Ambrosio Padilla Explained

Ambrosio B. Padilla
Office:Senate Minority Leader
Office2:Senator of the Philippines
Office3:Solicitor General of the Philippines
Predecessor3:Querube Makalintal
Successor3:Guillermo Torres
Office4:1st President of the Philippine Olympic Committee
Predecessor4:Himself (as President of the Philippine Amateur Athletic Federation)
Successor4:Nereo Andolong
Office5:6th President of the Philippine Amateur Athletic Federation
Predecessor5:Felipe Monserrat
Successor5:Himself (as President of the Philippine Olympic Committee)
Birth Name:Ambrosio Bibby Padilla
Birth Date:7 December 1910
Birth Place:Lingayen, Pangasinan, Philippine Islands
Death Place:Quezon City, Philippines
Nationality:Filipino
Party:Liberal
Spouse:Lourdes de las Alas
Children:10
Alma Mater:Ateneo de Manila
University of the Philippines Diliman (LL.B)
Module:
Embed:yes
College:Ateneo
UP
Honorific Prefix:The Honorable
Termstart:January 17, 1966
Termend:December 30, 1969
Predecessor:Estanislao Fernandez
Successor:Gerardo Roxas
Termstart1:January 27, 1958
Termend1:January 25, 1960
Predecessor1:Lorenzo M. Tañada Sr.
Successor1:Ferdinand Marcos
Termstart2:December 30, 1957
Termend2:September 23, 1972[1]
President3:Ramon Magsaysay
Termstart3:September 1, 1954
Termend3:December 30, 1957
Termstart4:1975
Termend4:1976
Termstart5:1970
Termend5:1975
Office6:Vice President of the 1986 Constitutional Commission
President6:Cecilia Muñoz-Palma
Termstart6:June 2, 1986
Termend6:October 15, 1986

Ambrosio Bibby Padilla (in Tagalog paˈdilja/; December 7, 1910  - August 11, 1996[2] [3]) was a Filipino basketball player and an elected member of the Senate of the Philippines. He was one of the most important figures in Asian basketball development.

Early life

Padilla was born as the eighth of eleven children of Dr. Nicanor Padilla and Ysabel Bibby. He married Lourdes de las Alas on May 4, 1941, the eldest daughter of Taaleño senator Antonio de las Alas. Padilla fathered 10 children: 6 boys and 4 girls.

Athletic career

Padilla was born in Lingayen, Pangasinan. He studied at the Ateneo de Manila for his high school and college education. In college, he was the team captain of the 1928 Ateneo de Manila Blue Eagles varsity basketball squad that won the 1928 NCAA (Philippines) basketball championship under coach James A. Martin, S.J. Later, he studied law at the University of the Philippines and became a varsity player of the university's baseball team in the early 1930s.

In 1930, Padilla played for the Philippines which won the gold medal of the 9th Far Eastern Games basketball tournament in Tokyo, Japan. He played alongside Jacinto Ciria Cruz and Mariano Filomeno. In 1934, he captained the national team that retained the basketball championship in the 10th Far Eastern Games held at home for the final time.

In 1936, Padilla as team captain of the national basketball team led the Philippines to a fifth-place finished in the 11th (1936) Summer Olympics held at Berlin, Germany. It remains the best finish by an Asian country in men's Olympic basketball history. The team was coached by Dionisio Calvo and, aside from Padilla, boasted of great players like Ciria Cruz and Charles Borck.

Padilla retired from basketball and became the chair of the Philippine Amateur Athletic Federation (PAAF) Basketball Committee from 1938 to 1954.

The international governing body, FIBA, appointed Padilla as its Vice President for Asia from 1956 to 1964. He was one of the forefathers and later elected President of the Asian Basketball Confederation (ABC), now known as FIBA Asia, from 1960 to 1966 with his former coach Dionisio Calvo as the Secretary-General. When he finished his term, he served as the ABC president emeritus from 1967.

He became the sixth President of the Philippine Amateur Athletic Federation (PAAF), the forerunner of the Philippine Olympic Committee (POC), in 1970 and became the first president of the POC when PAAF was renamed POC in 1975.[4]

Political career

President Ramon Magsaysay appointed Padilla as Solicitor General in 1954. He later resigned in 1957 to run for the Senate and won. He served in the Senate until 1972 when President Ferdinand Marcos declared Martial Law. Notwithstanding his stature and brushing aside the dangers arising from his opposition to the martial law regime, he actively fought the Marcos regime with his legal skills and belief in freedom.

After Marcos was overthrown in the 1986 People Power Revolution, President Corazon Aquino appointed Padilla to the 1986 Constitutional Commission which was tasked to draft a new constitution for the country. Padilla was elected vice-chair of the commission with former Supreme Court Associate Justice Cecilia Muñoz-Palma as its chair. The new Constitution was officially ratified by the Filipino people in a plebiscite held on February 2, 1987.

Legacy

Padilla, who died on August 11, 1996, was inducted into the Philippine National Basketball Hall of Fame in January 1999 along with other Filipino basketball greats like Carlos Loyzaga, Lauro Mumar, Jacinto Ciria Cruz, Charles Borck, Edgardo Ocampo, Mariano Tolentino, and his own Olympic coach Chito Calvo. The Ateneo de Manila University's Ambrosio Padilla Award, which is given out annually to the university's best academically performing college varsity player from any sport, is named in his honor.

A classroom at Malcolm Hall of the University of the Philippines College of Law is named in his honor.

Prominent offspring

He is the father of Francisco "Frank" Padilla, founder and Servant General of the Catholic renewal group Missionary Families of Christ and Alexander Padilla, CEO and President of Philippine Health Insurance Corporation from 2013 to 2016.

Awards and achievements

See also

Notes and References

  1. Congress was dissolved when President Ferdinand Marcos imposed Martial Law on September 21, 1972.
  2. The Manila Standard, Basketball Olympian, Senator Dead At 85, The Manila Standard, p.4 (12 augustus 1996)
  3. The Philippine Daily Inquirer, In Loving Memory on the 7th Death Anniversary of Ambrosio Padilla, The Philippine Daily Inquirer, B.14 (11 augustus 2003)
  4. Web site: History of the Philippine Olympic Committee. https://web.archive.org/web/20151117220856/http://www.olympic.ph/historyPOC.html. Philippine Olympic Committee. 22 November 2015. 17 November 2015.
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20200418003252/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/pa/ambrosio-padilla-1.html Ambrosio Padilla