However, the extraordinary Chinese discipline of Wushu has given birth to many of the most talented athletes in the sport today, particularly in the Philippines, where its practitioners such as Eduard Folayang, Geje Eustaquio, Kevin Belingon and Rene Catalan smoothly transitioned to mixed martial arts.
Folayang has won several international Wushu tournaments, including a gold medal performance at the 2011 Southeast Asian Games, which he won with a flashy spinning back fist knockout in the finals.
The 34-year-old Baguio City native has also earned two gold medals at the same event in 2003 and 2005, a silver medal at the 2006 Doha Asian Games, and bronze medals at the 2002 Busan Asian Games and the 2005 World Wushu Championships.
After a successful Wushu stint, Folayang transitioned to mixed martial arts in 2007 and is now an 11-year veteran of the sport.
Wushu will be among the 40 sports that are set to be contested at the 2018 Asian Games in Indonesia from 18 August to 2 September.
The Philippines is fielding 272 athletes for the quadrennial extravaganza, including eight representatives in the Wushu category that is composed of two disciplines: Taolu and Sanda.
Taolu involves martial art patterns, acrobatic movements and techniques for which competitors are judged and given points according to specific rules, while Sanda is a full-contact sport that appears much like kickboxing bouts.
Meanwhile, Jean Claude Saclag will lead the Philippine’s Sanda national squad along with Francisco Solis, Clemente Tabugara Jr. and Divine Wally.
Despite going head-to-head with powerhouse nations such as China, Iran and South Korea, Folayang remains optimistic that the Philippines’ homegrown Wushu athletes are more than able to cop medals at the upcoming Asian Games.
“The chances to bring home medals are high. The country has already established an impressive track record in Wushu. We have been competing in the sport since 1990. I am confident that they will be able to hoist the country’s flag aloft on the Asian Games stage,” Folayang stated.
“We cannot say or calculate. Once they are on the Wushu stage, anything can happen. Like in mixed martial arts, Wushu is a game of chance, wherein everyone has a chance and deserves a chance. We have done it before. I believe we can do it again,” Catalan expressed.
Currently ranked No. 9 in the region, the Philippines hopes to improve its 0-2-3 gold-silver-bronze production during the 2014 Asian Games in Incheon, South Korea.
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