Vietnam turns to tennis
HANOI, Vietnam (AP) -- Tennis, anyone?
The organizers of the first international tournament in Vietnam sure hope so.
This communist state is hosting the Vietnam Open this week, hoping the event
will build on growing support for the sport.
``This tournament will be a booster for Vietnamese players and the development
of tennis in Vietnam,'' tournament director Amit Naor said. ``By staging this
event, this will show Vietnam can host major international events in other
sports, too.''
The event, with a relatively small purse of $380,000, is being played at Ho Chi
Minh City's Phu Tho Stadium. None of the world's top-ranked players are here --
No. 1 Roger Federer is playing in neighboring Thailand -- though No. 10 Mariano
Puerta of Argentina, No. 14 Thomas Johansson of Sweden and No. 16 Radek
Stepaneck of the Czech Republic were in the field. Vietnam's top player, Do
Minh Quan, was also in the field.
``It would be wonderful for Vietnamese fans who will have a chance to see world
-class players in action,'' Nguyen Hoang Nang, director of the Sports
Department in Ho Chi Minh City, said. ``Hopefully, the Vietnam Open will be an
annual event.''
Tennis has been on the upswing in Vietnam recently, with 3,000 to 4,000 courts
having been built in the last six or seven years, and more than 100,000 players
participating, according to Tran Ngoc Linh, general secretary of the Vietnam
Tennis Association.
First introduced in Vietnam at the turn of the last century by the French,
tennis was considered an elite sport since only the French and wealthy locals
could afford it.
The sport was almost abandoned in the north after the communists defeated the
French at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, but it remained popular in southern Vietnam,
which was ruled by a U.S.-backed government.
After Vietnam was reunified in 1975 at the end of the Vietnam War, the sport
was all but forgotten as the country endured economic crisis and isolation.
But with Vietnam's economy steadily picking up, and an emerging middle class
with more time and money on its hands, there's been a racket revival.
Amateur tennis is big business. Rackets, shoes and apparel can costs hundreds
of dollars. Court rentals are $4.50 per hour, or 70,000 Vietnamese dong.
Hosting an ATP event is huge boost for the sport, although ticket prices are
steep for the Vietnamese -- $75 to $142.
``It would help to create an impetus for Vietnam's tennis development,'' Linh
said. ``And Vietnamese players will have a chance to learn from world-class
players.''
Though Vietnam remains a developing nation, Naor is confident the decision to
bring big-time tennis here is a good one given the country's potential.
``We went into Russia 15 years ago. There were no vending machines back then
but it has become one of the best tournaments we have,'' he said. ``We expect
the same thing here.''
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