Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Aeroflot champ Liem wants to be No 1

Grandmaster Le Quang Liem of Vietnam, who defended his championship title at the 2011 Aeroflot Open last week in Russia, returned home to a warm welcome at Tan Son Nhat Airport in Ho Chi Minh City Monday.

The 20-year-old player had an interview with local media.

What are your targets this year?

They are to take part in some elite chess tournaments including the Dortmund Sparkassen event in Germany in July, World Cup in Russia in August, and the 26th SEA Games in Indonesia in November.

In addition, I will also join some other international tournaments wearing the jerseys of Germany’s Bremen chess club in March, France’s Every Grand Roque in April and China’s Qingdao Yucai in June.

I target to lift up my Elo ratings to 2,700 this year. [Now, his is 2,689.]

And other long-term targets?

It is to take my Elo ratings to the world’s top 30 and 20 and the number one in the world.

I have another task of completing my university program. I am now a freshman of finance and banking at the Saigon University.

Is it a trouble to follow at the same time two targets?

I take all my free time from chess competition for my banking studies. It’s difficult but I will improve.

What kind of support do you need from local and central sports departments to improve your world rankings?

I’ve met difficulties in legal documents to travel abroad for competition. I wish to have an official passport [granted to government officials on overseas missions], instead of ordinary passport to facilitate my travel.

For example, while competing at the Tata Steel chess tournament held last month in the Netherlands, coach Lam Minh Chau and I had to travel far away to another city for our visas to enter Russia as the Russian Embassy in Vietnam was on holiday for the Lunar New Year festival.

It would not cost that much time with an official passport.

How is your chess training now?

I mainly learn chess by competing with rivals on the Internet as no coach or expert in Vietnam is qualified to train a grandmaster.

What do you plan to do on your birthday on March 13?

As previous years, I celebrate it with my family and friends.

The Vietnamese government has given financial support to Liem for overseas competition.


As for international open tournaments, Ho Chi Minh City Sports Department is in charge of covering costs for his competition trips. Other events like the Olympic Games, Asian Games and Sea Games, Vietnam Chess Federation will cover his expenses.

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Finding the best footballers

HA NOI – More than 100 sports journalists, coaches, and experts have cast their votes for their favourite men's and women's footballers in the prestigious Golden Ball award. The outcome will be announced next week.

The vote, organised by Sai Gon Giai Phong (Liberated Sai Gon) newspaper, is to select the best from a list of 29 candidates who also include young and foreign footballers.

V-League two-time champions Becamex Binh Duong dominate the list with three players – Nguyen Anh Duc, midfielder Nguyen Vu Phong and left winger Huynh Quang Thanh.

Dong Tam Long An follow with two key players Phan Van Tai Em and Nguyen Minh Phuong.

On the women's list, announced by the organising committee on Tuesday, six Ha Noi players who helped the national team win the Southeast Asian Games in Laos for the fourth time, are included.

Ha Minh Tuan of Da Nang and Nguyen Van Quyet of Viettel are promising candidates for the best young players of the year.

Argentinean goal poacher Gaston Merlo, the best striker in the national football V-League championship twice in a row, will face stronger competition from Brazilian Leandro De Oliveira, who moved to Binh Duong after a three-year contract with Hai Phong, Antonio Carlos of Dong Tam Long An, South African Kubheka Philam from Binh Duong and Nigerian Samson Kayode from Dong Thap.

Merlo, who helped Da Nang win the V-League title in 2009, won Best Foreign Player in the vote last year.

Last year, young playmaker Pham Thanh Luong from Ha Noi ACB, won the men's Golden Ball, while HCM City's Doan Thi Kim Chi clinched the women's title for the fourth time

Striker Le Cong Vinh from Ha Noi T&T and former national forward Le Huynh Duc, who now coaches Da Nang, both won the Golden Ball three times in a row.

The new winners will be announced at an award ceremony in HCM City on March 28. – VNS

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Nominees announced for 2010 Vietnam Golden Ball

Vietnam Golden Ball Award organizer, Saigon Giai Phong Newspaper, announced Tuesday the list of 35 nominees for the titles of best male footballer, best female, best U-21, and best foreigner in the year of 2010.

The selection of the list has been unanimously agreed upon by journalists from 17 sports media agencies in Vietnam. Selection is based on performances and conduct of morals during competitions last year.

Winners of each of the categories will be publicly announced in a ceremony to be held in late March in Ho Chi Minh City.

The list of nominees was sent to sports journalists, coaches and officials on Tuesday and it is planned the organizers will receive back the votes by March 10.

Now, strikers Le Huynh Duc and Le Cong Vinh top the honorable table with each winning the award three times in the past 15 years.

Male winners of Vietnam Golden Ball Awards from 1995-2009:


Le Huynh Duc (1995)

Vo Hoang Buu (1996)

Le Huynh Duc (1997)

Nguyen Hong Son (1998)

Tran Cong Minh (1999)

Nguyen Hong son (2000)

Vo Van Hanh (2001)

Le Huynh Duc (2002)

Pham Van Quyen (2003)

Le Cong Vinh (2004)

Phan Van Tai Em (2005)

Le Cong Vinh (2006)

Le Cong Vinh (2007)

Duong Hong Son (2008)

Pham Thanh Luong (2009)

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Ha Noi shooter to train Japanese

Eagle-eye: Shooter Dang Hong Ha will leave to coach Japanese marksmen in standard and mixed air mobile target rifle over a two-week course. — VNA/VNS Photo

Eagle-eye: Shooter Dang Hong Ha will leave to coach Japanese marksmen in standard and mixed air mobile target rifle over a two-week course. — VNA/VNS Photo

HA NOI — National key shooter Dang Hong Ha, 30, is to coach four Japanese shooters in a two-week course following an invitation from the Japanese Shooting Federation.

Ha, who has been in the sport for a decade in the women's air mobile target rifle, with a 60-medal collection, is the first Vietnamese shooter to professionally coach a foreign team.

Ha will coach Japanese shooters in standard and mixed air mobile target rifle. She will leave for Tokyo tomorrow.

"I was contacted last year by Yuzuru Nagayama, an official of the Japanese shooting federation," Ha said yesterday.

"I'm so happy. It's a challenge and honour for me and Viet Nam Shooting. I'll try to do my best with my experience and skills that I've gained from Vietnamese coaches in the national and Ha Noi team."

The Hanoian shooter broke her personal best record at the National Sports Games in Da Nang last December with 382 points after 40 shots, surpassing her old record of 378 points at the National Shooting Championship that has remained unbroken since 2004.

She also won a silver medal in the team event at the Asian Games in Guangzhou, China, last November.

Her personal best is 389 points from 40 shots during training in Ha Noi.

At the International Shooting Sport Federation World Cup in Munich, Germany last July, Ha scored 361 points to rank 13th. — VNS

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Liem eager to play for German team

HA NOI — International Grand Master (IGM) Le Quang Liem has agreed to compete for Germany's Bremen chess club from next month, Liem's father Le Quynh confirmed yesterday.

Liem, 20, will leave for Germany for March 18-19 following the signing of a two-month contract with the Bremen club, allowing Liem to compete in the German Chess tournament.

The HCM City-born grandmaster will receive payment from US$700-1,400 for each game he plays, excluding win bonuses, accommodation and air tickets.

"Liem was offered a contract by a Spanish chess club after he won the Russian International Chess Festival – Aeroflot Open in Moscow last week, but he previously signed with Bremen and French team Evry Grand Roque. Chinese Qingdao Yucai also invited Liem to play in the China's Chess League Division A, however, the agreement has yet to finalised," Quynh told Viet Nam News yesterday.

As the German Chess tournament is played monthly, the HCM City's player can travel forth and back between Viet Nam and Germany according to the German fixtures.

The 20-year-old will also play for the Evry Grand Roque Club in the French Chess League Top 16 this June when athletes will finish their match in a nine-game format over two weeks.

The International Grand Master is the first player to win the Aeroflot Open twice in a row, which has earned him an elo rate of 2,689 in March's World Chess Federation (FIDE) rankings and a place in the world top 50.

"It's not the first time a Vietnamese player has competed abroad. Over the past years, Vietnamese players have played for Chinese teams on short-term contracts," said the Viet Nam Chess Federation (VCF)'s vice chairman and general secretary Dang Tat Thang.

"A clutch of top athletes including Le Thanh Tu, Hoang Thi Bao Tram, Dao Thien Hai and Pham Le Thao Nguyen have played for Chinese teams. They both improved their skills and income from competitions abroad," Thang said.

He also added the federation always gave the green light to chess players wanting to compete for foreign clubs.

Liem was conferred the International Grand Master title following the Chess Olympiad in Turin in 2006.

The IGM said he had to overcome the pressure of his new found success to improve his world rankings at international tournaments this year.

Liem, who is a first year student at the Finance and Bank faculty of HCM City University, has to arrange time between his college studies and competitions.

Last year, Liem grabbed a silver medal at the Asian Games in Guangzhou, China. — VNS

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Benzema gives Real edge in Champions League

Karim Benzema scored against his former club Lyon to earn Real Madrid a 1-1 draw here on Tuesday, while Chelsea made an impressive 2-0 win over FC Copenhagen to hold a strong position to reach the Champions League quarterfinals.

Benzema put the visitors 1-0 up moments after coming on as a second-half substitute at a damp and chilly Stade Gerland, only for Bafetimbi Gomis to equalize seven minutes from time.

Gomis's late volley extended Lyon's remarkable unbeaten record against Real to seven matches, but Benzema's away goal makes Jose Mourinho's side slight favorites to progress ahead of the second leg in Madrid on March 16.

"I feel like I watched a real Champions League match: hard and well contested with very few clear chances due to the defensive rigor on both sides," said Real coach Mourinho.

"In the second half we managed to find spaces and, to begin with, we were closer to a second goal than Lyon were to an equalizer.

"But it sets things up well for the second leg, where we will hope to qualify in front of our supporters."

Lyon eliminated Real at the same stage of last season's competition and the nine-time European champions are bidding to end an unwelcome run that has seen them fall in the round of 16 for the last six seasons in a row.

Lyon, meanwhile, are seeking to build on their first ever semi-final appearance last year and coach Claude Puel admitted he was disappointed that Real had managed to breach his side's defence.

"At home, in the first leg, we would have preferred them not to score," he said. "It's a bit of a shame, especially because we played a great first half."

Having beaten Real in their three previous encounters on home turf, Lyon began the game in enterprising style, their five-man midfield smothering the visitors' attempts to play the ball through the middle.

Michel Bastos stabbed a shot over the Real crossbar from a tight angle on the right, Cris hooked wide from just inside the penalty area and Cesar Delgado had a penalty appeal turned down after an untidy foul by Sergio Ramos.

Angel di Maria belatedly called Lyon goalkeeper Hugo Lloris into action with a weak low shot before the France number one was given slightly more to do by a stinging Cristiano Ronaldo free-kick.

It was not long before the hosts were back on the attack, however, and Gomis was guilty of a terrible miss in the 34th minute when he side-footed over an open goal after Iker Casillas spilled a cross from Bastos.

Lyon's re-emergence after half-time drew a thunderous roar from the home fans, but a reminder of Real's attacking threat was quick to arrive as the visitors struck the woodwork twice in a matter of minutes.

Ronaldo hit the far post with a dipping free-kick from a seemingly prohibitive angle on the left-hand side, before Ramos sent a header crashing against the crossbar from Mesut Ozil's in-swinging corner.

Ronaldo's free-kick will have a more lasting impact on the tie, however, as it was awarded for a foul by Bastos on Di Maria that earned the Brazilian a yellow card that rules him out of the return leg.

Another Ronaldo free-kick sparked controversy shortly beyond the hour, with the Portuguese adamant the ball had struck the arm of Yoann Gourcuff in the Lyon wall.

Benzema, who left Lyon for the Bernabeu in 2009, received a rapturous reception when he entered the fray but he silenced the crowd after barely a minute.

Receiving a pass from Ronaldo, he drove across the area in a horizontal line before keeping his cool to beat Lloris with a low shot that Cris vainly sought to keep out with a desperate goal-line lunge.

Lyon's proud unbeaten record against Real looked destined to come to an end until the 83rd minute, when Gomis atoned for his earlier miss by seizing upon a flick-on from a free-kick to volley into the bottom-left corner.

Chelsea's firepower

real 2

Nicolas Anelka of Chelsea celebrates after his second goal against FC Copenhagen during their UEFA Champions League round of 16 first leg football match at Parken stadium in Copenhagen. Chelsea won 2-0

After the misery of last weekend's FA Cup exit against Everton, Nicolas Anelka gave Blues boss Ancelotti some much-needed breathing space as his double-strike put Chelsea within touching distance of the Champions League quarterfinals.

Ancelotti opted to leave Didier Drogba on the bench as he played a 4-4-2 formation with Anelka and Torres spearheading the attack.

Anelka showed his class as he netted two clinical finishes to take his tally in Europe this season to seven goals in six games, while Torres went close to breaking his duck following his blockbuster move from Liverpool.

Anelka opened the scoring in the 17th minute when he pounced on a poor pass by former Chelsea winger Jesper Gronkjaer and drove home a fierce strike from the edge of the area.

The former Arsenal forward struck again in the 54th minute as he drilled Frank Lampard's pass into the bottom corner.

Drogba has been out of form lately but he remains a formidable option to have on the bench and Ancelotti insists the trio won't complain about being rotated to keep them fresh for an assault on the Champions League.

Asked if they were the best in Europe, Ancelotti said: "Yes, I think so. We want to maintain their fitness, but rotation could do them good with the Premier League and the Champions League.

"They are accepting my decisions without problems, and this is important. To have them available at the moment, it's important at this time of year.

"We have fantastic strikers. I have to make a decision about the games, to put them in or not.


"Didier played for two hours against Everton. Torres and Anelka were fresh and, together, they played well."

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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Three preliminary jobs before Liem excels at world chess

After brilliantly defending his title at the Aeroflot Open 2011 in Russia last week, grandmaster Le Quang Liem has become a prominent figure in a long-term plan of Vietnam to propel him to the world’s top spot in the future.

Ranking 79th in the world with an Elo rating of 2,664 in the January’s table, the 20-year-old player is estimated to have lifted himself up to an Elo of 2,689 after clinching the title and may surge to the top 40 at this month’s table, to be released soon.

Vietnam Chess Federation Deputy-General Secretary Nguyen Phuoc Trung sent Tuoi Tre a letter explaining the three preliminary jobs that must be accomplished before Liem can dream the impossible dream of becoming the World Chess champion.

First of all, Liem must make an unequivocal decision either to enter the professional sporting career with chess or to go on with his study, as he is a freshman of finance and banking at Saigon University at the moment.

Given the fact that all top-rated sportsmen in the world are professionals, it seems unlikely that Liem can take on both chess and study and excel in either of them, Trung said.

Becoming a professional, Liem will have time to map out a strategic route for training and competition. He can decide which tournament to enter to accumulate knowledge, which one to take to test his new chess strategies and which one to win to hike up his Elo points.

“I believe Liem will have a bright future at the Chess World Cup in 2013 if he chooses to enter the professional sports,” Trung writes in the letter.

Secondly, Liem’s bright future in world chess, however, depends on how the government of Vietnam plans and implements the “national strategy of investment” for Liem.

Vietnam has long struggled to better its status in world sports. Its goal, nevertheless, is simply to get out of the “under-developed zone”, never to reach the top spot and dominate the international world of sports.

It is clear that in the world of professional sports, individual effort alone is never enough to take an athlete to the top position. In Liem’s case, it requires a lot of national support and a careful “national investment plan.”

That is, Trung said, sports leaders of Vietnam should assist with a suitable strategy to help Liem develop his chess talent and scale the height of his sporting career.

Last but not the least is the question of money.

Liem needs all the help of qualified trainers and assisting staff he can get in his daily training and competition.

“He needs money to develop into a world-class player, as we can’t ask him to win all the tournaments he takes part in and use the prize money to cover for all the costs he incurred,” Trung concluded.

liem 2

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