Sunday, September 5, 2010

Vietnam 42nd at first Youth Olympics

Vietnam 42nd at first Youth OlympicsVietnam was in the 42nd spot as the first Youth Olympics Games in Singapore closed on Thursday, August 26.

A total of 98 international squads participated in the 12-day tournament.

Thirteen Vietnamese athletes took part in seven of 26 competitions at the event which attracted some 5,000 athletes aged 14-17 from around the world.

The Vietnamese athletes won a gold medal in the men’s 56kg weightlifting contest, a silver in the women’s 55kg taekwondo category and two bronze medals in the men’s 55kg taekwondo category and women singles’ badminton event.

China finished on top with 30 gold, 16 silver, and five bronze medals, followed by Russia with 19 gold, 14 silver and 13 bronze medals and South Korea in third with 11 gold, four silver and four bronze medals.

The USA finished thirteenth with four gold, nine silver and nine bronze medals while hosts Singapore came in 62nd place with two silver and four bronze medals.

Thailand topped the Southeast Asian region with four gold and three silver medals, finishing in the 14th position.

Malaysia finished 65th with two silver medals while Indonesia was in 84th place with just one bronze medal.

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Saturday, September 4, 2010

Vietnam 42nd at first Youth Olympics

Vietnam 42nd at first Youth OlympicsVietnam was in the 42nd spot as the first Youth Olympics Games in Singapore closed on Thursday, August 26.

A total of 98 international squads participated in the 12-day tournament.

Thirteen Vietnamese athletes took part in seven of 26 competitions at the event which attracted some 5,000 athletes aged 14-17 from around the world.

The Vietnamese athletes won a gold medal in the men’s 56kg weightlifting contest, a silver in the women’s 55kg taekwondo category and two bronze medals in the men’s 55kg taekwondo category and women singles’ badminton event.

China finished on top with 30 gold, 16 silver, and five bronze medals, followed by Russia with 19 gold, 14 silver and 13 bronze medals and South Korea in third with 11 gold, four silver and four bronze medals.

The USA finished thirteenth with four gold, nine silver and nine bronze medals while hosts Singapore came in 62nd place with two silver and four bronze medals.

Thailand topped the Southeast Asian region with four gold and three silver medals, finishing in the 14th position.

Malaysia finished 65th with two silver medals while Indonesia was in 84th place with just one bronze medal.

Related Articles

Vietnam 42nd at first Youth Olympics

Vietnam 42nd at first Youth OlympicsVietnam was in the 42nd spot as the first Youth Olympics Games in Singapore closed on Thursday, August 26.

A total of 98 international squads participated in the 12-day tournament.

Thirteen Vietnamese athletes took part in seven of 26 competitions at the event which attracted some 5,000 athletes aged 14-17 from around the world.

The Vietnamese athletes won a gold medal in the men’s 56kg weightlifting contest, a silver in the women’s 55kg taekwondo category and two bronze medals in the men’s 55kg taekwondo category and women singles’ badminton event.

China finished on top with 30 gold, 16 silver, and five bronze medals, followed by Russia with 19 gold, 14 silver and 13 bronze medals and South Korea in third with 11 gold, four silver and four bronze medals.

The USA finished thirteenth with four gold, nine silver and nine bronze medals while hosts Singapore came in 62nd place with two silver and four bronze medals.

Thailand topped the Southeast Asian region with four gold and three silver medals, finishing in the 14th position.

Malaysia finished 65th with two silver medals while Indonesia was in 84th place with just one bronze medal.

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Vietnam joins Beijing charity sale

The Vietnamese pavilion, with a number of specialties such as coffee on
show at an international charity sale in Beijing , China , was
crowded with visitors and customers.


The event,
the second of its kind so far, was opened on September 4, calling for
“Love without border and financial assistance for the disabled”.


The charity event, drawing over 60 agencies of foreign diplomatic
corps and international organisations in China, aimed to raise fund for
the construction of community-based functional rehabilitation centres
and improve life quality, such as the capacity of community integration,
for the disabled in Gansu and He Bei provinces, which were hardest hit
by recent huge mudslides.


A deputy president of
the Chinese Federation of the Disabled, Tang Xiao Quan, expressed thanks
to the foreign diplomatic corps and foreign business circles for their
thoughtfulness and assistance to Chinese disabled people.


The latest survey showed that China was home to some 83 million disabled people, mostly in the countryside./.

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New coach, same story as Belarus shock France

france
Belarus' Alexander Hleb (L) fights for the ball with France's Mathieu Valbuena (R) during their Euro 2012 qualifying soccer match in Saint-Denis, near Paris September 3, 2010
Photo: Reuters

France learned the road to post-World Cup redemption will be long and hard as they suffered a 1-0 defeat at home to Belarus on Friday, while Spain reveled in their status as world and European champions with an easy win over Liechtenstein.

England and Italy were able to make positive starts on their routes to recovery from disappointing World Cup displays, scoring contrasting wins in their first Euro 2012 qualifiers.

England played with the sort of skill and quick passing that completely eluded them in South Africa as they beat Bulgaria 4-0 at Wembley, Jermain Defoe netting a smartly taken hat-trick in the Group G clash.

Italy were almost embarrassed but were ultimately able to celebrate a 2-1 victory after coming from a goal down away to Estonia in Group C.

For France, though, there was only further misery, as a much changed team from the World Cup was cheered on to the pitch but roundly booed off it.

Laurent Blanc's first competitive match since replacing Raymond Domenech after a World Cup campaign that veered between farce and fiasco offered few positives for the French, as a late goal from Sergei Kislyak consigned them to a Group D defeat.

While Europe's first big night of competitive international action since the World Cup was a chance for atonement for the flops, it was a celebration for the three big success stories.

Spain led the way as two goals from Fernando Torres and one from World Cup hero David Villa -- who moved to within one goal of equaling Raul's scoring record for the country -- helped them brush past Liechtenstein in a Group I match in Vaduz.

David Silva was the other scorer in the opening match of the defense of the title Spain won in Austria and Switzerland in 2008.

The Netherlands, beaten by the Spanish in the Johannesburg final, saw off San Marino 5-0 in Group E with a hat-trick from Klaas-Jan Huntelaar.

Serious opponents

Germany, who took third place at the World Cup, had a tougher night against more serious opponents in Group A but came through 1-0 against Belgium with a goal from the ever reliable Miroslav Klose.

In the night's other David and Goliath clash, Russia proved there is no room for sentiment when it comes to the business of qualifying, grabbing a workmanlike 2-0 win away to Andorra in Group B thanks to two goals from Pavel Pogrebnyak.

While Blanc was suffering the ignominy of defeat, new Italy coach Cesare Prandelli was able to celebrate -- but only after an almighty scare.

The hosts opened the scoring in the 31st minute when forward Sergei Zenjov struck after Italian keeper Salvatore Sirigu lost his grip on the wet ball.

The 2006 world champions just managed to halt their seven-game win drought thanks to second-half goals from Antonio Cassano and Leonardo Bonucci.

"It's a strong emotion," Prandelli told Rai TV after his first competitive game in charge. "We had the right reaction and deserved to win.”

“I said at halftime we had to continue doing the right things but with more speed.

“We made mistakes on nearly every dead ball we conceded,” he admitted.

"At the moment Antonio Cassano and Giampaolo Pazzini are the two forwards who shine the most."

England's commanding win over Bulgaria will have come as a relief to another Italian coach in Fabio Capello, whose position was called into question after England's limp 4-1 exit to Germany in the World Cup second round.

Defoe's opening goal in the third minute set them on their way and while their form dipped after that they finished strongly. Defoe completed his hat-trick with goals in the 61st and 86th minutes, with Adam Johnson also finding the net.

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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

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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.

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