The Phnom Penh Post

NOCC to contest petanque, tennis axe

- HS Manjunath

THE National Olympic Committee of Cambodia will lobby hard over the next few weeks for the inclusion of the Kingdom’s most productive medalearni­ng sport, petanque, along with vovinam and tennis after the discipline­s were left out of the initial list of 30 preferred sports for the 2019 SEA Games in the Philippine­s

The move was recommende­d by the Executive Committee of the SEA Games Federation for approval by the SEA Games Federation Council.

Chairman of the SEAGF Executive Committee Dr Celso L Dayrit called on the council to approve the list with immediate effect, even as the Olympic Council of Malaysia joined Cambodia in calling for the res- toration of several sports axed from the previous edition, one the host country dominated with an all-time high of 145 gold medals.

The 30th SEA Games are to be held from November 30 to December 10 next year.

While Cambodia has scooped multiple golds and a clutch of silver and bronze medals from the sport and has produced petanque world champions over the past few years, vovinam has also contribute­d to golden glory, most recently at the World Championsh­ips.

Tennis hasn’t missed a medal since the 2007 Games in Thailand, bar 2013 when Myanmar for the first time in history dropped it only for it to be restored by Singapore in 2015, with Malaysia retaining it last year in Kuala Lumpur.

According to the secretaryg­eneral of the NOCC, Vath Chamroeun, who attended the two-day Manila deliberati­ons, there is a provision for additional sports to be included if the sponsor of that request is backed by the mandatory support of at least four fellow member nations.

“Based on the representa­tion made by the Philippine­s Olympic Committee, more discipline­s can be added in line with suggestion­s from other NOCs before June 13. We intend to rally support for the i n c l u s i o n o f p e t a n q u e , vovinam, e-sport, indoor hockey and tennis,” Chamroeun told The Post on Sunday.

Among the sports dropped from Kuala Lumpur 2017 are hockey, table tennis, rugby, petanque, lawn bowls, netball, cricket, water skiing and track cycling.

As hosts, the Philippine­s have brought in discipline­s not contested last year, like baseball, judo and jujitsu, wrestling, dancesport and arnis, a Philippine martial art.

B a d mi n t o n , o r i g i n a l l y dropped from the initial list, was reinstated following strong objections from Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Myanmar and Thailand.

Fed confident of U-turn

As soon as word reached Tennis Cambodia that the game found no place in the original list, its secretary-general, Tep Rithivit, announced his intention to rally support among like-minded federation­s to push for its retention.

“For the Philippine­s, one of the top medal contenders, to axe tennis is a big surprise.

“I am confident that countries like Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam and Malaysia will get on board before the June 13 deadline and get tennis back into the competitio­n,” Rithivit told The Post.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? NOCC secretary-general Vath Chamroeun attends the SEA Games Federation Executive Committee meeting.
SUPPLIED NOCC secretary-general Vath Chamroeun attends the SEA Games Federation Executive Committee meeting.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia