For Carlos Yulo and Ernie Gawilan, sport has long been more than a contest of medals. Their journeys have become platforms for discipline, representation, and service, with both Filipino athletes continuing to take part in a regional program that links elite performance with community-building initiatives ahead of the Aichi-Nagoya 2026 Asian Games and Asian Para Games.
Yulo, the Philippines’ Olympic gymnastics champion, and Gawilan, one of the country’s most accomplished Paralympic swimmers, are among seven Asian athletes included in the refreshed roster of Toyota’s Global Team Toyota Athletes program. While the line-up spans several Southeast Asian countries, the continued participation of the two Filipino standouts places the Philippines at the center of a broader effort to use sport as a tool for youth development, inclusion, and social impact.
The program brings together athletes not only for their achievements in competition, but also for their ability to inspire communities beyond the playing field. Its central initiative, called the Dual Hero Project, pairs each athlete with a Toyota-supported community project connected to their personal story, allowing their influence to extend to young athletes, persons with disabilities, environmental advocates, and local communities.
For Gawilan, that mission has taken shape through a nationwide coastal cleanup and mangrove restoration effort. The initiative mobilized more than 1,300 volunteers across 33 sites and led to the planting of over 10,000 mangroves. For a swimmer whose life and career have been closely tied to water, the project reflects a full-circle advocacy: protecting the same natural environment that helped shape his athletic journey.
Yulo, meanwhile, has helped inspire the next generation through the “Start Your Impossible” Gymnastics Camp, a youth development initiative designed to give aspiring gymnasts access to mentorship, training, and encouragement from one of the country’s most successful athletes. The camp aims to help young Filipino gymnasts see a clearer path toward their own ambitions, while reinforcing the values of discipline, persistence, and confidence.
Together, Yulo and Gawilan represent two sides of Philippine sporting excellence: one pushing the boundaries of gymnastics on the world stage, the other showing the strength and visibility of para sport. Their involvement also highlights the growing recognition of athletes as community leaders whose influence can help open opportunities for others.
The 2026 roster includes two new para-athletes from Indonesia and Malaysia, joining returning athletes from the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. The wider team reflects the increasing prominence of both able-bodied and para-athletes across Asia, as well as the role of regional programs in building a more inclusive sporting culture.
Toyota Motor Asia said the initiative forms part of its regional “Move Your World” platform, which promotes mobility not only as physical movement, but also as access, opportunity, and participation. Through the athlete program, the company supports sports figures whose work can help create lasting impact in the communities that shaped them.
As preparations continue for the 20th Asian Games Aichi-Nagoya 2026, the program’s objective is not limited to competitive readiness. It also seeks to show how sport can create access, encourage participation, and support causes that matter to athletes and their communities.
For the Philippines, the continued involvement of Yulo and Gawilan offers a timely reminder that athletic success can carry impact far beyond the podium. Through youth camps, environmental action, and advocacy for inclusion, their stories show how Filipino athletes can help move communities forward while preparing to once again represent the country on the regional stage.
