Sustainability As Reputation Infrastructure

Regulations in the Philippines now mandate structured sustainability disclosures, reinforcing the shift from voluntary initiatives to audited institutional requirements.

How Chef Tatung Learned To Let Simpol Grow Beyond Him

Behind Simpol’s familiar tone is a deliberate process, where discipline and shared understanding help transform simple content into something that resonates across platforms and audiences.

Prifood, COREnergy Team Up To Optimize Energy Use Under RAP

Prifood partners with COREnergy to optimize energy use and strengthen operational efficiency across its facilities.

9Lives And Vision Express Introduce A New Eyewear Collection With A Modern 90s Edge

The new 9Lives eyewear collection with Vision Express revisits 90s fashion through bold frames and modern design, blending nostalgia with a refined and contemporary edge.
X

Golden Hour: Gymnast Carlos Yulo Finally Nails Biggest Olympics Prize

Carlos Edriel Yulo, the smallest competitor, delivered the second gold for the Philippines in its 100-year Olympic history.

Golden Hour: Gymnast Carlos Yulo Finally Nails Biggest Olympics Prize

2718
2718

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Carlos Edriel Yulo was the smallest competitor but he stood tallest to deliver just the second gold for the Philippines in its 100-year participation in the Olympics.

The 24-year-old Yulo delivered what the country expected of him after a near-flawless routine in his pet event, floor exercise, at the Bercy Arena of the Paris Olympics late Saturday (PH time).

He crashed out in the final three years ago in Tokyo but finally hit perfection to win it all.

“A final of the very highest quality,” the international gymnastics federation said.

The wunderkind performed third in order and scored exactly 15 points, enough to edge Israeli Artem Dolgopyat, the 2021 Tokyo champion who came right before him.

Dolgopyat tallied 14.966 points for silver while Great Britain’s Jake Jarman, whose mother hails from Cebu province, captured the bronze with 14.933 points.

On Sunday night, he will go for a second medal in the vault finals.

“I am confident that it will not be the last,” President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. posted on social media. “Congratulations, Caloy! The entire country stands proud with you!”

“Thanks to Carlos Yulo, we have another golden moment to celebrate. His dedication and skill have not only brought us immense pride but also highlighted the incredible talent of our nation. Thank you, Carlos, for making us proud and inspiring us with your success. Your achievements are a testament to your hard work and the spirit of our people. Here’s to making history and celebrating many more triumphs!” the Philippine Olympic Committee said.

The 4-foot-9 Yulo rose to prominence after winning the 2019 Germany world championship, also on the floor. He plucked another gold in vault two years later in Japan.

Weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz delivered the Philippines’ first-ever Olympic gold in Tokyo.

Yulo capturing the gold made up for boxer Carlo Paalam’s farewell from medal contention at Paris North Arena in the nearby city of Villepinte.

Paalam could not sustain a solid first round and fell prey to Australian opponent Charlie Senior in the men’s 57-kilogram quarterfinals.

The bout was tight almost all nine minutes with Paalam showing his accuracy and solid evasion and Senior making good use of his height and reach advantage.

The verdict, though, was ultimately decided by Irish judge Ben McGarrigle, who gave Round 3 to Senior after scoring it 19-all in the other rounds, sending Paalam home without a medal after a silver in Tokyo.

Female boxers Aira Villegas (50kg) and 2021 Tokyo silver medalist Nesthy Petecio also qualified for the quarterfinals. Another win means a sure bronze. (PNA)

Photo Credit: https://www.instagram.com/figymnastics