Friday, November 26, 2010

Basketball gets jump start

Tall order: Students of Hoang Hoa Tham and LeVan Tam primary schools play in the Ha Noi Primary Basketball tournament. The Viet Nam Basketball Federation plans to promote the sport in schools. —VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Truong

Tall order: Students of Hoang Hoa Tham and LeVan Tam primary schools play in the Ha Noi Primary Basketball tournament. The Viet Nam Basketball Federation plans to promote the sport in schools. —VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Truong

HA NOI — The Viet Nam Basketball Federation (VBF) plans to promote basketball in secondary schools across the country over the next two years.

The plan is the first step towards developing basketball among kids to make up for a lack of investment over the past 25 years that has left the country floundering at the bottom of the ASEAN rankings.

The sport has already been recognised as an alternative form of physical education at secondary schools such as Ha Noi-Amsterdam, Le Van Tam and Quang Trung.

Basketball is also popular in universities and colleges throughout the country.

The VBF estimates that there are approximately 6,000 amateur players across the country, 100 of whom play professionally for eight men's and five women's teams.

The federation wants to increase the number of regular players to 10,000 by the end of 2012, which it hopes will lead to the discovery of fresh talent.

"It's the best way to develop basketball in next decade. We want to popularise it in schools over the next two years in the same way other powerful basketball playing countries have," said VBF general secretary Nguyen Quoc Quan.

"However, we need the co-operation of local sport administrations and schools to nurture grassroots basketball," he said.

Quan also complained that most communities don't want to finance projects that don't result in instant success.

"Basketball is a team sport, not like athletics, martial arts or other individual events. Communities think that building a basketball foundation for kids would be a waste of time," he said.

The sport has been played in universities since the 1990s, but it has only recently taken off in schools in Ha Noi, HCM City and Nha Trang.

The federation, established in 1962, organised the first national championships in 1985, but the sport suffered for 10 years from a lack of investment and elite competition.

The country's women's team bagged a bronze medal in the ASEAN Basketball Championships in 2004, which was the pinnacle of the nation's achievements in the sport.

Although basketball has been included in the Olympic Games since 1932, the national administration is still reluctant to promote it as one of the country's top sports, over doubts Viet Nam can be successful.

"It's possible to win gold medals at regional games in martial arts like karate, taekwondo, silat or wushu, and also in athletics, but not basketball," Quan explained.

Basketball centres have already been set up in HCM City, Yen Bai, Soc Trang, Tra Vinh, Ca Mau, Binh Duong and Quang Ninh but Ha Noi has only one surviving women's team left, sponsored by Vietnam Airlines.

Four years ago, the VBF made it possible for domestic teams to sign two foreign players with one allowed on the court at any time.

Teams from Can Tho, Soc Trang and the HCM City- based Joton signed players from the Philippines, China and Mongolia on loan deals.

Joton, who were the first team in Viet Nam to be owned by a business – Joton Paints – were established five years ago as an amateur team.

They gained promotion to the premier league in 2006 and came third at the national championships earlier this year.

"We decided to form an amateur team because basketball is a popular sport in HCM City. The team's success persuaded the VBF to allow us to play in the basketball premier league," said Joton's team manager Pham Sy Hung.

"Joton invests VND2 billion (US$100,000) per year in the team. It's a great effort to manage a team in the premier league," Hung added.

However, the team still doesn't have its own court, due to the cost of renting a gymnasium in the commercial hub city.

"Teams must be run as profitable businesses like football and volleyball teams. The change will help basketballers increase their incomes and promote the quality of the game," Quan speculated.

Players for HCM City and Joton receive the highest wages in Viet Nam, earning from VND7 to 8 million ($350-400) each month.

High wages have helped Joton lure top players such as Phan Van Luyen and Trinh Nhan Duc from Soc Trang.

However, the team plan to establish a centre in the city as part of a 10-year project, which will include a youth training centre for different age groups.

Earlier this year, the VBF also organised its first ever national U17 tournament in Ha Noi, which for the previous eight years, had been run by 16 local amateur teams. — VNS

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Vu Thi Huong makes history in ASIAD with bronze medal

Japan's Momoko Takahashi (R), Vietnam's Vu Thi Huong (C) and Uzbekistan's Guzel Khubbieva run their women's 100m final at the 16th Asian Games in Guangzhou, Guangdong province on Monday - Photo: Reuters
HCMC – Vietnam’s sprinter Vu Thi Huong won the bronze medal in the women’s 100m category of the track and field event at the 16th Asian Games (ASIAD) in Guangzhou, China on Monday.

It was the country’s first medal in track and field competition since Vietnam began participating in Asia’s biggest sporting event in Seoul in 1986.

Asian champion Fukushima Chisato from Japan secured the gold with 11’’33 while Khubbieva Guzel from Uzbekistan took the silver as she finished with 11’’34.

Vu Thi Huong, who earned a gold medal in the women’s 60m category at Asian Indoor Games in Vietnam this year, and her teammate Le Ngoc Phuong reached the final round. However, Huong claimed the bronze as she was clocked in 11’’43. Phuong just crossed line at the bottom with 11’’76.

Earlier, Vu Thi Huong came first in group 1 of the semifinal round with 11’’46 at the 100 meter event while Le Ngoc Phuong just finished fifth in group 2 in the same category.

In boxing event, Vietnamese fighters exited from the competition when Nguyen Thi Tuyet Mai was 3-9 knocked out by Shinmoto Aya from Japan in the quarterfinals of the women’s under 51kg category and Ngo Thi Chung was 1-10 beaten by Yun Kum Ju from North Korea in the quarterfinals of the women’s under 60kg category.

Vietnamese women’s sepaktakraw team had an 21-19, 23-21 victory over Myanmar in the women’s regu event on Monday. The Vietnamese side will meet hosts China on Tuesday before facing archrivals Thailand in the round-robin competition.

The Vietnamese team comprising Dao Trong Kien, Hoang Ngoc Nhat and Vu Van Dung suffered a 199-226 loss to Japanese team in the men’s archery event while Le Thi Bich, Nguyen Thi Nguyet and Nguyen Thi Tuoi lost 22-45 to Japanese fencers in the women’s team foil category of the fencing event.

In men’s individual road race, rider Bui Minh Thuy failed to clinch the medal when he completed the 180-kilometer stage in four hours, 14 minutes and 55.15 seconds, ranking at fifth place while his compatriot Mai Nguyen Hung did not complete his competition.

Wong Kam Po from Hong Kong bagged the gold with 4:14:54.18, Miyazawa Takashi from Japan gained the silver with 4:14:54.33 and Chinese rider Zou Rongxi took the bronze with 4:14:54.96.

Vietnam took one more bronze medal in the tenth competition day, dropping to 25th in the ranking table with 11 silvers and 12 bronzes.

China still leads with 154 golds, 77 silvers and 73 bronzes, followed by South Korea with 61 golds, 51 silvers and 66 bronzes and Japan with 32 golds, 59 silvers and 67 bronzes.

Medals Standings (at 10:00 p.m. Vietnamese time)

Country

Gold

Silver

Bronze

Total

1

154

77

73

304

2 South Korea

61

51

66

178

3 Japan

32

59

67

158

4 Iran

12

8

15

35

5 Hong Kong

8

13

12

33

6 Chinese Taipei

8

9

29

46

7 Thailand

7

7

22

36

8 India

6

12

18

36

9 Malaysia

6

11

8

25

10 Kazakhstan

5

13

23

41

25 Vietnam

0

11

12

23

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Thursday, November 18, 2010

EUNIC Vietnam links cultural ties

Vietnam became one of the links in the worldwide network of the European
Union of National Institutes for Culture (EUNIC) following the
establishment of EUNIC Vietnam in Hanoi on Nov. 18.


An agreement on EUNIC Vietnam inception was signed by representatives of
the British Council of the UK, the Goethe Institute of Germany, the
L’Espace Centre of France, the Brussels-Wallonie delegation of Belgium
and embassies of Italy, the Netherlands, and Austria.


EUNIC
Vietnam President, Franck Pezza, who is Chief of the Brussels-Wallonie
delegation, said EUNIC Vietnam will act as a bridge for European and
Vietnamese researchers, artists and audiences through cultural and
artistic events and activities.


According to EUNIC Vietnam Vice
President, Almuth Meyer-Zollitsch, who also is the Goethe Institute’s
Chief, apart from the organisation of cultural projects and activities
of each European country, EUNIC Vietnam will play a role as coordinator
and organiser for joint activities with various countries.


EUNIC
Vietnam will host the European music festival in Ho Chi Minh City later
this month along with the European Balling Days, European Literature
Week and European Language Week.


Established in 2006, EUNIC
operates beside the European Commission. With its headquarters in
Brussels, Belgium, the organisation has so far made its presence felt in
53 countries./.

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Bridge to become open-air gallery

The Long Bien Bridge Festival opens this weekend with more events and
performers than ever, according to festival founder and organiser Nguyen
Nga.


Nga, an overseas Vietnamese living in
France , is busy completing final preparations for the festival, to be
entitled Dragon Bridge .


The festival will be
closed to motor vehicle traffic and will become an outdoor art gallery,
featuring an exhibition of contemporary arts, including paintings by
disabled children and children affected by Agent Orange, as well as
woodblock art and a collection of kites by artisans from Hanoi and the
northern province of Hai Duong.


The festival
will also feature an exhibition of photographs, documents and other
artefacts depicting national defence over the past 10 centuries.
Throughout the length of the 1,682m bridge, it will be divided into ten
sections representing the 10 centuries (1010-2010) of Hanoi , each
section brought to life by diverse art forms, antiquities and costumes,
representing the lifestyles of the people of the time.


" Long Bien Bridge is alive," said Nga. "It's not only in the
memory of Hanoians, but it is also the bridge of the resistance, the
bridge of pains and sufferings, the bridge of happiness, the bridge of
loves, and the bridge of peace and freedom.


"It's
the flesh and the blood of the Hanoians, an umbilical cord between past
and present, between Hanoi , the country, and the world."


For the festival, the bridge will be divided into three areas. The
eastbound side of the bridge (the northern span) will become the
Bridge of Memories and will symbolise people of courage. The
eastbound side (the southern span) will be decorated with the flags of
70 countries and territories and animated by street performers.
Symbolising peace and friendship, this side will be called "The Bridge
of Dreams".


The highlight of the festival will be a
concert and light show on the bridge on Nov. 21, to be broadcast live on
television. Two musical pieces composed by French musicians as gifts
for the Long Bien Festival – On the Long Bien Bridge and See Hanoi –
will be presented by artists from Vietnam National Academy of Music and
the Flonflons troupe from France and Belgium .


The festival's general director, People's Artist Le Hung, said, "The
designer of Long Bien Bridge is also the designer of the Eiffel
Tower , which is a world-famous tourist attraction, so why we can't
turn Long Bien Bridge into a bridge for tourism? The festival
was initiated with that goal in mind, so I agreed to be the general
director of the event."


During the event, the organising board will also raise funds for flood victims in the central region./.

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Wushu artists win three silvers at ASIAD

Wushu martial artists sailed to three silvers in the fifth day of competition at the Asian Games on Nov. 17.


Nguyen Thi Bich took a silver medal after losing to Chinese E Meidie
in the final sanshou (combat) event of the women's 52kg weight category
at Nansha Gymnasium.


Her teammate Phan Van Hau
failed to overpower host Li Xinjie in the men's 56kg class final earlier
in the day while Nguyen Van Tuan was defeated by Chinese Zhang Junyong
in the men's 65kg final, forcing both to settle for silver.


Vietnamese taekwondo athletes earned three bronze medals in their debut at the Asian Games the same day.


Duong Thanh Tam and Nguyen Trong Cuong battled to bronze in the men's
74kg and 87kg weight categories, while Vu Thi Hau added one more to the
women's team in the 49kg class.


In tennis, Nguyen
Hoang Thien took a 0-6, 6-3, 6-2 win over Al Nabhani Mohammed of Oman
in the men's singles first round at the Aoti Tennis Centre.


The 15-year-old and his teammate Le Quoc Khanh then cruised past
Qatari Al Mutawa and Zayed 6-2, 6-3 in the men's doubles later in the
day.


In the other men's singles match, Vietnamese Do
Minh Quan also dominated his opponent, Pariva Jeetendra from Nepal ,
in two sets, 6-1, 6-1.


On the badminton court,
Nguyen Tien Minh waltzed over Parupalli Kashyap from India 21-14,
21-20 in the men's singles round of 32.


As of Nov. 17, Vietnam has won seven silver and 10 bronze medals in the medal tally./.

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Vietnam's new films presented to American audiences

Seven feature films, six short films and four documentary films set in
Vietnam were presented to American audiences during the "New Voices
From Vietnam" event organised in California's Los Angeles from Nov. 5-14
within the framework of the US Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences 's educational and cultural exchange efforts.


The event was organised by the Academy and the UCLA ( University of
California , Los Angeles ) Film & Television Archive.


Vietnam 's outstanding filmmakers and other special guests appeared in person at each screening.


The directors whose features were screened included Dang Nhat Minh,
Phan Dang Di (with "Bi, Don’t Be Afraid" film), Nguyen Phan Quang Binh
("Floating Lives"), Nguyen Vinh Son ("The Moon at the Bottom of the
Well"), Bui Thac Chuyen ("Adrift"), Le Thanh Son ("Clash") and Stephane
Gauger ("Owl and the Sparrow").


All of the directors
took part in an Academy salute to the legendary Dang Nhat Minh,
director of such classic Vietnamese films as "The Love Doesn’t Come
Back" (1984), "Nostalgia for the Countryside" (1996) and Vietnam ’s
2009 entry to the Academy’s Foreign Language Film Award competition,
"Don’t Burn".


Speaking at the salute on the night
of Nov. 10, Dang Nhat Minh called it an honour not only for himself but
also for the Vietnamese cinematography.


Vietnamese
martial arts star Dustin Nguyen, actress Do Hai Yen and director Nguyen
Phan Quang Binh had a conversation with American audiences after the
screening of "Floating Lives" feature film on Nov. 6./.

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Wushu artists win three silvers

Bronzer: Taekwondo artist Nguyen Trong Cuong grabs a bronze medal in the men's 87kg weight category at the Asian Games yesterday. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Khanh

Bronzer: Taekwondo artist Nguyen Trong Cuong grabs a bronze medal in the men's 87kg weight category at the Asian Games yesterday. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Khanh

HA NOI — Wushu martial artists sailed to three silvers in the fifth day of competition at the Asian Games yesterday.

Nguyen Thi Bich took a silver medal after losing to Chinese E Meidie in the final sanshou (combat) event of the women's 52kg weight category at Nansha Gymnasium.

Her teammate Phan Van Hau failed to overpower host Li Xinjie in the men's 56kg class final earlier in the day while Nguyen Van Tuan was defeated by Chinese Zhang Junyong in the men's 65kg final, forcing both to settle for silver.

Vietnamese Taekwondo athletes earned three bronze medals in their debut at the Asian Games yesterday.

Duong Thanh Tam and Nguyen Trong Cuong battled to bronze in the men's 74kg and 87kg weight categories, while Vu Thi Hau added one more to the women's team in the 49kg class.

In tennis, Nguyen Hoang Thien took a 0-6, 6-3, 6-2 win over Al Nabhani Mohammed of Oman in the men's singles first round at the Aoti Tennis Centre.

The 15-year-old and his teammate Le Quoc Khanh then cruised past Qatari Al Mutawa and Zayed 6-2, 6-3 in the men's doubles later in the day.

In the other men's singles match, Vietnamese Do Minh Quan also dominated his opponent, Pariva Jeetendra from Nepal, in two sets, 6-1, 6-1.

On the badminton court, Nguyen Tien Minh waltzed over Parupalli Kashyap from India 21-14, 21-20 in the men's singles round of 32.

As of yesterday, Viet Nam has won seven silver and 10 bronze medals in the medal tally. — VNS

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