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Metro Manila Turf Club, Inc. (MMTCI), operating as MetroTurf, is a horse racing institution in the Philippines. Located in Malvar and Tanauan , Batangas , the company was founded in 2013 and is served as an alternate horse racing hub alongside the Manila Jockey Club and the Philippine Racing Club .
In February 2013, the Metro Manila Turf Club, Inc. (also known as Metro Turf or MMTCI) opened, being the third world-class horse racing facility in the country. It operates at Malvar, Batangas. [10] Until the end of 2012, races were conducted every other Tuesdays to Sundays. The race venues were alternatively shuttled between PRCI and MJCI.
Radyo Pilipinas Live (2022–2024) Radyo Pilipinas News Today (2017–2018) Radyo Pilipinas Sports (2020) Radyo Peryodiko; Ronda Patrol Alas Pilipinas (2018) Sagip Kalikasan (2017–2019) Sentro Balita (2020, 2022–2023, hookup from PTV) Serbisyo Publiko; Serbisyong Coast Guard; Sports 918 (2020) Sulong Kaibigan; Tropang Bistag (2017–2022)
Founded in 1937 as the Santa Ana Turf Club in Makati, it is located at the Saddle and Clubs Leisure Park in Naic, Cavite where the Santa Ana Park racetrack is situated. Currently, it is one of the three racing clubs in the Philippines; the other two are the Manila Jockey Club Incorporated (MJCI), and the upstart Metro Manila Turf Club (MetroTurf).
People's Television Network (PTV) is a government television network owned by the Government of the Philippines and the main brand of People's Television Network, Inc. (PTNI), one of the attached agencies under the Presidential Communications Office (PCO).
Horse racing in the Philippines The sport as practiced in the country is flat racing on dirt; there are no turf tracks in the Philippines. Horse racing in the Philippines had its origins during the Spanish colonial era. For a decade in the late 1860s to 1870s, members of prominent families held "fun runs", racing Philippine ponies on a quarter ...
DZRH News Television airs the live video feed of DZRH programs, except selected radio dramas, the religious radio program Tinig ng Pagasa and during sign-off. It signs off every Sunday from 12:00 am to 4:00 am PHT and during Holy Week from Maundy Thursday to Black Saturday , thus showing its logo without audio instead.
The following year, on 3 November, Gamboa and his crew went to Adelaide, Australia for the live coverage of the Australian Grand Prix. On 15 May 1992, the show reported live from Speedway, Indiana in the United States about the tragic death of 27-year-old Filipino race car driver Jovy Marcelo during qualifications for the Indianapolis 500.