Ramirez consoles Caloy, Kurt and co.

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TOKYO—Losing happens even to the best of ’em.

This was the message of Philippine Sports Commission chairman William “Butch” Ramirez to Filipino athetes, who suffered heartbreaking setbacks during the first day of competitions of the Summer Olympic Games.

Taekwondo jin Kurt Barbosa and Filipino-American swimmer Remedy Rule were eliminated right on the first day of competition, while world champion gymnast Carlos Yulo, one of the country’s brightest hopes for a gold medal in these games, failed to advance to the finals of his favorite the men’s floor exercise and five other events, making only the vault championship round.

“Si Caloy, first time sa Olympics. I got to talk to him before his vault competition. Sabi ko sa kanya na ‘wag siya masyadong mag-worry kasi it really happens,” said Ramirez, citing Japanese legend and two-time Olympic champion “King Kohei” Uchimura, who fell off the horizontal bar and failed to advance during the men’s gymnastics qualifying round on Saturday.

“Kahit ‘yung Japanese two-time world champion, natalo, nahulog sa bar,” Ramirez said.

The PSC chief said pressure from the Filipino public and high expectations that stemmed from the Philippines’s 97-year-old gold medal drought in the Olympics proved simply too much for the Filipino Olympians to handle.

“Medyo frustrating because we are expecting the elusive gold since 1924,” Ramirez said.

The journey to Olympic glory doesn’t happen overnight, Ramirez said.

“Naawa ako sa bata (Yulo) dahil he was pressured. Nakita ko na umupo siya sa ibaba. I would imagine as an athlete ‘yung frustration nu’ng bata, but Caloy should not worry because he has Paris Olympics to look forward to,” said Ramirez, who also made an example of Olympic silver medalist Hidilyn Diaz, who took three Olympics (Beijing, London, Rio) before clinching a medal.

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