Saturday, September 4, 2010

Master Liem ranked 40th

HCM CITY — Grand Master Le Quang Liem's recent successes have propelled him 14 spots higher in the World Chess Federation's latest rankings released early this month.

With an Elo rating of 2694, Viet Nam's top player is now in the 40th place, the highest ranking achieved by a chess player so far. Magnus Carlsen of Norway is the world's top-ranked player with a rating of 2826.

Liem's remarkable success at the Sparkassen Chess Meet that took place in Dortmund, Germany in July.

Liem came in second in his debut at the super-tournament, which featured five world-class players – former World Chess Champion Vladimir Kramnik (World No 4), Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (6), Ruslan Ponomariov (14), Peter Leko (16), and Arkadij Naiditsch (51).

Liem was the top seed at the 2010 Asian Chess championship held in the Philippines in April, where he earned a ticket to the World Chess Championships next month in Italy.

The HCM City-based grand master, who is just 19, had in March become the first Vietnamese player to enter the top 50 in world rankings when he reached 42, winning the prestigious Aeroflot Open that featured 75 grandmasters and five international masters.

He had then slipped to 55th place before the latest surge. — VNS

Related Articles

Murray breezes on, Hurricane Earl a no-show

murray
Andy Murray of Britain hits a return to Dustin Brown of Jamaica during the US Open tennis tournament in New York, September 3, 2010
Photo: Reuters

Andy Murray need not have worried. The forecasters got it wrong on both fronts at the US Open on Friday.

While the wind picked up and there were a few fleeting drops of rain that caused a stoppage in play, Hurricane Earl never quite made an appearance at Flushing Meadows.

But Murray's second-round opponent, an unorthodox Jamaican he knew little about and was warned to expect the unexpected, did show up on center court but also ran out of puff.

With his dreadlocked hair, sleeveless shirt and baggy short, Dustin Johnson was an instant hit with the Arthur Ashe crowd but apart from a few fleeting moments in the first set, he was blown away, the Briton winning 7-5 6-3 6-0.

Murray, fearing the heavens might open at any time if the predicted wild weather arrived, did his best to finish the match as quickly as he could but ended up hitting the practice courts again because he wanted another workout.

"(There were) probably two rallies in the match that went past eight, nine shots," Murray said. "So I just went out and hit for 45 minutes just to get a bit of a rhythm, hit a lot of balls."

Friday was not a day for the underdogs. They gave the seeds moments of trouble but the big names in action all prevailed.

The defending women's champion Kim Clijsters recovered from a slow start to reel off 12 games in a row in her 6-3 6-0 third round win over Czech Petra Kvitova.

The Belgian struggled with her serve but still proved too much for Kvitova, the 27th seed, to handle.

Clijsters, who won the US Open in 2005 and 2009, has not lost a set in this year's tournament and is steadily improving aspects of her game.

"I think it's only a matter of a few little details I think in my game that I just want to improve," she said. "I'm trying to achieve the perfect match but a match like today gives me more satisfaction because I beat a good player without even playing my best tennis."

Clijsters will play unseeded Serb Ana Ivanovic in the round of 16 with Samantha Stosur or Elena Dementieva lurking in the quarterfinals.

Building momentum

Stosur, runner-up at the French Open in June and seeded fifth at Flushing Meadows, turned in an impressive display to defeat Italy's Sara Errani 6-2 6-3 in one hour 20 minutes.

The Australian came into the tournament under an injury cloud but is slowly building momentum and confidence.

"Once you get to this point, you never know what can happen," she said. "So if you keep playing well, you can find maybe the semis or finals.”

“If I've been there once, I definitely want to try to be there again."

Dementieva, a finalist at the US Open six years ago, booked her passage into the fourth round with a 7-5 6-2 victory over Slovakia's Daniela Hantuchova with 7-5 6-2 win.

The Russian won the Olympic gold medal in Beijing but has never won a grand slam singles title.

"I don't put any pressure on myself,” she said. “I have had a very successful career so far.”

"I'm definitely looking for the big title, but I'm just trying to work on my game."

French Open champion Francesca Schiavone replicated Roger Federer's stunning between-the-legs shot during her 6-1 7-5 third round victory over Alona Bondarenko of Ukraine.

John Isner and Sam Querry raised American hopes of a local winner in the men's draw when they both won.

Isner fired down 24 aces on his way to a 6-3 3-6 7-6 6-4 victory over Marco Chiudinelli but there were times during the match when he grimaced, still feeling the effects of turning his ankle trying to hit a jumping return off a serve into his body from David Nalbandian in Cincinnati.

Querry defeated Marc Granollers 6-2 6-3 6-4 and they almost had a third with qualifier only going down in a fifth set tiebreaker to Sergiy Stakhovsky.

Related Articles

Friday, September 3, 2010

Federer, Wozniacki lead US Open stars into third round

Federer

Number two seed Roger Federer of Switzerland returns a backhand to Andreas Beck of Germany during their US Open match in New York. Federer won 6-3, 6-4, 6-3.

Roger Federer and Caroline Wozniacki cruised into the third round of the US Open while Maria Sharapova, Novak Djokovic and Robin Soderling showed why they are title contenders as well.

Swiss second seed Federer, seeking his 17th Grand Slam crown and a seventh consecutive trip to the US Open final, beat Germany's 104th-ranked Andreas Beck 6-3, 6-4, 6-3 in one hour and 41 minutes at Arthur Ashe Stadium on Thursday.

Five-time US Open champion Federer will face 109th-ranked Paul-Henri Mathieu to decide a fourth-round berth on the Flushing Meadows hardcourts.

"It's the perfect start," Federer said.

"Body is well. Mentally obviously I'm fresh, too. I haven't played too much, so I'm really eager. I'm ready for tough matches coming around. It's good I'm saving myself, really, and my game is fine."

Danish women's top seed Wozniacki blanked Taiwan's Chang Kai-Chen 6-0, 6-0 in 47 minutes, her 11th match victory in a row after titles at Montreal and New Haven leading into the Open. She has dropped only two games in two matches.

"I go out there and I don't give up. I don't give any free points away and that is one of my strong points," Wozniacki said. "I am feeling fresh, all recovered from everything. I am happy to be playing injury-free. It's perfect."

Russian ace Sharapova routed Iveta Benesova of the Czech Republic 6-1, 6-2, moving closer to a fourth-round showdown with Wozniacki. The 2006 US Open winner struggled with injuries last year but is back on form now.

"Last year here, the position I was in, I was trying to see where my game was, so it's nice to be back on the court and not having to worry about anything other than trying to win," Sharapova said.

Serbian third seed Djokovic advanced 7-5, 6-3, 7-6 (8/6) over German Philipp Petzschner, saying, "I was shakey the whole match but I was able to hold on."

Djokovic reached the 2007 US Open final and the Flushing Meadows semi-finals the past two years, each time losing to Federer, whom he could again face in the semi-finals.

"It's important to save energy in the opening rounds," Djokovic said. "Overall I can be satisfied with how I played. I played well when I needed to and was a little bit lucky."

Swedish fifth seed Soderling downed American Taylor Dent 6-2, 6-2, 6-4. The French Open runner-up meets Dutchman Thiemo de Bakker next.

"I'm pretty confident. I know I can do well when I play well," Soderling said. "But you need to play well. No one can play well every match. So anything can happen. I can lose first round. I can go on really deep as well."

Russian sixth seed Nikolay Davydenko, a 2006 and 2007 US Open semi-final loser to Federer, was ousted 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 by 38th-ranked Richard Gasquet in the biggest upset of the day.

Gasquet, among a record 12 Frenchmen to reach the second round, lost only seven of 52 points on his first serve as Davydenko made his quickest US Open exit since 2005.

Davydenko joined a US Open seeded scrap heap that includes No. 7 Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic, US ninth seed Andy Roddick and Croatian 11th seed Marin Cilic, who lost to Japanese qualifier Kei Nishikori 5-7, 7-6 (8/6), 3-6, 7-6 (7/3), 6-1 in an exhausting five-hour duel.

"I was cramping from the second set but I kept fighting and fighting and got the fourth set tie-breaker. That was key for me," Nishikori said.

"It was hot but I feel good now."

China's Peng Shaui, ranked 61st, shocked Polish ninth seed Agnieszka Radwanska 2-6, 6-1, 6-4 in the biggest upset on the women's side.

Taiwan's Chan Yung-Jan made her deepest Grand Slam run after 17 tries by beating Austria's Tamira Paszek 6-3, 6-3.

"I was not 100 percent in my first match and was missing the easy ball, but that was better today and I'm looking to play even better from now on," Chan said.

Related Articles

Beckham hoping to return to MLS action next week

beckham
Photo: Reuters

David Beckham hopes to make his return to action in LA Galaxy's match against Columbus Crew on September 11, the midfielder said on Thursday.

Beckham has been sidelined since March when he suffered an Achilles tendon injury, while playing on loan for AC Milan, that cost him a place in the England squad at the World Cup in South Africa.

"The doctors' original date was October 1 but I want to be ready before then," he told the team's website (www.lagalaxy.com). "I'll keep my fingers crossed and hopefully will play in part of the game here against Columbus.”

“I'll be on the bench, and hopefully I'll get on the field for 15-20 minutes, that's what I'm looking at."

Beckham took part in his first full training session with the club on August 11 and said he has had ups and downs.

"At the moment, you have good days and you have bad days,” he said. “You wake up with a lot more pain in your body when you're in preseason.”

“I have to do it because I need to get as close to match fitness as possible," he said. "It's a bit difficult when you don't play in games.”

“That's where you get the real fitness from, but I'm doing what I can in the gym and what I can on the field, just trying to get strength back in my leg.

"Working out was something I've done for the last 25 years, and to not being able to do it was tough for me."

The former Manchester United and Real Madrid midfielder said he was still tentative in some areas of movement.

"When you do go through a trauma like this, an injury like this, there's always going to be that thing in the back of your mind saying, 'The last time I did that motion was when it actually snapped'. Cutting and turning and pushing off is still difficult for me, but that's going to come in time," he said.

The 35-year-old Beckham said he had never considered retirement and added that he had been grumpy at home.

"It's probably better asking my wife that more than me. Being around the house, not being able to train, not being able to play, I think it's been worse for her than me. It's been a long road," he said.

Related Articles

Lightweights throw in the towel at US Open

us open
Novak Djokovic of Serbia reacts after defeating Philipp Petzschner of Germany during the US Open tennis tournament in New York, September 2, 2010
Photo: Reuters

There was an old-fashioned fight at the US Open on Thursday but not the one tournament officials wanted to see.

Instead of happening on the court, the scuffle broke out in the upper deck, high above Arthur Ashe Stadium where Novak Djokovic and Philipp Petzschner were locked in their own battle.

Play stopped briefly as New York police handcuffed three rowdy fans and evicted them from Flushing Meadows.

The fracas in the stands came at the end of a day when some of the sport's heavyweights delighted in humbling lesser-known opponents in second round matches.

Each of the five featured matches on center court was decided in straight-sets. At times the quality of tennis was breathtaking and the crowds roared their approval, but it was rarely a fair contest.

Roger Federer's victim was Germany's Andreas Beck. He won the match 6-3 6-4 6-3 in one hour 41 minutes and even the Swiss master himself was impressed.

"It's the perfect start," he said. "I played Monday, had two days off.”

“I had another easy one physically today, and here I am in the third round feeling like I'm completely in the tournament."

Maria Sharapova was also in a hurry, belting Czech Iveta Benesova 6-1 6-2, but neither of the former champions could match the ruthless display from Caroline Wozniacki.

“Double bagel”

The Dane needed just 47 minutes to inflict the dreaded 6-0 6-0 "double bagel" on Taiwan's Chang Kai Chen and remain on course for a meeting with Russian Sharapova in the fourth round.

Russia's Vera Zvonareva, Wimbledon finalist this year, and Belgium's Yanina Wickmayer, semifinalist at the US Open last season, also registered easy wins on another steamy day when the Extreme Weather Policy was invoked as temperatures climbed past 91 degrees Fahrenheit (33 Celsius).

A year ago, Kim Clijsters was the mom hogging the spotlight at the US Open. This time it is Mother Nature.

Unrelenting heat and swirling winds have transformed the last grand slam of the year into a battle against the elements and now Hurricane Earl is approaching New York, threatening to dump gallons of rain on the city that never sleeps.

Petzschner landed a few blows on Djokovic but the world number three was too crafty for the German, winning 7-5 6-3 7-6 to meet James Blake in the next round.

Djokovic's fellow Serb Jelena Jankovic, the women's fourth seed, survived after being pushed to three sets by Mirjana Lucic.

Russian Nikolay Davydenko, however, was left punch-drunk after being hammered 6-3 6-4 6-2 by Frenchman Richard Gasquet.

"I don't know if I need to have a coach, a mental coach or if I need to go somewhere to change my brain," the sixth seed said.

The casualty rate among the seeds in the first four days of the championship has been almost as brutal as the baking heat with 22 making early exits, including six more Thursday.

Agnieszka Radwanska, Aravane Rezai and Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez were sent tumbling out of the women's draw.

Davydenko was the highest men's seed to fall and was joined at the exit by Thomaz Bellucci and Croatia's 11th seed Marin Cilic, upset 5-7 7-6 3-6 7-6 6-1 by Japan's Kei Nishikori.

Trick shot

For Federer it was business as usual in his pursuit of a 17th grand slam title but there was no repeat of the magical between-the-legs trick shot he played in his opening match.

"Tougher matches will only be coming up now, I guess," he said. "It's gonna be interesting to see how the Saturday conditions are going to be with the hurricane sort of moving in.”

“We'll see how that goes."

Djokovic produced a stunning backhand winner on Thursday that would make it on anyone's highlights reel but said he had no plans to try and replicate Federer's shot.

"I have something else between my legs," he told the center court crowd.

Wozniacki is looming as the favorite to win her first grand slam title after a flawless start to the tournament.

Promoted to top seed after world number one Serena Williams withdrew with a foot injury, Wozniacki won three lead-up tournaments and has carried her form into the US Open.

"When you're winning, you have that confidence," she said. "You go out on the court and you know what to do.”

“You're in your own bubble, that's what I'm aiming for."

Related Articles

87-year-old remains master of martial arts

dao thanh
Vietnamese traditional martial arts master Dao Thanh, 87, performs a Tu mon bat quai, a defensive technique against many simultaneous attackers
Photo: Tuoi Tre

Dao Thanh is the last of the four Great Sages of martial arts still alive.

The 87-year-old master of Tay Son, one of Vietnam’s many traditional fighting skills, still trains young learners daily in his remote hometown in the central province of Binh Dinh.

Despite his age, he rides his bicycle 60 kilometers every day to go around for the training.

He lives in the mountainous village of Tan Duc in An Nhon District. A large garden surrounded by bamboo hedges in front of his house has been a training ground for generations of Vietnamese martial artists over the last 70 years.

Master Pham Dinh Phong, vice chairman of the Vietnam Traditional Martial Arts Federation, was one of his disciples several decades ago.

Thanh agreed to meet Tuoi Tre correspondent at home last month.

“I’ve been teaching martial artists for free all my life,” he begins.

“I can’t stay at home as I miss my students and miss schools. I may die if I stay at home.

“I don’t get money from my students but they sometimes give me some tea, milk, or rice.”

A few gift him money occasionally.

“I [am] poor but relaxed.”

He began learning martial arts at 15 from teacher That Duy.

“My mother was afraid I would be enrolled in the French Army and sent me to the teacher.”

After two years there, he went to other teacher, Phi Hung in Phan Ri District in the central province of Binh Thuan, to learn sword fighting and bare hand techniques.

After six years of training he began teaching himself to earn money so that he could go to a top master to learn. And, he has never looked back since.

Now he lives with his wife he married at 17 and has six sons and four daughters.

“She loves me because I was handsome and skilled at martial arts,” he jokes.

“I love her because she is good at singing and making beautiful conical hats.”

He pours some wine and says with obvious contentment: “We are poor but happy.

“I just need three bowls of rice and a bowl of soup for a meal. That’s enough. So what do I need money for?”

“If I want some fish, I ride my wife to the market to sell some chicken eggs and buy some fish. I don’t need any more than that.”

Thanh’s home has become a regular visiting place for Phong to learn esoteric techniques that few teachers know.

Thanh says he may be the only person to still know some techniques believed to be invented by King Quang Trung in the 18th century and General Ly Thuong Kiet in the 11th century.

Phong says Thanh is a sage of Vietnamese traditional martial arts that need to be preserved.

The country is home to more than 100 different martial arts of which 40 -- like Xuan Thanh, Xuan Lieu, Nhat Nam, Tay Son, and Hung Ke Quyen -- are famous.

Thanh’s other famous contemporaries, the three other Great Sages, Huong Kiem Trung, Muoi Dau, and Ha Trong Son, have all passed.

Thanh says: “Last year I went on a bicycle tour of Quy Nhon [city] to visit friends who trained with me. Unluckily, they had all died.”

Related Articles

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Vietnam spotlighted at Shanghai expo

Vietnam spotlighted at Shanghai expo

“The Vietnam National Day” started at the Shanghai Expo 2010 on September 2.


Vietnamese Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism Hoang Tuan Anh,
Vietnamese Ambassador Doan Manh Giao and Deputy Head of the China
National Tourism Administration Du Ri Li along with more than 200
representatives from offices, organisation and enterprises from China
and Vietnam attended the event.


Addressing the
opening ceremony, Minister Anh stressed that the event is of special
significance as it is being organised on the occasion of the 65 th
anniversary of Vietnam’s National Day (September 2), the Vietnam-China
Friendship Year and 60 th anniversary of Vietnam-China diplomatic ties.


2010 is an important year to Vietnam as the
country will celebrate the 1,000 th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi
while assuming the ASEAN Chair. Thus, the country wishes to work with
all neighbouring countries and other partners for peace, stability,
cooperation and development of Asia and the world, he said.


For his part, Du Ri Li spoke highly of Vietnam ’s contributions to
the Shanghai Expo. He said Vietnam and China are creating new
opportunities after 60 years of establishing diplomatic ties, adding
that cooperation in politics, economics, science-technology and culture
is developing fruitfully thanks to the special attention of the two
countries’ leaders, he said.


Within the framework of
the event, Vietnamese artists staged a special performance highlighting
the country’s traditional culture. Nearly 300 Vietnamese and Chinese
enterprises also attended a forum on investment cooperation jointly held
by Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry and Shanghai Trade
Promotion Committee./.

Related Articles