Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Vietnam beats China again to take AFF U16 title

Vietnam beats China again to take AFF U16 titleVietnam claimed the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) Under-16 Championship after defeating China 1-0 in the final match at the Manahan Stadium in Indonesia on Sunday.

It was the second time in a week that Vietnam beat China at the event. Six days earlier, during the opening match, the squad routed China’s10-man team.

The Vietnamese came into the final after two 1-0 wins over China and Indonesia, respectively. The team kept close guard on the bigger Chinese players and left them no space for easy scoring.

The Chinese understood their opponents better than they had in the first encounter but failed to find a way into Vietnam’s goals.

Vietnam, on the other hand, scored right before the break.

 Anh Tuan (who took the solitary goal against China six days before) fired a powerful shot that Chinese goalkeeper Xu Jiamincould only push away. The ball found an unmarked Xuan Nam who sent it into an empty net.

After the interval, China launched more attacks but Vietnam stood firm till the final whistle while East Timor upset Indonesia 2-0 in the fight for the third place.

Speaking at a press conference after the final, Chinese coach Zhang Ning admitted Vietnam deserved to take the championship and Vietnam’s Hoang Van Phuc said he was pleased with his players’ achievement.

The event was a good chance to prepare the Vietnamese boys for the Asian Under-16 Football Championship 2010 to take place in Uzbekistan from October 24 till November 7.

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Vietnam beats China again to take AFF U16 title

Vietnam beats China again to take AFF U16 titleVietnam claimed the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) Under-16 Championship after defeating China 1-0 in the final match at the Manahan Stadium in Indonesia on Sunday.

It was the second time in a week that Vietnam beat China at the event. Six days earlier, during the opening match, the squad routed China’s10-man team.

The Vietnamese came into the final after two 1-0 wins over China and Indonesia, respectively. The team kept close guard on the bigger Chinese players and left them no space for easy scoring.

The Chinese understood their opponents better than they had in the first encounter but failed to find a way into Vietnam’s goals.

Vietnam, on the other hand, scored right before the break.

 Anh Tuan (who took the solitary goal against China six days before) fired a powerful shot that Chinese goalkeeper Xu Jiamincould only push away. The ball found an unmarked Xuan Nam who sent it into an empty net.

After the interval, China launched more attacks but Vietnam stood firm till the final whistle while East Timor upset Indonesia 2-0 in the fight for the third place.

Speaking at a press conference after the final, Chinese coach Zhang Ning admitted Vietnam deserved to take the championship and Vietnam’s Hoang Van Phuc said he was pleased with his players’ achievement.

The event was a good chance to prepare the Vietnamese boys for the Asian Under-16 Football Championship 2010 to take place in Uzbekistan from October 24 till November 7.

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North Korea draws with Vietnam to win Millennium Football Cup

HCMC – North Korea won the 1,000th Thang Long-Hanoi Football Cup 2010 after a goalless draw with hosts Vietnam during the tournament’s final match at My Dinh National Stadium in Hanoi on Friday, picking up US$20,000 in cash and a trophy.

A draw was enough for North Korea to win the round-robin tournament. Kuwait’s U23s had also tied goalless with Australia in an earlier game the same day.

To win the cup, Vietnam had to beat North Korea who had six points from the two opening games, while the hosts only had three points from one win and one loss.

The home side had beaten Kuwait U23 3-0 in the opener but lost 0-2 to Australia in the second game, while North Korea beat Australia 1-0 in the first game and did the same with Kuwait in the second game.

Vietnam, who began with a changed lineup after their loss to Australia, showed great determination to win the game.

Defender Nguyen Huy Hoang made his debut at the game, replacing defender Le Phuoc Tu from the beginning, midfielders Nguyen Minh Chau and Nguyen Vu Phong also played in the first minutes. Nguyen Trong Hoang came in for Nguyen Quang Hai in the middle.

Vietnam laid on the pressure in the opening minutes and dominated possession in the first half but were up against the strong defensive line that North Korea set up and some good saves by the North Korean goalie.

The visitors, who had six players that had attended the World Cup 2010 in South Africa in June, mounted pressure on the Vietnamese defenders in the last minutes of the first half and continuously dominated the attack in the second.

The Vietnamese players rallied to create some chances in the game’s closing minutes but the Korean side’s defense resiliently held out to keep a clean score sheet. 

Korea won with seven points. Vietnam finished second with US$10,000 with four points from one win, one draw and one loss. The Australian side came third with three points and pocketed US$5,000 while the bottom-placed Kuwait got only one point.

The tournament was a test for Vietnam before the Southeast Asian championship - AFF Suzuki Cup 2010, co-hosted by Indonesia and Vietnam from December 1 to 29.

In related news, the Vietnamese Olympic football squad together with the Olympic teams from Iran, Malaysia and Singapore will complete at the International Football Tournament/ Eximbank 2010 Cup in HCMC this week.

The round-robin tournament will be held at Thong Nhat Stadium in HCMC from September 28 to October 2. It also celebrates the 1,000 anniversary of the capital city.

The Vietnamese Olympic football squad secured two wins over Cambodia in the friendly matches before taking part in the friendly tournament. The Vietnamese side beat Cambodian national squad 2-0 on September 18 and they also defeated the Cambodian squad 3-0 in three days later.

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Vietnam wins U-16 football competition

HCMC – Vietnam won the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) U-16 Championships title after beating China 1-0 in the final in Indonesia on Sunday, while East Timor won third place after trouncing host Indonesia 2-0 earlier in the day.

Vietnam’s coach Hoang Van Phuc was confident before taking on China in the final game as his team had won by one goal over China in the opener.

The Vietnamese placed pressure on the China defending lines from the start and they dominated the game in the first half but couldn’t convert.

The Vietnamese in the crowd waited till the 44th minute to celebrate, when Van Nam took a kick in the penalty box beating the Chinese goalie.

Coach Phuc made some strategic changes in the second half to play more defensively and rely on rare counter attacks.

Neither Vietnam nor China looked like scoring throughout the last half, despite some strong China attacks.

It was the third victory of the national U-16 football squad in the tournament. Vietnam had earned a 1-0 victory over China in the opener, 1-0 win over Indonesia in the second game and a 1-2 loss to East Timor in the third game.

The Vietnamese team included the best seven players from Danang U-17 team, the champions of the national U-17 football championship. The rest were from the 10 clubs around the country including Song Lam Nghe An, Hanoi T&T and Hoa Phat Hanoi.

The U-16 teams of Vietnam, China, East Timor, and hosts Indonesia competed in the tournament from September 20 to 26 in Indonesia.

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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./.

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Northernmost Lung Cu flag tower inaugurated

A new national flag tower has been inaugurated on the peak of Rong
mountain, Lung cu commune, Dong Van district in the northernmost
province of Ha Giang.


The Lung Cu National Flag Tower, built
on the place of the old one at a cost of 20.8 billion VND, is 33.15
metres in height and about 3.8 m in diametre.


About 1,600m above
the sea level, it imitates the Hanoi Flag Tower with eight bronze
drum faces decorating eight sides at the foot of the octagonal tower. It
is built by concrete material and has a 135-step staircase to the top.


The national flag hoisted on the towered has an area of 54 sq.m, symbolising the unity of 54 ethnic groups in Vietnam .


Construction
of the new flag tower aims to affirm the position and sovereignty of
Vietnam as well as honour the patriotism and bravery of the people and
soldiers in the border area, Hoang Minh Nhat, Secretary of the Ha Giang
Province Party’s Committee, said at the inaugural ceremony on September
25.


The flag tower, about 170 km from Ha Giang town, is expected to become a destination for tourists./.

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India races to ready Games Village in time

Workers painted walls and mopped rain water at the Commonwealth Games Village as India raced on Sunday to address complaints about dirty and unhygienic facilities one week before the start of the showpiece event.

The Games were supposed to enhance India's image as a rising power, but shoddy construction, dirty accommodation and security fears raised governance and accountability issues in Asia's third largest economy.

Several top athletes, including world champion sprinter Usain Bolt, pulled out, removing some of the shine from the event held every four years for former British colonies.

Two more Australian athletes, cyclist Travis Meyer and table tennis player Stephanie Sang, pulled out on Sunday. This comes a day after Britain's number one tennis player Elena Baltacha withdrew because of concerns about disease and hygiene.

On Sunday, Indian organizing committee officials met to review the work at the Games Village where masons plastered walls while workers dried out the basement of the Village which sits on the flooded plains of the Yamuna river.

"All finishing work is going on in full swing," said Dalbir Singh, mayor of the Games Village where the athletes will stay.

"It's a world class facility with some minor issues and work is going on to fix those problems."

Most of the 34 apartment blocs are gleaming and spacious and fitted with Italian marble. But much of what is good about the facility was overshadowed by athletes' complaints of dirtiness and unfinished work in some of the living quarters.

Snake, Tobacco spit

South Africa's High Commissioner to India, Harris Majeke, told reporters a snake had been found in the room of an athlete at the Games village.

"That was really a threat to the lives of our athletes," he said, complaining of filth in the living quarters. "When everything is done, then we will ask our teams to come."

The Times Now news channel said about 150 rooms meant for athletes were uninhabitable.

Indian boxer Akhil Kumar's bed caved in on Saturday. It was found the mattress had just been placed on the bed frame without any support underneath.

"Laborers have done a very bad job. They had spit 'paan' (chewing tobacco) on the walls, stains of which are almost unremovable," Lalit Bhanot, secretary general of the Games organizing committee, told Reuters.

"We are identifying rooms which are dirty and shutting them down. But we have adequate rooms so there is nothing to worry about."

India was awarded the Games in 2003 but did not begin proper preparations until two years ago. Michael Fennell, chief of the Commonwealth Games Federation, has said India's image has taken a beating.

Athletes from 20 countries have arrived so far, including Scotland and Canada, which had delayed its arrival until Sunday.

The English team, which had checked into hotels because their accommodation was not ready, moved some support staff into the Village on Sunday. The athletes will follow on Monday.

"Work is on track. About 600 flats will be handed over by tomorrow (Monday) and everything will be complete by Wednesday," Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit told reporters.

India had hoped to use the Games to display its growing global economic and political influence, rivaling neighbor China which put on a spectacular 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics.

Instead, they have become a major embarrassment for the world's largest democracy, where infrastructure projects have progressed slowly and are a drag on economic growth.

Desperate officials on Friday asked the Indian Army to build a temporary bridge to replace the US$1.1 million footbridge that collapsed last week. The bridge, providing access to the main Jawaharlal Nehru stadium, should be finished within five days.

The bridge collapse and a suspected militant attack on two foreign visitors threw the Games into crisis. An outbreak of dengue fever has only compounded worries.

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