venue Bonifacio High Street; and registration partners Cycling Zone, R.O.X., Runnr, and Second Wind.

 

 

Live More

 

It’s safe to say XTERRA racers worldwide are different beasts altogether compared to the usually described as Type-A personalities of the triathlon community.  XTERRA can get dirty, muddy, scrappy, and bumpy.  Once you meet Team Unlimited (the company that owns and runs XTERRA worldwide, based in Maui, Hawaii) Senior Vice President Dave Nicholas, you get an immediate picture of the spunk and punk rock nature of XTERRA.  Known as Kahuna Dave, Nicholas recently visited the Philippines and left quite a big impression on us, and vice versa – of us giving a wonderful impression of the Philippines. 

 

“XTERRA will be a huge hit in the Philippines.  I see so many people riding mountain bikes and enjoying the outdoors. This will be a natural for everyone from 7 to 70,” exclaimed Nicholas.

 

Then Kahuna Dave added words like “marvelous” plus “perfectly executed” and “beyond expectations” together with a playful grin and handshake that says more than the accolades.  I could sense the Kahuna’s message was to feel good about doing good, but the doing is where real living lives.  Swim in the ocean, ride the high country, and run in nature with the “beasts” – Live More says XTERRA. 

 

Punk Rock Races

 

One day when I’m old and simply enjoying the sunrise, I may be asked what my favorite races have been - will I say those that won me medals?  Maybe, but it’s unlikely.  I know I’ll love and remember the races that made me dig deep the most (and get dirty) and forced me to question the meaning of life.   Okay, okay - that’s a little too profound for something that involves swimming, biking, and running.  So I’ll end with a quote from Sid Vicious of the punk band Sex Pistols:  “When things get bad, when times get rough…pass out or break something.” 

 

Welcome to XTERRA!

 

NOTE:  There will be five XTERRA events in the 2011 calendar.  In January, there will be a trail run, followed by an off-road triathlon in March, then a mountain bike race in June, an XTERRA corporate challenge in September, and the second installment of Putik Pare! in November.  To get more information about XTERRA Philippines races and events, please visit www.xterraphil.com or write to secretariat@xterraphil.com .

 

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 8:54 pm | permalink | Add comment

Somewhere Between Michael Phelps and Maxim Magazine

July 4, 2010


 

 

From the Sunday Inquirer Magazine (July 4. 2010)

 

 

“Somewhere Between Michael Phelps and Maxim Magazine”

by Guy S. Concepcion

 

Michael Phelps is not human.  So please do not dream of doing what he can do in the pool.  The most imaginative fiction writer cannot come up with a story like his - eight gold medals and seven world records in the 2008 Olympiad.  That story is two years old, and he’s been in a few infamous headlines since then, but what he accomplished in the Beijing Olympics is timeless and unforgettable.

 

Closer to earth, ABS-CBN personality Enchong Dee is a superb swimmer too.  His 21 gold-medal haul at the UAAP swimming championships for DLSU the past three years, although not impossible to match, is quite amazing too.

 

These two swimmers are not our benchmarks. 

 

Whenever I read Maxim magazine for the articles, I notice the sport that the featured personalities list down as their favorite is often swimming.  Then I wonder, do they do butterfly sets for technique and speed, or do they just swim for distance?  Then I recall those I see lounging poolside, cocktails with small umbrellas in hand, who consider sun-tanning as swimming.   They shouldn’t be our inspiration too.

 

For the majority of the populace, swimming is somewhere in the middle of Michael Phelps and Maxim.  Long considered one of the best forms of exercise, swimming provides a total body workout.  First, all the major muscle groups are used, top down.   Next, cardiovascular endurance is optimized.  And third, due to its low impact and the protective cocoon of water, swimming hardly causes injuries.  All you need is a safe and accessible body of water, and off you go.

 

The Philippines should be a swimming world power like the United States and Australia since our nation is an archipelago.  What’s surprising though is the large number of Filipinos who don’t know how to swim.  Hopefully, that statistic shifts to those who know how to swim.  More so, to those who can swim already, perhaps they don’t swim enough because they think it’s too tiring or it’s too hard.  They just have to do it right and do it often.  This article will try to contribute to that mission.

 

BREATHING

 

In Australia, swim teachers are not discouraged to hold swim lessons in the ocean.  Just stay in shallow waters and first learn to inhale and exhale.  Some regular swimmers, or triathletes, forget this very basic task. 

 

 Try this exercise:

 

  • Go underwater, exhale a lot of air through your nose, trying to empty out your lungs (perhaps start with a 5-count underwater).
  • Go up and inhale through your mouth only, then quickly go underwater again.
  • Do this 10x, and do three sets (increasing your underwater count to 8 and then 12).

 

You’ll notice it is easier to inhale when you exhale a lot of air.  The “panickers” who think they’ll swallow a lot of water or are not getting enough oxygen when they breathe simply do not exhale enough. 

 

On the plus side of training your breathing, your lung capacity will eventually improve since you’re not always taking short breaths.  This larger lung capacity will help you run better or even help you climb stairs faster.   

 

HOLD WATER

 

If by chance you are on a business trip and the hotel’s pool is not designed for lap swimming, you can still get in a good workout by doing some sculling.  Make your hands flat, with fingers together and wipe the water side to side, back and forth – pretending you’re doing wax-on wax-off on your shiny car.  The deeper the pool the better - you can feel the hard work of trying to stay afloat by just sculling.  You’ll realize you can give your fingertip muscles a gym workout!

 

Why is sculling crucial to good swimming?  Answer:  because you need to feel or hold the water with each stroke to gain distance per stroke.   Think of your hands as fins that pushes water, or as large wings that can lift an eagle with one swoop.   Swim coaches usually incorporate sculling sets into their workouts everyday, and you can even learn to scull with your toes, making your kick efficient too.

 

Who would’ve thought your fingers and toes can also be exercised?

 

GO OFTEN

 

When the weather is too hot, it’s discouraging to run.  When it’s raining, it’s dangerous to bike.  The gym can get crowded, and they are usually near ice cream stands.  But you can swim in most any weather, except when there’s a thunderstorm. 

 

Like any sport, the only way to improve is to do it right and do it often.  

 

There are dozens of swimming clubs nationwide that coach swimmers in different levels, from beginners, intermediate, to competitive – and not just for children or teenagers (the demographic most often associated with competitive swimming).  Any age can join, and the training is usually five to six times a week.  The coaches at these clubs know how to teach proper technique, provide the right workout, and monitor progress.  These swimming clubs have home pools either at country clubs, schools, or villages.  For sure there is one near you.

 

SWIM, COMPETE AT ANY AGE!

 

All types of physical training, if done repeatedly without any variation for about eight to ten weeks will cause a plateau.  The body will eventually adapt to the initial stress caused by training, and the adaptation will not produce positive change in important stuff like weight, stamina, and motivation.  Many wonder why they don’t lose weight anymore, or why they can still only do 20 laps in one hour even if they’ve been swimming for years.

 

The next step is to join races.   I know a dozen or so “die-hard” swimmers who swim only for exercise.  Often I encourage these regulars to join races open to adults.  Some do, many don’t.

 

Most local swim meets are for kids, and it’s a shame that what is known as “masters swimming” has not fully developed in the Philippines yet.  Next month, the FINA World Masters Swimming Championship will be in Sweden.      Thousands and thousands of swimmers aged 19 – 90 join this event held every two years (previously, it was in Perth, Australia).  The Philippines should send a team each time.

 

In the meantime, let’s race locally – either in the pool or out in the open water.  So far, open water races have been held in Mactan Island, Sarangani Bay, Anilao, and Hamilo.  Distances range from 2k, 3k, 5k, 8k, even up to 13k.  Training for long races will surely reinvigorate new life into your chlorinated blood.

 

Anyway, is swimming really the best workout?  Never ask a swim coach that!

 

 

The author is the head coach and founder of the Corinthian Ducks Aquatic Club, and is the head coach of the defending UAAP champion De La Salle University varsity swimming team. Comments can be sent to his email:  guy.concepcion@hotmail.com

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 2:59 pm | permalink | comments[1]

But what I really want to do is direct…

June 21, 2010

 

Article for the column Green Light

MANILA STANDARD TODAY - June 21, 2010

 

 

But what I really want to do is direct…

 

By Rene F. Concepcion

 

 

     A little over a year ago, I wrote in this same column about my first true try at triathlon.  I said that the sport was pretty crazy and that the racers were crazier.  I did admit though that I got bitten by the swim-bike-run bug.  One year later, I’ve become a sponsored athlete, I can run faster than Piolo, plus I’ve lost a lot more weight - but I also lost four front teeth from flying off my bike, but that’s different story.  For now, I’ll just describe how big the sport has become, and how much more tries I’ll try when it comes to this insane sport called triathlon.

 

            The biggest multi-sport race in the country will be in sixty days:  the Cobra Ironman 70.3 Philippines in Camarines Sur.  Over 800 individual and relay participants will be racing in August, starting and ending at the Camsur Watersports Complex to complete a 1.2 mile swim, 56 mile bike, and a 13.1 mile run (hence, 70.3).  Professional stars of this sport will head to Camsur, including last year’s winner from New Zealand, Terenzo Bozzone.  Popular running coach Rio dela Cruz will also bring his Team Timex – RunRio three-man squad back to Naga to defend their tri-relay title.        

 

As for me, after a humbling attempt at this international half-Ironman event in its inaugural year last year, I swore I’d be better prepared this time around.  So, I haven’t seen my beer buddies in months.  And I’ve forgotten what KFC tastes like.  There has also been a couple more minor, albeit still skin-breaking bike falls.  I take on these sacrifices and deal with daily fatigue due to training for what exactly:  six hours on race day of continuous muscle pain felt by a delirious brain?  If you want to know what leftover Beef Stroganoff feels like being nuked inside a microwave, sign up for Ironman Philippines. But you’ll have to wait till next year because Camsur’s 70.3 is already sold-out.

 

There are really a lot of us out there, who pulverize our Nike shoes on the pavement, risk being side-swiped by truck drivers who don’t see cars let alone bikes, and hope sharks aren’t hungry when we’re out in the open sea.  If I subtract one second for every time I ask myself “why am I doing this,” I’d be faster than Terenzo Bozzone.  Right now, my 70.3 time isn’t much faster than one of our Senators. Thus, I train and train and train.  I swim, I bike, I run.  Thankfully, I am still able to balance work and family with my (ahem) hobby.  I can honestly say triathletes have mastered the juggling of three things.  You can’t deny there’s a strong admiration for that.

 

I haven’t done a full Ironman yet, unarguably the real barometer for triathletes who have embraced the multi-sport lifestyle and not just jumped in on a craze.  I haven’t even run a full 26-mile marathon yet, and an Ironman ends with that!  I’m sure to attempt it.  It’s a question of where and when.  I can choose any of the over twenty Ironman races offered all over the world – often staged at major tourist destinations such as Nice, Zurich, New Zealand, and Australia.  They sell-out fast, roughly 1500 participants join per race.  The question now is can I do it?

 

Before I answer that, it’s best to first focus on the next sixty days.  The training will be intense (sample run set:  5 x 1-mile faster than 10k pace).  Every minute of extra sleep will be golden.  Vitamin C sales will shoot up.  Good performances in races earlier this year mean nothing because as the adage goes, you’re only as good as your next race.  Kevin Costner won the Best Picture and Best Director Oscars for Dances with Wolves, but all that everyone remembers is that his next movie, The Postman, sucked.  It’s a tough crowd with a lot of hecklers and over-analyzers, but none tougher than one’s own midlife-crisis ego.

 

My words aren’t exactly reassuring especially to those wondering if they should try triathlon.  Just trust me that it’s not a cult or like a paddled-in-the-butt hazing to be in a fraternity. To those who are in this for the long-haul, to those who’ve made this sport a big part of their lives, you know what I am talking about.  Why am I doing this?  The answer’s easy:  because I love Beef Stroganoff.

 

 

 

Professor Rene F. Concepcion is a full-time faculty member at De La Salle University, teaching marketing under the College of Business.   He is also the head coach of the defending UAAP champion DLSU varsity swimming team.   Comments can be sent to his email address:  rene.concepcion@dlsu.edu.ph

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Motivational Speakers Need Motivated Doers

March 9, 2010

From the column GREEN LIGHT, Manila Standard Today, 8 March 2010.

Motivational Speakers Need Motivated Doers
by Rene F. Concepcion

I’ll never forget the first couple of times I attended motivational talks. I was only eight years old! First, sitting in the front, I listened to the University of Utah swimming coach, who came to the Philippines with his team for a training camp. He said (and I remember the key words distinctly) that to be a champion, one needs desire and determination. Next, and more significant in my memory, sitting in the front again, I listened to three-time Olympic gold medalist in swimming, American Debbie Meyer, tell us Filipino kids she practiced so hard for the 1968 Mexico City Olympiad that there was no such thing as a rest day or holiday. She swam during Christmas, New Year, Easter, her birthday, etc.

I’ve attended many more talks over the years, with varying themes and industries. Some memorable ones would be sitting (you guessed it – in the front) with hundreds of film fans and aspiring filmmakers when Quentin Tarantino came to town. He said those present will be the future of Philippine cinema. Another was Silicon Valley pioneer Dado Banatao, whose message to MBA students and professors was straightforward: love what you do, and never give up. I wrote pages and pages of notes when swim coach, Bob Bowman, gave two lectures on how he trained his wonder boy, Michael Phelps. And I’ll always take to heart Ramon R. del Rosario, Jr. and Fernando Zobel’s separate speeches on corporate social responsibility.

There are dozens of these motivational speaking engagements going on daily, big or small, all over the world. You’d think all those attending and getting motivated would turn these great ideas and fantastic inspiration into some kind of world-changing positive energy. If you really believe gurus like Tony Robbins and John C. Maxwell, then you have no excuse not to be a great leader and super successful. People invest so much time and money to be thrilled by these talks; self-help books are bestsellers, sports stars like Jack Nicklaus charge over $100,000 per engagement, while Lance Armstrong earns double that. So how come there aren’t more 7-time Tour de France champions?

It’s obvious that extraordinary circumstances (perhaps the era one is born in, nationality, training, proper support, and a whole lot of luck) plus God-given natural talent, and/or fate bring these world-renowned champions, celebrities, composers, scientists, philosophers, businessmen, and billionaires to a higher-level. Author Malcolm Gladwell discussed this concept with a lot of convincing arguments in his bestseller Outliers. Fact is, there will only be one Bill Gates and one Usain Bolt. We can’t all be the world’s richest or the world’s fastest. Nonetheless, these speakers say we can all be outstanding in whatever it is we choose to do.

That eight year old kid who listened to and was coached for a few days by Debbie Meyer believed her. If we work hard for our goals, they are achievable. Such simple words: set a goal, do it right, work hard, achieve, success, satisfaction. By the time I was 16, I stood on the podium of a major swimming meet in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and guess who presented me my medal - Debbie Meyer. I don’t know who was happier, Debbie or me (most probably it was my mom). Who knows if Quentin Tarantino will ever hand me a film award, but I certainly understand a motivational speaker’s message when I hear one – you can’t earn anything without trying. So, does anyone know Uma Thurman’s number?

Of course, trophies, money, or fame should not be the only measure. There will always be someone faster or someone will always have more fans, and if we are counting points, someone will always have more points. I don’t deny that society likes numbers because numbers don’t lie. But motivational speakers who go up there and simply read their CVs are the worst kind. What I glean from the most inspirational of these speakers is that they’ve humanized their struggles, they are just like you and me, and they hardly talk about actual results (we already know their achievements – they are famous – and also because the persons introducing these speakers have read their résumés!).

Therefore, Mr. Phelps, if ever you grace us with your greatness, please don’t talk about your eight, or what you ate (or smoked) – we know already. Just tell us what you love or hate, and make us believe that we too can be as great. Not in swimming, of course, but in living. Now that I’ve earned some kind of “success” and if I had a chance to give a motivational talk (or write a column), my message for living would be this - believe in what motivational speakers have to say because we believed them when they motivated us that one time too.

———————————————
Professor Rene F. Concepcion is a faculty member of the De La Salle University Ramon V. del Rosario Sr. Graduate School of Business. He teaches marketing electives and sports management. He is also the head coach of the DLSU varsity swimming team, which recently won the 72nd UAAP Championship. You may send comments to his email: rene.concepcion@dlsu.edu.ph

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 7:39 am | permalink | Add comment

My Favorite Films of the Decade (2000-2009)

December 28, 2009

My Favorite Films of the Decade (2000-2009)

 

Now that the first decade of the 21st century is coming to a close, maybe it’s a good time for me to return to one of my true loves in life:  the cinema.  I’ve neglected films for so long that I haven’t seen Inglorious Basterds yet – normally I’d be there on the first day, first screening.  It has also been ten years since I made my last film.  I wonder when (or what) I will direct next.

 

Perhaps to be inspired, I should immerse myself back into movies, and then who knows, I might be motivated enough to want to write/produce/direct again.  To start this re-immersion, I will look at the past decade and see which movies were my favorites.

 

In ascending order of my personal choices for the best films of 2000-2009:

 
  1.  LORD OF WAR (2005) Directed by Andrew Niccol
 

 

 

This dark comedy stars Nicolas Cage, who plays an international arms dealer, supplying AK-47s, tanks, RPGs, and solid gold M60s (Rambo’s machine gun) to mad men in their quest for power, genocide, and thirst for blood.  Yes, it is a funny movie.  As Stanley Kubrick said about nuclear holocaust, the only way we can digest such a topic is through comedy.  Lord of War is the second film I’ve chosen by Niccol to be in my best of the decade list, the other being his beautiful sci-fi romance Gattaca (1997) in my favorite movies of the 1990s.

 
  1. ACROSS THE UNIVERSE (2007) Directed by Julie Taymor
 

 

 

This musical incorporated Beatles’s songs into the boy-meets-girl-boy-loses-girl-boy-gets-girl-back plot, and when “Hey, Jude” was sung in the film’s climax, the movie reached emotional perfection.  Director Julie Taymor is known for bringing The Lion King to Broadway, adding a new visual dimension on-stage to the animated Disney classic.  Here, she colors the already bright-spectrum of Lennon and McCartney tunes with her super-talented palette.

    
  1. GLADIATOR (2000) Directed by Ridley Scott
 

 

 

“My name is Gladiator.”  Try saying that line and realize how great Russell Crowe’s performance was.  Just like how Sean Connery perfected “My name is Bond.  James Bond.”

 
  1. BLACK HAWK DOWN (2001) Directed by Ridley Scott
 

 

 

British filmmaker Ridley Scott had a creative peak early this decade [much like when he followed Alien (1979) with Blade Runner (1982)].  With repeated viewings, Black Hawk Down transforms each time from a purely visceral action film, to a study of precise filmmaking (cinematography, editing, production design, and sound) to a powerful commentary on war, and finally back to a visceral movie drama.  He has always been a great visual trendsetter:  How many films have tried to copy the “Alien,” “Blade Runner,” or “Black Hawk Down” look?  Too many. 

 
  1. MASTER AND COMMANDER:  THE FAR SIDE OF THE WORLD (2003)  Directed by Peter Weir
 

 

 

This Napoleonic-era naval epic is not just one of the smartest action-adventure films of all time – it is one of the smartest movies period.  The details of seafaring during the 18th-19th century is so complete, and the plot of a British naval captain (Russell Crowe again showing his superb talent) playing a cat-and-mouse chess match in the high seas versus a far-superior French ship is never spoon-fed.  But above all, this movie demonstrates better than most the ideals of honor, teamwork, and true friendship.

 

5.         THE BOURNE SUPREMACY (2004)/THE BOURNE ULTIMATUM (2007)

Directed by Paul Greengrass

 

 

 

Although each film can most certainly stand on their own, when seen together, they become ultimately supreme movies.  I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again:  I wanted my own film to be a Bourne film.  If only I had the great editing, the fantastic locations, the awesome car chase scenes, the kick-ass fight sequences, and Matt Damon (who above any actor, in my opinion, can elevate any movie he’s in to a better level…like Euro Trip.  I rest my case.)

  
  1. BATMAN BEGINS (2005) Directed by Christopher Nolan
 

 

 

A Batman movie wouldn’t be a Batman movie without the batsuit and batmobile, and here we are introduced to what they are really supposed to look like.  Director Christopher Nolan insisted that any gadgetry would be based on reality.  But the most important reality in this film is why Bruce Wayne became Batman, and finally, his reason made sense to me.  This film started the trend of revisiting the origins of movie franchises (James Bond, Star Trek, etc.).  The best comic book movie until…but first…

      
  1. LOST IN TRANSLATION (2003) Directed by Sofia Coppola
 

 

 

So far, my top films have been spectacles.  Movies are like that; they provide elements of another “world” – allowing us to escape then empathize with extraordinary persons and situations.  But when Bill Murray and Charlotte Johansson give us characters and situations that are so today and everyday yet transport us to what dreams are made of, then cinema has truly become art.  Sofia Coppola deserved her Oscar for original screenplay, but her great direction should have trounced any returning king or hobbit that year, or any other.

  
  1. THE DARK KNIGHT (2008) Directed by Christopher Nolan
 

 

 

Perhaps one reason I stopped going to movies is because I can’t imagine any film can top the excitement, enthusiasm, enjoyment, emotion, and energy I got the three times I watched this film in the theater (twice in IMAX).  No one will ever forget the performance of Heath Ledger as The Joker (which earned him 29 acting awards all over the world, including the Best Supporting Actor Oscar).  Why so serious?”  Yup, they’re only movies, but we’re lucky to have ‘em.  And we are lucky to have been in the same generation as Mr. Ledger, who made The Dark Knight immortal.

 

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 11:00 pm | permalink | Add comment

Eight Races and a Funeral

July 1, 2009

Eight Races and a Funeral

We have less than eight weeks to go before the big day, Ironman 70.3 Philippines.   Many of us are undoubtedly training as best we could for the 1.9k swim, 90k bike, and 21k run on August 23, but it seems all I’ve been doing is racing.  I’ve only had one Sunday since SUBIT where I didn’t race. Add one Friday and full Saturday of competing to that list - one can say I’m really due a recovery day. 

Here was my racing schedule since SUBIT:

Friday, May  29 – Open Water Swim 13K Relay Sarangani Bay.

Sunday, May 31 – IE8 (8-mile) Run at The Fort.

Sunday, June 7 – Mizuno Infinity Run (15K) at The Fort.

Sunday, June 14 – Animo Sprint Triathlon in Ayala Alabang.

Saturday, June 20 – Swim Masters Series (200m Free, 100m Breast, 50m Fly, 200m IM, 400m Free) at Trace College, Los Baños.

Sunday, June 21 – Open Water Swim 5K in Anilao.

Here are my race reports, starting with the Mizuno Infinity:

1.  I finally found the right pair of Nike’s for me – the Nike Zoom Start.  It felt light, it was cushiony, and it helped me go 1hr 14 – the day after my first Century ride (via Total – Naic).

2. ANIMO SPRINT:  I visualized the whole week that my bike leg would be better than at SUBIT.  Visualization works!  I imagined I would be off the saddle pushing hard on hills and flying fast after the climb.  That’s how it happened, and it felt fantastic not to be passed or be caught on the bike.  Too bad I didn’t visualize the run too.   Larry got me with about a kilometer to go!  Nice one, Larry.  I will now visualize the awesome tempo you had and how those pink Nike’s were like a blur.

3.  Swim Masters Series – 200m Freestyle:  It felt good to be back home (the 50m pool!), racing the same races I did as a kid.  PF thought I had gone out too hard in the first 100 meters.  But all that triathlon training got me my endurance back.  My splits were 1:04/1:06. 

4.  SMS – 100m Breaststroke:  With only four minutes rest between my 200 Free and 100 Breast, all I could do here was hope the lactic acid build up wouldn’t be too severe.  FYI, all swim races, since they are so short, are anaerobic efforts.  Some say one reason (of many reasons) why Michael Phelps won eight gold medals is because his body can flush out lactic acid quicker than most.

5.  SMS – 50m Butterfly:  I jammed my finger on the wall, trying for a strong finish.  My finger still hurts up to now, but the aggressive touch got me to the wall first.  (NOTE:  PF swam a great 100m Butterfly, beating ex-national triathlete, 22-year old Mikki Quilala, who is still a DLSU varsity swimmer!)

6.  SMS – 200m Individual Medley:   this is my favorite event.  I did well.

7.  SMS – 400m Freestyle:  this is my second favorite event.  I did really well (splits 1:12/1:14/1:11/1:09).

8.  SMS – 5K Open Water:  I truly appreciate that so many of the Polo Tri did the open water race.  Congrats to PF for topping his age-group (45-49), with Tony coming in 2nd and Larry 3rd.  Itong placed 2nd (40-44), with Bea and Monica both 1st in their age-groups.  And of course, good job Diego for placing 2nd overall.  The 2K winners were:  Debbie (3rd overall); Tricia 1st in her age-group, and first overall in the pregnant category; and Mike 1st in his age-group too.  It was a great effort by all who braved the big distance and the big waves.

Post-script:  Driving to Anilao that Sunday morning, I had strong feelings things weren’t well with the energies of the universe.  My mom’s old van (that I borrowed without her permission, to haul my DLSU swimmers to Batangas) broke down on the Star Tollway.  So I got stuck in Lipa getting the van towed, then I had to coordinate with a rental van to get the swimmers to Anilao, plus my pregnant wife was getting hungry. 

Two hours late, but I made it to the starting gate.  But as I walked towards the 5K race briefing, I got several text messages telling me the sad news…one of the true mentors in my life, Br. Ceci Hojilla, died of a heart attack in his sleep. 

Non-Lasallians may not be familiar with the role of the Christian Brothers in De La Salle schools worldwide. Many of them have strong personalities with great ambition and visions towards changing society through education.  Br. Ceci changed lives through caring – not about headlines, fund raising, rankings, or legacies – Br. Ceci changed lives because he cared about you – not as a student, an athlete, a professor, or alumni – he cared about you period.

I dedicated my 5K race to him.  Which is such a corny thing to do – the effort wouldn’t be enough.  To honor Br. Ceci’s life, I must keep on racing – not just in swimming, biking, or running – I must keep on racing in caring like him. 

I guess I’m not taking that recovery day because caring is everyday.

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 3:00 pm | permalink | Add comment

A Triathlete’s Black and Blues

May 25, 2009

   

 

Article for the column GREEN LIGHT (Manila Standard Today, May 25, 2009)
 
A Triathlete’s Black and Blues
 
By Rene F. Concepcion
 
I competed in my first standard-distance triathlon two Sundays ago at the ITU Subic Bay International Triathlon.  That’s a 1.5km swim, followed by a 40km bike, and finishing off with a 10km run.  I’ve got blisters all over both feet to prove it.
 
One year ago, I questioned the sanity of triathletes.  I watched them do the run leg in severe summer heat; their faces expressed pain and suffering, with the scowl of someone desperate for logic and reason.  My reply to people who asked if I would ever join triathlons is that I get the same “satisfaction” racing a 50-meter freestyle, which ends in less than 30-seconds.  Why prolong the pain for three-hours?
 
A year and three hours later, I know the answer:  I look good in a tri-suit! 
 
For over a decade, I had the hardest time losing the girth I added due to age, slower metabolism, horrible happy-hour diet, and stressed-out, stuck-in-traffic or glued-to-the- tube sedentary lifestyle.  The occasional gym visit or the promises never to eat Spam again (till I lose the weight) never worked.  My life plateaued.
 
Today, the plateaus I long for are the ones after a heartbreak hill (biking and running), or steady 200-meter splits of an 800-meter freestyle time trial.  Training is everyday, if not, you will never finish a race.  The sport is simply too hard.  The attraction is that triathlons make you hungry again - hungry to satisfy a competitive urge inherent in the human spirit that could’ve been dormant, lost, or trampled upon by the drudgery of daily sign-of-the- times living.
 
Swimming fast doesn’t matter; biking faster than Ghost Rider (who can ride up the side of buildings – and believe me, hills feel like the y-axis) does not either.  You can be the world’s fastest runner, but what really matters is that you can swim, bike, and run fast back-to-back- to-back.  That’s the sport.  It’s a triathlon.  As a competitive swimmer, I was an IMer (Individual Medley) so I know what it’s like to do all strokes (fly, back, breast, and free) in one race.   How I wish it were as easy.
 
At the race in Subic, I was first overall for about 30 minutes.  I built a good lead in the swim, got on the bike in a trouble-free transition, and stayed “first” for maybe a kilometer.  Then the big biker boys starting speeding by me; I felt like a balut-vendor.  Ninety-plus minutes later, I reached the run.  At this point, hoping for a fast time or decent ranking was futile.  There was no medal to win, no best time to beat.  I’ve been so used to getting gold in the pool, maybe it’s time I learned to accept…
 
No!  I haven’t accepted anything except I swear I am going to be super ready for the next race.  It will be the Animo Sprint on June 14 at Ayala Alabang, then the much-anticipated Ironman 70.3 Philippines on August 23 in Camarines Sur.   Less than one year into this sport, I am attempting the half-Ironman distance of 1.9km swim, 90km bike, and 21.1km run in Camsur.  After that, I’ll accept my fate leading me to the Ironman distance of 3.8km swim, 180km bike, and a full 42.2km marathon run, wherever that race might be.  I’m throwing down the gauntlet.
 
Certainly I will continue to join swim-only races like this Friday’s 13k open water relay across Sarangani Bay, and the upcoming 1st International Swim Masters Series – Philippines next month (June 20 - 21) at Trace College and Anilao - pool racing on the first day and a 5k open water competition the next.  It would be nice to touch first again since it’s swimming only.  Water is my comfort zone. 
 
But I’ve been out to sea, sailing in comfort, too long.  No matter how blistered my feet may get, triathlons show me what’s beyond – beyond my mind, body, and soul’s limit.  It sounds cliché-ish, but true.  Human hunger seems to be a ravenous thirst for the extraordinary, the summit, of feeling a unique pulse as if thrown back by the blast of a space ship that no one believes you saw.  So many folks are now into this sport that perhaps the one-of-a-kind factor may be gone, but I’ve yet to experience all triathlon has to offer.   Show me the road - I’ll swim so fast to get to shore.
 
NOTE:  For more info on the following races, please visit their respective websites:  Animo Sprint Triathlon for the Benefit of the Jaime Hilario Scholarship Fund and One La Salle Fund (June 14) www.triathlon. org.ph; 1st International Swim Masters Series (June 20 – 21) www.sportsmgt. ph; Ironman 70.3 Philippines www.ironman703phil. com.  Train now, you’ll also look good in a tri-suit!
 
Professor Rene F. Concepcion is a full-time faculty member at the De La Salle University Ramon V. del Rosario Sr. Graduate School of Business.  He has just finished a one-year sabbatical.  But he has continued to be the head coach of the DLSU varsity swimming team, with this coming school year as his 8th season.  Comments can be sent to his email concepcionr@ dlsu.edu. ph

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 10:17 am | permalink | comments[3]

A New Deal Today

October 21, 2008

Article for the column GREEN LIGHT (Manila Standard Today, October 20, 2008)

 

A New Deal Today

 

By Rene F. Concepcion

 

Call me geeky, but my comic book collection before Daredevil and Spider-man were those bookstore-published comic books on Philippine national heroes.  I liked the stories of Bonifacio and Lapu-Lapu the most, plus I was particularly fond of the Jose Rizal series that included the travels of Rizal and the loves of Rizal.  My major, to no one’s surprise, was history.

 

My college thesis dealt with the two world wars.  But the historic event foremost in everyone’s mind nowadays happened between WWI and WWII.  This was the period when millions of people lost their jobs and their homes, billions of wealth disappeared, thousands of banks closed, human dignity was at an all-time low, leading to the rise of evil ideologues, which then led to worse and unthinkable human suffering. The era was called The Great Depression, and if history teaches important lessons, this depression should never happen again.

 

Last year, I attended a finance lecture where the guest speaker assured the class that history has indeed been studied, that financial institutions have safeguarded the world economy against severe crisis.  Basically, he was saying that finance guys are smart, there’s nothing to fear, computations are under control.  One year later, doesn’t it feel like no one guarded the safe from the smart guys?

 

Call me Mr. Bean when it comes to bean counting, but despite my bumbling around numbers (finance wizards have bumbled worse, right?) history has hopefully provided enough information to combat economic woes. 

Here is a beautiful quote from Franklin Delano Roosevelt taken from his “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself” speech during his first United States presidential inauguration in 1932, three years after the stock market crashed: 

The measure of the restoration lies in the extent to which we apply social values more noble than mere monetary profit…Happiness lies not in the mere possession of money; it lies in the joy of achievement, in the thrill of creative effort. The joy and moral stimulation of work no longer must be forgotten in the mad chase of evanescent profits. These dark days will be worth all they cost us if they teach us that our true destiny is not to be ministered unto but to minister to ourselves and to our fellow men.

Roosevelt’s policies, called The New Deal, had the U.S. government more directly involved in economic stimulation – by creating jobs through government projects despite deficits, regulating banks and capital markets, and protecting the poor through socialized government support.  They sound oh so familiar lately, don’t they?  The irony is that today’s Republican leadership, oh so against big government, is hammering a very interventionist new deal to quickly cut the current economic downfall.  They believe that their stimulus package will work.  Guess what, FDR’s New Deal didn’t end the depression, World War II did.  But there is nothing in the words and ideas of good men that the sacrifice of even one life is worth the restoration of tranquility, unless the life that is sacrificed is their own. 

Yet thanks to today’s Republican leadership, there is still war – although history has shown there has never been true lasting world peace.  Human instinct somehow reverts to conflict, it’s a survival of the fittest mode, a value system of “I deserve my property because I worked and earned to keep my land and fence myself in.“  No trespassing once I’ve grabbed the land from you! 

It’s sad to think that all the consumption and consequent credit crunch could’ve been caused by the comfortability of an air-conditioned Camry or Cadillac, or the perceived power of a Prada purse.  Or maybe too many world leaders are still so easily willing to sacrifice the lives of others except themselves.

The bright side is that history is more replete with good news and progress.  It can be summed up with these words, again from Roosevelt:  “Compared with the perils which our forefathers conquered because they believed and were not afraid, we have still much to be thankful for.  Nature still offers her bounty and human efforts have multiplied it.  Plenty is at our doorstep.”

So please call me and let’s make a new deal.  It will be in the spirit of morality, creativity, and community.  FDR’s New Deal left important systems (the FDIC, SEC, and SSS), so hopefully our geeky, artsy, athletic, selfless, and heroic hearts working together can also leave a legacy of more lasting peace, and not just monetary, but more of ethical prosperity.  Who knows, one day some kid could be inspired after reading about us in a comic book.

 

Professor Rene F. Concepcion is a full-time faculty member at the De La Salle University Ramon V. del Rosario Sr. Graduate School of Business where he teaches Sports and Recreation Management and Culture and Arts Management.  He is currently on his one-year sabbatical, but he continues to be the head coach of the DLSU varsity swimming team.  Comments can be sent to his email concepcionr@dlsu.edu.ph

 

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 8:36 am | permalink | comments[1]

Another Brick Off the Wall

September 3, 2008

 

 

Article for the column “Mirror Image” (Business Mirror, September 3, 2008)

 

“Another Brick Off The Wall”

 

By Rene F. Concepcion

 

Michael Jackson turned 50 years old last week.  But does anyone know how old are his bleached skin, cleft chin, and nose?

 

This is my third of three pieces on the Olympic Games, but I’m starting off with Michael Jackson, who instead of the musical talent who thrilled us for decades has become what my 13-year old godson calls a freak.  I guess I can’t help but think our Filipino athletes of natural grace, talent, and potential have also been butchered, like Michael, by misguided beliefs in plastic solutions intent on the now, never the before, and with no intention for the after.

 

Since I’m already on a pop music tone, let’s listen to some Bob Marley:

 

Old pirates, yes, they rob I; Sold I to the merchant ships, Minutes after they took I
From the bottomless pit.
But my hand was made strong
By the hand of the Almighty.
We forward in this generation
Triumphantly.

 

Usian Bolt has landed on Planet Earth!  The Jamaicans must be doing something right, man.  At 6’5” and can run 100 meters in 9.69 seconds, Bolt is superhuman.  Not many people know Jamaica also got gold-silver-bronze in the women’s 100-meter final, and added the men’s 4×100-meter (beating the world record set by the United States), the women’s 200-meter, the women’s 400-meter hurdles, plus, Bolt’s other superhuman feat, the 200-meter dash.  That’s six gold medals total.  It is inspiring that the redemption Bob Marley believed in, the triumph of a strong hand, is possible even from one, tiny island. 

 

I suppose it must also be possible for a nation composed of 7,101 islands.  But I learned some Filipino Olympians missed the celebration of the closing ceremonies due to airline ticketing trouble – although some Filipino sports officials were able to stay on longer in Beijing.  And while the Olympic issue is hot, many government soap-boxers are berating sport incumbents and then offering their expert solutions.  These blame-games result in the usual cosmetic surgery – politicians get press, the press gets headlines, and people get topical during happy hour. Meanwhile, the “atletang Pilipino” gets robbed by pirates with false promises of emancipation from the bottomless pit.    

 

 

          South Korea already has an Olympic gold medalist in swimming.  Indonesia is continuing its winning streak in badminton.  Even war-torn Afghanistan won a medal.  In fairness, there are still dozens of countries like us that don’t score on the medal board.  So to be less medal-count and medal-color conscious, let’s analyze specific results to see if our country’s sports program has generally improved or suffered:

 

* In 1992, a Filipino swimmer’s 200-meter breaststroke time would have won gold in 1972.  So back in Barcelona, one can argue that Philippine swimming was 20 years behind.

 

* In 2008, in the same event, the Philippines would still have only won gold in 1972.  Therefore in Beijing, it can again be argued that Philippine swimming has fallen 36 years behind.

 

* The Philippines has actually medaled in this event, courtesy of Teofisto Yldefonso, who won back-to-back bronze medals way back in 1928 and 1932!

 

Maybe the United States swimming program is to blame for our decline.  In ’92, 2008 (and even in Yldefonso’s time of the American Occupation), Philippine Olympic swimmers have been U.S. trained.  Hey America, why didn’t you coach our swimmers better!?  (Or, hey you Filipinos who married Americans, why didn’t you choose Caucasian spouses with better swimming genes!?)  All facetiousness aside, this just goes to show there is no viable local swimming program whatsoever. 

 

Maybe I’m the one to blame because I am a local swim coach.  I’ve coached some breaststrokers who wouldn’t be able to beat Yldefonso, perhaps proving my coaching is 80 years behind.  Wait a second, what am I saying!?  You see, there simply aren’t enough funds, there’s too much politics, there’s too much pollution, we only care about basketball, parents are pests, school is too hard, kids eat only fast food, Filipino athletes are always afraid, besides,  we’ll only win in sports with weight categories anyway, etc., etc., etc.

 

Excuses are just another brick on the wall; the wall plastered with political campaign posters and hard body billboards with factory-manufactured celebrity models who convince the populace it’s better to look good than to swim, bike, run, jump, shoot, throw, serve, kick, box, fence, and putt good. 

 

To paraphrase Pink Floyd:  We don’t need your kind of education.  We don’t need education that allows for no accountability; and the kind that doesn’t recognize heartfelt effort.  How sad for our Beijing squad to come home to bricks thrown at their performances - that is if they actually come home to the Philippines because some don’t call our country home.

 

 

Professor Rene F. Concepcion is a full-time faculty member at the De La Salle University – Manila Ramon V. del Rosario Sr. Graduate School of Business.  He teaches Sports and Recreation Management and Culture and Arts Management.  He is currently on his one-year research sabbatical, but he continues to be the head coach of the DLSU varsity swimming team.  Comments can be sent to his email:  concepcionr@dlsu.edu.ph

 

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 11:19 am | permalink | comments[1]

Phelps Plus Plus

August 20, 2008

Article for the column “Mirror Image” (Business Mirror, August 20, 2008)

 

“Phelps Plus Plus”

 

By Rene F. Concepcion

 

Many journalists have already written about Michael Phelps, and there’s no question their words are inspirational.  When a writer has a subject of extreme genius, any dummy can describe the once-in-a-lifetime gift the world has in the form of Michael Phelps.

 

So it’s time to write about other champions, someone like Jason Lezak.  Without him, Phelps would have one less gold medal.  As anchor of the 4×100-meter freestyle relay, Lezak had to chase Frenchman Alain Bernard, who at the time of the race was the world-record holder in the 100-meter freestyle, the event for which Bernard eventually won Olympic gold.  If the world-record holder has a lead, everyone probably agrees that chasing the fastest guy in the planet is impossible.  At one point, Lezak did picture defeat.

 

“I’m not going to lie,” Lezak said in the media conference after. “The thought really crossed my mind for a split-second, ‘There’s no way (to catch Bernard).’ ” But great champions find a way.  Lezak swam the most mind-boggling 100-meter freestyle relay time of 46.06 seconds.  For swimmers, this statistic is so incredible it’s like saying Tiger eagled all 18 holes, or Lebron scored 30 points per period.

 

At age 32 (old by swimming standards), with no major endorsement deals, and choosing to coach himself (training alone instead of with a team), plus harboring disappointing defeats from Sydney and Athens, Lezak proved that when the mind and body is faced with supreme obstacles, a superhuman spirit suddenly soars because it is imperative to be super.

 

Since the start of the Beijing Olympiad, I’ve been asked by reporters, organizations, and even good friends to describe the spirit of the Olympics.  I would hardly talk about my performance, but more so the qualities I saw in others.  Since many journalists have already described the greatness of a hundred Olympic feats, adding to the canon of stories is pointless unless I finally write about my personal Olympic experience. 

 

I did my lifetime best times two times, and faltered the other two times.  I guess my swimming results were 50-50.  Of course, I pushed myself 100 percent in all four events.  But as I climbed out of the pool each time, best time or not, and knowing I would never make it to the next round, I guess it took a lot of guts to accept being a tiny fish from a small pond, sunk in a big Olympic ocean.

 

Yet everybody, and I mean everybody, has a competitive nature.  No one will settle for silver if they can grab gold.  Since I was never going to win in the Olympic arena, I suppose my competitive nature automatically turned to something else that needed superhuman spirit.  And you know what, I bet Olympic gold medalists wouldn’t have the mettle to fight the fight I’ve been fighting for the past 20 years.  I’ve chosen to compete against the monster called Philippine Sports!  

 

I’m realistic — we aren’t going to produce the likes of Michael Phelps in the Philippines.  But all countries, including ours, can create bravehearts like Jason Lezak.  If only Philippine sport doesn’t shoot itself in the foot before stepping onto the plane for the Games.

 

There isn’t enough space in this column to describe in detail the heartache of Seoul ’88.  I repeat, it wasn’t because of my swimming.  It was because of thieving.  What was stolen?  For one, Philippine pride — our national flag fell to the ground because instead of embroidered flags sewn onto our parade uniforms, we were given car stickers that obviously couldn’t stick to cheap polyester.  You want to hear another?  Well, I could write an entire novel about fighting the monster.  I just hope my heart is brave enough to have a victory ceremony at the end of this story that’s a never-ending call to adventure.

 

In the meantime, I try to enjoy and appreciate the big and small blessings that come our way.  The other night, I saw Lebron James make this incredible bouncing pass in the USA versus Spain basketball game.  Plus, I felt emotional seeing 41-year old US swimmer Dara Torres crying on the victory stand.  Was she sad because she only got silver, or was she in tears because even she felt so much honor with her amazingly unbelievable achievement? 

 

To end, I must return to Michael Phelps, and say my two-cents-worth.  Despite his historic eight gold medal haul, I’m so happy to see that he is still a very simple, good guy.  He may be a monster in the pool, but I know he will never make a monster out of sports.

 

 

Professor Rene F. Concepcion is a full-time faculty member in the De La Salle University – Manila Ramon V. del Rosario Sr. Graduate School of Business.  He teaches Sports and Recreation Management and Culture and Arts Management.  He is currently on his one-year sabbatical, but he continues to be coach the DLSU varsity swimming team.  This is the second of three parts that Professor Concepcion will write on the Olympic Games.  Part three will appear on September 3, 2008.  Comments can be sent to his email address:  concepcionr@dlsu.edu.ph

 

 

 

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 9:59 am | permalink | Add comment

20-Year Old Olympic Soul

August 6, 2008

 

 

20-Year Old Olympic Soul

 

Seeing the Seoul Olympic stadium again, 20 years after the privilege of competing in the Olympic Games, wasn’t as dramatic as I thought it would be. 

 

Not that my memories of Seoul ‘88 were ordinary.  Quite the contrary, these were the Games when boxer Leopoldo Serrantes won bronze for our country.  I can still picture Serrantes dropping to his knees when the referee declared victory.  I also remember watching Steffi Graf and Greg Louganis compete, plus I saw them at the Olympic Village, heading to the dining hall to eat.  For those moments I felt like their equal — even superstars get hungry like me! 

 

While in Korea last month, I had occasion to return to these memories.  Then I wondered what the adjective “Olympian” has meant to me for the past 20 years.  I had plenty of time to reflect because, for one, I couldn’t flag any cab down at the Seoul stadium.  Upon landing in Manila, my luggage was one of the last to come out.  Then on EDSA, what else can you do but think “heavy” when you’re stuck in heavy traffic.    

 

Over the years, I notice I always pick the wrong line at Jollibee.  I’m still subject to No I.D. No Entry.  And a virus killed the files in my USB.  Truth is the adjective is not a free pass to anything.  I’m not complaining, and I ask for no special treatment.  Other people actually volunteer that bit of info about me (someone said I’m modest and very proud of it).  Truth is I’ve been worried to write this piece knowing I’ll have to say I’m such and such.  Go ahead, roll your eyes, I could’ve picked a different topic, but I didn’t.

 

Not too many people know, but Leopoldo Serrantes has been confined at the Veterans Memorial Hospital the past two years due to a lung ailment.  High profile individuals helped him with medical bills, but he used the money to pay overdue rent.  The world’s third best light-flyweight in 1988 couldn’t pay rent.    

 

Some Filipino Olympians have lost dignity.  At the run-down and dirty national stadium named after our national hero, sometimes I would see them, stooped, shoulders down, hearts down.  Once upon a time they were literally our country’s best.  It is improbable that human beings of such high caliber could fall, but they did.  It appears they don’t even bother to dream of shining again, not anymore in their sport, but in simply belonging to the right line.

 

Some other Olympians have lost a different kind of dignity, and sadly, they don’t even know it.  They’ve lost moral fiber.  Sadder for them if they do know, so, they compensate their consciences with the carnivorous consumption that comes with corruption.  It is sorrowful that sportsmen who grew up being steadfast could spiral so swiftly down and out of scruples. 

 

Maybe it’s unwarranted to place grand expectations on people who just happen to be Olympians.  Many of them cheat, as you know, doping is always in the news.  And people cannot avoid sometimes being down on their luck (with rent, with health, with family, with emotions, with day to day living).  I’ve faced burdens beyond the trivial, and I admit I wasn’t always so strong. 

 

But I owe a duty to the sheer weight of this word.  Olympian is not only an adjective.  It is a big noun.  It is a powerful verb.  I have an obligation to keep my Olympic soul intact.  The once and future Olympians of pure virtue compete not for glory or gold, but for the beauty of what can be.  I cannot dishonor their philosophy.

 

Twenty years is now longer than the years it took me to become one.  By now I should’ve reached heights beyond the peaks of Mount Olympus if the spirit is supposed to keep me surging.  Or have I fallen too?  Do I need to return to sports just to prove my worth (and so be endorsing instead of queuing the slowest lines at Jollibee)?  It’s never too late, nor is anyone too old to be elite if your heart wills it –- just look at 39-year old American Sheila Toarmina, who’ll be competing in Beijing in her fourth Olympics, but in her third sport (Swimming 1996; Triathlon 2000 & 2004; Modern Pentathlon 2008)!

 

Back at the Seoul stadium, fantastic as it is, I realized it’s only a building.   The drama of climbing a whole mountain of valorous living is Olympian enough. 

 

 

Professor Rene F. Concepcion is a full-time faculty member at the De La Salle University Ramon V. del Rosario Sr. Graduate School of Business.  He is currently on his one-year sabbatical, but continues to be the head coach of the DLSU – Manila varsity swim team.  This is the first of Prof. Concepcion’s three-part series on the Olympic Games.  You may send your comments to concepcionr@dlsu.edu.ph.  The second part will appear on August 20, 2008.  

 

ARTICLE FOR THE COLUMN MIRROR IMAGE (BUSINESS MIRROR AUGUST 7, 2008) 

        

 

 

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 9:59 pm | permalink | Add comment

Incredible Hitchcock in the Hulk

June 27, 2008

 Alfred Hitchcock said that suspense is better than surprise in cinema.  The analogy he used was that surprise is a scene where a man sits on a chair, and then a bomb explodes, giving the audience a sudden jolt; meanwhile, suspense is the audience being told that there is a ticking time bomb under the man’s seat, and the audience is anticipating the explosion.  The master said that suspense is much, much better.

It was probably over 20 minutes into the movie before we see the Hulk, and in that scene where Bruce Banner transforms into the Hulk, we don’t see the Hulk, we just see what the Hulk does (like throw people fifty feet across the room flying at 50mph; or throw forklifts, destroy factory machinery, you know, Hulk-stuff).  That anticipation, that letting the audience wait and wait, is what makes this movie great.

And when we finally see the green behomoth, we are shown his face in close up!  You’d think we’d be shown how big and green he is.  No, we are given a close up.  That’s an excellent choice by Louis Leterrier, the film’s director.  This says two important things:  1)  The Hulk is a real character and not just a cartoon hero; and 2) We are primed to feel what goes on inside his rampaging consciousness, again instead of being primed just to watch destruction and mayhem summer action-movie style.  And thanks to Edward Norton’s outstanding performace, we feel there is no difference between Bruce Banner and the big, green guy.  That’s important because we want to know the Hulk, follow him, and not be numbed by special effects.

It’s great to learn that Edward Norton did the motion-capture movements of the Hulk that the CGI-SFX team then transformed into the CGI Hulk that we see on the big screen.  I really wonder why Ang Lee decided to do the motion-capture for his Hulk, rather than let Eric Bana do the studio work.  With Edward Norton doing the motion capture, again we can feel it’s the same character.  I was never a fan of the comic book version primarily because I didn’t like the idea that Bruce Banner is so meek and smart, then the Hulk was just growling and smashing all the time, speaking like Tarzan.  Who can relate to a superhero like that, and why would you want to?  But here, I could connect the two personalities, and I could believe Bruce is the Hulk, but bigger, stronger, meaner, and greener.  I want to relate to a superhero like that because the Hulk wants to be heroic. 

I want to write something about the latest (please say it’s the last) Indiana Jones movie.  It sucked!  Mr. Spielberg, you know I am one of your biggest fans, and I can write a book about you one day that says you are a brilliant brilliant movie director, but after watching the “Incredible Hulk,” I was wishing the Hulk would smash and stomp and chew and throw and rip and pulverise and destroy any evidence that INDY 4 ever existed.

 

 

  

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Reality Check with Paycheck

June 4, 2008

 

Article for Mirror Image (“Business Mirror” June 4, 2008)

 

Reality Check with Paycheck

 

By

Rene F. Concepcion

 

It’s been two weeks since David Cook won American Idol.  Articles about the win are beginning to be filed away now. The new talk is how fast his songs are climbing the charts, plus real important stuff like, you know, who he’s dating and will they go out again.  But this talent show and recent Idol winner signify more than just the surface celebrity fluff, entertainment, money, and ratings. 

 

The night the two Davids went head to head, I was convinced (yet very frustrated) that David Archuleta would win.  But Americans are smart after all!  They recognized David Cook’s genuine talent, especially with his rock-edged anthem “The World I Know” originally by Collective Soul.  He didn’t choose a hit song, as many expected in order for him to win votes, yet his singing was star-making.  The video for that performance has over a million hits on YouTube.

 

Meanwhile, David A. will still surely sing and sell records, but I hope he would actually consider college now.  He needs experience, savvy, maturity, and artistry that can only be found while growing up in a world without lots of yes-men, paparazzi, performance per diems plus overbearing, fame-and- fortune hunter fathers.  But I’m sure the promise of celebrity complete with fat checkbooks is too hard to pass up.  

 

The real world spins by taking the easy way out.  That’s the nice way of saying that most people sell out.  It would be completely appropriate if an Idol contestant auditions with the song from Cabaret called “Money” (all together now - “Money makes the world go around, the world go around”).  So it’s so refreshing to see that once in a while, just sometimes, integrity prevails.    

 

“If I had to choose between playing a song that not a whole lot of people know that I could get behind, or the opposite, I’ll choose the lesser-known every time,” said Cook to the press backstage right after the finale.

 

It takes a lot of strength to stick to one’s conviction, especially when one is a player on the stage of mass media.  Give the people what they want – usually sugarcoated – and in return, the people will love you.  Offer something harder to swallow, something challenging, formed and functioned differently, and you risk isolation. 

 

David Cook’s song choice to finish his Idol run is not an easily played, listened to, nor an easily sung song with pop-happy lyrics.  But David Cook hit a musicality-engineered bull’s eye.  By the time he sung the lyrics below, the harmony in the theater and through the airwaves was evident – this was an extraordinary performance.

I drink myself a newfound pity
sitting alone in
New York City
and I don’t know why.

So I walk up on high
and I step to the edge
to see my world below.
And I laugh at myself
while the tears roll down.
‘cause it’s the world I know.
Oh, it’s the world I know.    

 

True artists have the gift of making inward conflict we all feel into something universal, elevating mundane sentimentality into something emotionally sublime.  No doubt, the 50 million-plus voters for David Cook saw the worlds they knew too and connected.

 

Reality TV, in my opinion, has been one of the low points in the history of television.  I chastise myself for watching even a few seconds of the Kardashians (Bruce Jenner, what did you do to your face? You are an Olympic champion for goodness sake!) 

 

But even lows can produce highs.  As Orson Welles said in the film The Third Man:  “…in Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance.  In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock.” 

 

Most significantly, this world we know gets totally redeemed when people actually recognize good rather than just good politicizing, pandering, and purses full of pocket money.       

 

 

 

Professor Rene F. Concepcion is a full-time faculty member of De La Salle University – Manila Ramon V. del Rosario Sr. Graduate School of Business, teaching subjects on Culture and Arts Management plus Sports and Recreation Management.  He is currently on his one-year faculty sabbatical.  Yet he continues to be the coach of the DLSU varsity swimming team.   Comments can be sent to his email:  concepcionr@dlsu.edu.ph

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 10:01 am | permalink | Add comment

Is IRON MAN really good, or everything else so far in 2008 has been bad?

May 2, 2008

Iron Man was one of my favorite comic books growing up.  I think because he was easiest to draw.  Spider-Man had too many web-lines and his acrobatic stances are too difficult to put on paper if you are really only a circle and stick drawer.  But also because I liked how smart Tony Stark was/is.  My favorite parts in the comics always came when Iron Man’s suit somehow always had trouble (low batt, broken jets, no oxygen, etc) but Tony Stark was always so smart to find a scientific solution in the midst of being blasted by bombs by the bad guys.

So, I find the movie very good because it showed how smart Tony Stark is, especially when he was able to devise that first suit of armor with all the needed power supply in a cave with spare parts.  It’s actually good propaganda to the millions of teenagers watching this film to find engineering cool.

I was happy to see that the Mark I armor he used to escape Afghan forces was not clunky and had cool weapons and almost (almost) martial arts movements.  That made for a more cinematic and dramatic escape sequence.  By the time we see the Mark III suit, when he is flying along side fighter jets, the summer movie satisfaction is complete.

It’s amazing that the Iron Man rating on Rotten Tomatoes is as high as 95% positive reviews.  I have a feeling the movies that have come out in 2008 have been so feeble that the first thing of any quality to come along garnered so many thumbs up.  I think for this movie to rank as high as "Batman Begins" and "Spider-man 2" in all-time best superhero movies will be a stretch, but I think the sequel will not be encumbered anymore with set ups, so we can expect better battles and challenges to the characters.

 

 

 

 

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 9:55 am | permalink | Add comment

Endangered Leaders

April 23, 2008

Article for “Mirror Image” (Business Mirror – April 23, 2008)

 

Endangered Leaders

 

By Rene F. Concepcion

 

Swimsuit manufacturing leader Speedo is feeling the bite of crab mentality lately.  Their latest technological breakthrough in swimsuit design called the LZR Racer is causing an any-news-is-good-news scenario for Speedo.  First, the better news:  Over a dozen world records have been broken since the LZR Racer’s debut in international competition, and those achieving the world’s best times say the swimsuit is sensational.  And the crabby news:  many think using the new suit is cheating.

 

Even the tiniest water turbulence and resistance that the LRZ Racer reduces can help turn an already golden race into an out-of-this-world athletic achievement (NASA helped design the darn thing).  Last month, an underdog French sprinter, Alain Bernard, set two monumental world records – the 50-meter freestyle and 100-meter freestyle – at the European Championships.  A few days later, Australian Eamon Sullivan destroyed Bernard’s 50-meter freestyle time.  Sullivan’s world record (:21.28 seconds) could beat someone jogging along side the pool!

 

One can only wonder how fast the true boy wonder of swimming, USA’s Michael Phelps, would go once he dons the suit. Now there’s talk that elite swimmers with endorsements outside of Speedo want to use it too.  For the record, FINA, the world governing body for swimming, has found no reason to prevent its use at the Olympics or any swimming competition.

 

Purists say the very pricey LRZ Racer would be giving undue advantage to swimmers who can afford the swimsuit.  But when was the playing field ever even?  American athletes get lactate level blood tests during practice.  Filipinos gauge lactic acid levels by saying “my muscles hurt.”  The US Olympic swim team will spend time in Singapore prior to Beijing just to orient themselves to oriental weather.  They will take over an exclusive country club – a boot camp with room service and spas.  Has anyone been to where some of our national athletes are billeted lately?

 

All advantages are useless unless talent, hard work, courage, and will power are in the athlete’s mind, body and soul.  And despite disadvantages, an athlete must battle anyway.  The playing field evens out when fighting spirit is the weapon, not the equipment, not the high-tech coaching.  The underdog may not win the medal, or the endorsement deals, but they can win the hearts of those they inspire because they competed against all odds.

 

Despite all the how-to books and did-this seminars, true leaders are an endangered species.  One thing is because crabs pull them down, not allowing for the best to climb over the top, to lead, to discover, and to set new standards.  No one wants to be left behind, so the one leading everyone is asked to slow down.  The slow pace makes hunting easier for predators. 

 

Here, I will go ahead and say it:  One day, the Philippines could be completely gobbled up.  If we fail to forge ahead because we protect pittance, we will be followers forever.   There, I’ve said it.  I was hiding behind the Speedo case study, but what I really wanted to say is that we are those who always cry foul to anything new.  And we have an excuse for everything.  Oh, woe is our country – blah, blah, blah.

 

Our past produced deficits we can’t pay back, so today, we can’t afford to buy anything.  Why did we borrow before?  We borrowed to belong.  Once we got ourselves into the party, we got content and failed to progress.  Our swimmers will wear the LRZ Racer, and they will look good, but we bought it to blend.  If we are going to spend money we don’t have to race, spend more on what’s inside the swimsuit.   The current world record breakers were given gifts to gain hearts of gold, not to have fleeting bling-bling.

 

I hope we soon recognize the value of originality.  And I wish crab mentality will soon become extinct.

 

 

 

 

Professor Rene F. Concepcion teaches Sports and Recreation Management and Culture and Arts Management, plus he heads the Marketing, Communications, and International Networks office at the De La Salle Professional Schools Ramon V. del Rosario Sr. Graduate School of Business.  He is also the head coach of the De La Salle University varsity swimming team.  Comments can be sent to his email address:  rene.concepcion@dlsps.edu.ph

Posted by Guy S. Concepcion at 9:51 am | permalink | comments[3]

Tokyo Translation

April 16, 2008

Article for Green Light (Manila Standard Today April 14, 2008)

 

Tokyo Translation

 

By Rene F. Concepcion

 

There’s still something right in this world when people still want to just sit down and gaze at cherry blossoms.  Besides, you wouldn’t think someone like me, who loves the zombie movie Dawn of the Dead, would even go gaga over flowers in a tree.

 

I was in Tokyo recently to participate in the Asia-Pacific Association for International Education (APAIE), hosted by Waseda University.  Organizers timed this annual academic conference just in time for the traditional Japanese pilgrimage called hanami or “flower viewing” during early spring when cherry blossoms bloom. 

 

I was one of the thousands who flocked to parks and paths lined with cherry blossoms to view the beautiful pinkish white flowers.  There is a maximum two week window when the cherry blossoms are in abundance.  After that, people would have to wait another year for the next hanami.

 

For the few moments standing under flowers and trees, it would seem food shortages, rising oil prices, mortgage meltdowns, and melting polar ice caps have lost their impact.  We need those peaceful moments.  We need Mother Nature to remind us that beauty exists and we must pay attention.  Most of all, we need to preserve and to protect these natural wonders.

 

At the APAIE conference, I heard half a dozen talks by top academic minds from Japan, China, Korea, Europe, and North America whose objectives are to preserve and protect another kind of natural wonder:  the human mind.  One way to continue high levels of research and learning is to foster global partnerships and cooperation in higher education. 

 

Globalism is already a household term, and common economies will also be common very soon.  By 2015, for example, the ASEAN countries will have free trade, an open exchange of skilled workforce, and unrestricted flow of capital investment.  The European Union set the stage, and it seems regional economic cooperation is the way to stability. 

 

Therefore, universities are embracing globalization, encouraging more student exchanges, and are heavily recruiting international students.  In Japan, for example, the goal is to reach 300,000 international students enrolled in Japanese universities.  With this growing desire for cross-cultural education the world over, peace, love, and understanding among nations might become a reality.

 

Yet realists know world peace is an impossible dream.  Just turn on CNN and/or open any world history text book, it shows the human animal was, is, and always will be territorial and protectionist of possessions.  Americans love driving their Mustang convertibles, so they’ll always need oil.  Besides, which country wouldn’t want their language, culture, history, and nationality preserved?  Ideally, it is best to be distinct but not divergent.

 

Cross-cultural pop culture, or mass media, is a good gauge of globalization more than politics and economics.  Ancient Egypt outsourced their pyramid construction, and look how that turned out.  An Indian computer engineering major taking business classes in Brazil to study South American policies and procedures will learn more from day-to-day interactions with local flavor. 

 

Recent examples of positive borderless tendencies are: 

 

  • A border-free NBA, UEFA Champions league, and major league baseball, where the best professional sports stars are international.
  • The top acting award winners at this year’s Oscars came from the UK, France, and Spain. 
  • Japanese manga and anime influence western pop art.  And isn’t the most popular superhero in the American hit show Heroes is Hiro, a Japanese guy?
  • The thrill of the reality TV show The Amazing Race, where diverse contestants get immersed in different countries, cities, and cultures.
  • The upcoming film “My Blueberry Nights” directed by a Hong Kong filmmaker, filmed in the United States with British and American actors, and shot by an Iranian-French cinematographer, using French and Chinese money.
  • The relative success of Earth Hour, where over 400 cities worldwide shut off lights for one hour.

 

China is no longer the sleeping giant that strategists “warn” will be the new superpower.  China is already the early bird out to catch the first worm alongside the US and the EU.  It is true China hasn’t gained popularity with their policies lately.  But if a Filipino listening to a song by an Irish band with Spanish lyrics in an American designed — but assembled in China — iPod (the evolution of the Walkman, a Japanese invention) while strolling under Tokyo cherry blossoms after attending a talk by French-Canadians, can understand that zombie movies are dumb representations of fear and invasion, then all our nations’ colors can bleed into one.

 

 

 

 

Professor Rene F. Concepcion teaches Culture & Arts Management and Sports & Recreation Management at the De La Salle Professional Schools Ramon V. del Rosario Sr. Graduate School of Business.  He is also the school’s Marketing, Communications and International Networks Director.  Plus, he coaches the DLSU varsity swim team.  His email address is rene.concepcion@dlsps.edu.ph

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