Nguyen Thi Anh Vien is the brightest Vietnamese performer at the 29th SEA Games, possessing a collection of eight individual gold medals. Vietnam
dethrones Thailand in track and field
Vietnam’s
biggest success in this year’s SEA Games came in the track and field
competition as, for the first time ever, Vietnam surpassed Thailand to lead
the sport’s medal tally at the SEA Games arena.
Thailand
sent an athletics team of 80 athletes to Malaysia, with a target of winning
14 gold medals, which, as stated by Athletics Association of Thailand (AAT)
deputy general secretary Supawanat Ariyamongkol, would be enough to defend
their title as the overall track and field champions during the biennial
games.
However,
Thailand’s plan was unraveled as their competitors only managed to secure
nine gold medals before the athletics competition concluded on August 26,
eight titles fewer than Vietnam’s tally. For the first time, after 14
versions of the Games, Thailand lost their crown as reigning champions in the
sport.
Discussing
Vietnam’s victory, Tran Duc Phan, head of the national SEA Games delegation,
affirmed that Thailand brought their strongest lineup to Kuala Lumpur, not
young inexperienced athletes, so all of the wins secured by Vietnamese
athletes were quite deserved as they showed their abilities, whilst also holding
significant meanings.
The
success beyond the expectations of Vietnamese athletics is a worthy result of
a correct and concentrated investment strategy, based on the strongest lineup
of athletes so far, Phan said.
The
triple victory of Le Tu Chinh, on the 100m and 200m sprint and 4x100m relay
events, was an unbelievable performance for a SEA Games debutant.
Particularly, in the women’s 4x100m relay, Chinh contributed significantly to
Vietnam’s miracle of beating Thailand to bring home the historic gold medal
and set a new Games record. For how she performed, Chinh has proved herself
as a worthy successor of the "queen speed” Vu Thi Huong, who helped Vietnam
to dominate the Southeast Asian region’s short distances over the past few
years.
Le Tu Chinh, the youngest member of Vietnam's track and field
team, impresses strongly with three gold medals in Kuala Lumpur.
Alongside
Tu Chinh, Nguyen Thi Huyen went on to affirm her no. 1 position in her
favourite disciplines of 400m, 400m hurdles and 4x400m relay, including
setting a new SEA Games record. It would also be a shortcoming to overlook
the impressive wins secured by Vietnamese athletes in the medium distances:
800m and 1,500m.
Despite
regrets following gold medal misses in some events, it is undeniable that
Vietnamese athletics has experienced a very successful SEA Games.
Victories
registered in many other fronts
Excluding
the incomprehensible failure of Olympic champion Hoang Xuan Vinh in the men’s
10m air pistol and 50m pistol categories, most of Vietnam’s teams, especially
in the Olympic sports, have left strong impressions with encouraging results
in the SEA Games arena.
In
regards to swimming, "little mermaid” Nguyen Thi Anh Vien repeated the same
miracle that saw her win Singapore two years ago, securing eight individual
gold medals and breaking four Games records. With this amazing collection,
Vien is not only the brightest Vietnamese performers but also among the most
valuable athletes at the Kuala Lumpur Games.
Concerning
other Olympic events, the men’s gymnastics team accounted for five of the
Games’ seven gold medals; Vietnamese table tennis players overcame their
Singaporean opponents to win the men’s team title for the first time since
1989; and weightlifter Trinh Van Vinh claimed a shocking gold medal and broke
two records in the men’s 62kg category, beating a reigning Olympic runner-up.
Especially,
at the 29th SEA Games, Vietnam introduced a number of new
young promising athletes. It came as a great surprise to everyone as
15-year-old swimmer Nguyen Huu Kim Son blasted his way to a gold medal and
set up a new Games record in such a difficult discipline as the 400m medley.
Meanwhile, Huy Hoang, who is two years older than Son, did the same thing in
the men’s 1,500m freestyle category. Le Tu Chinh, the youngest member of
Vietnam’s track and field team, also made a perfect debut at the SEA Games
arena with three golds and one Games record.
Although
the SEA Games is only a regional-level playground, the success achieved by
the Vietnamese athletes there will be a launchpad for them towards achieving
greater results at the continental and world level Games, such as the Asian
Games and the Olympic Games.
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