Philippines at the 1986 Asian Games

The Philippines participated in the 1986 Asian Games held in Seoul, South Korea from September 20 to October 5, 1986. and ranked 6th with 4 gold medals, 5 silver medals and 9 bronze medals for a total of 18 over-all medals.[1]

Philippines at the
1986 Asian Games
IOC codePHI
NOCPhilippine Olympic Committee
Websitewww.olympic.ph (in English)
in Seoul
Medals
Ranked 6th
Gold
4
Silver
5
Bronze
9
Total
18
Asian Games appearances (overview)

Asian Games Performance

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Bong Coo emerged as the most successful Filipino campaigner with 2 gold medals in the (1) Individual ALL Events where she broke her own record in 24 games. She was also a member of the (2) Team of Five where the Philippines successfully defended their title in 1978 (bowling was not a part of the 1982 games). Other team members were Catalina Solis, Cecilia Gaffud, Rebecca Watanabe and Arianne Cerdeña.

Sprinter Lydia de Vega won the gold in the 100 meter and Ramon Brobio won the gold in individual men's golf.

Isidro del Prado, one of the country's greatest middle-distance runners of all time, won a silver in the 400 meter run, while boxer Leopoldo Cantancio lost in the lightweight class final to complete a five silver finish.

Basketball tasted a medal for the first time since 1962, winning the bronze medal with a gallant stand against powerhouses China and South Korea.

Medalists

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The following Philippine competitors won medals at the Games.

Gold

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No. Medal Name Sport Event
1   Gold Lydia de Vega   Athletics Women's 100m
2   Gold Bong Coo   Bowling Women's All-Events
3   Gold Bong Coo
Catalina Solis
Rebecca Watanabe
Arianne Cerdeña
Cecilia Gaffud
  Bowling Women's Team
4   Gold Ramon Brobio   Golf Men's Individual

Silver

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No. Medal Name Sport Event
1   Silver Isidro del Prado   Athletics Men's 400m
2   Silver Lydia de Vega   Athletics Women's 200m
3   Silver Rene Reyes   Bowling Men's Singles
4   Silver Delfin Garcia
Jorge Fernandez
  Bowling Men's Doubles
5   Silver Leopoldo Cantancio   Boxing Lightweight 60kg

Bronze

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No. Medal Name Sport Event
1   Bronze Romeo Gido
Honesto Larce
Leopoldo Arnillo
Isidro del Prado
  Athletics Men's 4 × 400 m Relay
2   Bronze Eric Altamirano
Allan Caidic
Glenn Capacio
Harmon Codiñera
Jerry Codiñera
Jojo Lastimosa
Samboy Lim
Ronnie Magsanoc
Alvin Patrimonio
Dindo Pumaren
Elmer Reyes
Jack Tanuan
  Basketball Men's Team
3   Bronze Bong Coo
Arianne Cerdeña
  Bowling Women's Doubles
4   Bronze Catalina Solis   Bowling Women's Masters
5   Bronze Brix Flores   Boxing Bantamweight 54kg
6   Bronze Ernesto Coronel   Boxing Light middleweight 71kg
7   Bronze Bernardo Rimarim   Cycling Track Men's Points Race
8   Bronze Ramon Brobio
Robert Pactolerin
Wilfredo Victoria
Carito Villaroman
  Golf Men's Team
9   Bronze Monsour del Rosario   Taekwondo Lightweight -70kg

Multiple

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Name Sport Gold Silver Bronze Total
Bong Coo Bowling 2 0 1 3
Lydia de Vega Athletics 1 1 0 2
Arianne Cerdeña Bowling 1 0 1 2
Catalina Solis Bowling 1 0 1 2
Ramon Brobio Golf 1 0 1 2
Isidro del Prado Athletics 0 1 1 2

Medal summary

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Medal by sports

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SportGoldSilverBronzeTotal
  Bowling2226
  Athletics1214
  Golf1012
  Boxing0123
  Basketball0011
  Cycling0011
  Taekwondo0011
Totals (7 entries)45918

Basketball

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1986 Philippines Asian Games basketball team
 
Head coachJoe Lipa
1986 Asian Games  Bronze
 
 
 
 

Uniform

 
 
 
 

Uniform

← 1982
1990 →

The 1986 Philippines men's national basketball team, competed in the 1986 Asian Games. The team placed third, behind South Korea, and PR China.[2][3]

Pos No. Player College
PF 4 Alvin Patrimonio Mapua
PG 5 Ronnie Magsanoc UP Diliman
SG 6 Jojo Lastimosa San Jose Recolletos
SF 7 Elmer Reyes San Beda
SG 8 Allan Caidic UE
SG 9 Samboy Lim Letran
PG 10 Dindo Pumaren La Salle
PG 11 Eric Altamirano UP Diliman
SF/SG 12 Glenn Capacio FEU
C/PF 13 Harmon Codinera FEU
C 14 Jerry Codinera UE
C 15 Jack Tanuan FEU

References

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  1. ^ 1986 Asian Games medal tally Archived 2009-03-07 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Jolas remembers first stint with national team in 1986". ESPN.com. 2020-05-02. Retrieved 2024-02-11.
  3. ^ "National teams in the PBA (Part 2): The Lipa, Pumaren and Toroman eras". ESPN.com. 2021-02-16. Retrieved 2024-02-11.