fbpx
Wikipedia

2009 SEA Games

The 2009 Southeast Asian Games (Lao: ກີລາພູມິພາກອາຊີຕາເວັນອອກສຽງໃຕ້ 2009, translit. Kila phoumipak asi taven oak siang tai 2009), officially known as the 25th Southeast Asian Games, was a Southeast Asian multi-sport event hosted by Vientiane, Laos. This was the first time Laos had held the Southeast Asian Games as Laos had previously declined hosting the 1965 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games, citing financial difficulties. This was also the first time the Southeast Asian Games was held in a landlocked country.

XXV Southeast Asian Games
Host cityVientiane, Laos
MottoGenerosity, Amity and Healthy Lifestyle
(Lao: ຄວາມມີນ້ຳໃຈ ໄມຕີຈິດ ຊີວິດສົດຊື່ນ)
Nations11
Athletes3100
Events372 in 25 sports
Opening9 December 2009
Closing18 December 2009
Opened byChoummaly Sayasone
President of Laos
Athlete's OathMayuly Phanouvong
Judge's OathSomphone Manikham
Torch lighterPhoxay Aphailath
Main venueNew Laos National Stadium
Website

The games commemorated 50 years of SEA Games and the main schedule was formally held from 9 to 18 December 2009, with several events had commenced from 2 December 2009. Around 3,100 athletes participated at the event, which featured 372 events in 25 sports. Laos is the ninth nation to host the games after Thailand, Myanmar, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Philippines, Brunei and Vietnam. It was opened by Choummaly Sayasone, the President of Laos at the New Laos National Stadium.

The final medal tally was led by Thailand, followed by Vietnam and Indonesia with host Laos in seventh place. Several Games and national records were broken during the games.

Host city

During the Southeast Asian Games Federation meeting at the 2003 Southeast Asian Games in Vietnam, Vientiane, the capital city of Laos was chosen as the host of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games.[1]

Development and preparation

The Laos 25th SEA Games Organising Committee (LAOSOC) led by president Somsavath Lengsavath was formed to oversee the staging of the games.[2]

Branding

 
Champa and Champi, the official mascots of the games.

The logo of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games is the image of the Pha That Luang, the national landmark and shrine of Laos beside the Mekong River. The shrine represents Laos as the host of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games and the Lao Culture, Arts and History, whereas the Mekong River, resembled by three wavy lines below the shrine, represents the origin of life, culture and lifestyle of Lao community especially in sports. The river itself also represents the integration of the Southeast Asian countries and the friendship made through sport events.[3]

The mascots of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games are two white elephants dressed in traditional Lao attire named Champa and Champi. Champa is the male elephant and Champi is the female elephant. The elephants symbolises the host nation, Laos as it was known as the kingdom of Lan Xang in ancient times, which literally means "the kingdom of a million elephants". The cheerful expression on the faces of the mascots represents the joyful and lively atmosphere during the games and warm welcome from Laos as the host country of the 25th SEA Games.[4][5]

33 songs were written for the games,[6] which included The Spirit of the Flame, the theme song of the games which was written and performed by Sam Intharaphithak.[7] Other songs included "Go Laos" which was sung by Sam Intharaphithak, Nalin Daravong, and Kave, "SEA Games Harmony" which was sung by Sithiphone, Sam Intharaphithak, Gai, Malya and Poui[8] and "Vientiane Games" which was sung by Buratino.[9] A Beerlao Campaign song for the games was also composed.[10][11]

Countdown

The countdown to the 25th SEA Games was held at the Chao Anouvong stadium on 31 December 2008, featured programmes such as the New Year celebrations, a show from Miss SEA Games contestants, performances by various artists, and a fireworks display. A countdown clock was also placed at a nearby shopping mall and the Patuxay Monument in Vientiane.[12][13]

Venues

The 2009 Southeast Asian Games used mostly new and some existing venues with the centrepiece of the activities being the new National Sport Complex. Incorporating the new 25,000-seat national stadium, it hosted most of the events. Athletes were housed at the National University of Laos, which was chosen as the games village.[14]

The 25th Southeast Asian Games had 27 venues for the games, all in Vientiane.[15]

Competition Venue Sports
New National Sport Complex
New Laos National Stadium Opening and closing ceremony, Athletics, Football (Men)
Aquatics stadium Aquatics (Swimming, Diving, Water polo), Finswimming
Archery range Archery
Gymnasium 1 Badminton
Beach Volleyball Stadium Volleyball (Beach)
Gymnasium 2 Volleyball (Indoor)
Shooting range Shooting
Tennis court Tennis
National University of Laos
University Stadium Football (Women)
Olympasia Gymnasium Boxing
Convention hall Table tennis
Booyong Gymnasium Taekwondo, Wrestling
Petanque court Petanque
Lao international Trade Exhibition and Convention Center
Hall 1 Sepak takraw
Hall 2 Wushu
Hall 3 Pencak silat
Beung Kha Nong Sports Centre
Lao-Thai Gymnasium Muay
Gymnasium 1 Shuttlecock
Others
That Luang, Lan Xang Avenue, Samsenethai, Thadeua km10, T4, Kaysone Road Cycling (Individual time trial)
Done Noune Tri Square, Ban Keun, return (Men: Thalath Market, Women: Pakkhanhoung) Cycling (Mass start)
Dane Song Cycling (Mountain bike: Downhill)
Tad Sone Cycling (Mountain bike: Cross country)
Don Chan Palace Hotel Billiards and snooker
Chao Anouvong Stadium Football (Men and Women)
Chao Anouvong Gymnasium Judo, Karate
SEA Games Golf Course Golf
Pornsawan School Weightlifting

Public transport

Lao Association of Travel Agents provided bus services during the Games to fetch volunteers between the city and outlying venues and transport athletes and performers to and from the games village, airport, the city, the games venues and within Laos. Car services were also available in the city throughout the games period.[16]

The games

Opening ceremony

The opening ceremony of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games was held on 9 December 2009 at 18:10 (LST) at the New Laos National Stadium. The ceremony preceded with the arrival of the then President Choummaly Sayasone and several guests of honour to the stadium. This was followed by announcement of the ceremony commencement by announcers, the scoreboard countdown and the parade of athletes from the participating nations led by Lao Police Force band and flag bearers carrying the flags of the games and the flags of the participating nations began with the Bruneian delegation. The Lao delegation, the largest of all participating nations with 733 athletes and officials, received the warmest welcome from the audiences when they marched into the stadium.[17][1] After all the contingent marched into the stadium, the National Flag of Laos and the games' flags were raised as the National Anthem of Laos is played. After that, Somsavat Lengsavad, the Standing Deputy Prime Minister of Laos and the chairman of the 25th Southeast Asian Games Organizing Committee gave the welcome speech and president Choummaly then declared the games opened. Mayuly Phanouvong took the athlete's oath, while the judge's oath was taken by Somphone Manikham. Later, a group of athletes passes the flame during the torch relay one after another before Phoxay Aphailath, lit the flame on an arrow carried by a man dressed as Sang Sinxay. The man who dressed as Sang Sinxay then aim the arrow lit by the flame from Phoxay with his bow carried with him at the cauldron, shoot and lit it instantly, symbolised the beginning of the games. After the cauldron was lit, the athletes took part at the parade earlier were escorted out of the stadium by the Lao Police Force, making way for the dance performance which concluded the ceremony. The dance performance includes segments such as Welcome dance for SEA Games, Forest, streams and life, Sinxay of Modern Times, Bright Future, In Harmony towards the future, Golden rice field and the light of righteousness.

Closing ceremony

The closing ceremony of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games was held on 18 December 2009 at 18:10 (LST) at the New Laos National Stadium. The ceremony preceded with the arrival of the then Prime Minister Bouasone Bouphavanh and several guests of honour to the stadium. It began with the parade of athletes by order of sports competed, followed by the closing speech of the games chairman, Songsavad Lengsavad, the lowering of the flag of Laos and the Games flag and the extinguishing of the cauldron. The hosting rights of the SEA Games was then handed over to Indonesia, host of the 2011 Southeast Asian Games in which Andi Mallarangeng, the Minister of Youth and Sports of Indonesia receiving the flag as the symbol of the handover. The Indonesian segment dance performance, Glory of Sriwijaya, was performed by dancers which combined dances from South Sumatra with other dances from Java.[18] The ceremony concluded with the Lao farewell segment dance performances which included Paddy Trash, Lao New Year, Rocket Festival and boat racing festival.[19][20]

Participating nations

Sports

Because of the limited sports facilities in Vientiane and Laos' lack of a coastline, only 25 sports featured in the programme, compared to 43 held in the 2007 Southeast Asian Games in Thailand. Among the Olympic sports removed from the Games were baseball, canoeing, sailing, gymnastics, hockey, rowing, fencing, triathlon, equestrian, softball, and basketball.[21][22][23][24]

  •   Archery (8)
  •   Aquatics
  •   Athletics (45)
  •   Badminton (7)
  •   Billiards and snooker (10) ¹
  •   Boxing (15)
  •   Cycling (8)
  •   Football (2)
  •   Golf (4)
  •   Judo (18)
  •   Karate (17) ¹
  •   Muay (13)
  •   Pencak silat (17)
  •   Pétanque (11)
  •   Sepak takraw (8) ¹
  •   Shooting (34)
  •   Shuttlecock (7) ʰ
  •   Table tennis (7)
  •   Taekwondo (21)
  •   Tennis (7)
  •   Volleyball (4)
  •   Weightlifting (13)
  •   Wrestling (18)
  •   Wushu (21) ¹
Key
¹ – non-Olympic sports
ʰ – sports absent from previous edition and reintroduced by the host country

Calendar

OC Opening ceremony Event competitions 1 Gold medal events CC Closing ceremony
December 2
Wed
3
Thu
4
Fri
5
Sat
6
Sun
7
Mon
8
Tue
9
Wed
10
Thu
11
Fri
12
Sat
13
Sun
14
Mon
15
Tue
16
Wed
17
Thu
18
Fri
Events
Ceremonies OC CC
  Archery 4 4 8
  Athletics 9 10 6 8 12 45
  Badminton 2 5 7
  Billiards and snooker 1 1 2 2 1 1 2 10
  Boxing 5 10 15
  Cycling 2 2 2 2 8
  Diving 2 2 2 2 8
  Finswimming 5 6 5 16
 Football 1 1 2
  Golf 4 4
  Judo 4 7 7 18
  Karate 4 7 6 17
  Muay 6 7 13
  Pencak silat 4 6 7 17
  Pétanque 2 2 3 2 2 11
  Sepak takraw 2 2 2 2 8
  Shooting 6 6 4 4 4 4 2 2 2 34
  Shuttlecock 2 3 2 7
  Swimming 7 6 7 6 6 32
  Table tennis 2 1 2 2 7
  Taekwondo 5 6 6 4 21
  Tennis 2 2 3 7
  Volleyball 1 3 4
  Water polo 1 1
  Weightlifting 3 3 3 4 13
  Wrestling 7 4 7 18
  Wushu 4 2 4 11 21
Daily medal events 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 7 31 35 34 38 43 47 53 74 9 372
Cumulative total 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 8 39 74 108 146 189 236 289 363 372
December 2
Wed
3
Thu
4
Fri
5
Sat
6
Sun
7
Mon
8
Tue
9
Wed
10
Thu
11
Fri
12
Sat
13
Sun
14
Mon
15
Tue
16
Wed
17
Thu
18
Fri
Total
events

Medal table

A total of 1246 medals, comprising 372 gold medals, 374 silver medals, and 500 bronze medals were awarded to athletes. The Host Laos performance was its best ever yet in Southeast Asian Games history and was placed seventh overall amongst participating nations.[25][26]

  *   Host nation (Laos)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Thailand868397266
2  Vietnam837557215
3  Indonesia435374170
4  Malaysia404059139
5  Philippines383551124
6  Singapore33303598
7  Laos*332552110
8  Myanmar12223771
9  Cambodia3102740
10  Brunei11810
11  East Timor0033
Totals (11 entries)3723745001246

Broadcasting

The games were broadcast live on 14 radio and television channels and websites in six countries.[27][28]

Brunei
Laos
Myanmar
Singapore
Thailand
Vietnam

Malaysia's TV3[29] and TV2[30] only broadcast the Games' Men's Football events.

Concerns, controversies and legacy

Prior to the games, the Laotian organising committee was criticised for reducing the number of sports. This had been done partly because Laos has no coastline (rendering sailing, windsurfing, and triathlon infeasible), and a general lack of sporting facilities in Vientiane.[21] The inclusion of a number of Olympic sports, previously uncontested at the SEA Games, were interpreted as a bid for greater coverage of the Games in Laos. Few critics stated that Laos specifically selected games in which they had a better chance of winning gold medals. The decision to remove basketball from the programme was an unpopular one.[22]

Many countries, including the Philippines – the defending champions for the men's division – offered to help to host the Games but Laos rejected these offers.[31] Laos accepted funding from China, Japan, Vietnam and the ASEAN nations to construct the appropriate sports facilities including the USD 100 million New Laos National Stadium and USD 19 million Games village.[32] Although prior criticisms had been levelled over the reduced programme and financing of facilities, upon commencement, the Games received a largely positive reaction from the other competing nations. The Games were considered a success for Laos, one of the poorest countries in the world, and a nation which had only sent four athletes to the 2008 Olympic Games.[33]

References

  1. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 13 December 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 December 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 December 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  4. ^ . 4 December 2009. Archived from the original on 4 December 2009.
  5. ^ Laos reveals the official mascot for the 25th Sea Games 2009. Laoupdate (15 December 2007). Retrieved on 20 December 2009.
  6. ^ "25th SEA Games tunes hit the airwaves in Laos".
  7. ^ "Sam - Spirit of the Flame". YouTube. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021.
  8. ^ "SEA Games Harmony". YouTube. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021.
  9. ^ "Vientiane Games". YouTube. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021.
  10. ^ "25thseagamesblogspot".
  11. ^ "Beerlao SEA Games Campaign Song". YouTube. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021.
  12. ^ "25th SEA Games Countdown To be held on New year eve".
  13. ^ "25th SEA Games countdown starts in Vientiane".
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 March 2018. Retrieved 22 June 2017.
  15. ^ . official website. 5 December 2009. Archived from the original on 5 December 2009.
  16. ^ . Official website. Archived from the original on 7 December 2009.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 November 2011. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  18. ^ Wibisono, Kunto (19 December 2009). "Lakorn Laos, Sampai Jumpa di Indonesia". ANTARA (in Indonesian). Retrieved 27 April 2023.
  19. ^ "Laos bids farewell to Games".
  20. ^ . Xinhua. Archived from the original on 26 November 2011.
  21. ^ a b Lines, Chris (16 December 2007). . The New York Times. Retrieved on 20 December 2009.
  22. ^ a b "Sport as politics and history: The 25th SEA Games in Laos".
  23. ^ Creak, Simon (2011). "Sport as politics and history: The 25th SEA Games in Laos 2". Anthropology Today. 27: 14–19. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8322.2011.00783.x.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 December 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  25. ^ . 2009 Southeast Asian Games. Retrieved on 20 December 2009.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 April 2016. Retrieved 23 March 2016.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 March 2018. Retrieved 21 June 2017.
  28. ^ "25th Southeast Asian Games Information". 15 February 2010.
  29. ^ "Malaysia vs Vietnam - SEA Games 2009 Final (Part 9)". YouTube. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021.
  30. ^ "SEA Games 2009 : Malaysia 1-0 Vietnam (RTM)". YouTube. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021.
  31. ^ "Vietnam willing to help Laos host SEA Games 2009". 16 January 2017.
  32. ^ . VietnamNet Bridge. 16 December 2007. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
  33. ^ "Laos wins rave reviews for SEA Games". Yahoo/AP. 16 December 2009. Retrieved 20 December 2009.[permanent dead link].

External links

  • 25th SEA Games Laos Official Report Part 2 18 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine
Preceded by Southeast Asian Games
Vientiane

XXV Southeast Asian Games (2009)
Succeeded by

2009, games, 2009, southeast, asian, games, ລາພ, ພາກອາຊ, ຕາເວ, ນອອກສຽງໃຕ, 2009, translit, kila, phoumipak, taven, siang, 2009, officially, known, 25th, southeast, asian, games, southeast, asian, multi, sport, event, hosted, vientiane, laos, this, first, time, . The 2009 Southeast Asian Games Lao ກ ລາພ ມ ພາກອາຊ ຕາເວ ນອອກສຽງໃຕ 2009 translit Kila phoumipak asi taven oak siang tai 2009 officially known as the 25th Southeast Asian Games was a Southeast Asian multi sport event hosted by Vientiane Laos This was the first time Laos had held the Southeast Asian Games as Laos had previously declined hosting the 1965 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games citing financial difficulties This was also the first time the Southeast Asian Games was held in a landlocked country XXV Southeast Asian GamesHost cityVientiane LaosMottoGenerosity Amity and Healthy Lifestyle Lao ຄວາມມ ນ ຳໃຈ ໄມຕ ຈ ດ ຊ ວ ດສ ດຊ ນ Nations11Athletes3100Events372 in 25 sportsOpening9 December 2009Closing18 December 2009Opened byChoummaly SayasonePresident of LaosAthlete s OathMayuly PhanouvongJudge s OathSomphone ManikhamTorch lighterPhoxay AphailathMain venueNew Laos National StadiumWebsite2009 Southeast Asian Games Nakhon Ratchasima 2007Jakarta Palembang 2011 The games commemorated 50 years of SEA Games and the main schedule was formally held from 9 to 18 December 2009 with several events had commenced from 2 December 2009 Around 3 100 athletes participated at the event which featured 372 events in 25 sports Laos is the ninth nation to host the games after Thailand Myanmar Malaysia Singapore Indonesia Philippines Brunei and Vietnam It was opened by Choummaly Sayasone the President of Laos at the New Laos National Stadium The final medal tally was led by Thailand followed by Vietnam and Indonesia with host Laos in seventh place Several Games and national records were broken during the games Contents 1 Host city 2 Development and preparation 2 1 Branding 2 2 Countdown 3 Venues 3 1 Public transport 4 The games 4 1 Opening ceremony 4 2 Closing ceremony 4 3 Participating nations 4 4 Sports 4 5 Calendar 4 6 Medal table 5 Broadcasting 6 Concerns controversies and legacy 7 References 8 External linksHost city EditDuring the Southeast Asian Games Federation meeting at the 2003 Southeast Asian Games in Vietnam Vientiane the capital city of Laos was chosen as the host of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games 1 Development and preparation EditThe Laos 25th SEA Games Organising Committee LAOSOC led by president Somsavath Lengsavath was formed to oversee the staging of the games 2 Branding Edit Champa and Champi the official mascots of the games The logo of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games is the image of the Pha That Luang the national landmark and shrine of Laos beside the Mekong River The shrine represents Laos as the host of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games and the Lao Culture Arts and History whereas the Mekong River resembled by three wavy lines below the shrine represents the origin of life culture and lifestyle of Lao community especially in sports The river itself also represents the integration of the Southeast Asian countries and the friendship made through sport events 3 The mascots of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games are two white elephants dressed in traditional Lao attire named Champa and Champi Champa is the male elephant and Champi is the female elephant The elephants symbolises the host nation Laos as it was known as the kingdom of Lan Xang in ancient times which literally means the kingdom of a million elephants The cheerful expression on the faces of the mascots represents the joyful and lively atmosphere during the games and warm welcome from Laos as the host country of the 25th SEA Games 4 5 33 songs were written for the games 6 which included The Spirit of the Flame the theme song of the games which was written and performed by Sam Intharaphithak 7 Other songs included Go Laos which was sung by Sam Intharaphithak Nalin Daravong and Kave SEA Games Harmony which was sung by Sithiphone Sam Intharaphithak Gai Malya and Poui 8 and Vientiane Games which was sung by Buratino 9 A Beerlao Campaign song for the games was also composed 10 11 Countdown Edit The countdown to the 25th SEA Games was held at the Chao Anouvong stadium on 31 December 2008 featured programmes such as the New Year celebrations a show from Miss SEA Games contestants performances by various artists and a fireworks display A countdown clock was also placed at a nearby shopping mall and the Patuxay Monument in Vientiane 12 13 Venues EditThe 2009 Southeast Asian Games used mostly new and some existing venues with the centrepiece of the activities being the new National Sport Complex Incorporating the new 25 000 seat national stadium it hosted most of the events Athletes were housed at the National University of Laos which was chosen as the games village 14 The 25th Southeast Asian Games had 27 venues for the games all in Vientiane 15 Competition Venue SportsNew National Sport ComplexNew Laos National Stadium Opening and closing ceremony Athletics Football Men Aquatics stadium Aquatics Swimming Diving Water polo FinswimmingArchery range ArcheryGymnasium 1 BadmintonBeach Volleyball Stadium Volleyball Beach Gymnasium 2 Volleyball Indoor Shooting range ShootingTennis court TennisNational University of LaosUniversity Stadium Football Women Olympasia Gymnasium BoxingConvention hall Table tennisBooyong Gymnasium Taekwondo WrestlingPetanque court PetanqueLao international Trade Exhibition and Convention CenterHall 1 Sepak takrawHall 2 WushuHall 3 Pencak silatBeung Kha Nong Sports CentreLao Thai Gymnasium MuayGymnasium 1 ShuttlecockOthersThat Luang Lan Xang Avenue Samsenethai Thadeua km10 T4 Kaysone Road Cycling Individual time trial Done Noune Tri Square Ban Keun return Men Thalath Market Women Pakkhanhoung Cycling Mass start Dane Song Cycling Mountain bike Downhill Tad Sone Cycling Mountain bike Cross country Don Chan Palace Hotel Billiards and snookerChao Anouvong Stadium Football Men and Women Chao Anouvong Gymnasium Judo KarateSEA Games Golf Course GolfPornsawan School WeightliftingPublic transport Edit Lao Association of Travel Agents provided bus services during the Games to fetch volunteers between the city and outlying venues and transport athletes and performers to and from the games village airport the city the games venues and within Laos Car services were also available in the city throughout the games period 16 The games EditOpening ceremony Edit The opening ceremony of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games was held on 9 December 2009 at 18 10 LST at the New Laos National Stadium The ceremony preceded with the arrival of the then President Choummaly Sayasone and several guests of honour to the stadium This was followed by announcement of the ceremony commencement by announcers the scoreboard countdown and the parade of athletes from the participating nations led by Lao Police Force band and flag bearers carrying the flags of the games and the flags of the participating nations began with the Bruneian delegation The Lao delegation the largest of all participating nations with 733 athletes and officials received the warmest welcome from the audiences when they marched into the stadium 17 1 After all the contingent marched into the stadium the National Flag of Laos and the games flags were raised as the National Anthem of Laos is played After that Somsavat Lengsavad the Standing Deputy Prime Minister of Laos and the chairman of the 25th Southeast Asian Games Organizing Committee gave the welcome speech and president Choummaly then declared the games opened Mayuly Phanouvong took the athlete s oath while the judge s oath was taken by Somphone Manikham Later a group of athletes passes the flame during the torch relay one after another before Phoxay Aphailath lit the flame on an arrow carried by a man dressed as Sang Sinxay The man who dressed as Sang Sinxay then aim the arrow lit by the flame from Phoxay with his bow carried with him at the cauldron shoot and lit it instantly symbolised the beginning of the games After the cauldron was lit the athletes took part at the parade earlier were escorted out of the stadium by the Lao Police Force making way for the dance performance which concluded the ceremony The dance performance includes segments such as Welcome dance for SEA Games Forest streams and life Sinxay of Modern Times Bright Future In Harmony towards the future Golden rice field and the light of righteousness Closing ceremony Edit The closing ceremony of the 2009 Southeast Asian Games was held on 18 December 2009 at 18 10 LST at the New Laos National Stadium The ceremony preceded with the arrival of the then Prime Minister Bouasone Bouphavanh and several guests of honour to the stadium It began with the parade of athletes by order of sports competed followed by the closing speech of the games chairman Songsavad Lengsavad the lowering of the flag of Laos and the Games flag and the extinguishing of the cauldron The hosting rights of the SEA Games was then handed over to Indonesia host of the 2011 Southeast Asian Games in which Andi Mallarangeng the Minister of Youth and Sports of Indonesia receiving the flag as the symbol of the handover The Indonesian segment dance performance Glory of Sriwijaya was performed by dancers which combined dances from South Sumatra with other dances from Java 18 The ceremony concluded with the Lao farewell segment dance performances which included Paddy Trash Lao New Year Rocket Festival and boat racing festival 19 20 Participating nations Edit Brunei 74 athletes Cambodia 214 Indonesia 650 Laos 853 Host Malaysia 564 Myanmar 389 Philippines 360 Singapore 413 Thailand 860 East Timor 61 Vietnam 681 Sports Edit Because of the limited sports facilities in Vientiane and Laos lack of a coastline only 25 sports featured in the programme compared to 43 held in the 2007 Southeast Asian Games in Thailand Among the Olympic sports removed from the Games were baseball canoeing sailing gymnastics hockey rowing fencing triathlon equestrian softball and basketball 21 22 23 24 Archery 8 Aquatics Swimming 32 Finswimming 16 ʰ Diving 8 Water polo 1 Athletics 45 Badminton 7 Billiards and snooker 10 Boxing 15 Cycling 8 Football 2 Golf 4 Judo 18 Karate 17 Muay 13 Pencak silat 17 Petanque 11 Sepak takraw 8 Shooting 34 Shuttlecock 7 ʰ Table tennis 7 Taekwondo 21 Tennis 7 Volleyball 4 Weightlifting 13 Wrestling 18 Wushu 21 Key non Olympic sports ʰ sports absent from previous edition and reintroduced by the host countryCalendar Edit OC Opening ceremony Event competitions 1 Gold medal events CC Closing ceremonyDecember 2Wed 3Thu 4Fri 5Sat 6Sun 7Mon 8Tue 9Wed 10Thu 11Fri 12Sat 13Sun 14Mon 15Tue 16Wed 17Thu 18Fri EventsCeremonies OC CC Archery 4 4 8 Athletics 9 10 6 8 12 45 Badminton 2 5 7 Billiards and snooker 1 1 2 2 1 1 2 10 Boxing 5 10 15 Cycling 2 2 2 2 8 Diving 2 2 2 2 8 Finswimming 5 6 5 16 Football 1 1 2 Golf 4 4 Judo 4 7 7 18 Karate 4 7 6 17 Muay 6 7 13 Pencak silat 4 6 7 17 Petanque 2 2 3 2 2 11 Sepak takraw 2 2 2 2 8 Shooting 6 6 4 4 4 4 2 2 2 34 Shuttlecock 2 3 2 7 Swimming 7 6 7 6 6 32 Table tennis 2 1 2 2 7 Taekwondo 5 6 6 4 21 Tennis 2 2 3 7 Volleyball 1 3 4 Water polo 1 1 Weightlifting 3 3 3 4 13 Wrestling 7 4 7 18 Wushu 4 2 4 11 21Daily medal events 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 7 31 35 34 38 43 47 53 74 9 372Cumulative total 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 8 39 74 108 146 189 236 289 363 372December 2Wed 3Thu 4Fri 5Sat 6Sun 7Mon 8Tue 9Wed 10Thu 11Fri 12Sat 13Sun 14Mon 15Tue 16Wed 17Thu 18Fri Totalevents Medal table Edit A total of 1246 medals comprising 372 gold medals 374 silver medals and 500 bronze medals were awarded to athletes The Host Laos performance was its best ever yet in Southeast Asian Games history and was placed seventh overall amongst participating nations 25 26 Host nation Laos RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal1 Thailand8683972662 Vietnam8375572153 Indonesia4353741704 Malaysia4040591395 Philippines3835511246 Singapore333035987 Laos 3325521108 Myanmar122237719 Cambodia310274010 Brunei1181011 East Timor0033Totals 11 entries 3723745001246Broadcasting EditThe games were broadcast live on 14 radio and television channels and websites in six countries 27 28 BruneiRadio Television BruneiLaosLao National Television Lao Star Television Lao National RadioMyanmarMRTV 4SingaporeMediacorp Channel 5ThailandNational Broadcasting Services of Thailand Channel 7 Thailand Royal Thai Army Radio and Television Channel 5 TOT Public Company Limited CAT Telecom Thai Public Broadcasting ServiceVietnamVietnam Multimedia Corporation Vietnam TelevisionMalaysia s TV3 29 and TV2 30 only broadcast the Games Men s Football events Concerns controversies and legacy EditPrior to the games the Laotian organising committee was criticised for reducing the number of sports This had been done partly because Laos has no coastline rendering sailing windsurfing and triathlon infeasible and a general lack of sporting facilities in Vientiane 21 The inclusion of a number of Olympic sports previously uncontested at the SEA Games were interpreted as a bid for greater coverage of the Games in Laos Few critics stated that Laos specifically selected games in which they had a better chance of winning gold medals The decision to remove basketball from the programme was an unpopular one 22 Many countries including the Philippines the defending champions for the men s division offered to help to host the Games but Laos rejected these offers 31 Laos accepted funding from China Japan Vietnam and the ASEAN nations to construct the appropriate sports facilities including the USD 100 million New Laos National Stadium and USD 19 million Games village 32 Although prior criticisms had been levelled over the reduced programme and financing of facilities upon commencement the Games received a largely positive reaction from the other competing nations The Games were considered a success for Laos one of the poorest countries in the world and a nation which had only sent four athletes to the 2008 Olympic Games 33 References Edit a b Laos President Declares Open the 25th SEA Games Archived from the original on 13 December 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 25th SEA Games Laos Vientiane 2009 Organizing Committee Archived from the original on 1 December 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Emblem Archived from the original on 4 December 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 25th Southeast Asian Games Information Mascots 4 December 2009 Archived from the original on 4 December 2009 Laos reveals the official mascot for the 25th Sea Games 2009 Laoupdate 15 December 2007 Retrieved on 20 December 2009 25th SEA Games tunes hit the airwaves in Laos Sam Spirit of the Flame YouTube Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 SEA Games Harmony YouTube Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Vientiane Games YouTube Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 25thseagamesblogspot Beerlao SEA Games Campaign Song YouTube Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 25th SEA Games Countdown To be held on New year eve 25th SEA Games countdown starts in Vientiane SEA Games athletes village in Laos opened Archived from the original on 27 March 2018 Retrieved 22 June 2017 Venues official website 5 December 2009 Archived from the original on 5 December 2009 Buses warm up for SEA Games service Official website Archived from the original on 7 December 2009 SEA Games opens in Laos Archived from the original on 26 November 2011 Retrieved 2 February 2017 Wibisono Kunto 19 December 2009 Lakorn Laos Sampai Jumpa di Indonesia ANTARA in Indonesian Retrieved 27 April 2023 Laos bids farewell to Games 25th SEA Games closes with Thailand topping medal tally Xinhua Archived from the original on 26 November 2011 a b Lines Chris 16 December 2007 2009 SEA Games to reduce number of Olympic sports The New York Times Retrieved on 20 December 2009 a b Sport as politics and history The 25th SEA Games in Laos Creak Simon 2011 Sport as politics and history The 25th SEA Games in Laos 2 Anthropology Today 27 14 19 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8322 2011 00783 x Next SEA Games to reduce the number of Olympic sports Archived from the original on 27 December 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Results amp Medal Tally 2009 Southeast Asian Games Retrieved on 20 December 2009 OCA Archived from the original on 4 April 2016 Retrieved 23 March 2016 Sea Games To Be Broadcast Live To 6 Asean Countries Archived from the original on 15 March 2018 Retrieved 21 June 2017 25th Southeast Asian Games Information 15 February 2010 Malaysia vs Vietnam SEA Games 2009 Final Part 9 YouTube Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 SEA Games 2009 Malaysia 1 0 Vietnam RTM YouTube Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Vietnam willing to help Laos host SEA Games 2009 16 January 2017 25th SEA Games to feature 25 sports VietnamNet Bridge 16 December 2007 Archived from the original on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 17 December 2007 Laos wins rave reviews for SEA Games Yahoo AP 16 December 2009 Retrieved 20 December 2009 permanent dead link External links Edit2009 Southeast Asian Games official website 25th SEA Games Laos Official Report Part 1 25th SEA Games Laos Official Report Part 2 Archived 18 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine 2009 Southeast Asian Games Utusan Malaysia Special Coverage PagePreceded byNakhon Ratchasima Southeast Asian GamesVientianeXXV Southeast Asian Games 2009 Succeeded byJakarta Palembang Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2009 SEA Games amp oldid 1154563881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.