Showing posts with label bronze medal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bronze medal. Show all posts

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Top sportspeople to be honoured

Hundreds of journalists and sports aficionados cast their votes for the athletes and coaches of the year in Ha Noi, Danang and HCMC Thursday.

Track and field athletes, who excelled at the Asian Games in Guangzhou, China last year, are expected to dominate this years awards for outstanding sporting achievements.

The annual awards were launched 33 years ago and have become an indispensable part of the sporting calendar.

Notable performances at the Guangzhou Games came from sprinter Vu Thi Huong, who won a bronze medal in the women's 100m and a 200m silver; Truong Thanh Hang, who won silvers in the 800 and 1,500m and bronze medal decathlete Vu Van Huyen.

Karateist Le Bich Phuong, who won Viet Nam's only gold medal to salvage Vietnamese pride in the martial arts competitions at the Games, is likely to win the poll.

Other candidates for honours include men's chess player Le Quang Liem, shooter Ha Minh Thanh and Youth Olympics weightlifting gold medallist Thach Kim Tuan.

Voters also nominated their choices for Viet Nam's best coaches and disabled athletes in yesterday's poll.

The awards are jointly organised by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union, the Viet Nam Fund for Young Talent Support and The Thao Vietnam (Vietnam Sports) newspaper.

The final results will be officially announced this week, while a gala night to honour athletes and coaches will be held in Ha Noi next month.

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Top sportspeople to be honoured

Hundreds of journalists and sports aficionados cast their votes for the athletes and coaches of the year in Ha Noi, Danang and HCMC Thursday.

Track and field athletes, who excelled at the Asian Games in Guangzhou, China last year, are expected to dominate this years awards for outstanding sporting achievements.

The annual awards were launched 33 years ago and have become an indispensable part of the sporting calendar.

Notable performances at the Guangzhou Games came from sprinter Vu Thi Huong, who won a bronze medal in the women's 100m and a 200m silver; Truong Thanh Hang, who won silvers in the 800 and 1,500m and bronze medal decathlete Vu Van Huyen.

Karateist Le Bich Phuong, who won Viet Nam's only gold medal to salvage Vietnamese pride in the martial arts competitions at the Games, is likely to win the poll.

Other candidates for honours include men's chess player Le Quang Liem, shooter Ha Minh Thanh and Youth Olympics weightlifting gold medallist Thach Kim Tuan.

Voters also nominated their choices for Viet Nam's best coaches and disabled athletes in yesterday's poll.

The awards are jointly organised by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union, the Viet Nam Fund for Young Talent Support and The Thao Vietnam (Vietnam Sports) newspaper.

The final results will be officially announced this week, while a gala night to honour athletes and coaches will be held in Ha Noi next month.

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Friday, January 7, 2011

Top sportspeople to be honoured

Top sportspeople to be honoured

Hundreds of journalists and sports
aficionados cast their votes for the athletes and coaches of the year in
Hanoi, Da Nang and HCM City on Jan. 6.


Track and field athletes, who excelled at the Asian Games in Guangzhou, China last year, are expected to dominate this years awards for
outstanding sporting achievements.


The annual awards were launched 33 years ago and have become an indispensable part of the sporting calendar.


Notable performances at the Guangzhou Games came from sprinter Vu Thi
Huong, who won a bronze medal in the women's 100m and a 200m silver;
Truong Thanh Hang, who won silvers in the 800 and 1,500m and bronze
medal decathlete Vu Van Huyen.


Karateist Le Bich
Phuong, who won Viet Nam's only gold medal to salvage Vietnamese
pride in the martial arts competitions at the Games, is likely to win
the poll.


Other candidates for honours include men's
chess player Le Quang Liem, shooter Ha Minh Thanh and Youth Olympics
weightlifting gold medallist Thach Kim Tuan.


Voters also nominated their choices for Vietnam's best coaches and disabled athletes in Jan. 6's poll.


The awards are jointly organised by the Ministry of Culture, Sports
and Tourism, the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union, the Vietnam Fund for
Young Talent Support and The Thao Vietnam (Vietnam Sports) newspaper.


The final results will be officially announced this
week, while a gala night to honour athletes and coaches will be held in
Hanoi next month. /.

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Thursday, December 16, 2010

Badminton player wins second Asian gold

HA NOI — Badminton player Pham Hoang Thang beat China's Tian Shiwei 21-19, 21-9 in the men's singles final to win gold at the Asian Para Games in Guangzhou, China yesterday.

Earlier, Thang defeated Thailand's Meepian Subpong 2-1 in semi-final and Indian Dillashwar Rao 2-0 in quarter-final.

Wheelchair racer Nguyen Thanh Thao finished second in the women's 100m with a time in 20.16 seconds, two hundredth of a second faster than Chinese Zhou Hong Zhuan, who came third.

China's Hung Lisha won gold in 17.83sec.

Trinh Cong Luan, 38, took a silver in the men's shot-put with a 10.05m attempt in the cerebral palsy category yesterday.

Gold medal went to Iran's Bagheri Jeddi Jalil, who achieved a 10.89m put, while his team-mate Zqout Khamis came third.

Wheelchair badminton player Truong Ngoc Binh bagged a bronze medal after a 2-0 (21-12, 21-14) loss to Chan Ho Yuen from Hong Kong.

The 20-year-old Cao Ngoc Hung also ranked third for the bronze medal in the men's discuss yesterday.

On Tuesday, swimmer Vo Thanh Tung won a gold in the men's 50m freestyle. Viet Nam rank 11th in medal tally with two golds, two silvers and four bronzes after the third day of competition. — VNS

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Swimmer tastes freestyle gold at Asdian Para Games

Swimmer Vo Thanh Tung clocked a time in 35.56sec to win a gold in the
men's 50m freestyle at the Asian ParaGames for disabled athletes in
Guangzhou, China, on Dec. 14.


Tung, 25, was faster than Siga
Tamery from Malaysia, who came in second with 38.68sec, and Kaewkham
Voravit of Thailand, in third with 39.93sec at Aoti Aquatics Centre.


It's the first gold for Vietnam in the second day of competition.


Tung competes in the 50m butterfly on Dec . 15 and 100m freestyle on Dec. 16.


Earlier,
Nguyen Anh Tuan only managed a bronze medal in the men's long jump with
a 5.33m leap, 63cm behind gold medallist China's Li Duan.


Thailand's Punthong Jakkit grabbed the silver with 5.38m.


On Dec 13, weightlifter Nguyen Thi Hong bagged a bronze medal in the women's weightlifting.


ietnam team now ranks in 10th place in the medal tally.


At
the send-off ceremony in Hanoi, sponsors announced they would provide
cash awards of 20 million VND (1,000 USD) to gold medal winners, in
addition to a 25 million VND(1,200 USD) award from the Government./.

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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Swimmer tastes freestyle gold

Lapping it up: Swimmer Vo Thanh Tung secures the first gold, and the second medal of Vietnamese team, at the Asian Para Games in Guangzhou, China. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Truong

Lapping it up: Swimmer Vo Thanh Tung secures the first gold, and the second medal of Vietnamese team, at the Asian Para Games in Guangzhou, China. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Truong

HA NOI — Swimmer Vo Thanh Tung clocked a time in 35.56sec to win a gold in the men's 50m freestyle at the Asian ParaGames for disabled athletes in Guangzhou, China, yesterday.

Tung, 25, was faster than Siga Tamery from Malaysia, who came in second with 38.68sec, and Kaewkham Voravit of Thailand, in third with 39.93sec at Aoti Aquatics Centre.

It's the first gold for Viet Nam in the second day of competition.

Tung competes in the 50m butterfly today and 100m freestyle tomorrow.

Earlier, Nguyen Anh Tuan only managed a bronze medal in the men's long jump with a 5.33m leap, 63cm behind gold medallist China's Li Duan.

Thailand's Punthong Jakkit grabbed the silver with 5.38m.

On Monday, weightlifter Nguyen Thi Hong bagged a bronze medal in the women's weightlifting.

Viet Nam team ranks in 10th place in the medal tally.

At the send-off ceremony in Ha Noi, sponsors announced they would provide cash awards of VND20 million (US$1,000) to gold medal winners, in addition to a VND25 million ($1,200) award from the Government. — 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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Vietnam wins last bronze at ASIAD 16

Vietnam won another bronze medal on Nov. 26, closing the 16th Asian
Games (ASIAD) with one gold, 17 silver and 15 bronze medals, ranking
23rd in the medal tally after 13 days of competition in Guangzhou,
China.


The bronze was earned by chess players Hoang Thi Bao Tram, Pham Thi Thao
Nguyen, Nguyen Thi Thanh An, Nguyen Thi Mai Huong and Nguyen Thi Tuong
Van in the women’s team event.


The same day, karate
martial artist Nguyen Minh Phung triumphed over his rivals from
Tajikistan and Qatar in the men’s 75kg category. However, he lost 0-1 to
China and 3-4 to Kim Do Won from the Republic of Korea in the battle
for the bronze medal.


Meanwhile, female karate
martial artist Bui Thi Trieu won 6-0 over Nepal in the 61kg category in
the first round of eight, but lost to her Uzbekistan opponent in the
next round.


Wrestlers Luong Thi Quyen and Pham Thi
Hue in the women’s 63kg and 55kg category, respectively, performed
unsuccessfully in the first round of eight. Wrestler Tran Thi Hoa also
failed to win a bronze after losing to rival Manyurova Guzel from
Kazakhstan in the women’s 72kg category.


The majority of medals belonged to China with 192 gold, 113 silver and 96 bronze, followed by the Republic of Korea and Japan./.

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Friday, November 26, 2010

Vu Thi Huong makes history in ASIAD with bronze medal

Japan's Momoko Takahashi (R), Vietnam's Vu Thi Huong (C) and Uzbekistan's Guzel Khubbieva run their women's 100m final at the 16th Asian Games in Guangzhou, Guangdong province on Monday - Photo: Reuters
HCMC – Vietnam’s sprinter Vu Thi Huong won the bronze medal in the women’s 100m category of the track and field event at the 16th Asian Games (ASIAD) in Guangzhou, China on Monday.

It was the country’s first medal in track and field competition since Vietnam began participating in Asia’s biggest sporting event in Seoul in 1986.

Asian champion Fukushima Chisato from Japan secured the gold with 11’’33 while Khubbieva Guzel from Uzbekistan took the silver as she finished with 11’’34.

Vu Thi Huong, who earned a gold medal in the women’s 60m category at Asian Indoor Games in Vietnam this year, and her teammate Le Ngoc Phuong reached the final round. However, Huong claimed the bronze as she was clocked in 11’’43. Phuong just crossed line at the bottom with 11’’76.

Earlier, Vu Thi Huong came first in group 1 of the semifinal round with 11’’46 at the 100 meter event while Le Ngoc Phuong just finished fifth in group 2 in the same category.

In boxing event, Vietnamese fighters exited from the competition when Nguyen Thi Tuyet Mai was 3-9 knocked out by Shinmoto Aya from Japan in the quarterfinals of the women’s under 51kg category and Ngo Thi Chung was 1-10 beaten by Yun Kum Ju from North Korea in the quarterfinals of the women’s under 60kg category.

Vietnamese women’s sepaktakraw team had an 21-19, 23-21 victory over Myanmar in the women’s regu event on Monday. The Vietnamese side will meet hosts China on Tuesday before facing archrivals Thailand in the round-robin competition.

The Vietnamese team comprising Dao Trong Kien, Hoang Ngoc Nhat and Vu Van Dung suffered a 199-226 loss to Japanese team in the men’s archery event while Le Thi Bich, Nguyen Thi Nguyet and Nguyen Thi Tuoi lost 22-45 to Japanese fencers in the women’s team foil category of the fencing event.

In men’s individual road race, rider Bui Minh Thuy failed to clinch the medal when he completed the 180-kilometer stage in four hours, 14 minutes and 55.15 seconds, ranking at fifth place while his compatriot Mai Nguyen Hung did not complete his competition.

Wong Kam Po from Hong Kong bagged the gold with 4:14:54.18, Miyazawa Takashi from Japan gained the silver with 4:14:54.33 and Chinese rider Zou Rongxi took the bronze with 4:14:54.96.

Vietnam took one more bronze medal in the tenth competition day, dropping to 25th in the ranking table with 11 silvers and 12 bronzes.

China still leads with 154 golds, 77 silvers and 73 bronzes, followed by South Korea with 61 golds, 51 silvers and 66 bronzes and Japan with 32 golds, 59 silvers and 67 bronzes.

Medals Standings (at 10:00 p.m. Vietnamese time)

Country

Gold

Silver

Bronze

Total

1

154

77

73

304

2 South Korea

61

51

66

178

3 Japan

32

59

67

158

4 Iran

12

8

15

35

5 Hong Kong

8

13

12

33

6 Chinese Taipei

8

9

29

46

7 Thailand

7

7

22

36

8 India

6

12

18

36

9 Malaysia

6

11

8

25

10 Kazakhstan

5

13

23

41

25 Vietnam

0

11

12

23

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