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词条 1981 Southeast Asian Games
释义

  1. The games

     Participating nations  Sports  Medal table 

  2. References

{{EngvarB|date=February 2015}}{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2015}}{{Infobox games
| Name = 11th Southeast Asian Games
| Host city = Manila, Philippines
| Logo = 1981 sea games.png
| Size = 180px
| Optional caption =
| Sports = 18
| Nations participating = 7
| Athletes participating =
| Opening ceremony = 6 December
| Closing ceremony = 15 December
| Officially opened by = Ferdinand Marcos
{{small|President of the Philippines}}
| Athlete's Oath =
| Judge's Oath =
| torch lighter = Benjamin Silva-Netto
| Ceremony venue = Rizal Memorial Stadium
| previous = 1979
| next = 1983
}}

The 1981 Southeast Asian Games, officially known as the 11th Southeast Asian Games was a multi-sport event held in Manila, Philippines from 6 to 15 December 1981. This was the first time that the Philippines hosted the Games since its first participation in 1977. Philippines is the sixth nation to host the Southeast Asian Games after Thailand, Burma, Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia. The event was officially opened by President Ferdinand Marcos and the cauldron was lit by Benjamin Silva-Netto. The colourful opening ceremony was held in the Rizal Memorial Stadium in Manila. A new football stadium and indoor arena was built in Pasig named the University of Life Track & Field and Arena or the ULTRA, now called the PhilSports Arena. The adjacent apartments were used as the athlete's quarters and was converted into a BLISS housing project of First Lady Imelda Marcos. The final medal tally was led by Indonesia, followed by Thailand and host Philippines.

The games

Participating nations

{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • {{flagSEAGF|BIR|1981}}
  • {{flagSEAGF|BRU|1981}}
  • {{flagSEAGF|INA|1981}}
  • {{flagSEAGF|MAS|1981}}
  • {{flagSEAGF|PHI|1981}}
  • {{flagSEAGF|SIN|1981}}
  • {{flagSEAGF|THA|1981}}

}}

1{{small|Brunei was a British colony at that time.}}

More than 2,200 athletes and officials participated in the Manila Games.

Sports

{{columns-list|colwidth=20em|
  • Aquatics
  • Archery
  • Athletics
  • Badminton
  • Basketball
  • Bowling
  • Boxing
  • Cycling
  • Football
  • Gymnastics
  • Judo
  • Sepak Takraw
  • Shooting
  • Softball
  • Table tennis
  • Tennis
  • Volleyball
  • Weightlifting

}}

Medal table

{{-}}
Key
{{color box|border=darkgray|#ccccff| * }} Host nation (Philippines){{Medals table
| caption =
| host = PHI
| flag_template = flagIOC2team
| event = 1981 Southeast Asian Games
| team =
| gold_INA = 85 | silver_INA = 73 | bronze_INA = 56
| gold_THA = 62 | silver_THA = 45 | bronze_THA = 41
| gold_PHI = 55 | silver_PHI = 55 | bronze_PHI = 77 | host_PHI = yes
| gold_MAS = 16 | silver_MAS = 27 | bronze_MAS = 31
| gold_BIR = 15 | silver_BIR = 19 | bronze_BIR = 27
| gold_SIN = 12 | silver_SIN = 26 | bronze_SIN = 33
| gold_BRU = 0 | silver_BRU = 0 | bronze_BRU = 0
}}

Lydia de Vega was acclaimed the Queen of SEAGames Athletics when she won the 200-metre dash and the 400-metre in record times.

Bong Coo emerged as its most successful Filipino campaigner. She won six medals in six events, four of which were gold medals where she set six individual game records.

References

  • Percy Seneviratne (1993) Golden Moments: the S.E.A Games 1959-1991 Dominie Press, Singapore {{ISBN|981-00-4597-2}}
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20120801031004/http://www.olympic.org.my/web/gamesrecords/sea/sea_history.htm History of the SEA Games]
{{sequence
| prev = 1979
Jakarta, Indonesia
| list = Southeast Asian Games
| next = 1983
Singapore
}}{{SEA Games}}{{SEAsianGames-stub}}

9 : Southeast Asian Games|1981 in Asian sport|International sports competitions hosted by the Philippines|1981 in Philippine sport|Sports in Manila|Multi-sport events in the Philippines|1981 in multi-sport events|20th century in Manila|1981 Southeast Asian Games

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