Showing posts with label home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label home. Show all posts

Saturday, January 8, 2011

“Xuan Que Huong” welcomes OVs returning home for Tet

“Xuan Que Huong” welcomes OVs returning home for Tet
A special programme will take place at the
southern gate of Doan Mon of the Thang Long Royal Citadel in Hanoi
on Jan. 28 to welcome Vietnamese expatriates who return home for 2011
Lunar New Year festival.


According to Pham Hai Bang, Head
of the Culture-Information Department of the State Committee for
Overseas Vietnamese (SCOV), the event, entitled “Xuan Que Huong”
(Homeland Spring), will see the presence of 700-800 overseas Vietnamese
together with high-ranking Party and State leaders and representatives
of foreign diplomats.


This year’s programme is to
celebrate the successful hosting of the 1,000th anniversary of Thang
Long-Hanoi and the 11th National Party Congress. It is also to mark
100 years since Ho Chi Minh left Nha Rong Wharf on board a
French ship to seek ways to liberate the country and 60 years since he
returned homeland, Bang said.


The programme, jointly held by
SCOV under the Foreign Ministry and other related agencies, will start
with a incense burning ceremony at the Kinh Thien palace in the royal
citadel.


Vietnamese artists at home and abroad will perform at the programme./.

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Sunday, October 24, 2010

Leaders Chelsea break club record as Spurs held

Goals by Florent Malouda and Salomon Kalou and a club record eighth consecutive home clean sheet helped Chelsea open a five-point lead in the Premier League with a 2-0 win over Wolverhampton Wanderers on Saturday.

Malouda struck his seventh league goal of the season and Kalou came off the bench to seal victory after the break for Carlo Ancelotti's side whose early-season torrent of goals has slowed to a trickle in recent weeks.

Tottenham Hotspur rose to third, seven points behind Chelsea, after Dutchman Rafael van der Vaart made it five goals in seven since joining the north London club.

The midfielder notched the equalizer in a 1-1 draw at home to improving Everton.

West Bromwich Albion continued their dream start to life back in the top flight, moving into fourth place with a 2-1 home defeat of Fulham while Birmingham City beat Blackpool 2-0.

Sunderland edged Aston Villa 1-0 and Wigan Athletic's home match against Bolton Wanderers ended 1-1. West Ham United stayed bottom after a 2-1 home defeat by Newcastle United.

Second-placed Manchester City can reduce Chelsea's lead on Sunday when they host Arsenal while Manchester United, down in sixth spot, end their turbulent week at Stoke City.

Liverpool are also at home against Blackburn Rovers on Sunday.

Chelsea were not the fluent force that racked up 21 goals in their opening five league matches but were watertight at the back against Wolves.

It took them 23 minutes to break through against a lively visiting side and it was not until the 81st minute that Wolves were finally subdued.

"It was a tough game because we didn't play so well," Ancelotti told reporters. "We suffered from some dangerous situations in the first half and in the second half we conceded too many shots from distance.

"We could have closed the game before the second goal, we had a lot of chances, but we didn't play as well as we usually do."

Anelka enterprise

The opening goal owed much to the enterprise down the left of Nicolas Anelka. He played in Yuri Zhirkov and the Russian pulled the ball back into the path of Malouda who was unmarked eight meters out.

Chelsea have not conceded a league goal at home since March but Wolves came close to breaching the Blue wall on several occasions, most notably when Stephen Hunt's header was cleared off the line by Michael Essien.

Kevin Doyle also forced keeper Petr Cech to save a low shot and there was a growing sense of unease in the crowd before Kalou made it 2-0 after Essien and Didier Drogba linked up well.

Ancelotti picked out right back Jose Bosingwa for special praise after the Portuguese made his first league start for a year following a serious knee injury.

"Bosingwa was one of the best players on the pitch," said the coach. "He put a lot of pressure on in the second half by pushing up without the ball and he had opportunities to score.

"He played very well and he is an important player for us in the future."

Promoted West Bromwich are proving surprise packages under the astute management of former Chelsea midfielder Roberto di Matteo.

"This is beyond my expectations," Di Matteo said after his side came from behind to beat Fulham with goals by Youssuf Mulumbu and Marc-Antoine Fortune.

"I have absolutely no idea if we can keep it going. There is no secret -- it's hard work."

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Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Inter held to goalless draw by Juve

Inter Milan drew 0-0 with bitter Serie A rivals Juventus on Sunday after the two tired sides failed to end a San Siro stalemate despite decent chances.

The result meant champions Inter finished the weekend in second spot, two points behind new leaders Lazio who beat Brescia 1-0 in Rome to move on to 13 points from six games.

Inter had the best opportunity when Marco Storari kept out Maicon's header from a Wesley Sneijder free kick but seventh-placed Juve will feel they deserved the point.

Inter coach Rafael Benitez, in his first "Derby of Italy", named the same side which beat Werder Bremen 4-0 in the Champions League in midweek so fit-again striker Diego Milito had to be content with starting on the bench.

However, the inexperienced Jonathan Biabiany was injured on the half-hour mark so the Argentine came on and had two good chances, one from a cross from the again excellent Samuel Eto'o.

Juventus also had a slight surprise in their starting lineup with Fabio Quagliarella being preferred to talisman Alessandro Del Piero and the striker had three decent sniffs at goal.

The build-up to the match between Inter, who have won the last five league titles, and Juve, Italy's best supported and most successful domestic club, had been dominated by continuing rows over the 2006 match-fixing scandal and fans were hyped up.

Minor trouble between supporters was reported outside the not-quite-packed San Siro before kickoff but the encounter on the pitch was rather tame.

Juve's new winger Milos Krasic forced Julio Cesar into two smart saves although Vincenzo Iaquinta was rightly ruled offside when he netted the Serbian's cross.

“No joking”

Lazio hit top spot earlier on Sunday, after Stefano Mauri netted just before the break when Hernanes, bought from Sao Paulo and already looking like one of the Serie A signings of the season, used his trickery to release the recalled Italy midfielder.

"We have to reach 40 points before anything else, no joking," experienced coach Edy Reja told Sky, still fearing another relegation dogfight for the 1974 and 2000 champions.

Palermo's new Slovenian midfielder Josip Ilicic has also made a big impression in his first weeks in Italy and scored his third league goal with a spectacular left-footed shot to set up a 2-1 win at struggling Fiorentina.

It was a day for midfielders breaking forward and Marek Hamsik made third-placed Napoli's pressure tell by bagging the second-half opener in a 2-0 home victory over AS Roma, who were runners-up last term but now lie second from bottom.

Claudio Ranieri's Roma beat Inter at home last weekend for their first win of the campaign but they threatened little in Naples where the home side doubled their lead through Juan's own goal.

Luca Toni headed home deep into stoppage time to give Genoa a 2-1 home win over Bari while Sampdoria drew 1-1 at Bologna.

Chievo drew 0-0 with Cagliari and Lecce beat Catania 1-0 before Serie A stopped for the international break.

AC Milan, in fourth, edged past Parma 1-0 on Saturday.

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Monday, October 4, 2010

Sunderland thwart Manchester United title hopes

Manchester United's faltering-away form continued to blight their Premier League title challenge when they were held to a 0-0 draw at Sunderland on Saturday.

The match started 20 minutes late after a burst pipe damaged their dressing room causing part of the ceiling to collapse.

But there was nothing so destructive about the United attack, as a well-disciplined home defense held them to a fourth successive away draw in the league this season.

Chelsea, who host Arsenal on Sunday, are top with 15 points, followed by United on 13 and Arsenal on 11. United have dropped eight points in their opening four matches on their travels.

Tottenham Hotspur are fifth on 11 points after coming from behind to beat Aston Villa 2-1, Everton got their first win this season with a 2-0 success at Birmingham City and West Ham United now prop up the table after a 1-1 home draw with Fulham.

Hit post

Sunderland, who have now drawn their last four league games, went closest to scoring at the Stadium of Light when Boudewijn Zenden hit the post in the first half, but United manager Alex Ferguson said he was happy to leave with a point.

"I think you have to give credit to Sunderland, their home record this season has been fantastic," he told Sky Sports.

"The most important thing for us to do was not lose a goal because that's the area we've been weak in away games this season."

He said the incident before the match, when part of the roof of the visitors' dressing room collapsed, was not an issue.

"The staff at Sunderland were fantastic, and it did not disturb our build-up to the match very much."

Van the man

Rafael van der Vaart's rip-roaring week continued when he scored both goals as Spurs won at White Hart Lane to inflict a first defeat on Gerard Houllier since he became Villa manager.

Villa took the lead when Marc Albrighton tapped in at the far post after 16 minutes to score his first goal for the club.

However, Spurs stormed back when Van der Vaart headed them level in stoppage time at the end of the first half and put them ahead with a well-taken strike 15 minutes from time.

The Dutchman's performance followed his adventures on Wednesday when he missed a penalty, scored a goal and got sent off in the Champions League win over Twente Enschede.

Everton, the only one of the 92 League clubs without a win before kickoff, ended that unwanted record when they climbed off the bottom of the table by beating Birmingham at St Andrews.

Roger Johnson put through his own net after 54 minutes and Tim Cahill added the second with a header for his 100th English League goal after the 90th as Birmingham lost at home in the league for the first time since September last year.

The victory lifted Everton into 17th place and sent their local arch-rivals Liverpool into the relegation zone at least until they host Blackpool on Sunday.

Fulham's Clint Dempsey, who caused England goalkeeper Robert Green huge embarrassment when he scored a soft goal against him for the United States in the World Cup in June, beat him again after 33 minutes when he scored against West Ham United at Upton Park -- but this time Green had no chance of saving.

Dempsey controlled the ball with his chest before firing home from 12 yards. Frederic Piquionne equalized for the Hammers early in the second half and the match ended 1-1. West Ham have five points, the same as Wolves who lost 2-0 at Wigan Athletic.

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Thursday, September 30, 2010

Europe's football underdogs return to form

Unheralded Mainz top the table in Germany, Cesena have led Serie A, Saint-Etienne are back at the summit of the French first division and Barcelona were beaten, at home, by minnows Hercules.

Strange things are afoot in European football.

Over the early weeks of the season, in every major league on the continent, the big guns have struggled and the lesser lights have seized their chances.

Mainz beat reigning German champions Bayern Munich 2-1 on Saturday to record their sixth win in six league matches.

Their completely unexpected form has taken them to the top of the Bundesliga for the first time in their history, while Bayern are already 10 points off the pace in ninth.

"We don't feel bigger than we are," said Mainz coach Thomas Tuchel, whose charges are just one win short of the league record for consecutive wins at the start of a season.

Last season's German runners-up Schalke, meanwhile, opened the campaign with four straight defeats and sit second from bottom with a single win to their name.

An almost identical fate has befallen Roma, who are also in the relegation zone despite having finished second in the Italian top flight last term.

Lyon, second in France last season, are currently 18th with just one win from seven league games, while five-time European champions Liverpool are only three points off the bottom of England's Premier League.

For the teams bucking the trends in the early weeks of the 2010-11 campaign, the common denominators are belief, heart and good old-fashioned hard work.

"There's no particular secret to our game. We are playing with team spirit," said Cesena coach Massimo Ficcadenti, whose promoted side briefly topped the Italian standings after three matches.

"We are not looking at the table. We just want to stay up."

A similar refrain resounds in France, where 10-time champions Saint-Etienne have returned to the Ligue 1 summit for the first time since February 1982, despite having finished in 17th place for the past two seasons.

Les Verts forward Bakary Sako credits coach Christophe Galtier with the turnaround.

"Since his arrival, he's tried to create a team spirit," said Sako prior to his team's 1-0 win at neighbours Lyon on Saturday.

"He told us that, if we wanted to stay up, we'd only achieve it by collective effort."

The biggest shock of the season's early weeks was Barcelona's 2-0 loss at home to Hercules in their second league game.

It was the heaviest home defeat of Pep Guardiola's tenure and the Barcelona coach was full of praise for the La Liga newcomers, who are sitting snugly in mid-table after beating Sevilla 2-0 at the weekend.

"I congratulate Hercules," he said. "They came here and played well. They made it difficult for us and they got their reward."

Making life difficult, in the form of aggressive pressing, is increasingly the buzz tactic for unfancied teams taking on star-studded opposition.

Arsenal fell to a 3-2 defeat at home to promoted West Bromwich Albion in the Premier League on Saturday and victorious coach Roberto di Matteo credited a high-octane defensive effort for his side's unlikely triumph.

"We pressed them very high, in their half, all over the pitch," said the Italian. "We managed not to let them play their usual way."

It is a recurring theme. Mainz striker Adam Szalai said his side's "mission" against Bayern had been "to put the pressure on," while Cesena's 2-0 defeat of AC Milan earlier this month was described in the Italian press as a testament to the organization and work-rate of Ficcadenti's team.

Under-achieving heavyweights such as Bayern, Liverpool and Lyon seem to be paying the price for squads full of international players who have taken time to rediscover form and fitness after the rigors of the World Cup.

Teams like Mainz, Cesena, Saint-Etienne and Hercules, on the other hand, have been able to attack the campaign with a full pre-season behind them and a playing staff comprised of hungry, injury-free players.

The World Cup hangover theory can only be stretched so far, however.

Chelsea's players endured a disastrous tournament, with Nicolas Anelka sent home by France, Didier Drogba breaking his arm with Ivory Coast and Frank Lampard and Ashley Cole failing to impress once again for England.

And yet, prior to Saturday's defeat at Manchester City, the Premier League leaders had begun the campaign with five straight wins and an average of 4.2 goals scored per game.

Attributing the surprise results to the after-effects of the World Cup would also be doing a disservice to the industry, attitude and ambition of the 'little' teams who refuse to follow the script.

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