Achievements:
- 1984 & 1988 Olympic Games ( quarter finalist in both games )
- Currently SEA Games record holder in 100m ( 11.28secs ) since 1987 & former 200m record holder ( 23.35secs ) from 1987 to 2001
- Asia fastest women for 8 years from 1982 ? 1990
- 2 gold, 1 silver medals in 2 Asian Games
- 4 gold, 1 silver & 4 bronze medals in 5 Asian Track & Field meet
- 9 gold, 2 silver medals in 5 SEA Games
- 9 gold, 2 silver medals in 5 Asean Cup
- 9 gold in 3 Asean Schools Track & Field meet
Awards:
- Philippines Sports Writers Association ( PSA )
- 1981 ? Athlete of the Year
- 1986 ? Athlete of the Year
- 1987 ? Athlete of the Year
- 1992 ? Major Award
- 1993 ? Major Award
- 1994 ? Special Award
- 1998 ? Athlete of the Century
- 1999 ? Millennium Athlete
- Sports Columnist Organisation of the Philippines ( SCOOP )
- 1981 ? Athlete of the Year
- 1986 ? Athlete of the Year
- 1987 ? Outstanding Achievement Award
- 1993 ? Athlete of the Year
- 1994 ? Hall of Fame
- Ten Outstanding Young Men ( TOYM )
- 1993 ? Sports Category
- International Invitation Track & Field Competition, Bangkok
- 1983 ? Best Female Athlete
- Southern Coast Conference, USA
- 1986 ? Athlete of the Year
Brief Story of Lydia De Vega ( Extracted from Athletics Digest 1983, Singapore ): Track Queen Lydia De Vega from the Philippines
During all the Asian Games in Delhi, sheer joy and deep dissapointment were never as closely connected as after the 100 metres victory of Lydia De Vega. The 18 year old PE student and film actress from the Philippines had won the final comfortably and unchellenged in excellent 11.76secs but had injured herself after breaking the tape. A pulled muscle prevented her from participating also in the 200 metres.
But still, a dream had become true when Lydia crowned herself as the fastest women in Asia; a dream of a 14 year old schoolgirl who had started to compete in Track & Field meets with a promising 27.5secs for the 200m and the silver medal in the Philippines National Junior Championship and who added a fourth place in the 100m to this success. That was four years ago in 1978.
Only one year later, in 1979 at the age of 15 years, Lydia De Vega already represented her country in the 3rd Asian Track & Field Championship in Tokyo. With a leap of 5.47 metres she came in 7th in the Long Jump competition but also carried home a bronze medal when she came third in the women?s 4x400m relay with her team mates Lorena Morcilla, Carmen Torres and Myrna Ayo.
Still in 1979, Lydia won herself three gold medals in the ASEAN School Championship in Singapore. She took the titles in the 100m in 12.5 seconds, in the 400m in 58.0secs and in the Long Jump with a leap of 5.27 metres. But Lydia also won a silver medal in these Games when her 4x100m relay came in second to Malaysia. On the other hand the Games was already showed very clearly that Lydia was always in danger to be over burdened with too many races in just in a single meet.
This applies also to her participation in the 10th SEA Games in Jakarta, still in 1979. Within four days of competition she took part in the 400m, 4x100m relay, 4x400m relay ( in which she came 5th each ), in the 100m? ( in which she was placed 6th and recorded her best result of the Games when she clocked 12.38secs in the heats ), and in the Long Jump in which she came 7th with a performance of 5.45 metres. To cut down her competition programme she resigned from taking part in the Long Jump after having taken the title in this event in the national junior meet of that year.
1980, young Lydia made the news headlines when she won both the 200m and 400m in the first ever ASEAN Cup in Jakarta with times of 24.53 and 55.83 seconds respectively and when she got a ranking in the Asian top-list with 12.0secs in the 100m, 24.53 seconds in the 200m ( this as Asia?s number four ), and with 54.6secs over the 400m, the best time recorded in the one-lap event by an Asian women in that year.
With two silver and one bronze medals in the 4th Asian Track & Field Championship in Tokyo, Lydia De Vega had a flying start into the 1981 season. With a time of 55.39secs, she was second to Japan?s Yunko Yoshida in the 400 metres. In the 200m, she clocked 24.54secs to take the bronze behind the Japanese couple Emiko Konishi and Tomi Ohsaka. Her silver came in the 4x100m relay in which the Philippines team was placed second behind the Malaysia following the disqualification of the winning Japanese team.
At the end of the 1981 season, Lydia De Vega became the undisputed star of the 11th SEA Games in Manila. She assured for the gold medals in the 200m and 400m with outstanding 23.54secs in the shorter distance ( only Chi Cheng was faster in Asia ever ) and with 54.75secs in the metric quarter mile. Silver medals in both relay events completed her success but again showed the danger of being burdened with too many races at the same occasion.
After leaving school and taking up studies in PE at the Far Eastern University in Manila, Lydia De Vega also started an interesting job as a film actress; first in a movie showing the slow but steady progress of an athlete from the modest very beginnings at grassroot level up to setting records and winning gold medals. Her father, Francisco De Vega, who is also her coach, expressed his views about Lydia?s engagements when asked about her future plans, ?Studies first, Sports second, Film third.?
Gold medals were of course also on Lydia?s programme for 1982. Unchallenged again she won herself a triple crown in the 2nd ASEAN Cup in Kuala Lumpur with times of 11.8secs for the 100m, 24.2secs for the 200m and 55.0secs for the 400 metres. Having also won a bronze with her team in the 4x400m relay she had to cancel her participation in the sprint relay due to to slight injury which she got in the 400 metres. This was only three weeks prior to the 9th Asian Games in New Delhi.
In the Indian capital, Lydia seemed to be all right again when she won her heat in the 100m in excellent 11.77secs and clipped off another 1/100secs winning the finals from India?s P. T. Usha (11.95secs) and Korea?s Mo Myung Hee (11.99secs), both of her opponents never being able to endanger the fleet-footed track queen from the Philippines. But Lydia had to cancel her participation in the 200m due to new pains caused by her old injury after her triumphant showing in the 100 metres.
And this is how Lydia De Vega, who is a keen singer in her spare time, who was born in December 1964 in Meycauayan Bulacan, and who stands 1.68 metres at a weight of 61.0 kg, developed so far;
Year????????? Age?????????????? 100m????????? 200m????????? 400m
1978????????? 14 years???????????? 13.2?????????????? 27.5
- 1979????????? 15 years???????????? 12.1?????????????? 26.6??????????????? 58.8
1980????????? 16 years???????????? 12.0?????????????? 24.53????????????? 54.6
1981????????? 17 years???????????????? -????????????????? 23.54???????????? 54.75
1982????????? 18 years???????????? 11.76??????????? 24.20?????????????? 55.0
article from http://www.js-athletics.com/welcome/about_us/coaches/coach_diay.html
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Filed under: Uncategorized Tagged: | 100m, ASEAN Cup, ASEAN University Games, asian athletics, Asian Games, Athletics, Gitong Aloy, IAAF, Lydia de Vega, Michael Keon, PATAFA, Philippine athletics, philippine sports, Philippine track and field, philippine track records, PSC, SEA GAMES, sprinting, track and field
Source: http://pinoymiler.wordpress.com/2012/02/21/lydia-de-vega-mercado-legends-of-track-and-field/
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