Showing posts with label training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label training. Show all posts

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Youth football training, an upset refrain in Vietnam

Vietnam Football Federation (VFF) Nguyen Trong Hy mentioned youth training again, citing it as one of the targets of the nation in the future to brace up national football. Yet, the issue has actually been named long ago this decade.

Hy gave Tuoi Tre an interview on Wednesday.

Do you think that the early exit of Vietnam at this month’s Suzuki Cup is rooted from sloppy youth training?

That’s right. Youth training has long relied on state budget. It is rooted from the lack of legal binding in protecting lawful rights of individual investors for players’ transfer after their graduation.

Thus, it has discouraged individuals from investing in football training.

We are now focusing on building up such regulations to ensure fair achievements for individual investors in the field.

It seems that club owners now prefer buying talents to training youths for years

They do want to join in youth training but as I said their rights are not well observed now.

It requires great sum of money to build nearly perfect school as Aspire Academy in Qatar or Hoang Anh Gia Lai – Arsenal Football Academy in Vietnam’s Gia Lai Province.

Can you brief youth training in Vietnam during the past years?

If compared it to a tree, we can cover only the top of a tree by organizing tournaments for youth national teams to compete. This year, we set up 7 teams.

As for the root of a tree or daily professional training, clubs take care about it and get annually paid from the state budget.

Many provincial clubs have ignored youth training system. The Mekong Delta area with 12 provinces has only 3 youth teams.

Vietnam has 14 top-flight V-League clubs and 14 others playing at First Division but in total, we have only 17 youth teams competing at national youth leagues.

What should we do to change it?

In two or three years, the VFF will have sufficient fund -- from broadcasting copyrights and budget and we will re-establish a national U-19 league that all clubs at the top two leagues must send their young teams to partake.

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Saturday, November 27, 2010

Nine-year-old Dac Lac boy impresses

Whiz kid: Teenager Pham Thi Thu Huong practises with the Ha Noi-based T&T team. — VNS Photo Hoai Nam

Whiz kid: Teenager Pham Thi Thu Huong practises with the Ha Noi-based T&T team. — VNS Photo Hoai Nam

HA NOI — Nine-year-old Dinh Anh Hoang has spent two months training at the Ha Noi T&T table tennis centre.

Anh, from the Central Highlands province of Dac Lac, was recruited by the Ha Noi-based team following his impressive performance at the Junior Table Tennis Championship in June.

The boy trains in the 7-11 age group at the centre, which is home to 13 talented players from throughout the country. The centre also hosts 12-15 and 16-18 age groups.

"I enjoy life and the training at the centre. I hope to stand on the medal winner's podium someday, but I'll have to sweat during training now," Hoang said.

"My parents were worried about letting me go. But they're satisfied at the progress I've made in the less than two months I've spent away from home. They came here to visit, and saw me doing everything for myself.

"My day starts with early morning exercises, and five days a week playing table tennis with coaches in the morning and evening after school in the afternoon."

Hoang, whose home is 1,000km from Ha Noi, and his team-mates receive a full education at the Xuan La School on the banks of West Lake.

According to T&T coach Vu Manh Cuong, the club faces difficulties in luring players to help the team's development.

"We have enrolled only half of the team's target since 2008. It's because parents are hesitant about sending their kids to train as professional players," Cuong said.

"Hoang is the youngest player whose family we have managed to convince to be allowed to join the team. It was tough negotiating with his parents. However Hoang's parents were finally convinced by quality of the training facilities when they witnessed their son's progress in the sport and life," the 37-year-old coach added.

At the All-stars Junior tournament last month, the young team finished first in medal tally with two golds and one silver, beating off table tennis powerhouses Hai Duong and the Army.

The triumph resulted from the two years of hard work by the first set of juniors - the foundation of a professional team in future.

At the National Juniors Table Tennis Tournament in Vinh Long Province, Ta Hung Khanh and Pham Thi Thu Huong also bagged two golds to help the team finish fourth.

Two years ago, Vu Manh Cuong played for the T&T table tennis team at the National Table Tennis Championship, along with former national team members Nguyen Quy Tai and Do Tuan Son. However, the team withdrew from the championship a year later, due to a paucity of players after Tai and Son left.

"It was a disaster, as we had no players coming through at that time. We signed Tai and Son from Hai Duong as a spur of the moment decision and we paid the price for our lack of strength in depth."

"I recognise that a strong team must rest on a foundation of a good training system with elite kids, not just relying on mature players, as we did. We expect future successes with a generation of youngsters from our centre over next five years," the coach said.

T&T was the first team in Viet Nam to be owned by a business - the Ha Noi T&T Group, which transformed club's status from an amateur club into a professional outfit, just as the company had done for its football team.

However, the team currently survives off a modest investment of VND2 billion (US$103,000) per year, which is just half the required funding for a professional team.

The team have yet to own their own training centre for the two dozen athletes who will enrol for the five-year training period.

T&T Group chairman, Do Quang Hien also said the group has sought a co-operation agreement with the Ha Noi Sports Administration to establish a training centre at the My Dinh Sports Complex, where he hoped the table tennis team would be able to focus on a period of prolonged development.

"We want to train a generation of high quality table tennis players. They will grow up at our centre. We can buy the best Vietnamese players for immediate success, but it's a short-term vision and lacks a stable foundation," Hien said.

The T&T team coach said the first players from the centre would be sent to intensive training sessions in China over the next two years. — VNS

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Monday, September 27, 2010

Messi returns to training after injury

Barcelona's Argentine star Lionel Messi returned to training on Friday, five days after injuring his ankle, but away from the first-team squad, the club announced.

"Lionel Messi's road to recovery took a step forward on Friday as he strolled onto the training pitch for the first time to work on his individual program," Barcelona said on its website.

"He has moved up a gear and moved outside along with a coach and worked away from the rest of the first-team squad as he battles to regain full fitness."

Messi was stretchered off in the final minute of Sunday's league match against Atletico Madrid, which Barca won 2-1, following a robust tackle from Czech defender Tomasz Ujfalusi, who was sent off for the challenge.

Barcelona said Monday that Messi, the reigning FIFA World Player of the Year, would miss at least the next two matches after suffering ligament damage to his ankle.

Ujfalusi has apologized to Messi, saying he had "tried to go for the ball", but was "unlucky as my foot stepped on his ankle".

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