Showing posts with label Elizabeth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth. Show all posts

Monday, November 10, 2008

Honouring Sports School’s Best


By Y.P. SIVAM


WUSHU exponent Chai Fong Wei won the All-Round Student award of Bukit Jalil Sports School (BJSS) during the Excellence Award presentation ceremony recently.

Fong Wei, a Pre-University student, was adjudged the winner ahead of diver Cheong Jun Hoong and taekwondo exponent Nurul Asfahlina Mohamed Johari, It was the second time Fong Wei, who hails from Malacca was presented the award. Her first was 2006.
Besides getting excellent results in her studies, Fong Wei was also impressive in local and international competitions this year.

In the Sukma in Kuala Terengganu, Fong Wei won the gold medal in the Chang Quan event while she was a bronze medallist in the Dao Shu event in the World Wushu championships in China and Asian Wushu Championships in Macau.


Well done: Fong Wei holding up her trophy after receiving the All Round Student award from Noor Rezan (right). Looking on is BJSS principal Marina Chin (in purple baju kurung).



Fong Wei also won bronze medals in the Dao Shu and Gun Shu events in the Beijing Wushu championships during the Olympics.
Badminton players Ow Yao Han and Yew Hong Kheng won the Sportsboy award while diver Elizabeth Jimie was named as the Sportsgirl.
The Most Promising Sportsboy award went to athlete Muhd Ajmal Aiman Mat Hassan and the Most Promising Sportsgirl award went to diver Pandelela Rinong Pamg.
The BJSS hockey team received the special award for winning the Malaysia Hockey Federation (MHF) junior league.


Promising bunch: (From left) Pandelela Rinong, Muhd Ajmal Aiman Mat Hassan, Elizabeth Jimie, Yew Hong Kheng, Ow Yao Han and Chai Fong Wei raising their fists in triumph after being presented with the BJSS Excellence Awards.



Education Ministry deputy director-general (general education operations) Datuk Noor Rezan Bapoo Hashim, who presented the awards to the winners, commended the students for excelling in both studies and sports.


“But I would like to remind the students to always respect the elders. The Ministry is also proud of the success achieved by students from not only the BJSS but also from the Bandar Penawar Sports School (BPSS). We hope more students from these schools will excel in sports and studies,’’ said Noor Rezan.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Mun Yee’s hoping to be third time lucky in Olympics


Foot for thought: Olympic-bound divers (from left) Leong Mun Yee, Bryan Nickson Lomas, Pandelela Rinong and Elizabeth Jimie looking at some of the Power and Bata footwears after the shoes were presented to the Olympic Council of Malaysia at the OCM Muzium in Kuala Lumpur yesterday. AZMAN GHANI / The Star
PETALING JAYA: Diver Leong Mun Yee is hoping to be third time lucky in the Beijing Olympics next month.

She will be the first Malaysian diver to compete in three consecutive Olympics and will be out to win a place in the semi-finals after two unsuccessful attempts.

Individual events will consist of preliminaries, semi-finals and finals. The 18 divers with the highest scores in the preliminaries will proceed to the semi-finals.

And the top 12 ranked divers from the semi-finals will move into the final.
Malaysia first took part in the diving competition at the Sydney Olympics in 2000 and Mun Yee was among the three divers, including Yeoh Ken Nee and Azheem Bahari, who saw action.
She finished 39th in the 3m springboard preliminaries.

In Athens four years later, Mun Yee qualified for the 10m platform and the 3m springboard. She was placed 21st in the 10m platform and 26th in the 3m springboard.

As the most experienced diver in the team of four bound for Beijing, the 24-year-old from Ipoh has undergone more than a month of strenuous training in Kunming, China, in a bid to earn a place in Malaysian diving history.

Besides spending more than five hours a day in the pool, Mun Yee and her team-mates also went through hill-climbing sessions to build up their stamina.

“I will draw on my experience at the two previous Olympics to help me. If I can perform consistently, I have a chance to finish in the top 18 to reach the semi-finals.

“Breaking into the final, however, will be very tough as the world’s best divers are all there,” said Mun Yee, who started out as a swimmer.

She switched to diving at the age of 10 when the Jaya ‘98 programme was launched in 1994 to prepare a team for the 1998 Commonwealth Games, which Malaysia hosted for the first time.
Malaysia did not make a big impact at the Commonwealth Games but it proved to be the springboard to future successes at the international level.

Malaysian divers have not only won medals at Asian and Commonwealth Games levels but are the dominant force in the region.

Her decision to postpone her degree studies to concentrate on earning a third Olympic appearance has paid off but it will probably be her last.

Besides Mun Yee, other Malaysian women divers making their Olympic debut are Elizabeth Jimie and Pandelela Rinong.

Bryan Nickson will return to Olympic stage again after a glorious debut in Athens four years ago.
In Athens, he was the flag-bearer for the Malaysian contingent and just missed out on the semi-finals when he finished 19th in the 10m platform.

Bryan has since gone on to become the first Malaysian diver to qualify for the final in the World Championships in Melbourne last year.

It also made him the first Malaysian to qualify for the Olympics.
Malaysia have five swimmers in the fray but the odds are heavily stacked against them making it into the semi-finals of their respective events.