Sunday, November 28, 2010

World Chess Federation president visits Vietnam

The President of the World Chess Federation (FIDE), Kirsan Ilyumzhinov,
who is on a working visit to Vietnam , was warmly received by President
Nguyen Minh Triet in Hanoi on Nov. 28.


At the
reception, President Triet congratulated Ilyumzhinov on his reelection
to the post of president of the FIDE and hailed FIDE’s orientations
for its next tenure, with support given to developing countries. He
expressed his hope that FIDE would continue to help Vietnam in
training chess players.


President Triet also thanked
Ilyumzhinov, former President of the Republic of Kalmykia , for his
help to boost the construction of a “ Vietnam village” in Kalmykia, a
Russian republic on the Caspian Sea , saying the project helped deepen
two countries’ friendship and cooperation.


For his
part, Ilyumzhinov affirmed his commitments to further support Vietnam
on chess development as well as the construction of the “ Vietnam
village” and create favourable conditions for Vietnamese guest workers
to work in Kalmykia.


Ilyumzhinov has been president of FIDE since 1995./.

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Raging Nadal storms into semifinals

Rafael Nadal raised the temperature at the ATP World Tour Finals on Friday with a fiery defeat of Tomas Berdych and a rare flash of temper as a heavyweight semifinal line-up was completed.

The world number one looked unstoppable as he battered Berdych 7-6 6-1 to set up last four clash with home favorite Andy Murray before Novak Djokovic crushed a jaded Andy Roddick 6-2 6-3 in the final Group A action to book a meeting with Roger Federer.

Unlike last year when the event made its debut at the cavernous O2 Arena and virtually every match went the distance, this time there has been just one three-setter in the 12 matches so far, although Nadal's performances have stood out and not just because of the shocking pink shirt he has chosen to wear.

The 24-year-old spin king and the burly Berdych waged baseline warfare during a compelling 70-minute first set on Friday -- proof that after an 11-month slog and three grand slam titles Nadal's insatiable appetite for a scrap remains intact.

Just ask umpire Carlos Bernardes.

At 5-6, 15-15 Nadal blew his top when Berdych was awarded the point after the Czech successfully challenged an overrule by the Brazilian chair official, who deemed a backhand by the sixth seed had landed long.

When the Hawkeye video screen revealed the shot had kissed the baseline and the umpire awarded the point to Berdych, Nadal stormed to the chair and had a heated debate with the umpire and tournament supervisor Tom Barnes before returning to take out his rage on his opponent. He lost just one more game.

"He was wrong," Nadal pleaded later when calm had been restored. "That's something unbelievable. I was just asking Carlos what's happening. That's all."

Berdych stirred the pot when he accused the umpire of being "scared" of Nadal.

"It just shows how the referee is probably scared of him and just let him talk with him too long," Berdych, who lost to Nadal in the Wimbledon final, told reporters.

"I was waiting while he was talking for like three minutes. He was like sitting there and he's not going to play.

“It's not the mistake of Rafa. It's the mistake of the referee. He just needed to show him that it's not like he can do whatever he wants on the court."

Mind games

With Nadal and Federer, the only players here to win all three round-robin matches, in sublime form it would be fitting if they met in Sunday's final when a US$1.6 million jackpot could be up for grabs.

Murray and Djokovic will have other ideas even if the Briton appeared to have written off his chances after qualifying on Thursday. Nadal was not buying the mind games though.

"My only chance to win is play my best tennis and wait and hope Andy doesn't play his highest level," Nadal said after protesting his innocence over the controversy against Berdych. "The pressure is back on him now."

While the day's early action bristled with intensity and contained the best tennis of the week, the evening clash between Djokovic and Roddick was memorable mainly for the Serb walking on to court wearing a comedy eye patch.

Djokovic was struck by contact lens problems during his defeat by Nadal on Wednesday but after revealing his well-known sense of humor he got down to business and put Roddick out of his misery in 65 minutes.

"I got together with my team and glued my lenses in tonight," the 23-year-old joked on court when the interviewer asked him about his pirate's patch.

On a more serious note he said he was locking horns with Federer. "It's a great achievement that I already reached the semifinal and I will try to give my best tomorrow night.

"It's going to come down to maybe a couple of points."

The doubles semifinals are also finalized with American world number one pair Bob and Mike Bryan taking on Daniel Nestor and Nenad Zimonjic and Poles Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski up against Max Mirnyi and Mahesh Bhupathi.

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Saturday, November 27, 2010

Gold medal karateist awarded cash

Karateist Le Bich Phuong was awarded a cash prize of VND100 million (US$5,000) by sponsor Audio Vision Group (AVG) after winning Viet Nam's first gold at the Asian Games on Thursday.

The national sports administration will also present the 18-year-old athlete with VND75 million ($3,600).

Earlier, the sponsor announced it would present prize money of VND30 million ($1,500) to any Vietnamese athlete winning a gold medal at the Games, but only Phuong has succeeded after 13 days of competition.

AVG also presented national karate team coach Le Cong with $1,500 on Thursday.

U-16s to battle Iran at AFC tourney

Viet Nam's U-16 women's football team meet Iran in the opening match of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Championship qualifiers at Bangkok's Rajamangala Stadium next Thursday.

The team, who have been training in the mountainous town of Tam Dao, 65km west of Ha Noi, will play in group A against Thailand, Myanmar, Chinese Taipei and Iran between December 2-12.

The top two teams will qualify for the final.

AFF Cup tickets discounted

Tickets for group B matches at the ASEAN Football Federation, AFF-Suzuki Cup will go on sale at Ha Noi's My Dinh and Hang Day stadiums today.

The organising committee has reduced ticket prices from VND180,000-VND80,000 to VND150,000-VND50,000 to lure more fans.

Viet Nam will play Myanmar, Singapore and the Philippines in group B at My Dinh Stadium from December 2-8.

Last week, the AFF decided to change the venue for the competition's second pitch from Ha Noi's Hang Day Stadium to Nam Dinh's Thien Truong Stadium.

Matches between Viet Nam and Singapore and Myanmar and the Philippines on December 8 will take place concurrently at the two stadiums.

Tickets can be purchased by visiting www.aleale.com.vn.

In the final match between Viet Nam and Thailand two years ago, Vietnamese fans had to fork out up to VND3 million (US$150) to touts for tickets – a significant increase on the face value of VND80,000 ($4). — VNS

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VN exceeds previous tallies

 
Fast lane: Vietnamese sprinter Vu Thi Huong (fourth left) crosses the finishing line in the women's 200m final at the 16th Asian Games in Guangzhou. Huong won silver. — AFP/VNA Photo

Fast lane: Vietnamese sprinter Vu Thi Huong (fourth left) crosses the finishing line in the women's 200m final at the 16th Asian Games in Guangzhou. Huong won silver. — AFP/VNA Photo

 
Golden girl: Karate artist Le Bich Phuong (right) deals a three-point kick to the face of Japan's Kobayashi Miki to win a gold medal for Viet Nam. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Khanh

Golden girl: Karate artist Le Bich Phuong (right) deals a three-point kick to the face of Japan's Kobayashi Miki to win a gold medal for Viet Nam. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Khanh

 
Get a grip: Silver medallist Nguyen Thi Lua of Viet Nam (right) takes on gold medallist So Sim-hyang of North Korea during the women's freestyle 48kg wrestling competition. — AFP/VNA Photo

Get a grip: Silver medallist Nguyen Thi Lua of Viet Nam (right) takes on gold medallist So Sim-hyang of North Korea during the women's freestyle 48kg wrestling competition. — AFP/VNA Photo

HCM CITY — The Olympics sports of athletics, rowing, and wrestling shined at the 2010 Asian Games (ASIAD) in Guangzhou, China, providing moments for sports fans to savour after Viet Nam won more medals than in previous years.

With only one day to go, Viet Nam has won 33 medals of all types at the ASIAD 2010, but the country's current 23rd place on the medal tally is the second worst place Viet Nam has had since the country returned to the continental games in 1982.

Viet Nam did not compete at ASIAD 1986 in Seoul, South Korea, while Viet Nam's worst performance was at ASIAD 1990 in Beijing, China, when it did not win any medals.

Teenager Le Bich Phuong yesterday morning grabbed front-page headlines of both major newswires and printed newspapers nationwide when she ended the gold drought for the country at ASIAD and lifted the country four spots in the medal tally on Thursday.

The most noticeable achievement at ASIAD, however, was the phenomenal success in athletics and the unexpected medals from rowing and wrestling.

High marks

Like previous Asian Games, Vietnamese athletics teams came to the Asian Games in Guangzhou to compete and achieve the best possible result, or hope for at least a bronze medal.

"I came to the games with the hope for a bronze medal in the 100m event and a slight hope for the 200m event," said Vu Thi Huong, sprint queen of Southeast Asia.

But the team made a historic breakthrough when it won five medals, all of them in important events in athletics. Previously, Viet Nam had never won an athletics medal at ASIAD.

Vu Thi Huong opened the historic page for Viet Nam's athletics at ASIAD with a bronze medal in the women's 100m event on Tuesday.

One day later, Truong Thanh Hang, the medium-distance top runner in Southeast Asia, bettered Huong's achievement with a silver medal in the women's 1,500m.

The success reached a climax on Thursday when Huong and Hang won silvers in the women's 200m and 800m events, while Vu Van Huyen also brought home a bronze in the men's decathlon event after overcoming many powerhouses, including Japan and China.

Success gave confidence to the athletes and changed the sports officials' mentality towards Vietnamese athletes' opportunities in athletics at ASIAD.

"My bronze proved that athletes from Southeast Asia can compete with other athletes from across Asia," Huyen said.

"Athletics achieved a breakthrough at ASIAD this year and this proved that it was not a matter of small or big size. It showed how building a good training programme and talented athletes matter to our sport at the moment," said Le Quy Phuong, head of Viet Nam's sports delegation at ASIAD.

Rowing took sports supporters by surprise with two silver medals in the women's double scull and lightweight quadruple scull events, with four of six rowers making their debut in the continental games.

"The thing that makes us happy after winning medals at ASIAD is that more people know about us and our rowing club. We are very happy about that," said rower Tran Thi Sam.

Wrestling also won its first medal at ASIAD when 19-year-old Nguyen Thi Lua won a silver medal in the women's 48kg freestyle event.

Viet Nam's women's chess team ended with a bronze medal at the Asian Games after a loss yesterday to eventual gold-medal winner, China.

Sprinter Vu Thi Huong and her team-mates failed to finish in top three in the women's 4x100m relay.

Their time was 44.77 seconds.

Thailand won in 44.09, ahead of China (44.22 and Japan (44.41).

Viet Nam has won one gold, 17 silver and 15 bronze medals to rank 23rd on the medals table. — VNS

Asian Games Medals Tally

Country/territory

Gold

Silver

Bronze

1 China

197

117

98

2 South Korea

75

63

91

3 Japan

48

73

94

4 Iran

20

14

25

5 Kazakhstan

18

23

37

6 India

14

17

33

7 Chinese Taipei 13

16

38

8 Uzbekistan

11

22

23

9 Thailand

11

9

32

10 Malaysia

9

18

14

11 Hong Kong

8

15

17

12 North Korea

6

10

19

13 Saudi Arabia

5

3

5

14 Bahrain

5

0

4

15 Indonesia

4

9

13

16 Singapore

4

7

6

17 Kuwait

4

6

1

18 Qatar

4

5

6

19 Philippines

3

4

9

20 Pakistan

3

2

3

21 Mongolia

2

5

9

22 Jordan

2

2

2

23 Viet Nam

1

17

15

24 Kyrgyzstan

1

2

2

25 Macao

1

1

4

26 Bangladesh

1

1

1

27 Tajikistan

1

0

3

28 Syria

1

0

1

29 Myanmar

0

5

3

30 UAE

0

4

1

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Vietnam wins last bronze at ASIAD 16

Vietnam won another bronze medal on Nov. 26, closing the 16th Asian
Games (ASIAD) with one gold, 17 silver and 15 bronze medals, ranking
23rd in the medal tally after 13 days of competition in Guangzhou,
China.


The bronze was earned by chess players Hoang Thi Bao Tram, Pham Thi Thao
Nguyen, Nguyen Thi Thanh An, Nguyen Thi Mai Huong and Nguyen Thi Tuong
Van in the women’s team event.


The same day, karate
martial artist Nguyen Minh Phung triumphed over his rivals from
Tajikistan and Qatar in the men’s 75kg category. However, he lost 0-1 to
China and 3-4 to Kim Do Won from the Republic of Korea in the battle
for the bronze medal.


Meanwhile, female karate
martial artist Bui Thi Trieu won 6-0 over Nepal in the 61kg category in
the first round of eight, but lost to her Uzbekistan opponent in the
next round.


Wrestlers Luong Thi Quyen and Pham Thi
Hue in the women’s 63kg and 55kg category, respectively, performed
unsuccessfully in the first round of eight. Wrestler Tran Thi Hoa also
failed to win a bronze after losing to rival Manyurova Guzel from
Kazakhstan in the women’s 72kg category.


The majority of medals belonged to China with 192 gold, 113 silver and 96 bronze, followed by the Republic of Korea and Japan./.

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Viet Nam taste first gold

Golden triumph: Karate artist Le Bich Phuong celebrates after winning the first gold for Viet Nam yesterday. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Khanh <br /><br />

Golden triumph: Karate artist Le Bich Phuong celebrates after winning the first gold for Viet Nam yesterday. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Khanh

HA NOI — Karate artist Le Bich Phuong won a gold medal in the women's under-55kg class at the Asian Games yesterday, the first gold for Viet Nam after 13 days of competition.

Phuong was not a gold medal hope and surprised Vietnamese coaching staff by beating Japan's world champion Kobayashi Miki 4-3 in the final at Guangdong Gymnasium to win her first ever gold.

The 18-year-old fought superbly after cruising past South Korea's Ahn Tae-eun, Uzbekistan's Niyazova Regina and Macau's Lao Un Ieng before edging past her Japanese opponent in the final.

"I'm so happy to beat the world champion and take the first gold for Viet Nam at the Asian Games," Phuong said after the final.

"I dedicate the gold to all the Vietnamese people, who have supported us at Asia's biggest sporting event," she added.

Earlier, Phuong's teammate Tran Duc Minh bagged a bronze medal in the men's under-60kg division.

Runners Truong Thanh Hang and Vu Thi Huong added two more silvers for Viet Nam on the 13th day, finishing second in the women's 800m and 200m, respectively.

Hang, who bagged a silver medal in the women's 1,500m on Tuesday, ran a time of 2:00:91, just six tenths of a second behind Kazakhstan's Matko Margarita, who won the gold.

India's Lukka Tintu came in with 2:01:36 to take bronze.

Sprinter Huong, who set a milestone for Vietnamese athletics at ASIAD with a bronze medal in the women's 100m, managed a time of 23.74sec to finish second in the 200m yesterday.

Japan's Fukushima Chisato won the gold in 23.62sec.

Huong and her teammates compete in the 4x100m final today on the penultimate day of the Games.

Yesterday's competition also saw Vietnamese wrestler Nguyen Thi Lua bagging a silver medal in the women's 48kg freestyle after a 5-0 defeat to North Korea's So Sim-hyang in the final.

Viet Nam have won one gold, 17 silver and 14 bronze medals. They are currently 22nd in the medals table. — VNS

Asian Games Medals Tally

Country

Gold

Silver

Bronze

1 China

180

104

91

2 South Korea

72

60

85

3 Japan

39

68

86

4 Iran

19

11

23

5 Kazakhstan

15

18

32

6 Chinese Taipei

12

12

33

7 Uzbekistan

10

17

20

8 India

10

14

29

9 Malaysia

9

17

13

10 Thailand

9

7

31

11 Hong Kong

8

15

15

12 North Korea

6

10

18

13 Indonesia

4

9

12

14 Singapore

4

7

6

15 Qatar

4

4

6

16 Kuwait

3

6

1

17 Philippines

3

3

9

18 Saudi Arabia

3

3

5

19 Pakistan

3

2

2

20 Bahrain

3

0

3

21 Jordan

2

2

1

22 Viet Nam

1

17

14

23 Mongolia

1

3

9

24 Kyrgyzstan

1

2

2

25 Macao

1

1

3

26 Tajikistan

1

0

3

27 Myanmar

0

5

3

28 UAE

0

4

1

29 Iraq

0

1

2

29 Lebanon

0

1

2

31 Afghanistan

0

1

1

31 Bangladesh

0

1

1

33 Laos

0

0

2

34 Nepal

0

0

1

35 Oman

0

0

1

36 Syria

0

0

1

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Nine-year-old Dac Lac boy impresses

Whiz kid: Teenager Pham Thi Thu Huong practises with the Ha Noi-based T&T team. — VNS Photo Hoai Nam

Whiz kid: Teenager Pham Thi Thu Huong practises with the Ha Noi-based T&T team. — VNS Photo Hoai Nam

HA NOI — Nine-year-old Dinh Anh Hoang has spent two months training at the Ha Noi T&T table tennis centre.

Anh, from the Central Highlands province of Dac Lac, was recruited by the Ha Noi-based team following his impressive performance at the Junior Table Tennis Championship in June.

The boy trains in the 7-11 age group at the centre, which is home to 13 talented players from throughout the country. The centre also hosts 12-15 and 16-18 age groups.

"I enjoy life and the training at the centre. I hope to stand on the medal winner's podium someday, but I'll have to sweat during training now," Hoang said.

"My parents were worried about letting me go. But they're satisfied at the progress I've made in the less than two months I've spent away from home. They came here to visit, and saw me doing everything for myself.

"My day starts with early morning exercises, and five days a week playing table tennis with coaches in the morning and evening after school in the afternoon."

Hoang, whose home is 1,000km from Ha Noi, and his team-mates receive a full education at the Xuan La School on the banks of West Lake.

According to T&T coach Vu Manh Cuong, the club faces difficulties in luring players to help the team's development.

"We have enrolled only half of the team's target since 2008. It's because parents are hesitant about sending their kids to train as professional players," Cuong said.

"Hoang is the youngest player whose family we have managed to convince to be allowed to join the team. It was tough negotiating with his parents. However Hoang's parents were finally convinced by quality of the training facilities when they witnessed their son's progress in the sport and life," the 37-year-old coach added.

At the All-stars Junior tournament last month, the young team finished first in medal tally with two golds and one silver, beating off table tennis powerhouses Hai Duong and the Army.

The triumph resulted from the two years of hard work by the first set of juniors - the foundation of a professional team in future.

At the National Juniors Table Tennis Tournament in Vinh Long Province, Ta Hung Khanh and Pham Thi Thu Huong also bagged two golds to help the team finish fourth.

Two years ago, Vu Manh Cuong played for the T&T table tennis team at the National Table Tennis Championship, along with former national team members Nguyen Quy Tai and Do Tuan Son. However, the team withdrew from the championship a year later, due to a paucity of players after Tai and Son left.

"It was a disaster, as we had no players coming through at that time. We signed Tai and Son from Hai Duong as a spur of the moment decision and we paid the price for our lack of strength in depth."

"I recognise that a strong team must rest on a foundation of a good training system with elite kids, not just relying on mature players, as we did. We expect future successes with a generation of youngsters from our centre over next five years," the coach said.

T&T was the first team in Viet Nam to be owned by a business - the Ha Noi T&T Group, which transformed club's status from an amateur club into a professional outfit, just as the company had done for its football team.

However, the team currently survives off a modest investment of VND2 billion (US$103,000) per year, which is just half the required funding for a professional team.

The team have yet to own their own training centre for the two dozen athletes who will enrol for the five-year training period.

T&T Group chairman, Do Quang Hien also said the group has sought a co-operation agreement with the Ha Noi Sports Administration to establish a training centre at the My Dinh Sports Complex, where he hoped the table tennis team would be able to focus on a period of prolonged development.

"We want to train a generation of high quality table tennis players. They will grow up at our centre. We can buy the best Vietnamese players for immediate success, but it's a short-term vision and lacks a stable foundation," Hien said.

The T&T team coach said the first players from the centre would be sent to intensive training sessions in China over the next two years. — VNS

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