Saturday, May 18, 2024
28 C
Brunei Town

Arm wrestlers flex muscle

Fadhil Yunus

The Malay word berambit, derived from the term ‘arm wrestling’, has long been deeply rooted in Brunei Darussalam sporting culture yet is still less known among a certain group of people, especially among the younger generation.

But when one mentions arm wrestling or the literal translation of gusti lengan, only then they will be able to know where berambit originally comes from.

In an effort to enhance and revive the sport in the community, the Brunei Arm Wrestling Association is now actively promoting the sport in various ways.

The Brunei Arm Wresting Association was first established on December 6, 2017 led by Pengiran Haji Mohammad Yusren bin Pengiran Haji Mohd Daud as its president.

Currently, there are more than 90 members in the association and the Gym Muscle Factory based in Kampong Sengkurong has been utilised as their training venue.

Previously, arm wrestling was one of the sports which was not considered foreign to the community and was once seen as an activity performed during gatherings among family members and friends.

Most people assume that the sport activity requires physical strength, besides also leading to injury if making a wrong step.

Arm wrestling involves two participants who will contest either in the left or right position by holding and locking each other’s hands.

In playing the sport, several rules must also be complied with, such as using the knockout format whereby the player who loses for a second time will be eliminated from competition and the player who wins will proceed to the next round. The game is played by forcing the opponent’s hand to the table top and the player whose hand collapses loses. Only the right hand is allowed to be used during the competition. Each player is not allowed to wear any accessory such as a watch, ring and the like.

According to Pengiran Haji Mohammad Yusren, each player who plays in the country will follow standard rules set by the World Arm Wrestling Federation.

Even though the association has been formed for more than four years, it is still considered in a developing stage.

As with any other association in the country, the Brunei Arm Wrestling Federation has felt the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic which has affected the country and the world. It has also frustrated the efforts and plans of the association.

Nevertheless, it did not dampen the spirits of the association’s members to continuously train individually. In terms of achievements since its establishment, the association has succeeded in organising several competitions besides joining international competitions like in Kuching, Sarawak where local athletes finished among the top 25 participants as well as the Borneo Sports in Sabah.

On future plans, the association hopes to develop and progress the sport by attracting more enthusiasts, especially the younger generation, in addition to being determined to bring the sport to reach the international arena.

At the end of last year, the association conducted an arm wrestling workshop, organised in conjunction with Brunei December Festival (BDF) 2021, as one of the efforts to introduce the sport to the public.

Among the matters discussed during the online seminar through the Zoom application included an explanation on why arm wrestling is increasingly popular; the association’s upcoming plans; national athlete selection; involvement in the International Federation of Armwrestling (IFA) events; and goals to achieve within the next five years.

Those interested in participating can contact the association at the Gym Muscle Factory in Sengkurong.

Those starting with the sport have also been called to attend training as well as obtain guidance from a professional coach as a newcomer will not immediately sit at the table.

This is because an arm wrestling technique does not only encompass wrestling but also various exercises, such as building muscle mass, using a special nutritional system and designing an individual regimen for each athlete.

A newcomer who instantly begins training with a fight quite often leads to injury. Thus, it is imperative for newcomers and sport enthusiasts to learn and understand every rule of the sport.

Salah says he is not asking for ‘crazy stuff’ in new Liverpool deal

LONDON (AFP) – Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah (AFP pic below) said he is not asking for “crazy stuff” in any new contract he signs with the Premier League club but wants the deal to reflect his huge contribution at Anfield.

The Egypt international has fewer than 18 months remaining on his current deal and has reiterated whether he stays or goes remains in the hands of Liverpool.

Reports suggested that Salah, who has won the Champions League and Premier League with Liverpool, is looking for a weekly salary of over GBP300,000.

That would smash the Reds’ wage structure and would represent a significant policy change by the club, with the owners reluctant to hand out lucrative contracts to players once they reach 30, which Salah does in June.

Salah, who scored 111 goals in 165 Premier League matches for Liverpool, and is on track for a third Golden Boot in five years, said he wanted to be appreciated. “I want to stay, but it’s not in my hands. It’s in their hands. They know what I want. I’m not asking for crazy stuff,” Salah told GQ magazine.

“The thing is when you ask for something and they show you they can give you something (they should) because they appreciate what you did for the club.

“I’ve been here for my fifth year now. I know the club very well. I love the fans. The fans love me. But with the administration, they have (been) told the situation. It’s in their hands.”

Salah, currently playing for Egypt at the Africa Cup of Nations, has made the three-man shortlist, along with Bayern Munich’s Robert Lewandowski and Paris Saint-Germain’s Lionel Messi, for FIFA’s best men’s player of 2021.

He finished seventh in the race for last year’s Ballon d’Or, but the Egyptian’s ambition is to be the best in the world.

“I can’t really lie and say honestly I didn’t think about it,” he said. “No, I think about it. I want to be the best player in the world.

“But I will have a good life even if I don’t win. My life is OK, everything is fine.”

Fed vice chair is latest official to quit in trading scandal

WASHINGTON (AP) – Federal Reserve Vice Chair Richard Clarida said on Monday that he will step down on Friday, the third Fed official to resign after a trading scandal at the central bank that involved potential conflicts of interest.

The announcement followed new revelations around Clarida’s trading in a stock fund in February 2020, when the coronavirus threatened to upend the global economy and the Fed was discussing extraordinary rescue measures.

The New York Times last week reported that Clarida amended his financial disclosures in late December to show that he had sold and then repurchased shares in the stock fund within a matter of days.

Previously, Clarida had reported only the purchases, which came a day before Chair Jerome Powell said the Fed was prepared to support markets and the economy.

The Fed had characterised the purchase as a simple portfolio rebalancing – an explanation that was undercut by the revelation of the initial sale.

Last year, the presidents of two Fed regional banks – Robert Kaplan of the Dallas Fed and Eric Rosengren of the Boston Fed – also stepped down after their questionable trading was revealed.

Although the trades complied with Fed financial ethics rules, they raised the possibility of conflicts of interest because the officials could have profitted from the actions the Fed was taking at the time. Critics, notably Senator Elizabeth Warren, sharply criticised the trades and called for a ban on stock ownership by Fed officials.

Traders Edward McCarthy and Edward Curran working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. PHOTO: AP

Local team finishes in top 10 at SEA EC

Fadhil Yunus

Brunei Darussalam’s e-sport team Buah Gaming finished eighth in the PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds (PUBG) category, after accumulating 120 points at the virtual Southeast Asian ESports Championship (SEA EC) recently.

Despite apparent limitations, the Brunei representatives made a valiant effort towards their quest for glory after collecting two back-to-back Winner Winner Chicken Dinner (WWCD) titles during the second day of the final stage.

Brunei’s other representative, Auto Too Soon, whose entry to the final stage was aided by a strong showing in the opening day of the competition, finished 15th overall with 63 points.

Malaysia’s Geek Fam emerged champion with 175 points, followed by Thailand’s The Infinity with 161 points as the runners-up and Vietnam’s Eagles ESport in third place.

ESports Association of Brunei (ESB) said, “Our representatives Buah Gaming and Auto Too Soon did their very best and well done to both of them as they proved they can compete with some of the professional teams in the region.”

Buah Gaming produced one of the finest moments in the regional scene when all participants avoided elimination in the Sanhok round and also ensured the final elimination of eventual winners, Geek Fam.

Unfazed by formidable opposition, they recorded the most number of eliminations in the final stage with 16, which helped towards their push for a century of points mark.

The Brunei team headed into the final day in third place and was in a better position than their Thai rivals, The Infinity, when all the teams resumed battle last Sunday.

Both Buah Gaming and Auto Too Soon were guaranteed a seat in the regional competition following their performances in the national qualifiers.

Brunei’s Goodfellas Gaming and W Key were the other representatives that featured in the regional competition in the Valorant category.

The national esports association said, “This marks the first time Brunei Darussalam is competing in the regional scale and we hope to participate in more competitions such as this in the near future.”

Pilot rescued from wreckage in LA moments before train hits

LOS ANGELES (AP) – The pilot of a small plane averted death twice in a span of minutes on Sunday, first when he crash-landed onto railroad tracks, then when Los Angeles police rescued him just before a commuter train smashed into the aircraft.

Bodycam video showed the officers working furiously to disentangle the bloodied pilot from the cockpit of the crumpled Cessna 172.

“Go! Go! Go! Go! Go!” someone yelled as the officers dragged the man away seconds before the Metrolink train, its horn blaring, barreled through the plane.

The single-engine plane had engine failure during take-off from Whiteman Airport in the San Fernando Valley community of Pacoima and went down moments later, Police Captain Christopher Zine told reporters. The plane ended up on a rail crossing in an intersection adjacent to the airport and just blocks from the Los Angeles Police Department’s Foothill Division station.

Officers arrived at the crash scene almost immediately.

“I had requested Metrolink to cease all train activity, but apparently that didn’t happen,” Sgt Joseph Cavestany told CBSN Los Angeles.

Officer Christopher Aboyte told KABC-TV that he initially stood by the plane trying to keep the pilot, who was seated, conscious and alert.

Then, bells and flashing lights signalled an oncoming train, Officer Robert Sherock told the station.

“We looked and sure enough there was a train headed right for us at full speed,” he said.

‘It’s going to take forever’

Patty Nieberg & Lindsay Whitehurst

LOUISVILLE, COLORADO (AP) – Rex and Barba Hickman’s home of 23 years near the foothills of the Rocky Mountains has been reduced to a blackened heap by the most destructive wildfire in Colorado history.

Before the December 30 blaze, which ripped through nearly 1,100 homes, the Hickmans would often hang out with neighbours on their patio, sharing funny stories. But that isn’t likely to happen again for years – a delay made even longer by the pandemic.

“That’s part of the reason it hurts,” Barba Hickman, 65, said earlier this week while sifting through the rubble and coming to grips with how long it might take for neighbours to once again enjoy spontaneous get-togethers.

Re-building is never easy or quick. Homeowners must deal with insurers, land surveyors, architects and more. But in Colorado and other states hit by natural disasters this year, the pandemic has injected extra uncertainty and created more obstacles. Shortages of workers and raw materials will make rebuilding slower and more expensive.

“It’s going to take forever,” said a spokesperson for the Colorado Association of Realtors Kelly Moye.

Even without a pandemic, it took nearly seven years to completely rebuild after a 2012 fire that destroyed hundreds of homes in Colorado Springs, and homebuilders are still finishing up work after a 2017 fire in Santa Rosa, California.

Smoke rises in a neighbourhood of Boulder County that was destroyed by a wildfire. PHOTOS: AP
ABOVE & BELOW: A woman reacts to seeing the remains of her mother’s home destroyed by the Marshall Wildfire in Louisville, Colorado, and a family sit in front of their destroyed home in the aftermath of tornadoes that tore through the region in Dawson Springs

Compounding the stress for Colorado’s recent wildfire victims is an extremely tight housing market. With few homes for sale or rent, families are struggling to find temporary shelter.

“It’s a huge chunk of the population who all need the same thing. And they all need it right now,” said Moye. “They can’t go half an hour away because the kids need to stay in their school district.” The daunting road ahead for Coloradans affected by wildfire is also being faced by thousands of American families whose homes were damaged or destroyed by extreme weather last year, from tornadoes in the Midwest and Kentucky to Hurricane Ida’s impact in the Gulf Coast and New Jersey.

Builders everywhere are waiting longer than usual to line up carpenters, electricians and plumbers, and these specialists are themselves getting backed up waiting for parts.

From start to finish, construction of a 2,500-square-foot house in Denver would normally take four to five months. Now, that same project typically takes eight to 10 months, said Principal John Covert at Zonda Advisory, a homebuilding market research firm based in Denver. The local surge in demand after a disaster only compounds the problem.

Last Friday, President Biden and his wife, Jill, visited the area outside of Denver where more than USD500 million in damage was done. They walked along a street where homes burned to their concrete foundations, and met with residents and local officials.

In addition to causing delays in re-building, the pandemic is also driving up costs. Contractors are tough to come by amid a surge in remodeling, and supplies of lumber and steel are being held up by supply-chain snags, said Chief Economist for the National Association of Home Builders Robert Dietz,.

Lumber prices have soared from about USD350 per 1,000 board feet before the pandemic to nearly USD1,500 last year, Dietz said. That can mean additional costs of USD30,000-USD40,000 for a typical home, he said.

The Colorado towns hardest hit by last week’s wildfire, Louisville and Superior, are in a mostly affluent area in between Denver and the college town of Boulder. Median home prices there are more than double the national average, which stood at USD416,900 in November, up from USD321,500 a year earlier.

Rising real-estate prices can add a further burden for families that lost their homes to wildfire. “Costs are likely to exceed the insured value of many destroyed structures,” said Chief Economist for the Associated General Contractors of America Ken Simonson.

The Hickmans’ insurance claim adjustor said their policy is not going to cover a rebuild of their home exactly the way they had it. With a gas fireplace and wood-burning stove inside, and a front patio that had become a gathering spot for neighbours, the home was valued at more than USD1 million.

“The pandemic and the supply chains have increased the cost, and the insurance company does not seem to care about that,” Barba Hickman said.

Coloradans are not alone in facing pandemic-era challenges that have exacerbated the already stressful process of recovering from a natural disaster.

In December, a 200-mile line of tornadoes struck in Kentucky, decimating some rural small towns and displacing hundreds and killing dozens.

Cole Claybourn of Bowling Green has found a contractor to repair the chunk torn out of the corner of his house and the damaged roof, and hopes the work will start next week, a month after the disaster. “If this had just happened in just one part of the county it wouldn’t be a big deal, but this took out a pretty big swath of the city,” he said.

It’s too early for Claybourn, 32, to have supply-chain headaches, but he won’t be surprised if it’s a problem. “I’m a high school teacher and we couldn’t get toner in our building for months,” he said.

Before Hurricane Ida ripped through the Gulf Coast – and then took its destruction to New Jersey – in late summer, building contractors were already grappling with severe shortages of workers and depleted supply chains. The damage inflicted by Ida magnified those constraints.

Jeff Okrepkie, whose home burned in the 2017 Santa Rosa fire, said families starting to rebuild will benefit by working together, sharing information and being extremely patient.

“There’s so much that goes into building a house from the ground up and most of us have no experience in that,” said Okrepkie, who moved into his new home in early 2020.

The challenge for builders is occurring at a time of unprecedented economic uncertainty. The United States (US) economy bounced back with unexpected speed from a brief but painful recession in the spring of 2020, catching many businesses by surprise and forcing them to scramble to find supplies and to recall workers they’d furloughed last year.

But it’s unclear how long the supply and labour squeeze will last. Omicron and other COVID-19 variants could lead more Americans to stay home as a health precaution. That could put a dent in economic growth – but also possibly cool off inflation and ease shortages of workers and material.

Dietz, the economist, believes shortages of building materials will ease before the labour crunch does, especially in fast-growing regions like the mountain states and the US South.

For now, the Hickmans are taking some solace in being retired and having more time than many others to devote to rebuilding. They spent this past week focussed on finding a place to rent and are even considering relocating to Denver, nearly 20 miles to the southeast.

With everything she’s learned over the past week, Barba Hickman is urging her grown children to review their own insurance policies because “the time to argue about that is before your house burns”.

Police foil smuggling attempt

An attempt to smuggle 30 cartons of alcohol in the Temburong District was busted by the Royal Brunei Police Force (RBPF).

The RBPF said following the detection of a suspicious vehicle near a boat landing area of Kampong Ujung around 3.30am yesterday, Bangar Police Station personnel were informed. On noticing police presence, the suspects attempted to escape by driving towards Sultan Haji Omar ‘Ali Saifuddien Bridge.

More details on Wednesday’s Borneo Bulletin

Three detained for suspected immoral acts

Two women and a man allegedly involved in immoral activities were detained by the Royal Brunei Police Force (RBPF) on Monday afternoon.

Personnel from the Anti-Vice and Gambling Suppression Unit of the Criminal Investigation Department raided two separate rented rooms in Kampong Beribi around 2.42pm and 2.45pm, where they found the suspects involved in sexual activities.

The female suspects, a 37-year-old local and a 47-year-old foreigner, are believed to have been offering sexual services to a 47-year-old male foreigner.

More details on Wednesday’s Borneo Bulletin

Foreigner fined over BND13K for possessing cigarettes

The Magistrate’s Court yesterday ordered a Bangladeshi man to settle a BND13,760 fine for possessing smuggled cigarettes at his work quarters.

Md Nazim, 37, would have to serve 13 months’ jail in default of payment of the fine.

The court heard that the defendant was arrested by Customs preventive officers on discovering that he had kept 16 cartons and 14 packets along with BND684 cash proceeds from illicit sales of the contraband.

More details on Wednesday’s Borneo Bulletin