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luckyyy

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1)Tianhe Bowling Hall , but there won`t be any spectators because there is no room to seat them.
The squeeze on space also means that only two officials will be allowed to accompany each team when the event is underway.


Guangzhou: The tenpin bowling competition at the Asian Games is shaping up as one of the closest ever but will be completely lacking atmosphere, drawing angry protests from the top teams.

South Korea are the dominant nation, having won 16 gold, 14 silver and 13 bronze since the sport was introduced to the Games in Bangkok in 1978, with Malaysia seen as the their biggest threat.

The action starts at Tianhe Bowling Hall tomrrow, but there won`t be any spectators because there is no room to seat them.


The squeeze on space also means that only two officials will be allowed to accompany each team when the event is underway.

An official Asian Games news release said the decision sparked protests from players whose families and friends will have to watch the action on TV outside the venue.

Malaysian team manager Cheah Ban Cheng said the Asian Bowling Federation (ABF) was doing the sport an injustice.


"How can bowling get into the Olympics if we do not make it a spectator sport? Everyone knows that this is one of the criteria if the sport is to be in the Olympic programme," he said.

"How can the ABF, in sanctioning the event, overlook this and allow this to happen in our own backyard? Asians, after all, are doing their best to lobby for the inclusion of the sport in the Olympics.”

"The venue is nice but all these matters should have been looked into. It is not right to shut us out like this. I hope this will not happen again."

Korean coach Kang Do-In agreed that it was ridiculous to hold the event with no spectators.

"The lanes are good. However, the spectator seats are not enough. There should be hundreds of seats here," he said.

"The concourse area (between the stands and the bowling
approach is too narrow."

Korea`s strength lies in an equally formidable men and women`s team -- most other countries don`t have a balanced combination and either the men are good or women, but not both.

But they will be tested here with the Malaysians fielding their best team in years, while China, Singapore, Hong Kong and Thailand have also prepared long and hard for the high-profile event in bowling`s calendar.

Many of them have hired foreign coaches, many of whom are expert in ball drilling, lane conditions and other technical aspects of bowling that play such important roles in ensuring as many strikes as possible.

Twelve gold medals are at stake, with the competition running through to November 24.


Bureau Report

Row brews ahead of bowling
 
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Asian Games: Indian gymnastics coach deserts team

Guangzhou: Even before the competitions in the Asian Games could start, the Indian contingent was rocked by a controversy with the foreign coach of the gymnastic squad deserting the team after he was barred from taking part in the Opening Ceremony.Peeved at not being part of the Indian contingent for Friday's Asian Games Opening Ceremony, the foreign coach of the gymnastics contingent, Vladmir Chertkov, has left the squad in the lurch, according to the chef de mission Abhay Singh Chautala.

"Yesterday he wanted to be part of the contingent in the march past of the opening ceremony. He was wearing jeans and t-shirt and was told he needed to be attired in the dress that was worn by all the members for the ceremony. But he just left his room key in the Village and has left. I don't know his whereabouts now," Chautala told reporters."A lot of foreign coaches are connected with the Indian teams but none had any problem. If he has any he should come and talk to me," Chautala said.

Chautala also wanted the federation authorities and the Indian government to take strict action against the Russia-born US based coach for deserting the side during the mega event.

"I would like the federation president and secretary to take strict action against the coach. The government which pays his salary too should take necessary action for his irresponsible behaviour," Chautala said.

Six men and three women gymnasts are taking part in artistic gymmastics. Meanwhile, the participation of the team in the equestrian events is still in doubt as the Chinese authorities have not allowed the horses to enter.

"This is between the two government authorities," said Chautala.
 
2)Asia`s cricket bosses were on Sunday investigating the poor fan response to the sport`s debut in China despite claims that all tickets had been sold out.
Asia's cricket bosses were on Sunday investigating the poor fan response to the sport's debut in China despite claims that all tickets had been sold out.

Asian Games officials last week said there were no tickets left for the week-long women's competition at the new 4,800-seater cricket stadium in Guangzhou.

But just a smattering of spectators turned up for China's opening match against Malaysia on Saturday, which the hosts won easily by 55 runs.


"Frankly, we don't know what happpened, but we are trying to find out," Asian Cricket Council spokesman Shahriar Khan told AFP.

"It is true no tickets were available online, the only way they could be bought. I had many people asking me for tickets, but there was little I could do."

"It was definitely not a nice feeling to see empty stands for what was a historic moment."


Khan said he was told the Games organising committee (GAGOC) had bought all the tickets to ensure a full house, but were unable to distribute them.

Cricket's low-key debut at the Asian Games came even as the sport was fighting to keep its place in the four-yearly event after organisers of the next Games in South Korea wanted it out.

Cricket was omitted from Incheon's list of events proposed for the 2014 Asiad when it was released on Thursday, but the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) wants it retained because of its TV appeal.

The issue will now be decided at an OCA executive board meeting in Muscat in December.

OCA honorary life vice-president Wei Jizhong said there was a future for cricket in the Games since it was "very popular and very influential in Asia, especially in South Asia".

However, OCA vice-president Shin Yong Suk, who sits on the Incheon organising committee, said that South Korea did not even have a national cricket federation.

Cricket was last seen at a major multi-sport event at the 1998 Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpur, but was dropped for the next three editions in England, Australia and India.

Its Asian Games debut has already been marred by India's refusal to field men's or women's teams due to international and domestic commitments.

India, whose huge cricket-mad television audiences make them an attractive proposition for any organiser, are currently hosting New Zealand for a Test and one-day series.

Asia's other big three -- Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh -- sent second-string teams for the Twenty20 tournament in Guangzhou, robbing the event of its star appeal.

The International Cricket Council, the sport's ruling body, has identified China as one of the major new markets along with the United States for the development of the sport

Asiad: Cricket chiefs probe ticket farce
 
2)Asia`s cricket bosses were on Sunday investigating the poor fan response to the sport`s debut in China despite claims that all tickets had been sold out.
Asia's cricket bosses were on Sunday investigating the poor fan response to the sport's debut in China despite claims that all tickets had been sold out.

Kalmadi must have bought all the tickets just to confuse the Chinese. :agree:
 
3) scoring glitch

GUANGZHOU: From a memorable 2008 Asian Games to an utterly forgettable run two years later, Olympic champion Abhinav Bindra saw both ends of fortune's spectrum here on Saturday.

Cruising with ease and bristling with purpose on the opening day, Bindra saw his Asian Games dreams come crashing down when a probable scoring glitch tallied his 42nd shot as a mere 7.

The face continued to be emotionless but the shoulders drooped as Bindra dropped down rung after rung before the five-way tie to the final rounds saw him crack. The qualifying shoot-off score was perhaps a lot more flattering for Sanjeev Rajput, who missed a last-eight berth by a decimal point (51.8 to the 51.9 scored by Japan's Yamashita Toshikazu) when compared to Bindra's 50.6.

"Unfortunate," was how Bindra described it later on. "It was an error, no doubt about it. I was shooting really well. It was sheer bad luck." Bindra, who had 398 at the end of the fourth round, was immediately asked by his Kazakh coach Stanislav Lapidus to lodge a protest. Lapidus told him that he was certain the score was 9 but Bindra decided against doing so as he was unsure about what had happened.
Bindra denied by scoring glitch - The Times of India
 
1)Tianhe Bowling Hall , but there won`t be any spectators because there is no room to seat them.
The squeeze on space also means that only two officials will be allowed to accompany each team when the event is underway.


Guangzhou: The tenpin bowling competition at the Asian Games is shaping up as one of the closest ever but will be completely lacking atmosphere, drawing angry protests from the top teams.

South Korea are the dominant nation, having won 16 gold, 14 silver and 13 bronze since the sport was introduced to the Games in Bangkok in 1978, with Malaysia seen as the their biggest threat.

The action starts at Tianhe Bowling Hall tomrrow, but there won`t be any spectators because there is no room to seat them.


The squeeze on space also means that only two officials will be allowed to accompany each team when the event is underway.

An official Asian Games news release said the decision sparked protests from players whose families and friends will have to watch the action on TV outside the venue.

Malaysian team manager Cheah Ban Cheng said the Asian Bowling Federation (ABF) was doing the sport an injustice.


"How can bowling get into the Olympics if we do not make it a spectator sport? Everyone knows that this is one of the criteria if the sport is to be in the Olympic programme," he said.

"How can the ABF, in sanctioning the event, overlook this and allow this to happen in our own backyard? Asians, after all, are doing their best to lobby for the inclusion of the sport in the Olympics.”

"The venue is nice but all these matters should have been looked into. It is not right to shut us out like this. I hope this will not happen again."

Korean coach Kang Do-In agreed that it was ridiculous to hold the event with no spectators.

"The lanes are good. However, the spectator seats are not enough. There should be hundreds of seats here," he said.

"The concourse area (between the stands and the bowling
approach is too narrow."

Korea`s strength lies in an equally formidable men and women`s team -- most other countries don`t have a balanced combination and either the men are good or women, but not both.

But they will be tested here with the Malaysians fielding their best team in years, while China, Singapore, Hong Kong and Thailand have also prepared long and hard for the high-profile event in bowling`s calendar.

Many of them have hired foreign coaches, many of whom are expert in ball drilling, lane conditions and other technical aspects of bowling that play such important roles in ensuring as many strikes as possible.

Twelve gold medals are at stake, with the competition running through to November 24.


Bureau Report

Row brews ahead of bowling

Spectators are not that vital to a sport. If they can be accommodated, fine, if they can't, it is OK. The most important thing is the sporting event itself. If the event is conducted in an impartial manner and as per the rules, no one can call it a controversy. Let the spectators go else where to give vent to their excess energy. The teams just have to compete on their merit without the additional benefits that a sympathetic audience gives.
 
Spectators are not that vital to a sport. If they can be accommodated, fine, if they can't, it is OK. The most important thing is the sporting event itself. If the event is conducted in an impartial manner and as per the rules, no one can call it a controversy. Let the spectators go else where to give vent to their excess energy. The teams just have to compete on their merit without the additional benefits that a sympathetic audience gives.


chinese are hiding something..
i think the infrastructure is not ready to take the load of the spectaters...

It is true no tickets were available online, the only way they could be bought. I had many people asking me for tickets, but there was little I could do."

"It was definitely not a nice feeling to see empty stands for what was a historic moment."

Khan said he was told the Games organising committee (GAGOC) had bought all the tickets to ensure a full house, but were unable to distribute them
 
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chinese are hiding something..
i think the infrastructure is not ready to take the load of the spectaters...

Buddy, does it really matter? As long as the event itself is conducted as per the rules of the game?
 
Buddy, does it really matter? As long as the event itself is conducted as per the rules of the game?


all knows that main revenue comes from advertisment/telecast rights only and spectaters hardly add to any revenue...more over if there be no spectaterts at the venure lot burden can be easied on infrastructure , security etc....

how about conducting IPL on a empty stadium...

i myself won't mind..
 
one thing that i know is that
organizers of Asians games 2010 is 1000 times better than cwg 2010
 
Any proof you can share with us?

it's all there in the news article...

Tianhe Bowling Hall , but there won`t be any spectators because there is no room to seat them.
The squeeze on space also means that only two officials will be allowed to accompany each team when the event is underway.


It is true no tickets were available online, the only way they could be bought. I had many people asking me for tickets, but there was little I could do."
"It was definitely not a nice feeling to see empty stands for what was a historic moment."
Khan said he was told the Games organising committee (GAGOC) had bought all the tickets to ensure a full house, but were unable to distribute them

Korean coach Kang Do-In agreed that it was ridiculous to hold the event with no spectators
 
all knows that main revenue comes from advertisment/telecast rights only and spectaters hardly add to any revenue...more over if there be no spectaterts at the venure lot burden can be easied on infrastructure , security etc....

how about conducting IPL on a empty stadium...

i myself won't mind..

What I meant to imply was that these events are not entirely dependent on the revenues generated. They are not commercial enterprises. It is the responsibility of the nation which wins the bid to conduct the events as well as they can. I doubt the revenues earned during the CWG 2010 are even remotely close to the expenditure that India incurred on the same.
 

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