Nesthy Petecio Powers Through Despite Being Told: ‘Babae Ka, Hindi Para Sa’yo ‘Yan’

  • With Nesthy Petecio assured of at least a silver in the ongoing Tokyo 2020 Olympics, it’s high time we took a look back at her colorful career.

    Her accomplished boxing record has seen her earn medals in podiums all over the world. But she has seen her share of hurdles — and overcame them with grit and tenacity.

    Here’s everything you need to know about Nesthy Petecio.

    Early life and career of Nesthy Petecio

    In a recent interview, Nesthy Petecio, who was born in 1991 and grew up in Bago Gallera, Davao City, said that she started training hard when she was eleven years old. Her first competition? An Araw ng Dabaw bout.

    “My first opponent was a man,” she said in Bisaya when she was interviewed for a TrueID documentary short. “Not to brag, but I felt no fear. I was more excited. I wanted to show them that women can keep up with men.”

    ADVERTISEMENT – CONTINUE READING BELOW

    She admitted that she was always boyish, even from a young age. She liked playing basketball, and dabbled a little in athletics, but soon fell in love with the sweet science.

    Her father, while a boxing coach himself, was initially against her taking up the sport. “Pinapagalitan ko, pinapaalis ko. ‘Wag ka diyan, babae ka, hindi para sa ‘yo ‘yan,” said Nestor in a 2021 interview with ABS-CBN’s Jeff Canoy.

    But Nesthy would not be fazed.

    “Dahil sa boxing, dito nagkaroon ng kabuluhan ang buhay ko para lumaban hanggang marating ko ang kung saan ko gusto,” said Petecio in the TrueID docu.

    Her victory in that Araw ng Dabaw competition soon led her to 1992 Barcelona Olympics bronze medalist Roel Velasco, who became an early mentor.

    At just 15 years old, she won gold at the 2007 Philippine National Games, and then joined the national team.

    Racking up the international wins

    CONTINUE READING BELOW
    Recommended Videos

    Her first international podium came in the 2011 SEA Games, where she clinched silver in the bantamweight division.

    Two years later, she delivered again with another silver in the Myanmar edition of the regional meet; this time, as a featherweight. Though, in an interview with SPIN.ph in 2015, she believes she could have gotten the gold there, if not for biased homecourt judging, who awarded the top spot to her Burmese foe.

    A quick flurry of metal burnished the young boxer’s resume: a silver medal in the 2014 World Championships in Jeju, a gold in the President’s Cup in Jakarta in 2015, one more silver in the 2015 ASBC Women’s Boxing Championships in China, yet another silver in the 2015 Singapore SEA Games (this time, back as a bantamweight).

    However, in a qualifier tournament for the 2016 Rio Olympics, she suffered an early exit in Morocco against home bet Zohra Ez Zahraoui.

    Two years later, Petecio started the year strong with rousing first-place finishes in the Feliks Stamm Boxing Tournament in Warsaw as well as the 2nd Kapolri Cup Boxing International Open Tournament in Indonesia.

    But another early exit in the 2018 Asian Games in Jakarta would prove to be one of the most devastating blows to Petecio’s career.

    At the time, Association of Boxing Alliances of the Philippines secretary general Ed Picson slammed her loss via split decision against China’s Yin Junhua as a “travesty.”

    “We all saw what happened,” said Picson. “It’s just so sad that at a time when boxing is fighting hard to retain its spot in the Olympics, something like this happens. It’s heartbreaking.”

    ADVERTISEMENT – CONTINUE READING BELOW

    It was heartbreaking for Petecio, too.

    “After po talaga nun, sobrang na-down ako nun,” she said in a press conference in 2019. “Sinabi ko sa sarili ko, baka hindi para sa akin ‘yung boxing. Nag-gold ako ng apat na sunod-sunod para i-prepare ko ‘yung sarili ko sa Asian Games tapos ganun na nangyari.

    Petecio felt she even wanted to quit the sport and just work. “Down na down ako nun. Naka-graduate na rin naman ako ng associate course sa University of Baguio. Kaya ko naman mag-work.”

    In an interview with podcast Go Hard Girls, she said that, after the 2018 Asiad, she suffered depression for seven months.

    In the aftermath of Asiad, a return to glory

    A year later, she returned to the sport, and made a decisive statement with a gold in the Thailand Open International Boxing Championship.

    Then, Petecio became a true world champion in the Aiba World Women’s Championships in Ulan-Ude, Russia, beating hometown bet Liudmila Vorontsove.

    ADVERTISEMENT – CONTINUE READING BELOW

    Her win came just 24 hours after the victory of another future Olympian: Carlos Yulo, who won first place at the 41st FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Championships in Germany.

    It was a rousing one-two punch for Philippine sports — and the Philippine Sports Commission and the MVP Sports Foundation rewarded the two athletes accordingly, granting them a P2 million incentive each.

    In December, Petecio stood shoulder-to-shoulder with one of boxing’s undeniable greats, Manny Pacquiao, as the two pugilists lit the cauldron in New Clark City to kick off the 30th Southeast Asian Games.

    It was in this edition of the regional meet that Petecio finally got over her SEA Games silver slump. The scrappy fighter clinched her first SEAG gold, pummeling Oo New Ni of Myanmar for a victory via unanimous decision.

     

    On to the Olympics

    Her victory was enough for ABS-CBN to greenlight a Maalala Mo Kaya episode on her life. She was played by rising star Jane De Leon.

    ADVERTISEMENT – CONTINUE READING BELOW

    Before the global lockdowns hit on March 2020, Nesthy Petecio lost to Japan’s Sena Irie in the quarterfinals of the Asia and Oceania Boxing Olympic Qualification Tournament in Jordan on March 9.

    The pandemic proved to be both bane and blessing to Nesthy. Stranded in Baguio when the lockdowns descended soon after she flew back home, she missed the sport dearly as she was forced to stay at home and work on her mitts.

    When general community quarantine was finally granted to Baguio, she happily told SPIN.ph, “Hirap mag-training dahil ang daming bawal. Sobrang excited po ako makapag-training.”

    But the pandemic also served, in its own way, to boost Petecio’s career. Because of the left-and-right cancellations of the Olympic qualifiers, Petecio was able to book her ticket to Tokyo on the strength of her world ranking alone, which stood at world number two in September 2020. On March 19 of this year, the International Olympic Committee Boxing Task Force made her qualification official.

    And so the journey that was cut short back in the Rio games has finally led this defiant young woman to Tokyo.

     

    This story originally appeared on Spin.ph.

    *Minor edits have been made by the SmartParenting.com.ph editors.

    What other parents are reading

Nesthy Petecio Powers Through Despite Being Told: ‘Babae Ka, Hindi Para Sa’yo ‘Yan’
Source: Progress Pinas

Post a Comment

0 Comments