Ej Obiena

Ernest John EJ Uy Obiena, OLY (born November 17, 1995) is a Filipino Olympian pole vaulter, currently ranked second in the world in men's pole vault (2023), per the World Athletics Organization.

EJ Obiena
Ej Obiena
Obiena in 2022
Personal information
Full nameErnest John Uy Obiena
NicknameEJ
NationalityFilipino
Born (1995-11-17) November 17, 1995 (age 28)
Tondo, Manila, Philippines
Height6 ft 2 in (1.9 m)
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese蔡華強
Simplified Chinese蔡华强
Sport
CountryPhilippines
SportTrack and field
EventPole vaulting
College teamUniversity of Santo Tomas
Coached byEmerson Obiena
Vitaly Petrov (2014)
Achievements and titles
Highest world ranking2
Personal bests
  • Pole vault: 6.00m (2023, NR and AR)
  • 110 m hurdles 14.39 (2017)

Before breaking the Asian Athletics Championships record, he held the Philippine national record in pole vaulting, with a record 5.55 metres he accomplished on April 29, 2016, at the 78th Singapore Open Championships in Kallang, Singapore. He later broke the Asian Athletics Championships record with 5.71 metres on April 21, 2019, on its 23rd biennial meet in Doha, Qatar, earning him the coveted gold medal. Obiena currently holds the national record, which he has broken numerous times.

Obiena is the first Filipino to receive a scholarship from the International Athletic Association Federation (IAAF).

Early life and education

Obiena was born to track and field athletes Emerson Obiena and Jeanette Uy, on November 17, 1995, in Tondo, Manila. Obiena attended Chiang Kai Shek College for his secondary education, and later entered the University of Santo Tomas for his undergraduate studies.

Pole vault career

Early years

Obiena first took up pole vaulting when he was eight years old, but initially focused on hurdles. His father, Emerson Obiena served as his coach until he was 18 years old. Obiena competed in the 100 and 400 metre hurdles events for his high school, Chiang Kai Shek College. Unable to qualify for regional meets, he decided to return to pole vaulting when he was in his last years in high school, in a bid to secure a college scholarship.

In college, Obiena attended the University of Santo Tomas, where he competed for them at the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP).

National team

Ej Obiena 
Obiena (right) at the 2017 Asian Athletics Championships.

In early 2014, Obiena was able to meet Ukrainian pole vaulter Sergey Bubka who was visiting the Philippines. Originally, he only intended to get an autograph from Bubka, but learned from him of an opportunity to train in Italy. In the same year for three months, Obiena travelled to Italy to train under coach Vitaly Petrov in Formia, who also previously coached Bubka. On July 20, 2014, at the PATAFA weekly relays held at the PhilSports Football and Athletics Stadium, Obiena broke the national record for pole vault by registering 5.01 metres. The previous record was 5.0 metres by Edward Lasquete at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain. The junior national record was also broken, since Obiena at that time was still 18 years old. The previous record was 4.31 metres set three years before.

He later broke his own record several times in 2014 alone (5.05, 5.05, 5.15, 5.20, 5.21). By the time Obiena became ineligible for the national junior record, the record was 5.21 which Obiena set himself.[citation needed]

In the 2015 Southeast Asian Games, Obiena won a silver medal with a leap of 5.25 metres, then his personal record.

Obiena won a gold medal in the 2016 Philippine National Games Finals in Lingayen, Pangasinan after breaking a new personal record (5.47 metres), despite problems with a broken pole.

Obiena won gold in the men's pole vault event at the 2019 Summer Universiade setting a new national record of 5.76 metres. He secured a berth in the 2020 Summer Olympics by surpassing the qualifying standard by making a 5.81 metres height in a tournament in Chiara, Italy on September 3, 2019. The height was also a national record.

At the 2019 World Athletics Championships he failed to advance to the final round by finishing 15th out of 35 entrants through his 5.6 metres finish.

The COVID-19 pandemic caused the postponement of the Olympics and travel restrictions imposed by countries in response to the health crisis posed logistical issues to Obiena's preparations. For most of 2020, Obiena spent his time training in Formia, Italy, and was unable to go back to the Philippines during the Christmas season. He trained under American conditioning coach James Michael Lafferty and Nutritionist Carol Lafferty; along with Brazilian Thiago Braz as his training partner. Competing in 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Obiena managed to advance to the final of the pole vault competition but failed to make the podium.

Obiena set a then Asian record in pole vault when he lifted his best vault all the way to 5.93 metres at the International Golden Roof Challenge in Innsbruck, Austria on September 12, 2021. He won the tournament. This record was later broken on July 25, 2022, when Obiena lifted his best vault all the way to 5.94 metres at the World Athletics Championships in Oregon. He won a bronze medal, becoming the first Filipino to win a medal in the tournament.

In June 2023, Obiena cleared 6 metres for the first time at the Sparebanken Vest Bergen Jump Challenge in Norway also resetting the Asian record. He was able to accomplish said feat due to shifting to a 20-step technique from the previous 18-steps approach.

Coaches

Obiena has trained under coach Vitaly Petrov since 2014. Obiena's coaching team includes his father, Emerson Obiena, mentor James Michael Lafferty, physiotherapist Francesco Viscusi, osteopath Antonio Guglietta, nutritionist Carol Lafferty and sport psychologist Dr. Sheryll Casuga.

Dispute with PATAFA

In November 2021, the Philippine Athletics Track and Field Association (PATAFA) publicly escalated an accounting dispute involving late payments to Obiena's coach, Vitaly Petrov. Petrov later denied there was any payment issue with Obiena. Philippine Senators quickly came to Obiena's defense, calling unproven accusations "harassment" against an athlete considered a national treasure and passing a motion to recall the budget of the PSC. The Senators later approved the PSC budget with the condition that PATAFA will “rectify the grave injustice” done to Obiena's reputation. During congressional hearings, witnesses testified that PATAFA's payment system is broken.

After an investigation by its Ethics Committee, the Philippine Olympic Committee (POC) declared PATAFA's president Philip Juico persona non grata for his role in the harassment of Obiena. The investigation of the POC's ethics committee concluded that Juico had harassed the athlete by making "malicious public accusations".

On March 30, 2022, the Philippine Sports Commission announced that both parties reached an agreement during a mediation process. Obiena will be endorsed by PATAFA in any future competitions.

Competition record

Year Competition Venue Position Notes
Representing the Ej Obiena  Philippines
2013 Southeast Asian Games Naypyidaw, Myanmar 4th 4.90 m
2015 Southeast Asian Games Singapore 2nd 5.25 m
2016 Asian Indoor Championships Doha, Qatar 4th 5.40 m
2017 Asian Championships Bhubaneswar, India 3rd 5.50 m
2018 Asian Games Jakarta, Indonesia 7th 5.30 m
2019 Asian Championships Doha, Qatar 1st 5.71 m
Southeast Asian Games Philippines 5.45 m
Universiade Naples, Italy 5.76 m
World Championships Doha, Qatar 15th (q) 5.60 m
2020 Olympic Games Tokyo, Japan 11th 5.70 m
2022 Southeast Asian Games Vietnam 1st 5.46 m
World Championships Eugene, Oregon 3rd 5.94 m
2023 Southeast Asian Games Phnom Penh, Cambodia 1st 5.65 m
Asian Championships Bangkok, Thailand 1st 5.91 m
World Championships Budapest, Hungary 2nd 6.00 m
Asian Games Hangzhou, China 1st 5.90 m
2024 World Indoor Championships Glasgow, United Kingdom 9th 5.65 m

Awards

See also

References

Tags:

Ej Obiena Early life and educationEj Obiena Pole vault careerEj Obiena Competition recordEj Obiena AwardsEj Obiena

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