The three initial athletes for the 1924 Summer Olympics included Catalon, Taduran, and sprinter
David Nepomuceno. Nepomuceno and Catalon were considered "world-class athletes" by the
Philippine Olympian Association. Catalon and Taduran were gold medal winners at different editions of the
Far Eastern Championship Games; the former won ten and the latter won two in the lead-up to the Games. The PAAF held trials for their selection of athletes who would compete at the Games which were held on May 5, 1924 in
Manila. Nepomuceno and Catalon both ran the
100 yards in a credited time of 9.45 seconds at the trials to qualify for the Olympics. Their times were within one-fifth of a second of the
world record at that time held by
Jack Donaldson. Catalon and Nepomuceno trained in Manila in their preparations for the Games. Catalon was set to compete in the
men's 100 meters and
200 meters, while Taduran was set to compete in the
men's decathlon. Nepomuceno was the sole athlete that competed for the nation, and he participated in the men's 100 meters and 200 meters. Three weeks before the Games, Taduran injured his collarbone at a football game with American
G.I.s. He went to the Games as a representative for the nation as to his injury left him unable to compete. After a 33 day voyage to
Marseille, France, by sea, and a train ride to Paris, Nepomuceno and Catalon arrived a week before the opening ceremony for training. Contemporary reporter Rey Vergilio Lachica of the
Manila Bulletin described Nepomuceno as "dead tired" after the journey. Despite arriving in Paris, Catalon did not attend nor compete at the Games. After the voyage, a magazine quoted Nepomuceno saying: The final Philippine delegation to the 1924 Summer Olympics was composed of four people: Nepomuceno; Taduran; ==Opening ceremony and flag ruling==