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SEA Games 2015 Closing Ceremony

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Friendship the biggest winner at the Games
By Rohit Brijnath And Chua Siang Yee, The Straits Times, 17 Jun 2015

OUT there in Kallang a flame was extinguished last night, but maybe a stronger spirit for sport now flares within this nation. The SEA Games, which closed last night to music and fireworks, was a success because this nation vocally and visibly embraced it.

Even as athletes dazzled us - such as nine-year-old Malaysian Aiden Yoong Hanifah who won a water-ski bronze - it is public enthusiasm which sustained this Games. The National Stadium was almost full for the football final and Singapore was not even playing.

Athletes had to be delighted for performing is even more pleasing when there is a crowd to acknowledge effort and applaud skill. One might say it was a team effort.



In his Facebook post, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong congratulated Team Singapore athletes for their outstanding performances, but also added: "I saw crowds showing up to cheer on our athletes. I also saw the many officials and volunteers making sure everything ran smoothly.

"Thank you to the organisers, participants, volunteers, and all the fans who have made this such a memorable Games."

Singapore's athletes rode their home advantage to a record 259 medals, 84 of them gold, many won in the Singapore Sports Hub.

This was a Games in Singapore but not only for Singapore. Thailand topped the medal table with 95 golds and fittingly medals were won by every one of the 11 nations. In the arena, athletes wept and an Indonesian footballer bent down to console a defeated Singaporean. In the stands, a group of visiting fans, each carrying one letter, spelt out a sign that simply and profoundly read: FRIEND.

Even as we partitioned ourselves every day into gold, silver, bronze, this Games remains meaningful as a way to harmoniously gather a region.

In the midst of gaiety, we were shaken by the tragedy at Mount Kinabalu. Last night, Minister for Social and Family Development Tan Chuan-Jin, who is also president of the Singapore National Olympic Council, read out from the last blog post by the pupils and teachers of Tanjong Katong Primary School.

Its title was "It's not the mountain we conquer but ourselves" and every athlete would agree: Not every competitor at the Games would win but each one was in search of their best selves.



No one found their finest form as fluently as swimmer Joseph Schooling, who won all his nine events. He said: "I always strive to be the best and I'm fortunate to have accomplished my goal."

Last night, competition had ceased and, in a sweet show of athletic brotherhood, all 11 countries walked in together as one vast contingent. President Tony Tan Keng Yam declared the Games closed and called upon the region's youth "to assemble two years later in Malaysia to celebrate the 29th edition of the Games".

Now the future beckons and Mr Tan Chuan-Jin sounded an optimistic note when he said "we will work closely together" with various sporting bodies "to see how best to provide the platforms for our athletes to excel".

Sport, after all, is endlessly testing and multiple challenges await Singapore. A public must continue to romance its sportspeople. And athletes must use the momentum the medals have given them and translate it into success on grander stages. One Games is over but the pursuit of excellence has no finish line.







SPEECH BY MR TAN CHUAN-JIN, PRESIDENT OF SEA GAMES FEDERATION, AT THE 28TH SEA GAMES CLOSING CEREMONY ON TUESDAY, 16...
Posted by Tan Chuan-Jin on Tuesday, June 16, 2015








Malaysia wants to mine most golds in 2017
KL hopes to build on what S'pore has done to ramp up entertainment value
By Chua Siang Yee and Clara Chong, The Straits Times, 17 Jun 2015

THEY finished fourth in the SEA Games medal standings this year, 33 golds behind leaders Thailand, who harvested 95.

But that has not stopped 2017 SEA Games hosts Malaysia from signalling their intention to claim top honours in two years' time.

Malaysian chef de mission Norza Zakaria told The Straits Times: "I think we have done extremely well this year. We wanted to surpass our previous medal haul of 43 in Myanmar, my own internal prediction was 50, so now we have far surpassed it.

"In 2017, we (are aiming) to be the champion in the medal table."

The country last hosted the SEA Games in 2001 when it topped the medal tally with 111 golds, eight ahead of Thailand.

Norza was impressed with Singapore's hosting, especially in the use of light and sound effects at competition venues. He said Malaysia would look to build on that in 2017.

"Singapore has been a great host and we will try to emulate it and do better, in terms of organisation... and also giving services to the countries which are participating," he added.



Last night, at the SEA Games closing ceremony, Malaysia assumed the mantle of hosts.

Tunku Imran, president of the Olympic Council of Malaysia, received the SEA Games Federation flag from Singapore's Minister for Social and Family Development and Singapore National Olympic Council president Tan Chuan-Jin before handing it to Mr Khairy Jamaluddin, Malaysia's Youth and Sports Minister.

The capacity crowd was then treated to a performance titled Diversity In Motion.

Arifwaran Shaharuddin, director and choreographer of the segment, said he hoped the performance will inspire the nation to excel at the next Games.

He said: "The Malaysian athletes have exceeded expectations in terms of the number of gold medals, and we hope the next Games they will do the same, and bring the country together through sport."









Interview with MediaCorp "Today at the Games", on thoughts about Sea Games 2015. #SEAGames2015 #CelebrateTheExtraordinary #TeamSingapore #OurTeamSG
Posted by Tan Chuan-Jin on Wednesday, June 17, 2015





Let's not wait another 22 years to host SEA Games
By Marc Lim, Sports Editor, The Straits Times, 17 Jun 2015

THE defining moments of the Singapore SEA Games were not the record-breaking feats in the swimming pool or on the running track.

They were the occasions of national pride and togetherness that the athletes inspired at the 28th Games, which drew to a close last night. And the moments were all the more special for being unplanned and unexpected.

Who would have thought that a broken PA system during the playing of Majulah Singapura at the victory ceremony for the women's 4x200m freestyle relay would result in the SEA Games becoming the hottest item on social media?

The video of spectators at a packed OCBC Aquatic Centre picking up where the faulty system left off and singing the national anthem with gusto touched the hearts of both swimmers and thousands of others.



The Straits Times article about the heartfelt moment has been shared more than 69,000 times, and counting, on Facebook and Twitter. The video of the victory ceremony, posted by Sport Singapore on YouTube, has been viewed more than 330,000 times.

Contrast that number to the 5,000 views the Singapore men's 4x200m freestyle relay got for their race and you can see why that was an anomaly.

Emeritus Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong, who was presenting the gold medals to the four swimmers, described the moment as one of the highlights of a "stunning" Games that have "rallied and lifted us".

Recalled Mr Goh, who was Prime Minister the last time Singapore hosted the Games in 1993: "They were on the podium singing our national anthem and watching the Singapore flag being raised. Then the audio system broke down.

"Hardly missing a heartbeat, the Singaporeans in the stands continued with an a capella rendition. That was Singapore. That was the SEA Games spirit."

By now, many Singaporeans would also have seen the footage of silat fighter Muhammad Nur Alfian Juma'en breaking down as he sang the national anthem after a hard-fought win in the men's tanding F Class final.

His gold was the only win for silat - a win that mattered greatly to the sport, the fans and him.

As one comment on ST's Facebook read: "We cried with you."

In just two weeks, the Games have managed to bring this country closer than it has been for a while, bridging divides over issues that range from freedom of speech to gay rights. While the Games were on, it was like National Day every day, for 12 days straight. That was something only sport - which cuts across age, gender, race and social boundaries - could do.

Social media, so often the medium of choice for vitriolic messages, had, more often than not, good things to say about the Games.

Yes, to a large extent, the feel-good factor was generated by Team Singapore's outstanding performance. The final medal haul included a stunning 84 golds, far exceeding the previous best of 50 at the 1993 Singapore Games.

Although certain events were introduced to boost Singapore's medal haul, this was not the Mic-key Mouse Games. Swimmer Joseph Schooling clocked some world-class times while Malaysia's and Vietnam's gymnasts posted scores that would have stood out on the world stage.

One of the best parts of the Games was seeing Singaporeans go out and support not just gold medal favourites but also unfancied athletes like national sprinter Shanti Pereira, who delighted the country with her surprise win in the women's 200m track final. Not many among the 10,000 who turned up at the National Stadium to watch her expected a gold for Singapore in the event and so victory, when it came, was all the sweeter.

Some 22 years separated the last Singapore SEA Games in 1993 and this year's. My appeal is that we not wait another 22 years to play host once more.

There will always be arguments against hosting such a costly event. With a price tag of $324.5 million, would it not have been better to channel the money elsewhere, such as social welfare?

But perhaps the better question to ask is whether the investment was a worthy one. And in the case of the 2015 SEA Games, the answer is surely yes.

The harvest of 84 golds was a record, heralding a new era for Singapore sport. It was not only the usual suspects like swimming and sailing that delivered, but also sports like synchronised swimming and rhythmic gymnastics, which saw Singaporeans win their first golds. A total of 18 sports contributed to the bumper haul, another record.

But success was not confined to the sporting arenas.

Sales numbers at Kallang Wave Mall saw new highs, and businesses at Raffles City also saw hikes of 20 to 30 per cent. But it is arguably the intangibles that Singapore most benefited from.

Singapore marathoner Ashley Liew's decision to wait for his fellow runners to rejoin him on the right route, after they had mistakenly taken a detour, did more for the teaching of fair play than any physical education lesson could. His first instinct was not to capitalise on his competitors' mistake but rather, to make sure sportsmanship prevailed.

No fewer than three ministers praised him, with Foreign Affairs and Law Minister K. Shanmugam congratulating Liew on Facebook for "making us proud, as Singaporeans".

The anti-foreign talent sentiment never really caught fire at this year's Games as only 14 of the 84 golds won came from naturalised citizens.

In an era when the cost of hosting a major multinational, multi- event sports extravaganza has skyrocketed - the 2014 Asian Games in Incheon cost US$1.62 billion (S$2.1 billion) while next year's Rio Olympics are set to cost US$12 billion - the SEA Games represent an attractive substitute.

A nation committed to growing a sporting culture should always start with baby steps, and the SEA Games are ideal to nurture young sports talents and to market sport to the masses. At these Games, the winners were not just the 402 gold medallists, of whom more than 100 were Singaporean. Singapore, as a nation, also won.



The ubiquitous postage stamp has a special place in the hearts of generations of Singaporeans - from collectors eager to...
Posted by SEA GAMES 2015 on Tuesday, June 16, 2015




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Posted by SEA GAMES 2015 on Tuesday, June 16, 2015





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