Showing posts with label Asiad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asiad. Show all posts

Friday, February 11, 2011

Vietnam yet to hand out cash awards to Asiad winners

Until February 10, some Vietnamese athletes bagging medals at the ASIAD 16 in China in November last year have yet received any cash awards promised previously by the government.

Wrestlers and Wushu martial artists were handed rewards before Tet but track-and-field athletes like Vu Van Huyen, Truong Thanh Hang, Vu Thi Huong, and some others have received nothing by now.

“It’s the first time I have won the Asiad silver medal with a cash prize of VND25 million ($1,280). I was eager to receive it before Tet to support my family and enjoy a joyful Tet holidays but…,” an athlete, who wants to be anonymous, spoke to Tuoi Tre.

“Except my monthly salary of VND1 million, I get nothing.”

“We have set up an emergency budget worth around VND21 billion to award high-profile athletes,” said Nguyen Thi Kim Mai – deputy director of the Vietnam National Sports Committtee.

But this Asiad saw more medal winners than in the previous games, so the budget still falls short of around VND 4 million, she added.

“The rest of the athletes are expected to receive reward money from now to the end of this month,” she promised.

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Viet Nam target ASIAD golds

HA NOI – Vietnamese track and field athletes can seriously consider winning gold medals at the next Asian Games, according to coach Nguyen Dinh Minh.

"After ASIAD silvers and bronzes, I think that Viet Nam's track and field athletes can now target golds. Before (the ASIAD) it was a crazy thought but now we are close and in other words we could have 'touched' it," said Minh, who coached Southeast Asian sprint queen Vu Thi Huong to 100m bronze and 200m silver medals last month.

Viet Nam also pocketed silvers in the women's 800m and 1,500m and a bronze in the men's decathlon.

These achievements were not thought of when the team departed for the Guangzhou games. All the athletes wanted was to try their best to win Viet Nam's first ever track and field medal at the games.

"My athletes went to ASIAD having not had the best preparations so both coaches and athletes were under pressure, hoping to win an elusive medal. The runners had to try harder every round for their best result," Minh said.

"Viet Nam is starting to become competitive at the Asian level where we have had some success, but it is still along way from being able to make an impact at world competitions. If we receive good support and make plans, some of our athletes will have a chance to not only win an ASIAD gold but also compete on the world stage," he confirmed. – VNS

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Saturday, November 27, 2010

VN exceeds previous tallies

 
Fast lane: Vietnamese sprinter Vu Thi Huong (fourth left) crosses the finishing line in the women's 200m final at the 16th Asian Games in Guangzhou. Huong won silver. — AFP/VNA Photo

Fast lane: Vietnamese sprinter Vu Thi Huong (fourth left) crosses the finishing line in the women's 200m final at the 16th Asian Games in Guangzhou. Huong won silver. — AFP/VNA Photo

 
Golden girl: Karate artist Le Bich Phuong (right) deals a three-point kick to the face of Japan's Kobayashi Miki to win a gold medal for Viet Nam. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Khanh

Golden girl: Karate artist Le Bich Phuong (right) deals a three-point kick to the face of Japan's Kobayashi Miki to win a gold medal for Viet Nam. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Khanh

 
Get a grip: Silver medallist Nguyen Thi Lua of Viet Nam (right) takes on gold medallist So Sim-hyang of North Korea during the women's freestyle 48kg wrestling competition. — AFP/VNA Photo

Get a grip: Silver medallist Nguyen Thi Lua of Viet Nam (right) takes on gold medallist So Sim-hyang of North Korea during the women's freestyle 48kg wrestling competition. — AFP/VNA Photo

HCM CITY — The Olympics sports of athletics, rowing, and wrestling shined at the 2010 Asian Games (ASIAD) in Guangzhou, China, providing moments for sports fans to savour after Viet Nam won more medals than in previous years.

With only one day to go, Viet Nam has won 33 medals of all types at the ASIAD 2010, but the country's current 23rd place on the medal tally is the second worst place Viet Nam has had since the country returned to the continental games in 1982.

Viet Nam did not compete at ASIAD 1986 in Seoul, South Korea, while Viet Nam's worst performance was at ASIAD 1990 in Beijing, China, when it did not win any medals.

Teenager Le Bich Phuong yesterday morning grabbed front-page headlines of both major newswires and printed newspapers nationwide when she ended the gold drought for the country at ASIAD and lifted the country four spots in the medal tally on Thursday.

The most noticeable achievement at ASIAD, however, was the phenomenal success in athletics and the unexpected medals from rowing and wrestling.

High marks

Like previous Asian Games, Vietnamese athletics teams came to the Asian Games in Guangzhou to compete and achieve the best possible result, or hope for at least a bronze medal.

"I came to the games with the hope for a bronze medal in the 100m event and a slight hope for the 200m event," said Vu Thi Huong, sprint queen of Southeast Asia.

But the team made a historic breakthrough when it won five medals, all of them in important events in athletics. Previously, Viet Nam had never won an athletics medal at ASIAD.

Vu Thi Huong opened the historic page for Viet Nam's athletics at ASIAD with a bronze medal in the women's 100m event on Tuesday.

One day later, Truong Thanh Hang, the medium-distance top runner in Southeast Asia, bettered Huong's achievement with a silver medal in the women's 1,500m.

The success reached a climax on Thursday when Huong and Hang won silvers in the women's 200m and 800m events, while Vu Van Huyen also brought home a bronze in the men's decathlon event after overcoming many powerhouses, including Japan and China.

Success gave confidence to the athletes and changed the sports officials' mentality towards Vietnamese athletes' opportunities in athletics at ASIAD.

"My bronze proved that athletes from Southeast Asia can compete with other athletes from across Asia," Huyen said.

"Athletics achieved a breakthrough at ASIAD this year and this proved that it was not a matter of small or big size. It showed how building a good training programme and talented athletes matter to our sport at the moment," said Le Quy Phuong, head of Viet Nam's sports delegation at ASIAD.

Rowing took sports supporters by surprise with two silver medals in the women's double scull and lightweight quadruple scull events, with four of six rowers making their debut in the continental games.

"The thing that makes us happy after winning medals at ASIAD is that more people know about us and our rowing club. We are very happy about that," said rower Tran Thi Sam.

Wrestling also won its first medal at ASIAD when 19-year-old Nguyen Thi Lua won a silver medal in the women's 48kg freestyle event.

Viet Nam's women's chess team ended with a bronze medal at the Asian Games after a loss yesterday to eventual gold-medal winner, China.

Sprinter Vu Thi Huong and her team-mates failed to finish in top three in the women's 4x100m relay.

Their time was 44.77 seconds.

Thailand won in 44.09, ahead of China (44.22 and Japan (44.41).

Viet Nam has won one gold, 17 silver and 15 bronze medals to rank 23rd on the medals table. — VNS

Asian Games Medals Tally

Country/territory

Gold

Silver

Bronze

1 China

197

117

98

2 South Korea

75

63

91

3 Japan

48

73

94

4 Iran

20

14

25

5 Kazakhstan

18

23

37

6 India

14

17

33

7 Chinese Taipei 13

16

38

8 Uzbekistan

11

22

23

9 Thailand

11

9

32

10 Malaysia

9

18

14

11 Hong Kong

8

15

17

12 North Korea

6

10

19

13 Saudi Arabia

5

3

5

14 Bahrain

5

0

4

15 Indonesia

4

9

13

16 Singapore

4

7

6

17 Kuwait

4

6

1

18 Qatar

4

5

6

19 Philippines

3

4

9

20 Pakistan

3

2

3

21 Mongolia

2

5

9

22 Jordan

2

2

2

23 Viet Nam

1

17

15

24 Kyrgyzstan

1

2

2

25 Macao

1

1

4

26 Bangladesh

1

1

1

27 Tajikistan

1

0

3

28 Syria

1

0

1

29 Myanmar

0

5

3

30 UAE

0

4

1

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Sunday, November 7, 2010

Vietnamese athletes set off for Asiad 16

Vietnamese athletes set off for Asiad 16

Vietnam’s athlete delegation to the 16th Asian Games (Asiad 16) organised a departure ceremony in Hanoi on Nov. 7.


Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Thien Nhan attended the event,
encouraging the athletes to achieve good results at Asiad 16, scheduled
to take place in China ’s Guangxi province from Nov. 12-27.


Le Quy Phuong, Deputy General Director of the General Sports
Department and Head of the delegation, said Asiad 16 will be a big
challenge to the Vietnamese athletes.


However, they
are now ready to compete and expected to bring home from 4-6 gold
medals, helping the nation to rank in Top 15 at Asiad 16, Phuong added.


Vietnam is sending a 392-member delegation to
the games, including 260 athletes – the largest number so far – who will
compete in 29 sport and sub-sports events.


Experts
said Vietnam pins high hopes on its strong sports such as sepak
takraw, shooting, wushu, karate and chess, but it is likely to make
surprises in Olympics sports, namely track and field, swimming,
taekwondo and weightlifting./.

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