Monday, October 18, 2010

Dong Nai wins U.21 trophy after penalty shootout

Dong Nai wins U.21 trophy after penalty shootoutDong Nai took the 2010 National U.21 football championship after beating powerhouse Nghe An 5-4 in a penalty shootout at Gia Lai Province’s Pleiku Stadium on Sunday.

They had already beaten Nghe An 1-0 win in their group’s opening match, but this was a much closer match.

Nghe An played with lots of caution, but had to pick up after conceding the first goal just five minutes into the game.

They succeeded in scoring an equalizer just 10 minutes later, Trong Phi firing a shot that goalkeeper Thanh Diep could not reach.

Charged up by the equalizer, Nghe An’s young players launched more attacks, putting Dong Nai under great pressure. The team showed why it was able to three consecutive national U.21 championships from 2000 to 2002.

The team capitalized on one of the opportunities they created to take the lead midway through the first half.

After the break, Dong Nai’s striker Tuan Anh collected a neat pass from The Hung and made the score 2-2 after taking a neat pass from The Hung.

However, the team fell behind shortly afterwards, with Nghe An’s fast counterattack paying off. Trong Phi and Dinh Bao combined beautifully before striker Dinh Bao beat goalkeeper Diep with a powerful shot from outside the penalty area.

Dong Nai refused to give up, and just minutes from full time, they found the equalizer when Thanh Tan scored from a free kick.

No more goals were scored in the match, and the champions had to be chosen after a penalty shootout.

Both sides were successful in their first four tries but Nghe An’s Trong Phi failed to get his shot past the Dong Nai custodian, while Van Quyen fired in Dong Nai’s fifth shot without fuss.

Dong Nai’s victory in the National U.21 football championship is all the more impressive considering it is only the second tie that they were participating in the event.

Related Articles

Dong Nai wins U.21 trophy after penalty shootout

Dong Nai wins U.21 trophy after penalty shootoutDong Nai took the 2010 National U.21 football championship after beating powerhouse Nghe An 5-4 in a penalty shootout at Gia Lai Province’s Pleiku Stadium on Sunday.

They had already beaten Nghe An 1-0 win in their group’s opening match, but this was a much closer match.

Nghe An played with lots of caution, but had to pick up after conceding the first goal just five minutes into the game.

They succeeded in scoring an equalizer just 10 minutes later, Trong Phi firing a shot that goalkeeper Thanh Diep could not reach.

Charged up by the equalizer, Nghe An’s young players launched more attacks, putting Dong Nai under great pressure. The team showed why it was able to three consecutive national U.21 championships from 2000 to 2002.

The team capitalized on one of the opportunities they created to take the lead midway through the first half.

After the break, Dong Nai’s striker Tuan Anh collected a neat pass from The Hung and made the score 2-2 after taking a neat pass from The Hung.

However, the team fell behind shortly afterwards, with Nghe An’s fast counterattack paying off. Trong Phi and Dinh Bao combined beautifully before striker Dinh Bao beat goalkeeper Diep with a powerful shot from outside the penalty area.

Dong Nai refused to give up, and just minutes from full time, they found the equalizer when Thanh Tan scored from a free kick.

No more goals were scored in the match, and the champions had to be chosen after a penalty shootout.

Both sides were successful in their first four tries but Nghe An’s Trong Phi failed to get his shot past the Dong Nai custodian, while Van Quyen fired in Dong Nai’s fifth shot without fuss.

Dong Nai’s victory in the National U.21 football championship is all the more impressive considering it is only the second tie that they were participating in the event.

Related Articles

Thien targets higher ranking

Nguyen Hoang Thien hopes to break into the top 100 junior tennis players rankings after winning two straight titles during the past two weeks.

Thien took home the title at the U18 ITF's Becamex Binh Duong Cup on Friday and won another tournament in Bac Lieu Province.

Thien, who is ranked 369th in the world's junior tennis standings, will compete with the national team for the first time at the 16th Asian Games which will be held in Guangzhou, China in November.

The young athlete will compete at the ITF's group 3 tournament against Malaysian tennis players.

Viet Nam beat India 3-1 in friendly

Viet Nam's Olympic team came from behind to beat India 3-1 during their friendly match on Saturday in New Dehli.

Balwant Singh scored for India nine minutes into the match. Ngoc Dieu responded with a goal to even the score during the first half.

Coach Phan Thanh Hung's players dominated the second half with Dieu scoring another goal during the 56th minute. Striker Nguyen Anh Duc scored the final goal in the match.

The Vietnamese team will compete in a friendly tournament in Bangkok from October 27-31 before participating in the Asian Games.

Quyen signs with Song Lam Nghe An

Former national star Pham Van Quyen has signed a new contract with Song Lam Nghe An, despite having his name tarnished during a match fixing scandal.

Quyen's new contract is for three years but allows him to play for the club until his retirement. In effect, the player has a life-contract with his team, who warmly welcomed his return after a four-year ban for match fixing. His current contract will end by the end of this year.

Quyen was called up for the national team in preparation for the AFF Suzuki Cup 2010 but suffered an injury that resulted in a poor performance during the last season. — VNS

Related Articles

Liverpool slump in front of new owners

Liverpool's new owners watched their team slump to a comprehensive 2-0 defeat at Merseyside rivals Everton which sent them second bottom of the Premier League on Sunday.

Manchester City won 3-2 at Blackpool to move second in the table after Liverpool owners John W Henry and Tom Werner watched goals by Tim Cahill and Mikel Arteta condemn the five-times European champions to their fourth defeat of the season.

Fernando Torres went closest for the visitors at Goodison Park when his first-half header was turned over the bar by Everton keeper Tim Howard, but Liverpool offered little else.

They slipped one place in the standings on goal difference, level on six points with Wolverhampton Wanderers and bottom-placed West Ham United.

Chelsea stayed top after a 0-0 draw at Aston Villa on Saturday. City are second, two points behind, Arsenal third after a 2-1 win at home to Birmingham City and Manchester United fourth after a 2-2 draw with West Bromwich Albion at Old Trafford.

Hodgson under pressure

Henry's New England Sports Ventures, owners of the Boston Red Sox baseball team, completed a takeover of Liverpool on Friday after contentious legal battles with the previous US owners, Tom Hicks and George Gillett.

The jubilant scenes in London on Friday concluded one of the most dramatic weeks in Liverpool's 118-year history, yet the euphoria of the takeover battle did not carry over to the pitch.

Everton fans taunted their counterparts with chants of "Going down" after the defeat that left Liverpool 19th in the table, their lowest ever position in the Premier League.

Manager Roy Hodgson was given a vote of confidence by Henry before Sunday's match, but the defeat is certain to focus attention on the future of the Englishman who has presided over Liverpool's worst start to a season for over 50 years.

"I don't feel it to be a crisis,” Hodgson told Sky Sports. “The way we played today -- I don't think anyone would believe that's the level of football a team in the bottom three or four would play.”

"On the other hand, there's six points from eight games and that's a very, very poor return.

“We do need to start winning and climbing up that table soon, and until we do so I daresay the word 'crisis' will be bandied around."

Determined run

The breakthrough came from Seamus Coleman's determined run into the area. The Irish defender's cross took a deflection and the ball sat up for Cahill to drill his finish past Jose Reina.

Everton doubled their lead five minutes after halftime, when Sotiros Kyrgiakos's headed clearance from a corner fell to an unmarked Arteta, whose right-foot shot from the edge of the area swerved viciously and left Reina clutching at air.

At Bloomfield Road, Carlos Tevez put City ahead after 67 minutes with a neat touch at the near post from James Milner's cross.

Marlon Harewood got the faintest of touches to a free kick to bring Blackpool level with a header in the 78th minute, but City were back in front within a minute. Argentine Tevez robbed defender Ian Evatt -- who claimed he was fouled -- and his shot took a deflection before finding the bottom corner.

Spain forward David Silva made it three with a splendid solo goal, selling two dummies in the area and curling home a left-foot shot. Gary Taylor-Fletcher's stoppage-time strike was a consolation for the home side.

Related Articles

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Vietnam film week opens in Germany

A Vietnamese film week opened in Magdeburg city of the Sachsen-Anhalt
state on Oct. 14 as part of the Vietnam Year in Germany in 2010.


Addressing the opening ceremony, Vietnamese charge d’affaires Bui Ngoc
Toan stressed the importance of the film week which takes place in the
year Vietnam and Germany celebrate their 35 th anniversary of
diplomatic ties.


The event, which features 10 Vietnamese
well-known films, including Doi Cat (Life of Sand), Dung Dot (Don’t
Burn), Song trong so hai (Living in Fear) and Chuyen cua Pao (Pao’s
Storty), will tell Germany’s audience about Vietnam’s culture as well as
the Vietnamese people’s normal life.


Burkhart
Fieber, who is in charge of international cooperation, European issues
and communications of the Sachsen-Anhalt state spoke highly of the sound
cooperation between Vietnam and the state, especially in economy and
education.


He also highly appreciated the integration by Vietnamese community living in Sachsen-Anhalt.


Visitors to the opening ceremony had chance to learn about Vietnamese
landscape, people and culture through short films and documents
introduced by the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism as well as
enjoyed Vietnamese dishes and traditional music./.

Related Articles

Thien wins second championship title at U18 ITF

Vietnamese tennis player Nguyen Hoang Thien, 15, won the U18 International Tennis Federation’s (ITF) Group 5 championship title after beating Estonia’s Markus Kerner 2-0 in just 55 minutes in the southern province of Binh Duong on October 15.

He eased to a 6-2, 6-0 victory in just 55 minutes to take his second title of the year.

“I am happy and satisfied with this result,” said Thien. “I made a lot of efforts to win two championship titles in succession after my 6-month shoulder injury.”

The event in Binh Duong attracted 150 players from 23 nations and territories in the world.

On October 9, he had won the ITF Youth Tennis Open in the boys' singles event after beating Chinese Taipei Cheng Kuang Yu 2-0 (6-2, 6-2) in southern province of Bac Lieu.

Thien had jumped from 436th to 369th in the ITF’s junior rankings announced on October 11 due to these two titles.

According to the Vietnam Tennis Federation, for the first time, Thien will join Do Minh Quan and Le Quoc Khanh to represent Vietnam at the 2010 Asian Games in Guangzhou, China next month.

“My target this year is to enter the world’s top 200 young tennis players,” he said.

Related Articles

Liverpool change hands after 'penalty shootout'

Liverpool's tortured takeover battle ended on Friday with the owners of Major League Baseball's Boston Red Sox completing their 300 million pounds (US$480.8 million) purchase of the Premier League club.

New England Sports Ventures (NESV) said the deal, welcomed by jubilant fans but dismissed as an "epic swindle" and "organized conspiracy" by ousted co-owners George Gillett and Tom Hicks, had eliminated all of the acquisition debt placed on the club by the American pair.

In what could be a major boost for the struggling Merseyside team's embattled manager Roy Hodgson, the new owners added that the club's debt servicing obligations had been slashed from between $40-48 million a year to two to three.

"As any Liverpool fan knows, the most nerve-racking way to win is the penalty shootout," chairman Martin Broughton told a throng of reporters gathered outside the headquarters of a London law firm as he announced the change of ownership.

"But in the end, as long as you get the right result, it's worth the wait. We got the right result," added Broughton, who will stay on to oversee the transition.

However, Liverpool still face the prospect of a protracted legal battle after lawyers for Hicks and Gillett vowed to fight on "with all of their legal energies" in a claim for damages of $1.6 billion.

They also said they intended to return to the London High Court as part of that bid, with some analysts suggesting the legal battle could go on for years.

"Frankly, I think it's the beginning of a long book, rather than a final chapter," said Rick Horrow, a sports lecturer at Harvard Law School.

Texas breakthrough

The day had started with a breakthrough in Texas, where a judge lifted a restraining order that had prevented NESV from going ahead with the deal on Thursday.

It ended with new owner John W Henry declaring himself proud and humbled with his purchase, telling the fans what they wanted to hear.

"We regard our role as that of stewards for the club with a primary focus on returning the club to greatness on and off the field for the long-term," he said.

"We are committed first and foremost to winning. We have a history of winning, and today we want (Liverpool) supporters to know that this approach is what we intend to bring to this great club."

Liverpool, the five-time European champions, are one of England's greatest clubs with a brand of global stature despite their last league title coming 20 years ago.

However, they have had a nightmare start to the season and are currently 18th in the 20-strong Premier League with just six points from their opening seven matches.

Speaking before the deal was confirmed, Hodgson said a cloud had been lifted.

"It's a very good day for the club," he told a packed news conference at the club's training ground. "It's a relief... it has been a very difficult couple of weeks…”

“We've had to live through that bad time."

Local derby

Friday's outcome, desired by so many Liverpool fans, will be especially welcome ahead of Sunday's local derby away to Everton, a hugely important game given the club's precarious league position although one that Henry will miss.

"It's better for our first experience of our supporters to be at home," he said.

The amount of money the former co-owners, who bought the club in 2007 and have been left more than $160.2 million out of pocket, have vowed to pursue in damages was scoffed at by some commentators.

"They're hoping for a settlement," said Robert Boland, professor of sports management at New York University. "You never sue for a little.”

“Every (car) bumper tap in New York City is worth $2 million in damages, you always put the biggest number you possibly could imagine for damages on the lawsuit to start."

Hicks and Gillett had faced a Friday deadline to repay more than $320.5 million worth of outstanding debt to the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), the club's major creditors, who welcomed the new owners and rebuffed the old.

"RBS is pleased the sale of LFC to NESV has been completed and are confident this will provide the foundation for the club and its fans to enjoy renewed success on and off the pitch," the bank said in a statement.

"RBS is aware of reports that Mr Hicks and Mr Gillett may intend to pursue further litigation in relation to the sale of Liverpool FC.

"The English Courts have described claims made to date as 'not realistic and abusive'. Any further claims against RBS will be vigorously opposed," it added.

Related Articles