Thursday, October 14, 2010

China dominates Badminton Vietnam Open

China dominates Badminton Vietnam OpenChinese badminton players took three of the five championships at the Yonex Sunrise Vietnam Grand Prix 2010 which ended in Ho Chi Minh City on Sunday.

Chinese player Chen Yuekun, ranked 294th in the world, grabbed the men’s singles title after beating Nan Wel of Hong Kong 21-13, 21-14 in the finals to take a US$3,750 cash prize.

It was Chen who dethroned the tournament’s top-ranked player, Vietnamese star Nguyen Tien Minh in the quarterfinals –who, at the time, was ranked 9th in the world.

The women’s singles final match turned into an all-Chinese contest. Jin Ma-Qianxin Zheng beat compatriots Jinhua Tang-Huan Xia 21-19, 21-23, 21-13.

The Chinese pair Hanbin He-Jin Ma earned their mixed doubles victory after beating Hong Kong rivals Youhan-Samatha in straight sets in the finals.

The men’s doubles title went to the Indonesian duo Ahsan-Septano who beat Malaysian competitors Tazari and Soon Hock Ong.

Inthanon from Thailand claimed the women’s singles gold medal after beating Chinese contestant Hui Zhon 21-17, 22-20 in the final match.

The event indicated that Vietnamese badminton players, especially women players, are still very far from qualifying as international competitors.

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Movie distributor brings films to remote rural areas

Travelling to small villages in remote and mountainous regions is a hard
task at the best of times, but for members of a mobile film-screening
team based in HCM City , it is a full-time job.


"People usually come early to the film shows, sit on the ground to
watch, and stay until late," Vu Trong Tuan, a member of the three-strong
team, says.


"Their enthusiasm is our main source of encouragement."


The screenings are arranged by the State-owned Saigon Cinema Corporation for whom Tuan has been working for 35 years.


Documentary and feature films on the struggle for liberation, like
Duong Ve Que Me (Travelling Back to Native Land) and Vi Tuyen 17 Ngay Va
Dem (The 17th Parallel, Days and Nights), and cartoons are the most
commonly screened.


The team goes on its mission come
rain or shine. Planning a trip sometimes takes time, especially when it
is to a place that does not have electricity and generators are
required.


Once there, however, the crew will stay for a week.


"The team has a jeep. But many times we go on motorbikes to villages surrounded by mountains and forests," Tuan says.


"Often we have to wade through knee-deep brooks that cross muddy roads.


"We can get wet when it rains but our projector, films, and other equipment must be carefully protected."


Many times the team arrives late in the afternoon. "We may not have
time for dinner. But we must prepare for the film show quickly because
people are waiting," he says.


"We work forgetting
our hardship because the viewers get so much enjoyment from it and
because we are warmly received," Dang To Ha, the head of the team, says.


Ha has also worked for 35 years.


The films are usually screened in the yards of schools and
administrative offices or meeting places for the region's various ethnic
peoples.


The audience usually arrives several hours
before the show's 7pm start. Often, the shows last past midnight as
viewers ask for more screenings.


"Many poor ethnic
people in remote areas in the Central Highlands may never see films," he
says, adding it is moving when people inquire when the team will be
back.


Since 2006 alone the team has shown more than
400 cartoons, feature films, and documentaries to audiences totalling
over 300,000.


It has received many certificates of commendation from HCM City authorities for its efforts./.

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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Football: Golden Whistle blows for Tri

FIFA-accredited referee Vo Minh Tri won the Golden Whistle award for
the best referee of the year following his outstanding performance in
the V-League last season.


Tri, 38, received 72 votes
with a total of 310 points, beating his colleague Vo Quang Vinh, who
came in second with 202 points.


Phung Dinh Dung of Hanoi bagged third place.


Following the announcement on Oct. 12, linesman Nguyen Ngoc Ha from Hai Duong took the Golden Flag with 341 points.


It's the second year in a row that Ha has won the title for best referee's assistant.


He was followed by Nguyen Phong Vu from Ha Tinh and Nguyen Hoang Minh
of Dong Nai, who finished second and third, respectively.


"Tri is a popular choice for the award. He always shows the experience
and skills of a FIFA referee," said chairman of the National Referee's
Council Nguyen Van Mui.


The 38-year-old was one of the youngest referees to be accredited by FIFA back in 2001.


Last year, Tri just won the Bronze Whistle.


The official awards ceremony will be held in Hanoi on Oct. 14./.

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Top gymnasts to compete at Asian Games

HA NOI – The Vietnamese gymnastics team has vowed to bring home their first medal from the Asian Games.

"It will be a challenge for us at Asia's biggest games, but I do believe that all athletes will make something happen like they did at the World Cup event," said head of the National Sports Administration's gymnastics division Nguyen Kim Lan.

Top gymnasts Phan Thi Ha Thanh and Pham Phuoc Hung will lead their team as they attempt to bring home a gold medal at the Asian Games in China next month.

The duo performed well at the Artistic Gymnastics FIG World Cup in Porto, Portugal in June.

Thanh pocketed a silver medal in the women's individual vault event.

The Southeast Asian Games champion finished seventh out of 19 in the floor event and seventh in the balanced beam competition.

"It's the best result a Vietnamese gymnast has achieved at an international competition since the country first competed at the Moscow Olympics in 1980," said Lan.

Pham Phuoc Hung achieved a personal best when he finished fourth in the men's individual parallel bars event at the World Cup.

The Hanoian qualified for the parallel bars final round at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championship in London last October.

Hung, who has been training in China since 1998, and his male teammates will compete at the international event in the Netherlands, which runs through next week.

The team will also receive help from Do Thi Ngan Thuong, who is eligible to compete in the women's all-around event.

The Beijing Olympian said she will do her best at the Guangzhou Games to win a medal that she can add to her collection. – VNS

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National squad aim for top 15

High hopes: Vietnamese athletes march during the Southeast Asian Games' opening ceremony in Laos last December. Viet Nam will send a 260-member squad to compete in 29 of 42 sports at the Asian Games in Guangzhou, China, from November 12-27. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Khanh

High hopes: Vietnamese athletes march during the Southeast Asian Games' opening ceremony in Laos last December. Viet Nam will send a 260-member squad to compete in 29 of 42 sports at the Asian Games in Guangzhou, China, from November 12-27. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Khanh

HA NOI — Viet Nam will send its 260-member squad to compete in 29 of the 42 events at the 16th Asian Games in Guangzhou, China from November 12-27.

Deputy head of the National Sports Administration Le Quy Phuong will lead the team at the Asian Games.

Viet Nam hopes to finish in the top 15 out of the 45 participating countries and territories.

Viet Nam's biggest medal hopes rest with sprinter Vu Thi Huong, Asian Grand Prix winner Truong Thanh Hang, SEA Games record holder Vu Van Huyen and two-time SEA Games gold medallist Nguyen Dinh Cuong.

Viet Nam's chief medal hope, Chinese chess player Ngo Lan Huong, who was the 2009 world runner-up, is eyeing a gold medal.

In Qatar four years ago, Viet Nam won three gold, 13 silver and seven bronze medals to rank 19th out of the 45 countries at the competition.

Viet Nam began participating in Asia's biggest sport event at the Seoul games in 1986.

In 1994 at the Hiroshima Asian Games in Japan, Taekwondo artist Tran Quang Ha won the country's first gold medal, while Pham Hong Ha and Tran Van Thong brought home two silver medals.

At the Busan Asian Games in South Korea in 2002, the country had their best showing after winning four gold, seven silver and seven bronze medals to help Viet Nam finish 15th at the event. — VNS

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Golden Whistle blows for Tri

HA NOI — FIFA-accredited referee Vo Minh Tri won the Golden Whistle award for the best referee of the year following his outstanding performance in the V-League last season.

Tri, 38, received 72 votes with a total of 310 points, beating his colleague Vo Quang Vinh, who came in second with 202 points.

Phung Dinh Dung of Ha Noi bagged third place.

Following the announcement yesterday, linesman Nguyen Ngoc Ha from Hai Duong took the Golden Flag with 341 points.

It's the second year in a row that Ha has won the title for best referee's assistant.

He was followed by Nguyen Phong Vu from Ha Tinh and Nguyen Hoang Minh of Dong Nai, who finished second and third, respectively.

"Tri is a popular choice for the award. He always shows the experience and skills of a FIFA referee," said chairman of the National Referee's Council Nguyen Van Mui.

The 38-year-old was one of the youngest referees to be accredited by FIFA back in 2001.

Last year, Tri just won the Bronze Whistle.

The official awards ceremony will be held in Ha Noi tomorrow. — VNS

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Thien cruises to junior tennis quarterfinal

Teenager Nguyen Hoang Thien cruised to the quarters-finals of the Viet Nam International Junior Championship after beating Denmark's Mikael Torpegaard 6-4, 6-2 in southern Binh Duong Province yesterday.

Thien, the top seed, beat South Korea's Lee Sung-hui 6-0, 6-1 in the boys' singles first round on Monday.

The 15-year-old will meet Sweden's Solberg Christoffer, who beat Vietnamese Ho Huynh Dan Mach 6-2, 6-4, in the quarters at Binh Duong's Becamex Sports Centre today.

On Saturday, Thien won the men's singles title at the International Junior Championships in the southern province of Bac Lieu.

Two years ago, Thien took the singles title in Binh Duong Province, but only managed third place last year.

Born in 1995, Thien first stepped onto a tennis court at the age of eight.

His target is to break into the top 200 in the world by the time he's 18.

He currently ranks 431st in the International Tennis Federation's junior rankings.

Santos says no plans for Binh Duong move

Goalkeeper Phan Van Santos says he has not signed a contract with the Becamex Binh Duong football club for the next V-League season.

"It is not true that I have signed a three-year contract with Binh Duong and I am currently under contract with Navibank Sai Gon," the former national goalkeeper told Viet Nam News, rejecting local reports about his move.

The naturalised Brazilian Vietnamese, known for scoring goals from free kicks, is on a four-day business trip to Singapore.

Santos, 33, who was granted Vietnamese citizenship in 2008, has played football in Viet Nam for nine years and is one of the most successful goalkeepers in the V-League.

In eight years with Dong Tam Long An, he won two V-League titles before moving to Navibank Sai Gon in the second half of last season. — VNS

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