A Philippine teenager with a shy, crooked smile and
expressive eyebrows will perform on ice as the first figure skater ever to
represent a Southeast Asian country on Thursday.
Michael Christian Martinez, the lone athlete for the
Philippines, is an unlikely competitor from a country without snow.
Catapulted into the limelight after qualifying last year,
his entire home country, which has never won a medal in the Winter Olympics, is
rooting for him.
Martinez will compete in the men's figure skating program.
The top 24 skaters from that competition will move onto the final free skate
held on Friday.
"I'd love to qualify for the free skate [top 24]; that
would be a big accomplishment for me," Martinez, 17, said in an interview
with NBCOlympics.com.
"I don't know what placement I'll get because my
training is so different, but we'll see."
It's likely to be a David-versus-Goliath match-up. Facing
medal favorites such as Canada's Patrick Chan and Japan's Yuzuru Hanyu,
Martinez has not benefited from the sameintensive training as many of his
competitors.
Maria Teresa Martinez, his mother, said her son had full
training for two months before arriving in Sochi because of difficulties
funding his Olympic aspirations.
Ice skating is a costly endeavor with expenses for travel,
equipments and coaches.
His mother told CNN in an email that the family patched
together donations from a local shopping mall ice rink, friends and his skating
club. She said the family's life saving has been depleted and that their
family's farm in Luzon province had been damaged by typhoons last year.
If Martinez hadn't qualified for the Olympics in 2013, he
would've had to quit competitive skating because his family couldn't afford it,
his mother added.
"Now that he qualified, we are hoping we can finally
get support so he can continue, and try to qualify again in 2018, where he will
be more matured and more ready physically and mentally," she wrote.
Regardless of how he fares this week, Martinez has come a
long way.
Born in Paranaque City, Martinez was stricken with asthmatic
bronchitis at two months old. As a young boy, he struggled with sports because
of his asthma attacks.
"I couldn't take up any sport. I tried outdoor sports
when I was younger, but I easily got asthma attacks so I stopped," he said
in his Sochi Olympic athletes profile.
"I had asthma maintenance medicine when I started
skating, since the cold in the rink makes me sick too. But year after year, my
health keeps improving, so my mother fully supported me to continue skating.
She said it's better to spend the money on skating than in the hospital."
He got his first glimpse of skating after going to a
shopping mall with his mother at age 8. He became mesmerized when he saw
skaters spinning and jumping.
By age 12, he was competing in European junior competitions
and winning gold without a coach, his mother said.
In 2010, he began training in the United States with coaches
including John Nicks and Ilia Kulik, she said.
Martinez splits his time between Manila and Los Angeles.
In 2013, he came in fifth at the world Junior Championships
in Milan. He is currently ranked 30th by the International Skating Union.
Martinez does not have a dedicated practice rink in the
Philippines and has to use a public one, his mother said. In late January,
Martinez nursed an inflamed knee, saying it was likely caused by skating on
rough ice, according to an interview with Catholic News Service.
Martinez' social media accounts show a smile-prone teenager
flashing peace signs in photographs and having the time of his life in Sochi.