Showing posts with label used. Show all posts
Showing posts with label used. Show all posts

Friday, February 11, 2011

FA Cup trophy to tour Vietnam next month

The FA Cup trophy of the Football Association Challenge Cup, commonly known as the FA Cup will be displayed in four venues across Vietnam next month under the auspices of trademarked Big Cola.

It follows an agreement signed on January 29 between the Football Association of England (FA) and the Vietnam Football Federation.

The exhibit will be held in four major cities of the nation -- Hanoi, Da Nang, Ho Chi Minh City and Can Tho.

A report by the FA shows that matches of the 140-year-old league, the oldest domestic football competition in the world, have been broadcast in 160 nations and territories in the world, with over 1.4 billion spectators. Of which, Asia-Pacific plays the biggest market with over 544 viewers of the games.

Sean McAuliffe, head of the FA’s Business Development Department, said what makes the FA league favorite in the world can be counted as its long-time tradition and large number of entrants.

All incomes for the FA league have been totally invested in building football infrastructure, improving organization and investing in participating clubs, he added.

The league

The FA Cup was first held in 1871–72. It involves clubs of all standards playing against each other, including "minnows" from lower divisions and giants from the English Premier League.

The holders of the FA Cup are Chelsea, who beat Portsmouth in the 2010 final to complete an FA Cup and League Double.

The number of the league’s entrants has increased greatly in recent years. In the 2004–05 season, 660 clubs entered the competition, beating the long-standing record of 656 from the 1921–22 season.

In 2005–06 this increased to 674 entrants, in 2006–07 to 687, in 2007–08 to 731 clubs, and for the 2008–09 and 2009–10 competitions it reached 762.

By comparison, the other major English domestic cup, the League Cup, involves only 92 members of the Premier League and Football League.

 cup fa 1

An eventful cup

The first FA Cup trophy, the 'little tin idol', was used from the inception of the Cup in 1871–72 until it was stolen while held by Aston Villa in 1895, and was never seen again. The FA fined Villa £25 (US$32) to pay for a replacement.

Almost 60 years later, the thief admitted that the cup had been melted down to make counterfeit half-crown coins.

The second trophy was a replica of the first, and was last used in 1910 before being presented to the FA's long-serving president Lord Kinnaird. It was sold at Christie's on 19 May 2005 for £420,000 ($675,500) to David Gold, the joint chairman of West Ham United FC.

A new, larger, trophy was bought by the FA in 1911 designed and manufactured by Fattorini's of Bradford and won by Bradford City in its first outing.

This trophy still exists but is now too fragile to be used, so an exact replica was made and has been in use since the 1992 final.

A "backup" trophy was made alongside the existing trophy in 1992, but it has not been used so far, and will only be used if the current trophy is lost, damaged or destroyed.

 cup fa 2

Related Articles

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

HCM City plans to save old colonial French villas

HCM City is planning to conserve its French-era villas which are
being razed one by one to make way for high-rise buildings.


Most of them are in Districts 1 and 3, with a high concentration being on Tu Xuong and Le Quy Don streets.


The Department of Construction is drawing up a list of surviving
villas and will hire Japanese consultants to draft a master plan for
conserving while also using them as offices, schools, restaurants and
hotels.


Ly Khanh Tam Thao, deputy head of the
Department of Planning and Architecture's municipal area management
division, said: "They should be protected from the creep of urbanisation
and from being pulled down for their valuable land."


Only ornate buildings like the city hall and the HCM City Opera House would be used for their original purpose, he said.


"Owners of villas will be allowed to build other structures at the
back but they must be responsible for protecting their facade and
interior."


But since traffic could become a problem
on roads leading to them if they were used as offices, schools,
restaurants or hotels, traffic infrastructure in their vicinity must be
modified, said Nguyen Van Chinh, director of the Southern Institute of
Traffic and Communications.


"Operating public transport to these places is a good way to reduce the number of private vehicles," he added.


Luong Hien Chung of the HCM City University of Transport said,
however, the villas' large yards should be used as parking lots for
visitors' vehicles.


Thao said villa owners should be
charged heavily for services and the money would be used to improve
traffic infrastructure in the vicinity.


Many villas house luxurious French restaurants./.

Related Articles